Saturday, May 25, 2013

High Conservation Value (HCV)

   High Conservation Value (HCV) areas are defined as natural habitats where these values are considered to be ofoutstanding significance or critical importance. The HCV concept was originally developed by the Forest Stewardship Council (FSC) to help define forest areas of outstanding and critical importance - High Conservation Value Forests (HCVF) - for use in forest management certification.

   A High Conservation Value area is simply the area (e.g. a forest, a grassland, a watershed, or a landscape-level ecosystem) where these values are found, or, more precisely, the area that needs to be appropriately managed in order to maintain or enhance the identified values. Identifying the areas where these values occur is therefore the essential first step in developing appropriate management for them.
Definition of HCV areas

The HCV areas are defined as follows:
HCV1:areas containing globally, regionally or nationally significant concentrations of biodiversity values (e.g., endemism, endangered species)
HCV2:areas containing globally, regionally or nationally significant large landscape natural habitats, contained within, or containing, the management unit, where viable populations of most if not all naturally occurring species exist in natural patterns of distribution and abundance.
HCV3:areas that are in or contain rare, threatened or endangered ecosystems.
HCV4:areas that provide basic services of nature in critical situations (e.g., watershed protection, erosion control).
HCV5:areas fundamental to meeting basic needs of local communities (e.g., subsistence, health).
HCV6:areas critical to local communities’ traditional cultural identity (areas of cultural, ecological, economic or religious significance identified in co-operation with such local communities).

www.rspo.org

HCV monitoring protocol and software

   High Conservation Values (HCVs) are a set of social and ecological values that are considered a high priority for conservation. They include the presence of endemic or endangered species, rare or endangered ecosystems, and resources and ecosystem services on which local communities depend for their livelihoods all of which are significantly threatened by large-scale land conversion from forest to agriculture. In order to meet the criteria for RSPO certification, plantation owners are obliged to maintain and protect HCV areas within their concessions, however without regular and standardized monitoring, successful, efficient and robust management of HCVs is not possible.
   Regular patrol monitoring of HCV areas in oil palm plantations can provide plantation managers with the information they need to mitigate the negative impacts of oil palm cultivation on biodiversity; however, current guidance on how to do this is limited. ZSL is developing a practical protocol with accompanying easy-to-use software and training modules to enable field staff to effectively monitor key variables in HCV areas in oil palm landscapes. It is intended to support an adaptive management approach for improved protection of biodiversity within plantations, whereby management actions are informed by the results of patrol monitoring.
Results from regular patrols are analysed by accompanying software and reported in clear and easily understandable graphs and maps.
http://www.zsl.org