Literature DB >> 18173473

Indigenous, colonist, and government Impacts on Nicaragua's Bosawas Reserve.

Anthony Stocks1, Benjamin McMahan, Peter Taber.   

Abstract

We studied the impacts of colonists, two groups of indigenous residents (Miskitu and Mayangna), and management by the Nicaraguan Ministry of Environment and Natural Resources (MARENA) on the forest of the Bosawas International Biosphere Reserve. Indigenous people and colonists subsist on the natural resources of the reserve, and MARENA is responsible for protecting the area from colonization and illicit exploitation. Using geostatistical procedures and Landsat images at three different time periods, we compared per capita deforestation and boundary stabilization in areas with colonists and areas with indigenous peoples. We also examined whether the Mayangna deforested less than the Miskitu and whether the Nicaraguan government has effectively defended the Bosawas boundary against the advance of the agricultural frontier. In addition, we analyzed the current distribution of land uses within the reserve and its contiguous indigenous areas with a supervised classification of current land cover. Indigenous demarcations protected the forest successfully, whereas the Bosawas boundary itself did not inhibit colonization and consequent deforestation. Indigenous farmers deforested significantly less per capita than colonists, and the two indigenous groups in Bosawas did not differ significantly in their effects on the forest. Our results show that indigenous common-property institutions and indigenous defense of homeland have been powerful factors in protecting the forests of Bosawas and that the difficult evolution of a nested cross-scale governance system in Bosawas-under pressure from indigenous peoples-is probably the key to the forest's survival thus far.

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Year:  2007        PMID: 18173473     DOI: 10.1111/j.1523-1739.2007.00793.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Conserv Biol        ISSN: 0888-8892            Impact factor:   6.560


  3 in total

1.  Contrasting colonist and indigenous impacts on amazonian forests.

Authors:  Flora Lu; Clark Gray; Richard E Bilsborrow; Carlos F Mena; Christine M Erlien; Jason Bremner; Alisson Barbieri; Stephen J Walsh
Journal:  Conserv Biol       Date:  2010-03-11       Impact factor: 6.560

2.  Hunters and hunting across indigenous and colonist communities at the forest-agriculture interface: an ethnozoological study from the Peruvian Amazon.

Authors:  Wendy Francesconi; Vincent Bax; Genowefa Blundo-Canto; Simon Willcock; Sandra Cuadros; Martha Vanegas; Marcela Quintero; Carlos A Torres-Vitolas
Journal:  J Ethnobiol Ethnomed       Date:  2018-08-10       Impact factor: 2.733

Review 3.  The Impact of Deforestation, Urbanization, and Changing Land Use Patterns on the Ecology of Mosquito and Tick-Borne Diseases in Central America.

Authors:  Diana I Ortiz; Marta Piche-Ovares; Luis M Romero-Vega; Joseph Wagman; Adriana Troyo
Journal:  Insects       Date:  2021-12-23       Impact factor: 2.769

  3 in total

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