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      Three Gorges Project: Efforts and challenges for the environment

      , , , , , , ,
      Progress in Physical Geography
      SAGE Publications

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          Ecological and socioeconomic effects of China's policies for ecosystem services.

          To address devastating environmental crises and to improve human well-being, China has been implementing a number of national policies on payments for ecosystem services. Two of them, the Natural Forest Conservation Program (NFCP) and the Grain to Green Program (GTGP), are among the biggest programs in the world because of their ambitious goals, massive scales, huge payments, and potentially enormous impacts. The NFCP conserves natural forests through logging bans and afforestation with incentives to forest enterprises, whereas the GTGP converts cropland on steep slopes to forest and grassland by providing farmers with grain and cash subsidies. Overall ecological effects are beneficial, and socioeconomic effects are mostly positive. Whereas there are time lags in ecological effects, socioeconomic effects are more immediate. Both the NFCP and the GTGP also have global implications because they increase vegetative cover, enhance carbon sequestration, and reduce dust to other countries by controlling soil erosion. The future impacts of these programs may be even bigger. Extended payments for the GTGP have recently been approved by the central government for up to 8 years. The NFCP is likely to follow suit and receive renewed payments. To make these programs more effective, we recommend systematic planning, diversified funding, effective compensation, integrated research, and comprehensive monitoring. Effective implementation of these programs can also provide important experiences and lessons for other ecosystem service payment programs in China and many other parts of the world.
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            Ecology. Three-Gorges Dam--experiment in habitat fragmentation?

            Habitat fragmentation is the primary cause of the loss of biodiversity and ecosystem services, but its underlying processes and mechanisms remain poorly understood. Studies of islands and insular terrestrial habitats are essential for improving our understanding of habitat fragmentation. We argue that the Three-Gorges Dam, the largest that humans have ever created, presents a unique grand-scale natural experiment that allows ecologists to address a range of critical questions concerning the theory and practice of biodiversity conservation.
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              The Three Gorges Dam: an ecological perspective

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Progress in Physical Geography
                Progress in Physical Geography
                SAGE Publications
                0309-1333
                1477-0296
                December 13 2010
                June 08 2010
                : 34
                : 6
                : 741-754
                Article
                10.1177/0309133310370286
                0c8a2dbc-b71d-4d0c-8e6e-0db1c47ce408
                © 2010
                History

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