Title: Biodiversity, Agriculture and Markets
1Biodiversity, Agriculture and Markets
Paul Ferraro Department of Economics Andrew
Young School of Policy Studies Georgia State
University
2How biodiversity benefits agriculture directly
and indirectly
- Ignore how agriculture affects biodiversity,
negatively and positively. - Ignore how important agriculture is for
preserving biodiversity
3Caveats
- Valuation literature is in its infancy
- Opportunity costs are often poorly quantified
- Tradeoffs, environmental and economic, often
not clearly characterized - Little consideration of substitutes (exotic
species, physical capital and labor)
.but its clear that biodiversity has value for
agriculture.
4Cash on the Table
- Arguments that there are pure private gains to
protecting biodiversity imply cash on the table
(endogenous win-win scenarios).
5Biodiversity The Bad
- Menace to Crops, Livestock and Humans
- Local opportunity costs from protected areas
6Genetic Diversity
Library of genetic resources being destroyed
Lost opportunity to improve yields, lower
variances, and adapt to changing environmental
and market conditions.
In situ vs. ex situ conservation
7Food, Fuel and Medical Security
- Source of timber and nontimber forest products
Important safety net and source of supplemental
income for low-income rural people and women
(350 million people).
8Invasive Species
- Trade and migration increases risk of
invasive species damaging food and fiber
production
US 97 billion in damages (1906 to 1991). Less
absolute damage in developing nations, but
potentially larger relative damages.
Is biodiversity a friend or foe of invasive
species? Experimental data suggest foe, but
naturally-occurring data suggest friend. Debate
among ecologists.
9Ecosystem Services
- Controversy over definition and valuation
Focus identifying, valuing and connecting
beneficiaries to suppliers
Services are very important for low-input systems
10Pollination
- gt 100,000 invertebrate and gt1000 vertebrate
species serve as pollinators globally.
Habitat loss is major threat, followed by
pesticide use.
11Pollination
- US Pollinators play a significant role in the
production of more than 150 food crops.
Contribution of native pollinators is about 3
billion (1-14 billion)
12Pollination
- Tropical forests can boost yield and quality of
nearby coffee plantations (yield increase 20,
27 fewer poor quality beans, income increase 7
1714/ha of tropical forest)
13Pollination
- Himalaya regions (Bhutan, China, India, Nepal and
Pakistan) switch from traditional cereal crops
to high-value cash crops hindered by lack of
pollinators.
14Pollination
- Organic farms native bee sufficient robust
to diseases of imported bees.
Alabama A single bee (H. laboriosa) pollinates
75 worth of berries by visiting nearly 50,000
blueberry flowers in a year.
US Native species more likely to sonicate
flowers increase fruit set by 45 and fruit
weight by 200.
15Control agricultural pests
Predators and parasitoids
US Avoided losses by native species 4.5
billion/year (from native and exotic pests)
Vultures in India traditionally eat livestock
carcasses. Populations declined 95 from
livestock drug.
16Soil Biota (Dung burial)
Insects very efficient at decomposing
waste in livestock operations in pasture/ranges
- Enhance forage palatability
- Recycle nitrogen
- Reduce pest habitat
380 million per year to US livestock industry.
17Grasslands
Biodiversity improves average yield and lowers
yield variance
Observed in experimental and naturally-occurring
data.
But most data on biological outcomes (e.g.,
biomass) rather than economic outcomes.
18Hydrological Services
- Local water supplies (mean and variance)
drinking water, irrigation, drought mitigation
- Science to date show connections between
biodiversity/ecosystems and hydrological services
are conditional rather than universal
19Other Benefits
- Rural Health (control of vector habitat)
- Storm Buffers landslides, floods.
- Biological Insurance Hypothesis more diverse ?
more resistant and
resilient
- Aesthetic (for local consumption and tourists)
20Capturing Benefits
- Problem Local Public Goods (often with a
weakest-link production technology).
Solution Citizens need to (1) recognize benefits
and (2) develop institutions to coordinate human
activities.
21Capturing Benefits
- Problem Regional or Global Public Goods.
Solution Payments for Environmental Services
22Biodiversity as Asset
- Farmers throughout the world are being paid for
supplying biodiversity and associated ecosystem
services.
Farmers often have comparative advantage in
supplying biodiversity may be the risk-efficient
land use for such regions.
23 Evaluation through Randomized Policy
Experimentssee Ferraro and Pattanayak
- (1) How do we know biodiversity has the economic
values we believe it has?
(2) How do we know our interventions generate
these values?
USAID in unique position to contribute to science
and development by altering the way in which it
intervenes.