TY - JOUR
T1 - A productive friction
T2 - Leveraging misalignments between local ecological knowledge and remotely sensed imagery for forest conservation planning
AU - Clark, Matt
AU - Hamad, Haji Masoud
AU - Andrews, Jeffrey
AU - Kolarik, Nicholas
AU - Hopping, Kelly
AU - Hillis, Vicken
AU - Borgerhoff Mulder, Monique
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2024 The Author(s). Conservation Science and Practice published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of Society for Conservation Biology.
PY - 2024/11
Y1 - 2024/11
N2 - Earth's forests are continually monitored by both the satellite record and the lived experiences of nearly 2 billion forest-proximate peoples. Generally, the satellite record summarizes production estimates, such as percent tree cover, at regular, relatively coarse scales. Conversely, local perceptions tend to capture changes at irregular and very fine scales. While the utility of both of these sources of information has been widely demonstrated in isolation, little work has explored in what contexts they are expected to correlate or deviate, or how they might be quantitatively integrated. Here, we collect gridded information on community perceived and remotely sensed mangrove cover change across 719 0.5-km grids in Pemba Island, Tanzania. We reveal variation in the association between these two data sources across different wards (shehia) and explore the reasons for this variation using interviews and direct observation. We find that shehia with the greatest alignment between perceived and remotely sensed mangrove change tended to have little planting or natural regeneration of mangrove propagules and large areas of complete cover loss. Alternatively, in shehia with the lowest alignment, we find high levels of natural and/or human-assisted mangrove recolonization and selective harvesting of individual trees and branches. These findings indicate that the alignment between local knowledge and satellite observations of mangrove cover change systematically increases with the scale of change in this system. Finally, we demonstrate a practical workflow for quantitatively leveraging these misalignments by optimizing across both data sources to identify restoration priority areas.
AB - Earth's forests are continually monitored by both the satellite record and the lived experiences of nearly 2 billion forest-proximate peoples. Generally, the satellite record summarizes production estimates, such as percent tree cover, at regular, relatively coarse scales. Conversely, local perceptions tend to capture changes at irregular and very fine scales. While the utility of both of these sources of information has been widely demonstrated in isolation, little work has explored in what contexts they are expected to correlate or deviate, or how they might be quantitatively integrated. Here, we collect gridded information on community perceived and remotely sensed mangrove cover change across 719 0.5-km grids in Pemba Island, Tanzania. We reveal variation in the association between these two data sources across different wards (shehia) and explore the reasons for this variation using interviews and direct observation. We find that shehia with the greatest alignment between perceived and remotely sensed mangrove change tended to have little planting or natural regeneration of mangrove propagules and large areas of complete cover loss. Alternatively, in shehia with the lowest alignment, we find high levels of natural and/or human-assisted mangrove recolonization and selective harvesting of individual trees and branches. These findings indicate that the alignment between local knowledge and satellite observations of mangrove cover change systematically increases with the scale of change in this system. Finally, we demonstrate a practical workflow for quantitatively leveraging these misalignments by optimizing across both data sources to identify restoration priority areas.
KW - conservation
KW - local ecological knowledge
KW - mangroves
KW - remote sensing
KW - social-ecological systems
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85206799806&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1111/csp2.13247
DO - 10.1111/csp2.13247
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85206799806
VL - 6
JO - Conservation Science and Practice
JF - Conservation Science and Practice
IS - 11
M1 - e13247
ER -