Part 2: How can managed landscapes contribute to biodiversity goals?

GLF Live on the role of agricultural stakeholders as partners in conservation

Currently, the Post-2020 Global Biodiversity Framework is in the final stages of being negotiated as the pathway for stopping and reversing our planet’s biodiversity crisis, the die-off of the variety of life on Earth. But it’s missing one set of landscapes in particular: agricultural and mixed landscapes. Aside from their role in meeting people’s needs, these managed landscapes are also crucial grounds for conserving and protecting species and their habitats, and their caretakers have a pivotal role to play in fostering this along.

The second conversation in this two-part GLF Live series on managed landscapes focused on how people using landscapes in the productive sector and ministries of environment can best collaborate to achieve conservation. In a keynote followed by a moderated discussion, we’ll hear from ministry leaders in Rwanda and Mexico on the lessons they’ve learned and how these can apply to other countries and communities working to balance development and biodiversity goals.

Read the associated White Paper, “Opportunities to Maximize the Role of Agricultural Ecosystems in Biodiversity Conservation in the Post-2020 Global Biodiversity Framework,” here.

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Audio en español

Listen back to Part 1 of the conversation, on how agro-ecosystems can support integration and connectivity of natural ecosystems, here.

Jean Pierre Mugabo is the current Director-General of Rwanda Forestry Authority (RFA). From 2017 to 2020 he was the head of the forestry department in Rwanda Water and Forestry Authority (RWFA), Ministry of Environment. Mugabo holds a masters degree in Agronomy and has remarkable experience in forest development programs and management.

Dr. Sol Ortiz is a biologist from the Faculty of Sciences of the National Autonomous University of Mexico (UNAM) and a doctor in ecology from the Institute of Ecology of UNAM. She has worked in the public sector since 2001, first at the National Institute of Ecology, as coordinator of the Biosafety Program. From 2007 to 2018, she joined the National Council of Science and Technology (CONACYT). Since December 2018, Dr. Ortiz has worked at the Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development on climate change, genetic resources for food and agriculture, soil conservation, integration of biodiversity in agriculture, and sustainability. Among other activities, Sol coordinates the development and implementation of the National Strategy for the Sustainable Use and Conservation of Pollinators in Mexico, acts as National Focal Point to the Global Soil Partnership, and also serves as Technical Secretary of the Committee on Genetic Resources for Food and Agriculture.

Adriana Vidal (moderator) is a Senior Forest Policy Officer at IUCN’s Forest Conservation Programme (FCP) where she works with government agencies, partners and international global spaces advocating for and supporting enhanced policy frameworks for forest conservation, restoration and sustainable landscape management approaches. She joined IUCN in 2015 and currently coordinates the FCP’s international policy work on climate change and biodiversity and provides expert advice for country-level policy influencing strategies and activities. Adriana previously worked for 8 years in the non-profit, public and private sectors in the USA and Peru, providing legal counsel and policy advice on REDD+, forest conservation and environmental and social compliance involved in extractive industries. Adriana holds a JD degree from the Pontifical Catholic University of Peru and an LLM from New York University. 

To learn more about this topic, here are two more discussions:

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