A concerted approach to una de gato development in Peru

Uncaria tomentosa and U. guianensis appear to hold a potential to become an important export commodity and a source of income for small farmers in the tropical forest belt of the country. Both species have been important in traditional healing in many South American countries. They contain about six...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Jong, W. de, Melnyk, M., Alfaro, L., Rosales, M., García, M.
Format: Journal Article
Language:Inglés
Published: 2000
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/18206
_version_ 1855529866533797888
author Jong, W. de
Melnyk, M.
Alfaro, L.
Rosales, M.
García, M.
author_browse Alfaro, L.
García, M.
Jong, W. de
Melnyk, M.
Rosales, M.
author_facet Jong, W. de
Melnyk, M.
Alfaro, L.
Rosales, M.
García, M.
author_sort Jong, W. de
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Uncaria tomentosa and U. guianensis appear to hold a potential to become an important export commodity and a source of income for small farmers in the tropical forest belt of the country. Both species have been important in traditional healing in many South American countries. They contain about sixty substances that are being tested widely for possible medical treatments. Uncaria tomentosa has been traded from Peru since 1994 until it reached a peak export of 726 t in 1996. Despite the general discourse on the potential of species, such as these Uncaria spp., the many stakeholders with some interest in these species do not co-ordinate their activities sufficiently to enhance sustained income for the country and the rural poor. At the national level, there has been pressure on the government to implement legislation to prohibit the sales of the raw material of these species, in order to capture larger shares of benefits for the national economy. Initially false conservation arguments were used to stop collection from the wild, as there is sufficient evidence to argue that at current harvesting levels there is no threat to the two species. Regional government agencies have promoted the production of the two species without having a clear picture of future market development, allowing the possibility that much of the future production cannot be sold. Both actions may possibly negatively affect the benefits that accrue to local collectors or producers
format Journal Article
id CGSpace18206
institution CGIAR Consortium
language Inglés
publishDate 2000
publishDateRange 2000
publishDateSort 2000
record_format dspace
spelling CGSpace182062025-01-24T14:19:49Z A concerted approach to una de gato development in Peru Jong, W. de Melnyk, M. Alfaro, L. Rosales, M. García, M. forest products industry markets medicinal plants uncaria non-timber forest products Uncaria tomentosa and U. guianensis appear to hold a potential to become an important export commodity and a source of income for small farmers in the tropical forest belt of the country. Both species have been important in traditional healing in many South American countries. They contain about sixty substances that are being tested widely for possible medical treatments. Uncaria tomentosa has been traded from Peru since 1994 until it reached a peak export of 726 t in 1996. Despite the general discourse on the potential of species, such as these Uncaria spp., the many stakeholders with some interest in these species do not co-ordinate their activities sufficiently to enhance sustained income for the country and the rural poor. At the national level, there has been pressure on the government to implement legislation to prohibit the sales of the raw material of these species, in order to capture larger shares of benefits for the national economy. Initially false conservation arguments were used to stop collection from the wild, as there is sufficient evidence to argue that at current harvesting levels there is no threat to the two species. Regional government agencies have promoted the production of the two species without having a clear picture of future market development, allowing the possibility that much of the future production cannot be sold. Both actions may possibly negatively affect the benefits that accrue to local collectors or producers 2000 2012-06-04T09:06:12Z 2012-06-04T09:06:12Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/18206 en de Jong, W., Melnyk, M., Alfaro, L., Rosales, M., Garcia, M. 2000. A concerted approach to una de gato development in Peru . International Tree Crops Journal 10 (4) :321-336.
spellingShingle forest products industry
markets
medicinal plants
uncaria
non-timber forest products
Jong, W. de
Melnyk, M.
Alfaro, L.
Rosales, M.
García, M.
A concerted approach to una de gato development in Peru
title A concerted approach to una de gato development in Peru
title_full A concerted approach to una de gato development in Peru
title_fullStr A concerted approach to una de gato development in Peru
title_full_unstemmed A concerted approach to una de gato development in Peru
title_short A concerted approach to una de gato development in Peru
title_sort concerted approach to una de gato development in peru
topic forest products industry
markets
medicinal plants
uncaria
non-timber forest products
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/18206
work_keys_str_mv AT jongwde aconcertedapproachtounadegatodevelopmentinperu
AT melnykm aconcertedapproachtounadegatodevelopmentinperu
AT alfarol aconcertedapproachtounadegatodevelopmentinperu
AT rosalesm aconcertedapproachtounadegatodevelopmentinperu
AT garciam aconcertedapproachtounadegatodevelopmentinperu
AT jongwde concertedapproachtounadegatodevelopmentinperu
AT melnykm concertedapproachtounadegatodevelopmentinperu
AT alfarol concertedapproachtounadegatodevelopmentinperu
AT rosalesm concertedapproachtounadegatodevelopmentinperu
AT garciam concertedapproachtounadegatodevelopmentinperu