4.8 Article

Sustainable palm fruit harvesting as a pathway to conserve Amazon peatland forests

Journal

NATURE SUSTAINABILITY
Volume 5, Issue 6, Pages 479-487

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41893-022-00858-z

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation [5349]
  2. BOSQUES research group of IIAP
  3. projects 'Protecting biodiversity and livelihoods in the wetlands of Peruvian Amazonia' through the Newton-Paulet Fund by the Department for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy (UK) [220-2018-FONDECYT]
  4. CONCYTEC (Peru)
  5. CONCYTEC, the Newton Fund [001-2019-FONDECYT]
  6. Embajada Britanica Lima
  7. NERC
  8. project Novel approaches to understand the state of biodiversity and support livelihoods: the distribution and degradation levels of Mauritia flexuosa stands in Amazonia' through the Newton-Paulet Fund by the Department for Business, Energy and Industrial [41469429]
  9. NERC Knowledge Exchange Fellowship [NE/V018760/1]

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This study examines how sustainable fruit harvesting in Amazon peatlands can support livelihoods and mitigate climate change. The findings suggest that climbing fruit harvesting is more beneficial in increasing potential production and income than felling, providing a practical pathway to conserve and sustainably exploit this carbon-rich landscape.
Sustainable management of intact tropical peatlands is crucial for climate change mitigation, for biodiversity conservation and to support the livelihoods of local communities. Here, we explore whether sustainable fruit harvesting from Mauritia flexuosa palms could support these linked goals by increasing fruit production and incomes across the 2.8 million hectares of the most carbon-dense ecosystem in Amazonia: the lowland peatlands of northeastern Peru. M. flexuosa is dioecious, and fruits are typically harvested by felling female palms; the proportion of female palms therefore provides a good indicator of the health of a stand. Across 93 widely distributed sites, we found that the proportion of female palms increases with travel time to the urban market, and overall, fruit harvesting has halved the current potential production and income from this resource. However, significantly more female palms are found where fruit are harvested by climbing. We estimate that region-wide uptake of climbing could eventually increase potential fruit production by 51% and increase its gross value to US$62 +/- 28.2 million yr(-1). These findings demonstrate the high cost of unsustainable resource extraction in Neotropical forests and outline a practical path to conserve and sustainably exploit one of the most carbon-rich landscapes on the planet. A study of how sustainable fruit harvesting in Amazon peatlands can support livelihoods and aid efforts to mitigate climate change.

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