ERA Brazil Methodology for Biodiversity Stewardship Credit

Overview

Methodology Name: Biodiversity Stewardship Credit Methodology: Protocol for Ideation, Implementation & Monitoring

Developer: Ecosystem Regeneration Associates (ERA)

Sectoral Scope: Agriculture, Forestry, and Other Land Use

Abstract:

This crediting protocol guides landholders to become biodiversity stewards by applying interventions (project activities) that generate positive outcomes for the selected Umbrella Species and ecosystem under management. Landholders must evaluate and monitor umbrella species health, habitat quality and understand the local challenges and disturbances to establish a set of interventions that will be applied over the lifetime of the project. These interventions are established using the Theory of Change framework whereby the long-term goals are defined, as well as the desired outcomes, the interventions and the indicators.

To apply this crediting protocol to a biodiversity conservation project, it is necessary to submit evidence of the presence of the chosen Umbrella Species in the Property Area, through monitoring methods such as camera traps, footprints, bioacoustics, eDNA, etc. Data and evidence must be collected and exhibited in the Monitoring Reports along with the adoption and implementation of the project interventions. The price of the credit is defined by the cost of conservation, meaning the annual costs of the interventions adopted. These costs must be transparently reported in the Monitoring Reports. These Monitoring Reports will be verified by an external auditor to ensure all procedures have been followed in accordance with the standards.

FINAL VERSIONS:

Methodology:

Umbrella Species Guideline:

Templates:

Document History

Historical versions that can be viewed to understand the process of reviews and updates that have happened with this methodology.

Initial Submissions

The initial submission was a Biodiversity Methodology for Keystone Species Stewardship submitted on June 18, 2022. An additional Keystone Species Guideline focusing on the Jaguar as an example was also submitted.

Last updated