Monitoring and evaluation of climate adaptation conservation initiatives
Date:
April 27, 2022
Source:
Wildlife Conservation Society
Summary:
A new study offers pathways to improve monitoring and evaluation
(M&E) of climate-informed conservation while revealing how
practitioners are currently monitoring conservation adaptation
projects.
FULL STORY ==========================================================================
A new study offers pathways to improve monitoring and evaluation (M&E)
of climate-informed conservation while revealing how practitioners are currently monitoring conservation adaptation projects. This research
examines a portfolio of 76 conservation adaptation initiatives that
were led by non-governmental organizations and implemented in diverse ecosystems across the United States between 2011 and 2017.
==========================================================================
This study, published in the journal Conservation Science and Practice,
was co- authored by researchers at the Wildlife Conservation Society
(WCS), the University of British Columbia's Faculty of Forestry, and
the University of Massachusetts Amherst.
The findings reveal that some best practices from M&E in conservation,
such as closely tying monitoring plans to a theory of change, are underutilized. While the majority of projects reported social outcomes (co-benefits to human communities) in addition to ecological outcomes
at their project completion, their monitoring plans focused primarily
on ecological and biophysical changes.
Only 15 percent of projects planned to collect data related to social
outcomes, such as changes in perceptions or behaviors, and human
well-being linked to restoration activities.
"As practitioners ramp up the implementation of nature-based solutions
to meet adaptation and mitigation targets, our study offers insights
from on-the-ground actions to help improve project tracking, management,
and delivery of social and ecological outcomes," said Lauren E. Oakes, Conservation Scientist on the Forests & Climate Change team at WCS,
and the study's lead author.
The research team also found that partnering with external institutions
for M&E bolstered the comprehensiveness of the monitoring effort and
offered other benefits.
Sais Shannon Hagerman, Associate Professor in the Faculty of Forestry
at the University of British Columbia and the study's senior author:
"These partnerships delivered a suite of benefits, such as strengthened or higher quality design, enabling consistent data collection, and engaging
a wider range of people and types of expertise in adaptation." Climate adaptation projects are interventions that help wildlife, ecosystems, and people adapt to climate change. Examples include restoring habitat with
plant species that are more likely to survive future climate conditions, shifting fire management regimes and strategies to address more frequent
and intense wildfires, and creating "living shorelines" to reduce coastal erosion and protect inland habitat and communities.
Practitioners, funders, and governments increasingly stress the
importance of tracking progress and outcomes of such adaptation
initiatives. Assessing mitigation outcomes generally relies on one
indicator -- the balance of greenhouse gas emissions to and removals
from the atmosphere. However, measuring progress toward and outcomes
of adaptation is complicated and requires tailoring M&E design to each project's goals and objectives.
Sais Liz Tully, Associate Director of the WCS Climate Adaptation Fund: "Adaptation is inherently place-based and locally-led, and therefore
difficult to scale without established, transferable processes and
best practice. This study answers a challenging call from the field of
practice since monitoring adaptation involves dynamic interactions across
time, ecological processes, and evolving climate impacts." Adaptation represents a rapidly growing niche within the conservation community where well-designed learning and sharing of lessons are essential in the face
of a changing climate, the impact from which are being felt at a faster
pace and a larger scale. The authors highlight that finding avenues for practitioners to report results in more consistent and transparent ways
will also be critical to determine the suitability of novel adaptation approaches for broader adoption in addition to improving the success of adaptation outcomes for nature and people.
This interdisciplinary research team was supported by the Doris Duke
Charitable Foundation, and research was conducted in partnership with
the IUCN Species Survival Commission's Climate Change Specialist Group.
========================================================================== Story Source: Materials provided by Wildlife_Conservation_Society. Note: Content may be edited for style and length.
========================================================================== Journal Reference:
1. Lauren E. Oakes, Guillaume Peterson St‐Laurent, Molly
S. Cross,
Tatjana Washington, Elizabeth Tully, Shannon Hagerman. Strengthening
monitoring and evaluation of multiple benefits in
conservation initiatives that aim to foster climate change
adaptation. Conservation Science and Practice, 2022; DOI:
10.1111/csp2.12688 ==========================================================================
Link to news story:
https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2022/04/220427115740.htm
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