Management of secondary forests in colonist swidden agriculture in Peru, Brazil and Nicaragua

Recent studies have shown that although swidden agriculture contributes to tropical deforestation in Latin America, swidden farmers also regenerate significant areas of secondary forests on their farms as part of the following process. This paper discusses the opportunities and constraints to farmer...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Smith, J., Finegan, B., Sabogal, C., Gonçalves-Ferreira, M.D.S., Siles Gonzales, G., Kop, P. van de, Díaz Barba, A.
Formato: Capítulo de libro
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: Kluwer Academic Publishers 2001
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/18467
_version_ 1855526982760005632
author Smith, J.
Finegan, B.
Sabogal, C.
Gonçalves-Ferreira, M.D.S.
Siles Gonzales, G.
Kop, P. van de
Díaz Barba, A.
author_browse Díaz Barba, A.
Finegan, B.
Gonçalves-Ferreira, M.D.S.
Kop, P. van de
Sabogal, C.
Siles Gonzales, G.
Smith, J.
author_facet Smith, J.
Finegan, B.
Sabogal, C.
Gonçalves-Ferreira, M.D.S.
Siles Gonzales, G.
Kop, P. van de
Díaz Barba, A.
author_sort Smith, J.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Recent studies have shown that although swidden agriculture contributes to tropical deforestation in Latin America, swidden farmers also regenerate significant areas of secondary forests on their farms as part of the following process. This paper discusses the opportunities and constraints to farmers' regeneration and management of secondary forests. The analysis generalizes findings from case studies of new and old settlement areas in Peru, Brazil and Nicaragua, to derive generic management principles. In each country diagnostic farm surveys, multi-resource forest inventories and farmer-participatory research were carried out. Results show that about 25% of farm area remains under secondary forest even after a century of settlement. Secondary forests are the only significant forest resource available to the rural poor in older settlement areas. Secondary forests consist primarily of secondary forest fallows. Small areas are also maintained more permanently. Results show that an integrated resource management approach will be required, with management of secondary forests complemented by policy reforms and management of soils and residual forests. Different management strategies will be required for new and older settlement areas. For older settlement areas, strategies to reduce pressures for shorter fallows are identified, as well as principles for management of secondary forest fallows for soil recuperation and forest products. For newer areas, policies and technologies for slowing down the conversion of residual forest to agriculture and secondary forest would result in more biodiversity conservation and less, but more productive, secondary forest at later stages of frontier development. Management of secondary forest for high timber productivity, complemented by trade in forest carbon, may induce farmers to convert some of their fallow forests to permanent secondary forests.
format Book Chapter
id CGSpace18467
institution CGIAR Consortium
language Inglés
publishDate 2001
publishDateRange 2001
publishDateSort 2001
publisher Kluwer Academic Publishers
publisherStr Kluwer Academic Publishers
record_format dspace
spelling CGSpace184672025-01-24T14:13:04Z Management of secondary forests in colonist swidden agriculture in Peru, Brazil and Nicaragua Smith, J. Finegan, B. Sabogal, C. Gonçalves-Ferreira, M.D.S. Siles Gonzales, G. Kop, P. van de Díaz Barba, A. resource management secondary forests shifting cultivation fallow agriculture settlement forests frontier areas Recent studies have shown that although swidden agriculture contributes to tropical deforestation in Latin America, swidden farmers also regenerate significant areas of secondary forests on their farms as part of the following process. This paper discusses the opportunities and constraints to farmers' regeneration and management of secondary forests. The analysis generalizes findings from case studies of new and old settlement areas in Peru, Brazil and Nicaragua, to derive generic management principles. In each country diagnostic farm surveys, multi-resource forest inventories and farmer-participatory research were carried out. Results show that about 25% of farm area remains under secondary forest even after a century of settlement. Secondary forests are the only significant forest resource available to the rural poor in older settlement areas. Secondary forests consist primarily of secondary forest fallows. Small areas are also maintained more permanently. Results show that an integrated resource management approach will be required, with management of secondary forests complemented by policy reforms and management of soils and residual forests. Different management strategies will be required for new and older settlement areas. For older settlement areas, strategies to reduce pressures for shorter fallows are identified, as well as principles for management of secondary forest fallows for soil recuperation and forest products. For newer areas, policies and technologies for slowing down the conversion of residual forest to agriculture and secondary forest would result in more biodiversity conservation and less, but more productive, secondary forest at later stages of frontier development. Management of secondary forest for high timber productivity, complemented by trade in forest carbon, may induce farmers to convert some of their fallow forests to permanent secondary forests. 2001 2012-06-04T09:06:29Z 2012-06-04T09:06:29Z Book Chapter https://hdl.handle.net/10568/18467 en Kluwer Academic Publishers Smith, J., Finegan, B., Sabogal, C., Goncalves Ferreira, M.D.S., Siles Gonzales, G., van de Kop, P., Diaz Barba, A. 2001. Management of secondary forests in colonist swidden agriculture in Peru, Brazil and Nicaragua . World forests, v. 3 In: Palo, M., Uusivuori, J. and Mery, G. (eds.). World forests, markets and policies. :263-278. Dordrecht, Netherlands, Dordrecht, The Netherlands, Kluwer Academic Publishers. Kluwer Academic Publishers. ISBN: 0-7923-7171-2..
spellingShingle resource management
secondary forests
shifting cultivation
fallow
agriculture
settlement
forests
frontier areas
Smith, J.
Finegan, B.
Sabogal, C.
Gonçalves-Ferreira, M.D.S.
Siles Gonzales, G.
Kop, P. van de
Díaz Barba, A.
Management of secondary forests in colonist swidden agriculture in Peru, Brazil and Nicaragua
title Management of secondary forests in colonist swidden agriculture in Peru, Brazil and Nicaragua
title_full Management of secondary forests in colonist swidden agriculture in Peru, Brazil and Nicaragua
title_fullStr Management of secondary forests in colonist swidden agriculture in Peru, Brazil and Nicaragua
title_full_unstemmed Management of secondary forests in colonist swidden agriculture in Peru, Brazil and Nicaragua
title_short Management of secondary forests in colonist swidden agriculture in Peru, Brazil and Nicaragua
title_sort management of secondary forests in colonist swidden agriculture in peru brazil and nicaragua
topic resource management
secondary forests
shifting cultivation
fallow
agriculture
settlement
forests
frontier areas
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/18467
work_keys_str_mv AT smithj managementofsecondaryforestsincolonistswiddenagricultureinperubrazilandnicaragua
AT fineganb managementofsecondaryforestsincolonistswiddenagricultureinperubrazilandnicaragua
AT sabogalc managementofsecondaryforestsincolonistswiddenagricultureinperubrazilandnicaragua
AT goncalvesferreiramds managementofsecondaryforestsincolonistswiddenagricultureinperubrazilandnicaragua
AT silesgonzalesg managementofsecondaryforestsincolonistswiddenagricultureinperubrazilandnicaragua
AT koppvande managementofsecondaryforestsincolonistswiddenagricultureinperubrazilandnicaragua
AT diazbarbaa managementofsecondaryforestsincolonistswiddenagricultureinperubrazilandnicaragua