Do plants need passport?: a socio-economic study of the role of exotic tree and other plants species in Quang Tri province, Vietnam

A multidisciplinary team evaluated the role and use of exotic and indigenous trees in household livelihood systems in four villages, typical of three distinctly different ecosystems in Quang Tri Province, central Viet Nam. While in each case farmers used a great variety of trees and plants to meet t...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Midgley, S.J., Byron, R.N., Chandler, F.C., Ha Huy Thinh, Tran Hung Son, Hoang Hong Hanh
Formato: Libro
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation 1997
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/17826
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author Midgley, S.J.
Byron, R.N.
Chandler, F.C.
Ha Huy Thinh
Tran Hung Son
Hoang Hong Hanh
author_browse Byron, R.N.
Chandler, F.C.
Ha Huy Thinh
Hoang Hong Hanh
Midgley, S.J.
Tran Hung Son
author_facet Midgley, S.J.
Byron, R.N.
Chandler, F.C.
Ha Huy Thinh
Tran Hung Son
Hoang Hong Hanh
author_sort Midgley, S.J.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description A multidisciplinary team evaluated the role and use of exotic and indigenous trees in household livelihood systems in four villages, typical of three distinctly different ecosystems in Quang Tri Province, central Viet Nam. While in each case farmers used a great variety of trees and plants to meet their diverse subsistence and cash needs, this study reveals the crucial contribution of exotic trees. Where land tenure is clear and ownership of the trees is unambiguous, there was widespread enthusiasm for tree planting in all four areas studied. The use of casuarinas on sand dune areas as a coastal protection belt, for farm windbreaks and agroforestry, seems entirely positive on all social, ecological and economic criteria. Likewise the use of acacias provided significant economic and environmental benefits as an essential windbreak around (exotic) coffee and pepper plantations in the highlands near the Laos border, and in mixed plantations on farms in the low hills as a component of a mosaic landscape. Small-scale eucalyptus planting for local fuelwood and construction materials in the foothills has no discernible social or ecological ill-effects, offers one of the few economically viable land use options for both women and men, and creates a low-cost alternative to collection of wood from the few remaining natural forests. Through consultation between local villagers, government forestry extension workers, NGO assistance programmes, and other land users, appropriate species and silvicultural systems are being developed to significantly enhance social and economic welfare with minimal adverse environmental impact. The farmers concluded that provided the trees meet their needs, they do not care about the country of origin of that species.
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spelling CGSpace178262025-12-08T10:29:22Z Do plants need passport?: a socio-economic study of the role of exotic tree and other plants species in Quang Tri province, Vietnam Midgley, S.J. Byron, R.N. Chandler, F.C. Ha Huy Thinh Tran Hung Son Hoang Hong Hanh trees socioeconomics gender A multidisciplinary team evaluated the role and use of exotic and indigenous trees in household livelihood systems in four villages, typical of three distinctly different ecosystems in Quang Tri Province, central Viet Nam. While in each case farmers used a great variety of trees and plants to meet their diverse subsistence and cash needs, this study reveals the crucial contribution of exotic trees. Where land tenure is clear and ownership of the trees is unambiguous, there was widespread enthusiasm for tree planting in all four areas studied. The use of casuarinas on sand dune areas as a coastal protection belt, for farm windbreaks and agroforestry, seems entirely positive on all social, ecological and economic criteria. Likewise the use of acacias provided significant economic and environmental benefits as an essential windbreak around (exotic) coffee and pepper plantations in the highlands near the Laos border, and in mixed plantations on farms in the low hills as a component of a mosaic landscape. Small-scale eucalyptus planting for local fuelwood and construction materials in the foothills has no discernible social or ecological ill-effects, offers one of the few economically viable land use options for both women and men, and creates a low-cost alternative to collection of wood from the few remaining natural forests. Through consultation between local villagers, government forestry extension workers, NGO assistance programmes, and other land users, appropriate species and silvicultural systems are being developed to significantly enhance social and economic welfare with minimal adverse environmental impact. The farmers concluded that provided the trees meet their needs, they do not care about the country of origin of that species. 1997 2012-06-04T09:04:39Z 2012-06-04T09:04:39Z Book https://hdl.handle.net/10568/17826 en Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation Midgley, S.J., Byron, R.N., Chandler, F.C., Ha Huy Thinh, Tran Hung Son, Hoang Hong Hanh. 1997. Do plants need passport?: a socio-economic study of the role of exotic tree and other plants species in Quang Tri province, Vietnam . CSIRO Forestry and Forest Products Technical Report No.106. (no. 106) Canberra, Australia, CSIRO. ISBN: 064306309 9..
spellingShingle trees
socioeconomics
gender
Midgley, S.J.
Byron, R.N.
Chandler, F.C.
Ha Huy Thinh
Tran Hung Son
Hoang Hong Hanh
Do plants need passport?: a socio-economic study of the role of exotic tree and other plants species in Quang Tri province, Vietnam
title Do plants need passport?: a socio-economic study of the role of exotic tree and other plants species in Quang Tri province, Vietnam
title_full Do plants need passport?: a socio-economic study of the role of exotic tree and other plants species in Quang Tri province, Vietnam
title_fullStr Do plants need passport?: a socio-economic study of the role of exotic tree and other plants species in Quang Tri province, Vietnam
title_full_unstemmed Do plants need passport?: a socio-economic study of the role of exotic tree and other plants species in Quang Tri province, Vietnam
title_short Do plants need passport?: a socio-economic study of the role of exotic tree and other plants species in Quang Tri province, Vietnam
title_sort do plants need passport a socio economic study of the role of exotic tree and other plants species in quang tri province vietnam
topic trees
socioeconomics
gender
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/17826
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