"Forest is integral to life": people-forest relations in the lower river region, the Gambia

被引:3
|
作者
Darboe, Sarata [1 ]
Manneh, Lamin [2 ]
Stryamets, Nataliya [3 ,4 ]
Pruse, Baiba [1 ,5 ]
Pieroni, Andrea [6 ,7 ]
Soukand, Renata [1 ]
Mattalia, Giulia [1 ,8 ,9 ]
机构
[1] Ca Foscari Univ Venice, Dept Environm Sci Informat & Stat, Venice, Italy
[2] Dept Pk & Wildlife Management, Dumbuto, Gambia
[3] Swedish Univ Agr Sci, Fac Forest Sci, Sch Forest Management, Skinnskatteberg, Sweden
[4] Nat Reserve Roztochya, Ivano Frankove, Ukraine
[5] Vrije Univ Amsterdam, Athena Inst, Amsterdam, Netherlands
[6] Univ Gastron Sci, Pollenzo, Italy
[7] Tishk Int Univ, Erbil, Iraq
[8] Autonomous Univ Barcelona, Inst Ciencia & Tecnol Ambientals, Barcelona, Spain
[9] New York Bot Garden, New York, NY USA
关键词
community forest management; ethnobiology; ethnoforestry; IPLC; nature contributions to people; West Africa;
D O I
10.3389/ffgc.2023.1181013
中图分类号
Q14 [生态学(生物生态学)];
学科分类号
071012 ; 0713 ;
摘要
IntroductionForests play a crucial role in the lives of millions of people worldwide by providing material and non-material contributions. Despite forests' paramount importance from ecological, economic, and cultural perspectives, the long-term relationship between forests and local communities living in their proximity is often an undervalued contribution to our understanding of local ecological knowledge systems and forest changes.MethodsWe studied the interrelationships between the Mandinka peoples and forests in an understudied area of West Africa, the Gambia's Lower River Region (LRR). Through 35 semi-structured interviews, we documented the forests' contributions to local Mandinka peoples and their perception of forest changes. We also used geographic information systems (GIS software) for remote sensing satellite imagery to establish a baseline for these complex connections and changes.ResultsThis research revealed the crucial importance of the forest's contributions to Mandinka communities and specifically to their psychological well-being. In addition, the interviewees revealed how ongoing socio-economic changes are affecting the human-forest relationship and possibly eroding the local ethnoforestry knowledge in the LRR of the Gambia. The most common forest contributions are those that provide material goods, serving as the driving force in connecting people with the forest, while non-material contributions are eroding due to complex socio-economic changes. Major socio-economic changes are also believed to drive the shift from dense forest to mixed forest and grassland.DiscussionIn line with the state of the art, the knowledge and perception of changes documented in this article underline the quintessential need to include local communities' views in shaping forest management, in order to better fine-tune the strategies to safeguard biocultural diversity across forest areas.
引用
收藏
页数:12
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] A century of precipitation trends in forest lands of the Lower Mississippi River Alluvial Valley
    Ouyang, Ying
    Zhang, Jiaen
    Feng, Gary
    Wan, Yongshan
    Leininger, Theodor D.
    SCIENTIFIC REPORTS, 2020, 10 (01)
  • [22] Seed bank composition in a secondary forest in the Lower Delta of the Parana River (Argentina)
    Kalesnik, Fabio
    Sirolli, Horacio
    Collantes, Marta
    ACTA BOTANICA BRASILICA, 2013, 27 (01) : 40 - 49
  • [23] Herpetofauna of the forest of Lower Moa River, Cruzeiro do Sul, Acre - Brazil
    Bernarde, Paulo Sergio
    de Albuquerque, Saymon
    de Miranda, Daniele Bazzo
    Batista Turci, Luiz Carlos
    BIOTA NEOTROPICA, 2013, 13 (01): : 220 - 244
  • [24] Bamboo Forest Water Use Efficiency in the Yangtze River Delta Region, China
    Wang, Fan
    Jiang, Hong
    Chen, Xiaofeng
    Niu, Xiaodong
    TERRESTRIAL ATMOSPHERIC AND OCEANIC SCIENCES, 2016, 27 (06): : 981 - 989
  • [25] Life among the "anthros" (Anthropology and the Yanomami people of the Brazilian rain forest)
    Geertz, C
    ESPRIT, 2001, (07) : 20 - 33
  • [26] Subsistence farmer knowledge of strategies alleviating food insecurity in the context of climate change in the lower river region of the Gambia
    Ebrima Sonko
    Wojciech J. Florkowski
    Sampson Agodzo
    Philip Antwi-Agyei
    Food Security, 2020, 12 : 607 - 624
  • [27] Subsistence farmer knowledge of strategies alleviating food insecurity in the context of climate change in the lower river region of the Gambia
    Sonko, Ebrima
    Florkowski, Wojciech J.
    Agodzo, Sampson
    Antwi-Agyei, Philip
    FOOD SECURITY, 2020, 12 (03) : 607 - 624
  • [28] Spectral signatures for the identification of dry forest using Sentinel-2 images over the Lower Basin of the Chira river, Piura region
    Aldana, C.
    Revilla, M.
    Gonzales, J.
    Saavedra, Y.
    Moncada, W.
    Maicelo, J.
    REVISTA DE TELEDETECCION, 2020, (56): : 147 - 156
  • [29] Variation of the floodplain forest ecosystem service value in the lower reaches of Tarim River, China
    Mamat, Zulpiya
    Halik, Uemuet
    Keyimu, Maierdang
    Keram, Ayjamal
    Nurmamat, Kalbinur
    LAND DEGRADATION & DEVELOPMENT, 2018, 29 (01) : 47 - 57
  • [30] Estimation of water consumption of riparian forest in the lower reaches of Tarim River, northwest China
    Keyimu, Maierdang
    Halik, Uemuet
    Kurban, Alishir
    ENVIRONMENTAL EARTH SCIENCES, 2017, 76 (16)