Impacts of uncontrolled logging on the Miombo woodlands of the Niassa reserve in Mozambique.

This study evaluated the conservation status of tree populations and the impact of illegal logging in the Niassa National Reserve, a huge protected area in northern Mozambique, bordering Tanzania. The Miombo woodland around 8 villages was sampled on 43 transects laid out from log patios showing evid...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Alves, T., Sousa, C., Snook, Laura K., Jamice, R., Ferreira, E., Duguma, L., Chichongue, O., Schunko, C., Gratzer, G., Loo, J.
Format: Poster
Language:Inglés
Published: 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/78536
_version_ 1855534575322660864
author Alves, T.
Sousa, C.
Snook, Laura K.
Jamice, R.
Ferreira, E.
Duguma, L.
Chichongue, O.
Schunko, C.
Gratzer, G.
Loo, J.
author_browse Alves, T.
Chichongue, O.
Duguma, L.
Ferreira, E.
Gratzer, G.
Jamice, R.
Loo, J.
Schunko, C.
Snook, Laura K.
Sousa, C.
author_facet Alves, T.
Sousa, C.
Snook, Laura K.
Jamice, R.
Ferreira, E.
Duguma, L.
Chichongue, O.
Schunko, C.
Gratzer, G.
Loo, J.
author_sort Alves, T.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description This study evaluated the conservation status of tree populations and the impact of illegal logging in the Niassa National Reserve, a huge protected area in northern Mozambique, bordering Tanzania. The Miombo woodland around 8 villages was sampled on 43 transects laid out from log patios showing evidence of felling. Standing trees and stumps of 8 timber species (P. angolensis, A. quanzensis, M. sthulmannii, B. africana, C. imberbe, D. melanoxylon, P. angolensis and S. madagascariensis) were identified, quantified and measured. A total of 173 respondents in 12 villages were interviewed about their perception on logging and its benefits. Logging had removed 41% of the trees above the minimum cutting diameter (20-50cm dbh, depending on the species). On average, less than 2 m3/ha of standing volume of commercial-sized trees remained, of which very few had good form. Pitsaws where trees had been sawn into planks were widespread and large quantities of waste wood were left on the ground. Planks produced had been transported to Tanzania, where they were sold or further processed. Arrangements for logging were not transparent and villagers complained that they did not receive the benefits accorded by law to communities involved in legal logging (20% of the profits). Fewer than half of the respondents were in favour of a complete stop of logging; instead, they hoped to obtain greater benefits from it. In return for access, loggers had built schools in two villages, and some local leaders and villagers had received building materials from them. Villagers claimed that people in the area lack forestry skills such as operating chainsaws and transforming timber into products. If required, carpenters have to be brought from Tanzania. Uncontrolled logging has left insufficient volume for future timber harvesting, meaning community forestry is not a feasible livelihood option. Furthermore, tree growth in the reserve is slow (0.25 cm/yr dbh) and felling is incompatible with the primary management objective of the reserve, which is conservation. The methodology applied here to evaluate the impact of logging could be applied elsewhere to monitor logging and determine whether to issue logging licenses for a specific area.
format Poster
id CGSpace78536
institution CGIAR Consortium
language Inglés
publishDate 2016
publishDateRange 2016
publishDateSort 2016
record_format dspace
spelling CGSpace785362025-11-05T07:32:25Z Impacts of uncontrolled logging on the Miombo woodlands of the Niassa reserve in Mozambique. Alves, T. Sousa, C. Snook, Laura K. Jamice, R. Ferreira, E. Duguma, L. Chichongue, O. Schunko, C. Gratzer, G. Loo, J. illegal logging forest conservation timber trees impact assessment sustainability This study evaluated the conservation status of tree populations and the impact of illegal logging in the Niassa National Reserve, a huge protected area in northern Mozambique, bordering Tanzania. The Miombo woodland around 8 villages was sampled on 43 transects laid out from log patios showing evidence of felling. Standing trees and stumps of 8 timber species (P. angolensis, A. quanzensis, M. sthulmannii, B. africana, C. imberbe, D. melanoxylon, P. angolensis and S. madagascariensis) were identified, quantified and measured. A total of 173 respondents in 12 villages were interviewed about their perception on logging and its benefits. Logging had removed 41% of the trees above the minimum cutting diameter (20-50cm dbh, depending on the species). On average, less than 2 m3/ha of standing volume of commercial-sized trees remained, of which very few had good form. Pitsaws where trees had been sawn into planks were widespread and large quantities of waste wood were left on the ground. Planks produced had been transported to Tanzania, where they were sold or further processed. Arrangements for logging were not transparent and villagers complained that they did not receive the benefits accorded by law to communities involved in legal logging (20% of the profits). Fewer than half of the respondents were in favour of a complete stop of logging; instead, they hoped to obtain greater benefits from it. In return for access, loggers had built schools in two villages, and some local leaders and villagers had received building materials from them. Villagers claimed that people in the area lack forestry skills such as operating chainsaws and transforming timber into products. If required, carpenters have to be brought from Tanzania. Uncontrolled logging has left insufficient volume for future timber harvesting, meaning community forestry is not a feasible livelihood option. Furthermore, tree growth in the reserve is slow (0.25 cm/yr dbh) and felling is incompatible with the primary management objective of the reserve, which is conservation. The methodology applied here to evaluate the impact of logging could be applied elsewhere to monitor logging and determine whether to issue logging licenses for a specific area. 2016 2016-12-28T12:48:32Z 2016-12-28T12:48:32Z Poster https://hdl.handle.net/10568/78536 en Open Access application/pdf application/pdf Alves, T.; Sousa, C.; Snook, L.; Jamice, R.; Ferreira, E.; Duguma, L.; Chichongue, O.; Schunko, C.; Gratzer, G.; Loo, J. (2016) Impacts of uncontrolled logging on the Miombo woodlands of the Niassa reserve in Mozambique. [Abstract] presented at: Tropentag 2016: Solidarity in a competing world - fair use of resources. Vienna (Austria) Sep 18-21, 1p.
spellingShingle illegal logging
forest conservation
timber trees
impact assessment
sustainability
Alves, T.
Sousa, C.
Snook, Laura K.
Jamice, R.
Ferreira, E.
Duguma, L.
Chichongue, O.
Schunko, C.
Gratzer, G.
Loo, J.
Impacts of uncontrolled logging on the Miombo woodlands of the Niassa reserve in Mozambique.
title Impacts of uncontrolled logging on the Miombo woodlands of the Niassa reserve in Mozambique.
title_full Impacts of uncontrolled logging on the Miombo woodlands of the Niassa reserve in Mozambique.
title_fullStr Impacts of uncontrolled logging on the Miombo woodlands of the Niassa reserve in Mozambique.
title_full_unstemmed Impacts of uncontrolled logging on the Miombo woodlands of the Niassa reserve in Mozambique.
title_short Impacts of uncontrolled logging on the Miombo woodlands of the Niassa reserve in Mozambique.
title_sort impacts of uncontrolled logging on the miombo woodlands of the niassa reserve in mozambique
topic illegal logging
forest conservation
timber trees
impact assessment
sustainability
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/78536
work_keys_str_mv AT alvest impactsofuncontrolledloggingonthemiombowoodlandsoftheniassareserveinmozambique
AT sousac impactsofuncontrolledloggingonthemiombowoodlandsoftheniassareserveinmozambique
AT snooklaurak impactsofuncontrolledloggingonthemiombowoodlandsoftheniassareserveinmozambique
AT jamicer impactsofuncontrolledloggingonthemiombowoodlandsoftheniassareserveinmozambique
AT ferreirae impactsofuncontrolledloggingonthemiombowoodlandsoftheniassareserveinmozambique
AT dugumal impactsofuncontrolledloggingonthemiombowoodlandsoftheniassareserveinmozambique
AT chichongueo impactsofuncontrolledloggingonthemiombowoodlandsoftheniassareserveinmozambique
AT schunkoc impactsofuncontrolledloggingonthemiombowoodlandsoftheniassareserveinmozambique
AT gratzerg impactsofuncontrolledloggingonthemiombowoodlandsoftheniassareserveinmozambique
AT looj impactsofuncontrolledloggingonthemiombowoodlandsoftheniassareserveinmozambique