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Poverty and biodiversity: Measuring the overlap of human poverty and the biodiversity hotspots
Authors:Brendan Fisher  Treg Christopher
Affiliation:Gund Institute for Ecological Economics, University of Vermont, Burlington, VT 05405, USA
Abstract:In an effort to prioritize conservation efforts, scientists have developed the concept of biodiversity hotspots. Since most hotspots occur in countries where poverty is widespread, the success of conservation efforts depends upon the recognition that poverty can be a significant constraint on conservation, and at the same time conservation is an important component to the alleviation of long-term poverty. In this paper we present five key socio-economic poverty indicators (access to water, undernourishment, potential population pressure, number living below poverty line and debt service) and integrate them with an ecologically based hotspots analysis in order to illustrate magnitude of the overlap between biological conservation and poverty. The analysis here suggests that the overlap between severe, multifaceted poverty and key areas of global biodiversity is great and needs to be acknowledged. Understanding the magnitude of overlap and interactions among poverty, conservation and macroeconomic processes is crucial for identifying illusive, yet possible, win-win solutions.
Keywords:Biodiversity hotspots   Poverty   Conservation   Economic poverty
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