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Can Payments for Watershed Services Help Advance Restoration of Longleaf Pine? A Critically Engaged Research Approach

期刊

FORESTS
卷 12, 期 3, 页码 -

出版社

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/f12030279

关键词

longleaf pine; ecosystem services; water; forest restoration; incentive payments; critically engaged research

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资金

  1. National Fish and Wildlife Foundation [63751]
  2. US Department of Agriculture [FLA-FOR-005766]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Private forests play a critical role in providing ecosystem services in the southeastern US, with restoration of longleaf pine forests and savannas enhancing water supply. Various payments for watershed services strategies have emerged to address market failures in private forests and public water supply, potentially leading to biodiversity protection as a positive externality to water resource protection.
Private forests in the southeastern US are critical for providing a variety of ecosystem services, including timber production and water resource protection. Restoration of longleaf pine (LLP) forests and savannas tends to enhance some ecosystem services, including water supply, over timber production. A variety of payments for watershed services (PWS) strategies have emerged to address the market failure associated with private forests and public water supply. The nature of these programs suggests that biodiversity protection may be a positive externality, or third-party benefit, to water resource protection. This paper uses a critically engaged research approach and expert interviews to investigate how PWS programs may help prevent land use change and promote LLP restoration. We also offer recommendations on how to sustain emerging efforts to implement PWS strategies while including LLP restoration objectives.

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