A conservation failure in Sumatra serves a cautionary tale for PES schemes

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The Kerinci Seblat landscape, a highly biodiverse rainforest in western Sumatra, is one of the Indonesian island’s crown jewels. Anchored by the 14,000-square-kilometer (5,405-square-mile) Kerinci Seblat National Park, its mountainous terrain is home to Sumatran tigers and elephants, more than 300 bird species, and the notoriously smelly corpse flower (Amorphophallus titanum). Mount Kerinci, an active […]

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Papua New Guinea , Indonesia , West Kalimantan , Kalimantan Barat , Indonesian , Luke Mackin , James Erbaugh , Kerinci Seblat , Sinan Serhadli , Mount Kerinci , Nanga Lauk , Society Natural Resources , World Bank , Kerinci Seblat National Park , Environmental Research Letters , Dartmouth University , World Bank Funded , Nature Conservancy , Kerinci Seblat Integrated Conservation , Development Project , Wikimedia Commons , Southeast Asia , Nanga Lauk Village Forest , Natural Resources , Conservation Biology ,

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