Diverse values regarding nature are related to stable forests: the case of Indigenous lands in Panama
2025
Camilo Alejo | Manuel Ortega | Brian Leung | Oliver T. Coomes | Catherine Potvin
Local land use emerges from peoples’ worldviews and values regarding nature. In neotropical forest landscapes, largely inhabited by Indigenous peoples, exploring how Indigenous land use and underlying values may converge with global values such as carbon sequestration and biodiversity conservation may provide lessons to achieve equitable ecological and social outcomes. However, most studies have focused on exploring the influence of Indigenous land use on avoiding deforestation, while few examine how local values relate to deforestation, disturbances, and forest cover stability. To address these gaps, we analyzed deforestation and disturbance spatial-temporal patterns in Indigenous lands in Panama between 2000 and 2020, using a continuous change detection algorithm and generalized additive models. Additionally, we performed participatory mapping across three Indigenous lands to identify instrumental and relational values linked to land use. Our results show that disturbances followed by recovery are the dominant cause of land cover changes in Indigenous lands. Moreover, the area of stable forest cover in Indigenous lands until 2020 was two times higher than in protected areas and other lands lacking protection. The generalized additive models demonstrate that deforestation and disturbance in Indigenous lands exhibit a low density, spatial concentration on forest edges, and temporal stability, explaining forest cover stability. According to participatory mapping, obtaining food from agriculture mainly occurs where deforestation and disturbance are more concentrated. In contrast, other instrumental (i.e., gathering food and household materials) and relational values (e.g., sacred sites) are more dispersed in forests. By weaving scales and perspectives, our results illustrate that diverse values regarding nature framed by Indigenous worldviews can beget stability to forest cover, contributing to Indigenous peoples' quality of life, climate change mitigation, and biodiversity conservation. To align these contributions with global climate and biodiversity targets, it is crucial to disarticulate land ownership from deforestation, grant formal titles to Indigenous lands, and foster equitable incentives to Indigenous peoples.
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