Trees in the wild can make for difficult research subjects. They take up a lot of space, and they can grow slowly, sometimes taking decades to start bearing fruit.Many fruit tree species have large seeds that can’t be stored for conservation or later use in a seed bank the way smaller seeds can be, according to Ian Dawson, an associate fellow at ICRAF. That’s because many of these seeds die when they are dried and cooled, processes that are necessary for seed storage. Instead, some research institutions maintain gene banks of living trees.“People talk quite a lot about the optimum approach for tree conservation being circa situ,” Dawson says—that is, on farmland, close to the natural forest environment where the trees originally came from, even if the forest itself may no longer be there. Indeed, this may be the most promising approach so far to conserving indigenous fruit trees.Across Cameroon, ICRAF researchers have been collaborating with local farmers who choose from the wild the types of trees they want to grow. Leakey says that farmers, when asked what they wanted to improve in their agricultural systems, replied that they wanted to grow the disappearing species they used to gather. ICRAF agroforesters help the farmers select and improve the best varieties, at the same time teaching them how to propagate the trees from cuttings or grafts. This process, called participatory domestication,, started for indigenous fruit trees in Cameroon in the mid-1990s, recalls Leakey, who helped launch the project.Today, ICRAF works in more than 500 Cameroonian villages with more than 15 types of indigenous fruit trees, including safou (Dacryodes edulis) and bush mango (Irvingia gabonensis). Ann Degrande, a socioeconomist with ICRAF in Cameroon, says some farmers plant these trees among other crops near their home, but many integrate them on larger (but still relatively small) cacao or coffee farms. Cacao and coffee are major cash crops in humid parts of West Africa, and both grow well in shade, which the fruit trees can help provide. This may be considered a form of crop intensification—assuming the cacao or coffee density is not reduced—but more importantly for ICRAF researchers, it’s also considered crop diversification “because you produce a more diverse range of [products] per unit of land,” says Degrande.
Authors: Sarah Whitmee; Andy Haines; Chris Beyrer; Frederick Boltz; Anthony G Capon; Braulio Ferreira de Souza Dias; Alex Ezeh; Howard Frumkin; Peng Gong; Peter Head; Richard Horton; Georgina M Mace; Robert Marten; Samuel S Myers; Sania Nishtar; Steven A Osofsky; Subhrendu K Pattanayak; Montira J Pongsiri; Cristina Romanelli; Agnes Soucat; Jeanette Vega; Derek Yach Journal: Lancet Date: 2015-07-15 Impact factor: 79.321