Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://ir.lib.seu.ac.lk/handle/123456789/7928
Title: Bridging the divide: reconciling stakeholder values for payment for ecosystem services
Other Titles: A framework for sustainable management in Batticaloa Lagoon, Sri Lanka
Authors: Partheepan, Kulasegaram
Musthafa, Muneeb M.
Bhavan, Thangamani
Murgante, Beniamino
Keywords: Lagoon
Ecosystem
Resources
Land use
Willingness to accept
Willingness to pay
Issue Date: 21-Nov-2025
Publisher: Laboratory of Land Use, Mobility and Environment DICEA - Department of Civil, Building and Environmental Engineering University of Naples Federico
Citation: TeMAJournal of Land Use, Mobility and Environment Special Issue 2.2025 pp 47-66.
Abstract: Coastal lagoons are vital and productive ecosystems globally. However, recent anthropogenic pressures have substantially degraded these environments. The sustainability of lagoon resources critically depends on stakeholder engagement. Employing a choice experiment, this study quantifies the divergent preferences of key stakeholder groups–fishermen, tourists, and flood-affected residents–for preservation versus degradation scenarios in Sri Lanka's Batticaloa Lagoon. The survey targeted stakeholders using stratified sampling and reached 405 participants in the Batticaloa Lagoon Watershed. The analysis further assessed local perceptions of degradation and stakeholders' compensation expectations (WTA). The Choice Experiment and multinomial logit model identified significant conflicts between conservation valuations and compensation expectations. This novel empirical application directly compares within-subject Willingness-to-Pay and WTA measures, revealing significant valuation asymmetries that complicate Payment for Ecosystem Services (PES) design. These results provide empirical evidence of pronounced preference diversity among lagoon users in the study area. This study argues that management decisions must account for heterogeneous stakeholder valuations, rather than universal conservation ideals. The findings demonstrate the inevitability of one-size-fits-all PES policy failure and propose a differentiated PES framework with tailored incentives for fishermen, tourists, and flood-affected residents.
URI: http://ir.lib.seu.ac.lk/handle/123456789/7928
ISSN: 1970-9889
1970-9870
Appears in Collections:Research Articles

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