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Study: How Colombia can balance conservation and development

The 2016 peace agreement that ended five decades of conflict in Colombia also began the expansion of farmers, loggers, ranchers and oil drillers into biodiverse areas, increasing deforestation rates 44%.

"The fear is that, after these peace agreements, the forest is open to economic development — including cattle ranching, agriculture, mining, logging — and that can increase the already high deforestation level in Colombia. That can endanger the biodiversity within those forests," said lead author Camila Guerrero, a doctoral student in Arizona State University 's Biology and Society Program.

Guerrero, who is from Colombia, had just begun as a master's student when the peace accords were ratified.

"The worries about the impacts on biodiversity and the environment were very prominent in the news. So, yeah, that's why I got interested in the topic," she said.

The Nature Sustainability study found the resulting development would reduce biodiversity by up to 52% by 2033 unless Colombia doubled its conservation spending.

To help guide those decisions, the authors used computer models to find areas where biodiversity threats were high but conservation costs were low.

"The model that Camila developed allows us to select areas on a map and say, 'What would we get for conserving this area, compared to a neighboring area?' And, further, it allows us to incorporate the cost of those different selection decisions," said senior author Leah Gerber, director of the Center for Biodiversity Outcomes at ASU.

Gerber says they're not advocating specific policies.

"Rather, we're providing a methodology that can be used to more efficiently achieve biodiversity conservation objectives," she said.

She added that the approach can be scaled up globally and expanded to sectors other than agriculture.

"I'm most excited about this paper because I think it really represents a proof-of-concept of our agenda and our capacity to address these global biodiversity challenges," she said.

Nicholas Gerbis was a senior field correspondent for KJZZ from 2016 to 2024.