Back to news

Piloting of the Biodiversity Monitoring Protocol for REDD+ conducted in Parsa Wildlife Reserve, Nepal

Scope of Biodiversity monitoring protocol for REDD+ in Nepal

Under the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC), there is a requirement for countries prior to seeking result-based financing to show how all the social and environmental safeguards presented in the Cancun Safeguards are addressed and respected.

These safeguards ensure that REDD+ implementation does not have unintended or unanticipated adverse impacts. The safeguards also accommodate the need to address biodiversity conservation. However, in spite of these checks, none of the standards currently proposed include significant guidance on biodiversity monitoring.

2 mins Read

70% Complete
Setting up of camera trap Photo: Pradyumna Rana/ICIMOD

Though a few biodiversity monitoring manuals and guidelines from the Government of Nepal (GoN), National Trust for Nature Conservation (NTNC), and other organizations are available in Nepal, biodiversity monitoring in relation to REDD+ remains largely undeveloped. In addition, existing protocols and actions do not provide clear methodological guidance for REDD+ projects to meet Climate Community and Biodiversity Standards (CCB Standards) or other multiple benefit standards. The lack of this kind of protocol is a key factor constraining the adoption of good practices, especially given that many REDD+ projects are implemented in biodiversity hotspots and protected areas. In this context, the Department of National Parks and Wildlife Conservation (DNPWC), NTNC and ICIMOD have begun collaboration to develop a Biodiversity Monitoring Protocol (BMP) for REDD+.


Caption: Indian Nightjar caught in Mist Net, Photo: Pradyumna Rana/ICIMOD

The draft protocol was recently tested in the Parsa Wildlife Reserve (PWR) under the lead of NTNC. PWR fall in the Terai Arc Landscape for which the Government of Nepal is developing an Emission Reduction Programme Document (ERPD) to be submitted to the Forest Carbon Partnership Facility (FCPF) of the World Bank.

Piloting exercise for the BMP for REDD+

To pilot the protocol, NTNC led a two-week exercise in February 2017 in three selected hotspots of the Parsa Wildlife Reserve: Bhata-Rambhori (grassland-forest ecosystem), Halkoriya Daha (wetland-grassland ecosystem), and Kaminidaha (wetland-forest ecosystem). The aim of the piloting exercise was to identify from a list which tools and techniques were most relevant for biodiversity monitoring for REDD+. Participants in this exercise included thematic and field experts from DNPWC, the REDD Implementation Centre (REDD IC), the Department of Forests under the Ministry of Forests and Soil Conservation, Nepal, NTNC, ICIMOD, and GIZ.

The team employed the same methodology used in the President Chure Conservation Programme (RCCP): plots 2×2 km2. In each plot, a variety of biodiversity monitoring tools were used: camera traps for large and small mammals, Sherman traps, live traps, and pitfall traps for small mammals and rodents.

Researchers used transect walks and the point count method to monitor birds, mammals, and insects. They also employed a mist net for monitoring bats in the area. Not only was the REDD+ protocol improved as a result of this exercise, but Parsa was able to update its mammals database with a robust count of species. The pygmy shrew, the smallest mammal in Nepal, was spotted in Parsa for the first time.

NTNC is analyzing the collected data to generate a formal recommendation for the protocol, which will later be sent to DNPWC and REDD IC for endorsement.

Stay current

Stay up to date on what’s happening around the HKH with our most recent publications and find out how you can help by subscribing to our mailing list.

Sign Up

Related content

Continue exploring this topic

14 Dec 2015 KSL
Toilets Clean up Kailash Sacred Landscape

  The International Centre for Integrated Mountain Development (ICIMOD) in collaboration with Community-led Total Sanitation (CLTS) Foundation and Central Himalayan Environment ...

4 Apr 2018 News
ICIMOD Regional Board Member Ding Zhongli Elected Vice Chairperson of China National People’s Congress Standing Committee

Born in 1957, Ding is a Chinese geologist and an academician at the Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS). He ...

8 Apr 2015 News
Ramkumari Kumal’s story

How poor families with farmlands that are at risk of floods and animals’ foraying into them can barely eke out ...

23 Aug 2016 News
Assessment Tools Manage Water Resources Better

More than twenty water-resource management practitioners and researchers from China, In-dia and Nepal participated in a five-day training on the ...

22 Jul 2015 News
Community members speak of change in perception

On 14 July 2015, community members from the village of Dapcha in Nepal’s Kavre District gathered in a circle near ...

27 Mar 2015 News
SERVIR-Himalaya takes satellite imagery technology to the grassroots

Community members learn to use satellite imagery for monitoring their forest More than 30 community members from Khayar Khola watershed in ...

22 Jan 2016 News
Partnering for Better Livelihoods in Upper Indus

‘Agricultural Water, Energy and Hazard Management in the Upper Indus Basin for Improved Livelihood’, a special project in Upper Hunza, ...

19 Dec 2019 HI-LIFE
Promoting local food systems and food-based value chain in the Far-Eastern Himalayan Landscape

The workshop involved 30 participants (including 10 women) from government bodies, academia, I/NGOs, the private sector, and communities ...