Unfolding additional massive cutback effects of the Native Vegetation Protection Law on Legal Reserves, Brazil

Authors

  • Paulo André Tavares Universidade de São Paulo, Departamento de Ciências do Solo
  • Alice Dantas Brites Universidade de São Paulo, Departamento de Ciências do Solo https://orcid.org/0000-0002-6500-4243
  • Gerd Sparovek Universidade de São Paulo, Departamento de Ciências do Solo
  • Vinícius Guidotti Instituto de Manejo e Certificação Florestal e Agrícola, Imaflora
  • Felipe Cerignoni Instituto de Manejo e Certificação Florestal e Agrícola, Imaflora
  • Daniel Aguiar Agrosatélite Geotecnologia Aplicada
  • Jean Paul Metzger Universidade de São Paulo, Instituto de Biociências
  • Ricardo Ribeiro Rodrigues Universidade de São Paulo, Departamento de Ciências Biológicas
  • Luis Fernando Guedes Pinto Instituto de Manejo e Certificação Florestal e Agrícola, Imaflora
  • Kaline de Mello Universidade de São Paulo, Instituto de Biociências
  • Paulo Guilherme Molin Universidade Federal de São Carlos, Centro de Ciências Naturais

Keywords:

Native Vegetation, Biodiversity Conservation, New Forest Act, São Paulo State, Environmental Regularization Program

Abstract

Abstract: The Native Vegetation Protection Law - 2012 - (NVPL) is the main Brazilian regulation for protecting native vegetation (NV) on private land. The NVPL, currently in the implementation phase, reduced Legal Reserves (LR) requirements compared to its previous version, the 1965's Forest Act (FA), through several legal mechanisms. Among them, Article 68 (Art.68) exempts landholders from LR obligations if NV was converted without offending the legislation in place at the time of the conversion. The technical implementation of Art. 68 is controversial and its effects are still unknown. We developed a model to estimate the effects of Art.68 on LR using São Paulo State (Brazil) as case study. We analyzed former environmental laws to identify key periods in which NV preservation requirements had changed. After, we searched for past spatial data on NV cover with sufficient accuracy for each legal benchmark. Combining legal benchmarks with spatial data, we created two scenarios for Art.68 effects, plus a baseline scenario. The first scenario considered a single legal benchmark, the 1965's FA (scenario "1965"), while the other included the 1989 Cerrado's protection Federal Law as a second benchmark (scenario "1965/89"). The baseline scenario did not include Art.68 effects. Scenario "1965" reduced LR deficits in 49% compared to the baseline scenario, waiving landholders from restoration or offsetting needs in 423 thousand hectares (kha) of NV. Scenario "1965/89" waved 507 kha of NV from restoration needs and represented a 59% reduction in LR deficit compared to the baseline scenario. The LR reduction by scenario "1965/89" assumed particular importance considering that the additional cutback was concentrated on Cerrado, an already very fragmented and impacted region. Together with reductions from other NVPL rules, the additional effects of Art. 68 unfolded great concerns about the role of LR as a tool for NV preservation on private land, threating governmental restoration commitments, and pointing that conservation command and control approaches should be complemented with incentive policies to achieve the desired and committed standards.

Downloads

Published

2019-01-01

How to Cite

Tavares, P. A., Brites, A. D., Sparovek, G., Guidotti, V., Cerignoni, F., Aguiar, D., Metzger, J. P., Rodrigues, R. R., Pinto, L. F. G., Mello, K. de, & Molin, P. G. (2019). Unfolding additional massive cutback effects of the Native Vegetation Protection Law on Legal Reserves, Brazil. Biota Neotropica, 19(4). Retrieved from //www.biotaneotropica.org.br/BN/article/view/1664

Issue

Section

Short Communications

Most read articles by the same author(s)

1 2 > >> 
Loading...