International Fund for Agricultural DevelopmentBakun Indigenous Tribes Organization (BITO)The World Agroforestry Centre (ICRAF)2016-04-192016-04-192006-10-23http://hdl.handle.net/10919/66334Metadata only recordOne of the activities that the Bakun people have been involved in, as part of the partnership with IFAD, has been reforestation and agroforestry projects that increase their livelihood opportunities and to protect their natural resources. While the two hydroelectric plants operating in the watershed pay taxes to the local and national government it is unclear how much of this support gets back to the local communities. RUPES and the local people are working to implement methods for conditional payment for environmental services.text/plainen-USIn CopyrightPayments for environmental servicesLivelihoodsIndigenous communityTropical zonesForest ecosystemsHydropowerPovertyReforestationAgroforestryTraditional farmingAgricultural ecosystemsAgricultureHydroelectric powerWater regulationBakun indigenous tribes organization (bito)Watershed protection servicesUpland farmingConditional paymentsSedimentationOpportunity costsPoverty alleviationWatershedBakun indigenous people use modern mechanisms for selling environmental services to preserve a traditional way of life without its poverty trapsRUPES - Rewarding upland poor for environmental services: Bakun watershed case studyAbstract