María Teresa Vargas Ríos

Business Planning for a New Protected Area: The Río Grande-Che Guevara Biosphere Reserve, Bolivia

Sandy Rojas Natura techncian explains meterological monitoring in Moro Moro.

Rio Grande PA educational event children for watershed protection.

Rio Grande PA school childrens view of thw role of water in society.

Arriving at the compensation ceremony in Pucara.

Town/RegionCountryCategoriesDate
Río Grande-Che Guevara Biosphere Reserve BoliviaCentral and Latin America, Community, Forests, Habitat29 Jul 2008

The 57 000 km2 Río Grande catchment is one of Bolivia’s most important watersheds. Its cloud-forested slopes supply important irrigation water to lowland rice and soy growers, though in recent years catastrophic floods have decimated downstream agricultural production. These valleys are part of the mega-diverse Vilcabamba-Amboró biological corridor and home to an impressive diversity of fauna and fauna, including the endemic red fronted macaw (Ara rubrogenys). The area is also rich in cultural history, not least as the site of the last stand of revolutionary guerilla Ernesto “Che” Guevara. With support from the Fundación Natura Bolivia, the Santa Cruz Departmental Government created the Río Grande-Che Guevara Protected Area in March 2007, which will function:

1) To conserve biological diversity, maintain water supplies and minimize the impact of future flooding;
2) As a self-sustaining vehicle to improve local livelihoods;
3) As a model for payments for watershed services schemes for Bolivia and the international community.

As neither national nor departmental governments have the funds to support the sustainable management of a new protected area, Natura is working with local government to ensure that the reserve is designed from the outset for financial self-sustainability. This project will demonstrate to Latin America that under-funded, centralized, and failing “paper-park” protected areas are not the only option. Natura has identified three potential income sources for the reserve:

· Payments for watershed services (PWS);
· Tourism revenues; and
· Payments for carbon sequestration.

The PWS scheme in Río Grande will be a scaled-up version of Natura’s successful pilot experience in neighbouring Pampagrande, where downstream communities are compensating upstream communities for the opportunity cost of not deforesting land for agriculture. Inter-community negotiations determined that “payments” should take the form of one bee box and training in honey production for every 10 hectares of water-producing cloud forest protected by upstream landowners.

Currently, 46 landowners are protecting 2774 ha of native vegetation. Scaling up to Río Grande will involve perhaps 12 000 families in six municipalities, which will allow the project to benefit many of the 26 000 inhabitants of one of the five poorest provinces in Santa Cruz. With Rufford Foundation support, this initiative will show that management plans that treat parks as a cost to society can—and in many cases should—be replaced by business plans that treat protected areas as valuable, revenue-generating assets.

For more information contact naturabolivia@naturabolivia.org or go to www.naturabolivia.org

Project Update: September 2008

Read about the latest progress of this project in the report below.

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Progress Report419.5 KB
Interim Report

Read about the activities undertaken and findings of this project in the interim report below.

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Interim Report464 KB
Final Report

Read more about the activities undertaken and findings of this project in the final report and articles below.

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Final Report204 KB
Forest Ecology and Management 258 (2009) 1881–1888450.68 KB
Mountain Forum Bulletin January 2010278.88 KB
Memoria Samaipata1.55 MB
Newsletters

Read the fall edition of Fundación Natura Bolivia's newsletter 'Naturalia'.

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Spring 2008974.16 KB
Fall 2008898.07 KB
Winter 2008822.55 KB
Summer 20091.33 MB
Fall 20092.51 MB
Winter 2009954.78 KB

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