Handle nature’s contributions with care
editorial
Handle nature’s contributions with care
A renewed focus on nature’s utility is intended to enhance biodiversity protection. To avoid undermining
conservation goals, this must be accompanied by safeguards on resource extraction, as well as meaningful
acknowledgement and integration of Indigenous knowledge.
W
hether to value and preserve
nature for its own sake or for
what it can provide to humans is
an age-old debate in conservation biology.
Beginning in the 1960s, a more utilitarian
approach to the value of nature saw the
idea of ‘ecosystem services’ emerge, and it
has remained prominent ever since. But,
perhaps recognizing that the ecosystem
services concept insufficiently captures the
reciprocal relationship between humans and
nature and less monetizable benefits, the
Intergovernmental Science-Policy Platform
on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services
(IPBES) has recently adopted an alternative
term: ‘nature’s contributions to people’
(NCP)1. Many conservationists express some
unease with the term2,3, feeling that it is still
too focused on a utilitarian and extractive
perspective, or that it is barely different from
the ecosystem services conceptualization.
Nonetheless, the NCP concept has taken
root and is prominently featured in the
zero draft of the Convention on Biological
Diversity’s post-2020 biodiversity
framework4. NCP is also the focus of several
articles in this month’s issue of Nature
Ecology & Evolution.
Molina-Venegas et al. describe in a
Brief Communication how assemblages of
plants with higher phylogenetic diversity
capture a wider array of human uses of
the plants, such as in food, fuel, medicine
and clothing, than assemblages selected
by chance. In an associated News &
Views, Mooers and Tucker highlight the
implications of these findings for NCP
by reminding us that evolutionary or
phylogenetic diversity can preserve not
only existing usages, but also those that
people have not yet conceived. While they
note that this perspective speaks directly
to the utilitarian view of nature, they argue
that conserving evolutionarily diverse
species is prudent by any measure.
Des Roches et al. also contribute a
Perspective synthesizing the evidence that
intraspecific genetic variation can increase
material, non-material and regulating
functions, three separate components
of NCP. Following on from recent
concerns5 that the post-2020 biodiversity
framework’s goals related to maintenance
of genetic diversity lack specific targets
and recommendations, the authors also
suggest ideas for maintaining intraspecific
diversity in populations and strengthening
the evidence base that intraspecific diversity
provides tangible benefits. Knowing that
habitat loss and climatically driven range
shifts can homogenize communities at the
species and trait level raises the spectre
that loss of phylogenetic and intraspecific
genetic diversity will concomitantly remove
associated benefits to people.
While emphasizing the benefits of genetic
diversity or phylogenetic diversity to humans
(largely for purposes of consumption) may
incentivize and stimulate conservation, we
must take care in framing them as ‘new
reports’, when Indigenous communities
worldwide have managed ecosystems to
maintain and utilize diversity for thousands
of years. Indeed, Díaz et al.1 argue that
the “use of NCP elevates, emphasizes, and
operationalizes the role of indigenous
and local knowledge in understanding
nature’s contribution to people.” We think
it is crucial that discussions of NCP better
acknowledge and incorporate Indigenous
Nature Ecology & Evolution | VOL 5 | May 2021 | 551 | www.nature.com/natecolevol
and local knowledge, and will strive to make
this a more consistent editorial requirement
for publication.
Another ongoing concern about
emphasizing the utility of wild organisms
for human needs is that it could exacerbate
consumption and extraction and thus
undermine conservation goals. This concern
is perhaps why two of the post-2020
biodiversity framework’s five goals4 focus
on the sustainable use of beneficial wild and
domesticated biodiversity and the equitable
sharing of these benefits as critical aspects
of NCP. The draft also rightly notes that
traditional knowledge is central not only
to identifying nature’s beneficial organisms
but also shaping the strategies for their
sustainable use.
It remains to be seen whether the
conservation community and humanity
in general will be able to operationally
define sustainable use and achieve balance
between the use and abuse of nature. But in
the meantime, we are hopeful that studies
highlighting the diverse uses of wild species
and their benefits to humanity will continue
to advance the conservation agenda.
❐
Published online: 6 May 2021
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41559-021-01473-5
References
1. Díaz, S. et al. Science 359, 270–272 (2018).
2. Muradian, R. & Gómez-Baggethun, E. Ecol. Econ. 185,
107038 (2021).
3. Assessing nature’s contributions to people: eLetters online forum.
Science https://go.nature.com/32BCQqx (2018).
4. Updated Zero Draft of the Post-2020 Global Biodiversity
Framework (Convention on Biological Diversity, 2020);
http://go.nature.com/3jWOnsr
5. Laikre, L. et al. Science 367, 1083–1085 (2020).
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