| Literature DB >> 29520438 |
Janet Lowore1, Julia Meaton2, Adrian Wood3.
Abstract
In parts of the developing world, deforestation rates are high and poverty is chronic and pervasive. Addressing these issues through the commercialization of non-timber forest products (NTFPs) has been widely researched, tested, and discussed. While the evidence is inconclusive, there is growing understanding of what works and why, and this paper examines the acknowledged success and failure factors. African forest honey has been relatively overlooked as an NTFP, an oversight this paper addresses. Drawing on evidence from a long-established forest conservation, livelihoods, and trade development initiative in SW Ethiopia, forest honey is benchmarked against accepted success and failure factors and is found to be a near-perfect NTFP. The criteria are primarily focused on livelihood impacts and consequently this paper makes recommendations for additional criteria directly related to forest maintenance.Entities:
Keywords: Beekeeping; Ethiopia; Forest conservation; Honey; Livelihoods; NTFP
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29520438 PMCID: PMC5999120 DOI: 10.1007/s00267-018-1015-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Environ Manage ISSN: 0364-152X Impact factor: 3.266
Notable NTFP research collections
| Research | Reference to honey? |
|---|---|
| CIFOR’s comparative case studies of commercial production and trade of NTFPs (Ruiz Pérez et al. | None of the 61 cases concerned honey. Honey is mentioned once in a list of types of NTFPs |
| Riches of the forest seriesa | Of 61 cases, one discusses honey harvesting in the Philippines |
| Forest products livelihoods and conservation seriesb | Of 61 cases, no case concerns honey |
| Volume 1 - Asia (Kusters and Belcher | |
| The literature resource of the Poverty and Conservation Learning Group ( | Out of 1800 articles only three mention honey in their titles or abstracts |
| Study of ten NTFP products from 18 marginalized communities in Bolivia and Mexico (Marshall et al. | Honey not mentioned |
| NTFPs in the global context (Shackleton et al. | In this 286-page book honey is mentioned six times (Zambian and Tanzanian honey exports) |
aPart of CIFOR’s NTFP Case Comparison study—not all the same 61 cases
bPart of CIFOR’s NTFP Case Comparison study—not all the same 61 cases
Success and failure factors that have been shown to impact on the outcomes of NTFP trade
| References | T/L/C | |
|---|---|---|
| ‘‘Failure’’ factors | ||
| Inferior: this concerns perishability, seasonality, and economic inferiority, i.e., product is rejected when incomes rise | Neumann and Hirsch | T |
| Substitutable: NTFPs can be easily replaced by manufactured or farmed alternatives, undermining sustainable trade | Arnold and Pérez | T |
| Unmanageable: hard to manipulate quantity or quality of product | Belcher and Schrekenberg | T |
| Elite capture: as a product increases in value, more powerful actors displace the original NTFP harvesters, and capture the benefits | Dove | L |
| Poverty trap: decreasing prices force NTFP harvesters to collect more to earn the same | Belcher et al. | L |
| Boom and bust: product is commercialized bringing income benefits until the resource becomes scarce, expensive, and ultimately replaced | Homma | T |
| Over-exploitation: resource is over-harvested, causing depletion or extinction | Cunningham and Mbenkum | C |
| Diversity in the forest works against commercialization because not enough of the desired product | Neumann and Hirsch | T |
| Product development, for new special products, can take a long time | Belcher and Schrekenberg | T |
| ‘‘Success’’ factors | ||
| The natural resource base must be abundant to sustain viable trade | Cunningham | T |
| Sustaining a market requires quality, quantity, and timeliness | Cunningham | T |
| Adding value, if possible, can help grow and sustain beneficial trade | Cunningham | L |
| Clear rights to land/not an open access situation aids positive outcomes | Neumann and Hirsch | L and C |
| Local self-sufficiency should not be undermined | Arnold and Pérez | L |
| Conflict resolution mechanisms are necessary | Cunningham | T, L, C |
| Price incentives must be right | Cunningham | T |
| Visionary champions make a difference | Cunningham | T |
| Niche markets can reduce competition | Cunningham | T |
| Strategic partnerships are important | Cunningham | T |
| Additional factors | ||
| Where earlier forms of trade precede an increase in demand, existing control systems may protect the resource from being plundered | Neumann and Hirsch | T, L, C |
| The NTFP harvest must make the forest worth more than the alternative land use | Evans | T, L, C |
| NTFP specialization can lead to forest modification, which may be inconsistent with the objective of maintaining biodiversity, but may be good for livelihoods | Neumann and Hirsch | T, C |
| Biological characteristics of the NTFP determines likelihood and ease of sustainable harvest | Neumann and Hirsch | C |
| Conservation logic, direct and tangible link between conservation action and benefit | Elliot and Sumba | C |
T aids or constrains commercialization and trade, L aids or constrains livelihood benefits, C aids or constrains conservation outcomes