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Bioprospecting and Incentives for Biodiversity Conservation: Lessons from the History of Paclitaxel

In: Sustainable Resource Development in the 21st Century

Author

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  • George B. Frisvold

    (University of Arizona)

Abstract

Plants and other organisms remain an important source of new medicines, either directly or as sources of molecular building blocks or information for drug development. Bioprospecting contracts between pharmaceutical companies and species-rich source countries have been touted as a way for developing countries to capture greater gains from their genetic resources and to increase their incentives to preserve their biodiversity. This case study of the discovery and commercial development of the anticancer drug paclitaxel from the Pacific yew tree highlights neglected issues in debates over bioprospecting and conservation incentives. Paclitaxel’s discovery, commercialization, and resource use illustrate how bioprospecting can substitute one biodiversity threat (habitat conversion, when genetic resources are not valued) for another threat (overharvesting, when they are valued). Whether creation of market demand for genetic resources encourages or discourages biodiversity conservation depends crucially on underlying property rights and management regimes for common property resources.

Suggested Citation

  • George B. Frisvold, 2023. "Bioprospecting and Incentives for Biodiversity Conservation: Lessons from the History of Paclitaxel," Natural Resource Management and Policy, in: David Zilberman & Jeffrey M. Perloff & Cyndi Spindell Berck (ed.), Sustainable Resource Development in the 21st Century, pages 179-206, Springer.
  • Handle: RePEc:spr:nrmchp:978-3-031-24823-8_14
    DOI: 10.1007/978-3-031-24823-8_14
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