TY - JOUR
T1 - When money meets tradition
T2 - How new cash incomes could be risky for a vulnerable ecosystem
AU - Xiao, Lingyun
AU - Zhao, Xiang
AU - Mei, Suonancuo
AU - Mishra, Charudutt
AU - Alexander, Justine Shanti
AU - Weckworth, Byron
AU - Liu, Wei
AU - Li, Li
AU - Wang, Hao
AU - Zhu, Ziyun
AU - Lu, Zhi
N1 - Funding Information:
Panthera, Snow Leopard Trust and Conservation Leadership Program provided funding to this research. Thanks to Professor Wenjun Li and Dr. Xiaochuan Zhang who provided beneficial discussions on interpretation of the results. Thanks to Dr. Xiaoli Shen and Dr. Hugh Robinson who helped in improving the manuscript at the beginning stage. Special thanks to my two field assistants Dawajiangcai and Douxiujia, who played a key role in field survey and interviews. Thanks to the two anonymous reviewers and Dr. Yifu Wang who provided constructive suggestions during the peer review process which helps a lot in improving the manuscript.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2022 Elsevier Ltd
PY - 2022/8
Y1 - 2022/8
N2 - Economic incentives to simultaneously address poverty and biodiversity loss may fail if they do not align with local values or norms. Grazing livestock across the Tibetan Plateau's vast but fragile grasslands is often characterized as the area's primary driver of habitat degradation. China's grassland restoration policy provides eco-compensation subsidies for herders, with the assumption that providing extra cash income will help alleviating grazing pressure. We investigated potential impacts of this supplementary income, in combination with caterpillar fungus, a major local cash income source, on the pastoral livelihood on the Tibetan Plateau. Through field livestock census in seven communities and household livelihood interviews with 153 households we found that at both household and valley levels, eco-compensation didn't have the intended effect of reducing grazing pressure, while caterpillar fungus income has significant positive relationships on grazing intensity. Meanwhile, we found significant decrease of above-ground plant biomass after policy implementation was linked with low-elevation pastures with most intensive grazing, which indicated a negative impact of grazing on grassland condition at our study sites. Further, based on herdsmen's perceptions on different cash income sources we suspected those non-pastoral incomes might have even subsidized pastoralism. We suggested future economic incentives related to grassland restoration should be more targeted towards villages with low cash income and overgrazed grasslands, with clearly stated responsibilities and obligations, instead of standardized cash payment.
AB - Economic incentives to simultaneously address poverty and biodiversity loss may fail if they do not align with local values or norms. Grazing livestock across the Tibetan Plateau's vast but fragile grasslands is often characterized as the area's primary driver of habitat degradation. China's grassland restoration policy provides eco-compensation subsidies for herders, with the assumption that providing extra cash income will help alleviating grazing pressure. We investigated potential impacts of this supplementary income, in combination with caterpillar fungus, a major local cash income source, on the pastoral livelihood on the Tibetan Plateau. Through field livestock census in seven communities and household livelihood interviews with 153 households we found that at both household and valley levels, eco-compensation didn't have the intended effect of reducing grazing pressure, while caterpillar fungus income has significant positive relationships on grazing intensity. Meanwhile, we found significant decrease of above-ground plant biomass after policy implementation was linked with low-elevation pastures with most intensive grazing, which indicated a negative impact of grazing on grassland condition at our study sites. Further, based on herdsmen's perceptions on different cash income sources we suspected those non-pastoral incomes might have even subsidized pastoralism. We suggested future economic incentives related to grassland restoration should be more targeted towards villages with low cash income and overgrazed grasslands, with clearly stated responsibilities and obligations, instead of standardized cash payment.
KW - Conservation policy
KW - Economic incentives
KW - Grassland degradation
KW - Land-use intensity
KW - Pastoralism
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85130950330&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.biocon.2022.109575
DO - 10.1016/j.biocon.2022.109575
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85130950330
SN - 0006-3207
VL - 272
JO - Biological Conservation
JF - Biological Conservation
M1 - 109575
ER -