José López-García
National Autonomous University of Mexico
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Featured researches published by José López-García.
Environmental Conservation | 2009
Jordi Honey-Rosés; José López-García; Eduardo Rendón-Salinas; Armando Peralta-Higuera; Carlos Galindo-Leal
Paying landowners to conserve forests is a promising new strategy to protect biodiversity and ecosystem services. However to succeed with this approach, programme managers need reliable monitoring data to make informed payment decisions. This includes withholding payment from landowners who do not meet conservation objectives. The monitoring method used for the Monarch Butterfly Conservation Fund compared aerial photographs and conducted field sampling to identify forest changes. The comparison of aerial photographs showed that 161 hectares of forest were degraded in the central core zone of the Monarch Butterfly Biosphere Reserve in Mexico between 2001 and 2003. As a result, payment was withheld from one of 13 landowners. Analysis of high resolution (0.6 m) digital aerial photographs did not detect finer scale changes, despite obtaining an average pixel resolution 1000 times greater than Landsat satellite imagery. This suggests that current payment for ecosystem services programmes are underestimating environmental change and overpaying non-compliant participants. In addition, selecting a decision rule to enforce payment conditionality raised new questions about how much ecosystem degradation should be permitted before withholding payment. Sound decisions about withholding payment cannot be developed until the marginal value of ecosystem services is better understood. Until then, payment thresholds can be based on specific policy objectives.
Conservation Biology | 2014
Omar Vidal; José López-García; Eduardo Rendón-Salinas
We used aerial photographs, satellite images, and field surveys to monitor forest cover in the core zones of the Monarch Butterfly Biosphere Reserve in Mexico from 2001 to 2012. We used our data to assess the effectiveness of conservation actions that involved local, state, and federal authorities and community members (e.g., local landowners and private and civil organizations) in one of the world’s most iconic protected areas. From 2001 through 2012, 1254 ha were deforested (i.e., cleared areas had <10% canopy cover), 925 ha were degraded (i.e., areas for which canopy forest decreased), and 122 ha were affected by climatic conditions. Of the total 2179 ha of affected area, 2057 ha were affected by illegal logging: 1503 ha by large-scale logging and 554 ha by small-scale logging. Mexican authorities effectively enforced efforts to protect the monarch reserve, particularly from 2007 to 2012. Those efforts, together with the decade-long financial support from Mexican and international philanthropists and businesses to create local alternative-income generation and employment, resulted in the decrease of large-scale illegal logging from 731 ha affected in 2005–2007 to none affected in 2012, although small-scale logging is of growing concern. However, dire regional social and economic problems remain, and they must be addressed to ensure the reserve’s long-term conservation. The monarch butterfly (Danaus plexippus) overwintering colonies in Mexico—which engage in one of the longest known insect migrations—are threatened by deforestation, and a multistakeholder, regional, sustainable-development strategy is needed to protect the reserve.
Journal of Environmental Management | 2014
Lilia Manzo-Delgado; José López-García; Irasema Alcántara-Ayala
With international concern about the rates of deforestation worldwide, particular attention has been paid to Latin America. Forest conservation programmes in Mexico include Payment for Environmental Services (PES), a scheme that has been successfully introduced in the Monarch Butterfly Biosphere Reserve. To seek further evidence of the role of PES in lessening land degradation processes in a temperate region, the conservation state of the Cerro Prieto ejido within the Reserve was assessed by an analysis of changes in vegetation cover and land-use between 1971 and 2013. There were no changes in the total forest surface area, but the relative proportions of the different classes of cover density had changed. In 1971, closed and semi-closed forest occupied 247.81 ha and 5.38 ha, 82.33% and 1.79% of the total area of the ejido, respectively. By 2013, closed forest had decreased to 230.38 ha (76.54% of the ejido), and semi-closed cover was 17.23 ha (5.72% of the ejido), suggesting that some semi-closed forest had achieved closed status. The final balance between forest losses and recovery was: 29.63 ha were lost, whereas 13.72 ha were recovered. Losses were mainly linked to a sanitation harvest programme to control the bark beetle Scolytus mundus. Ecotourism associated with forest conservation in the Cerro Prieto ejido has been considered by inhabitants as a focal alternative for economic development. Consequently, it is essential to develop a well-planned and solidly structured approach based on social cohesion to foster a community-led sustainable development at local level.
Journal of Maps | 2010
José López-García; Álvaro Vega Guzmán
Abstract Please click here to download the map associated with this article. The Monarch Butterfly Biosphere Reserve in Mexico, with an area of 56,259 hectares, is one of the most important protected natural areas in the world; each year there arrives in its fir forests (Abies religiosa) a remarkable migratory insect, the Monarch butterfly (Danaus plexippus L.), which sets out from southern Canada and the northern USA on a journey of more than 4,000 km. The vegetation and land use of the reserve has been mapped by photo-interpretation of digital aerial photographs from February 2009 with a spatial resolution of 40 cm per pixel. The photographs were printed at a scale of 1:10000 and interpreted using the conventional techniques of photo-interpretation. The plant communities were confirmed by field surveys and digitized on screen, at an average scale 1:5,000, by means of direct comparison of photographic elements within an ortho-corrected mosaic from 2003 and the interpreted photographs from 2009. Classification of the categories of vegetation and land use, both during photo-interpretation and for the composition of the final map legend, was based on the national forest inventory of Mexico, 2000. This method, using digital aerial photographs and combining techniques of photo-interpretation and geographic information systems, has allowed the production of a detailed map.
Journal of Environmental Management | 2014
José López-García; Lilia Manzo-Delgado; Irasema Alcántara-Ayala
Forest conservation plays a significant role in environmental sustainability. In Mexico only 8.48 million ha of forest are used for conservation of biodiversity. Payment for Environmental Services in the Monarch Butterfly Biosphere Reserve, one of the most important national protected areas, contributes to the conservation of these forests. In the Reserve, production of rainbow trout has been important for the rural communities who need to conserve the forest cover in order to maintain the hibernation cycle of the butterfly. Aquaculture is a highly productive activity for these protected areas, since it harnesses the existing water resources. In this study, changes from 1999 to 2012 in vegetation and land-use cover in the El Lindero basin within the Reserve were evaluated in order to determine the conservation status and to consider the feasibility of aquaculture as a means of sustainable development at community level. Evaluation involved stereoscopic interpretation of digital aerial photographs from 1999 to 2012 at 1:10,000 scale, comparative analysis by orthocorrected mosaics and restitution on the mosaics. Between 1999 and 2012, forested land recovered by 28.57 ha (2.70%) at the expense of non-forested areas, although forest degradation was 3.59%. Forest density increased by 16.87%. In the 46 ha outside the Reserve, deforestation spread by 0.26%, and land use change was 0.11%. The trend towards change in forest cover is closely related to conservation programmes, particularly payment for not extracting timber, reforestation campaigns and surveillance, whose effects have been exploited for the development of rural aquaculture; this is a new way to improve the socio-economic status of the population, to avoid logging and to achieve environmental sustainability in the Reserve.
Investigaciones Geográficas | 2000
José Luis Palacio-Prieto; Gerardo Bocco; Alejandro Velázquez; Jean-François Mas; Francisco Takaki-Takaki; Arturo Victoria; Laura Luna-González; Gabriela Gómez-Rodríguez; José López-García; Mardocheo Palma Muñoz; Irma Trejo-Vázquez; Armando Peralta Higuera; Jorge Prado-Molina; Adriana Rodríguez-Aguilar; Rafael Mayorga-Saucedo; Francisco González Medrano
Conservation Biology | 2002
Lincoln P. Brower; Guillermo Castilleja; Armando Peralta; José López-García; Luis A. Bojórquez-Tapia; Salomón Dı́az; Daniela Melgarejo; Monica Missrie
Landslides | 2012
Irasema Alcántara-Ayala; José López-García; Ricardo J. Garnica
Zonas Áridas | 2007
Jesús David Gómez-Díaz; Alejandro Ismael Monterroso-Rivas; Juan A. Tinoco-Rueda; José López-García
Investigaciones Geográficas | 2008
Álvaro Vega Guzmán; José López-García; Lilia de Lourdes Manzo Delgado