| Literature DB >> 21644016 |
Jean-Laurent Pfund1, John Daniel Watts, Manuel Boissière, Amandine Boucard, Renee Marie Bullock, Andree Ekadinata, Sonya Dewi, Laurène Feintrenie, Patrice Levang, Salla Rantala, Douglas Sheil, Terry Sunderland, Terence Clarence Heethom Sunderland, Zora Lea Urech.
Abstract
We examine five forested landscapes in Africa (Cameroon, Madagascar, and Tanzania) and Asia (Indonesia and Laos) at different stages of landscape change. In all five areas, forest cover (outside of protected areas) continues to decrease despite local people's recognition of the importance of forest products and services. After forest conversion, agroforestry systems and fallows provide multiple functions and valued products, and retain significant biodiversity. But there are indications that such land use is transitory, with gradual simplification and loss of complex agroforests and fallows as land use becomes increasingly individualistic and profit driven. In Indonesia and Tanzania, farmers favor monocultures (rubber and oil palm, and sugarcane, respectively) for their high financial returns, with these systems replacing existing complex agroforests. In the study sites in Madagascar and Laos, investments in agroforests and new crops remain rare, despite government attempts to eradicate swidden systems and their multifunctional fallows. We discuss approaches to assessing local values related to landscape cover and associated goods and services. We highlight discrepancies between individual and collective responses in characterizing land use tendencies, and discuss the effects of accessibility on land management. We conclude that a combination of social, economic, and spatially explicit assessment methods is necessary to inform land use planning. Furthermore, any efforts to modify current trends will require clear incentives, such as through carbon finance. We speculate on the nature of such incentive schemes and the possibility of rewarding the provision of ecosystem services at a landscape scale and in a socially equitable manner.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21644016 PMCID: PMC3142544 DOI: 10.1007/s00267-011-9689-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Environ Manage ISSN: 0364-152X Impact factor: 3.266
Fig. 1Locations of the five selected sites, and size and forest cover of each studied landscape
Population density, forest cover, and summaries of the main policy drivers, land and resource management systems, and market commodities in the five study landscapes
| Site | Population density (person/km2) | Natural forest cover of the study zone | Main policy drivers for conservation and development | Key elements of the resource management system | Main market commodities | Dominant agroforestry systems | Land use management type |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cameroon: Takamanda-Mone Technical Operation Unit | 10–30 | 94% (protected areas, forest reserves and concession, unallocated (forest)) | Ongoing land zoning including the recent creation of a national park, logging concession included in the Technical Operation Unit, road development | NTFP harvesting, fishing, hunting, cassava, cocoa timber | Cocoa, oil palm, timber, bush mango | Cocoa, bush mango, oil palm | Swidden agriculture, smallholder |
| Laos: Viengkham District | 20 | 48% (mostly in the protected area for the study zone) | Opium eradication, land use planning to counter shifting cultivation, conservation and forestry policies, village resettlement | Upland and paddy rice cultivation, NTFP harvesting, cattle, monocrop plantations | Rice, teak, pigeon pea | Shifting cultivation with fallows | Swidden agriculture, tree plantations, smallholder |
| Madagascar: Manompana corridor | 20 | 37% (mostly outside the protected area in the study zone) | Conservation and forestry policies, including devolution of management rights, and internationally funded projects, generally conservation-oriented | Upland rice cultivation, clove trees and homegardens, timber, zebu, poultry | Rice, cloves, coffee, vanilla | Shifting cultivation with fallows, mixed homegardens and clove and fruit trees, vanilla cultivation | Swidden agriculture, smallholder |
| Tanzania: East Usambaras | 90 | 36% (mostly protected) | Conservation and forestry policies, land allocation and land use planning | Maize, cassava, beans, spices, sugarcane, tea | Spices, sugarcane, tea | Cardamom agroforests, shifting cultivation | Smallholders with some industrial tea plantations |
| Indonesia: Bungo District | 35 | 17% (mostly protected) | Transmigration (large governmental agricultural colonization programs), forestry regulation, land use planning, agro-industrial concessions | Paddy rice, oil palm, rubber, fruit | Palm oil, rubber | Rubber and durian agroforests | Smallholder with strong industrial trends |
Basic matrix for field surveys, with landscape components forming the column headings, and functions or use categories the raw headings
| Forests | Fallows | Homegardens, agroforests | Tree plantations | Swamps | Agric. fields | Others | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. Food (incl. hunting) | |||||||
| 2. Medicinal products | |||||||
| 3. Construction | |||||||
| 4. Firewood | |||||||
| 5. Tools, basketry, etc. | |||||||
| 6. Marketed items | |||||||
| 7. Rituals, sacred/magic aspects | |||||||
| 8. Water services | |||||||
| 9. Conservation services | |||||||
| 10. Other |
Fig. 2Average importance given to self-consumed and marketed goods as well as to regulating/supporting and cultural services, aggregated by sites (Takamanda/Cameroon, Viengkham/Laos, Manompana/Madagascar, Usambara/Tanzania, Bungo/Indonesia)
Fig. 3Relative importance given to specific categories of self-consumed goods, aggregated by sites
Fig. 4Annual deforestation rates outside protected areas from the 1990s through to 2000s (right axis) and the most recent percentage of non-forest area in the five landscapes (left axis)
Fig. 5Average importance given to functions of forests and farmlands in Takamanda, Cameroon
Fig. 6Types and values of landscape components as scored by focus groups in three villages in Laos. Phadheng is remote: it is two hours on foot to the nearest dirt road, where Bouammi is located, and about three hours to the asphalt road that leads to Muangmuay
Fig. 7Importance of income generation from landscape components in Manompana, Madagascar. The three villages differ in terms of accessibility: Bevalaina is less than 30 minutes from the main road on foot, Ambofampana is four hours, and Maromitety eight hours
Fig. 8Annual income generated by forest products (timber and NTFPs) in the study villages of Madagascar. Maromitety is the most remote (eight hours from the main road on foot), Ambofampana is intermediate (four hours), and Bevalaina is the most accessible (30 minutes). Indicative net returns to agricultural labor on fields are given as a reference. 1000 MGA (Malagasy Ariary) are as high as about 0.5 USD
Fig. 9Relative importance of the landscape components described in three villages in the East Usambaras, Tanzania. Misalai and Shambangenda are located in a mountain corridor area accessible by dirt road, and Kwatango is in a lower forested area, accessible by poor-quality dirt road
Fig. 10Recognized functions of young agroforests in three villages in Bungo District, Indonesia. Lubuk Beringin is close to the forested area. Danau is close to the district capital and has the least forest cover and Tebing Tinggi is in between
Fig. 11Recognized functions of old agroforests in three villages in Bungo District, Indonesia. Lubuk Beringin village is close to the forested area. Danau is close to the district capital and has the least forest cover and Tebing Tinggi is in between
Fig. 12Perceptions among Bungo residents of the proportions of the three main land uses in their village territory, at present (beginning of the arrows) and in 20 years (end of the arrows). Results were averaged and clustered in 3 categories of 4 villages, Lubuk Beringin is in the “low”, Tebing Tinggi in the “intermediate” and Danau in the high intensification category. Adapted from Therville 2008, based on a survey of 12 villages in Bungo District