Changing livelihoods and protected area management: a case study of charcoal production in south-west Madagascar

Allbwn ymchwil: Cyfraniad at gyfnodolynErthygladolygiad gan gymheiriaid

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Changing livelihoods and protected area management: a case study of charcoal production in south-west Madagascar. / Gardner, Charlie J.; Gabriel, Firengea U.L.; St John, Freya A. V. et al.
Yn: Oryx, Cyfrol 50, Rhif 3, 07.2016, t. 495-505.

Allbwn ymchwil: Cyfraniad at gyfnodolynErthygladolygiad gan gymheiriaid

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Gardner CJ, Gabriel FUL, St John FAV, Davies Z. Changing livelihoods and protected area management: a case study of charcoal production in south-west Madagascar. Oryx. 2016 Gor;50(3):495-505. Epub 2015 Ebr 20. doi: 10.1017/S0030605315000071

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Gardner, Charlie J. ; Gabriel, Firengea U.L. ; St John, Freya A. V. et al. / Changing livelihoods and protected area management : a case study of charcoal production in south-west Madagascar. Yn: Oryx. 2016 ; Cyfrol 50, Rhif 3. tt. 495-505.

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Changing livelihoods and protected area management

T2 - a case study of charcoal production in south-west Madagascar

AU - Gardner, Charlie J.

AU - Gabriel, Firengea U.L.

AU - St John, Freya A. V.

AU - Davies, Zoe

PY - 2016/7

Y1 - 2016/7

N2 - Protected areas are usually conceived and managed as static entities, although this approach is increasingly viewed as unrealistic given climate change and ecosystem dynamics. The ways in which people use land and/or natural resources within and around protected areas can also shift and evolve temporally but this remains an under-acknowledged challenge for protected area managers. Here we investigate the factors driving a rapid rise in charcoal production within a new, multiple-use protected area in Madagascar, to inform appropriate management responses. We conducted a questionnaire survey of 208 charcoal producers to ascertain the mix of livelihood activities they practised in 2010/2011 and 5 years previously. Respondents had diversified their livelihood activities over time, and cultivation and pastoralism had decreased as primary sources of revenue. Reasons for the growing reliance on charcoal production include the reduced viability of alternative livelihoods (primarily farming), as a result of changing rainfall patterns and the loss of irrigation infrastructure, as well as a growing need for cash to support themselves and their families. Our results suggest that charcoal production is not a desirable activity but a safety net when times are difficult. Conservation efforts to ameliorate underlying factors driving livelihood change, such as dam restoration, could reduce the prevalence of charcoal production, but simultaneous action to cut demand is also required. We recommend that mechanisms to detect, understand and respond to social change are integrated systematically into protected area management planning, alongside traditional biodiversity monitoring

AB - Protected areas are usually conceived and managed as static entities, although this approach is increasingly viewed as unrealistic given climate change and ecosystem dynamics. The ways in which people use land and/or natural resources within and around protected areas can also shift and evolve temporally but this remains an under-acknowledged challenge for protected area managers. Here we investigate the factors driving a rapid rise in charcoal production within a new, multiple-use protected area in Madagascar, to inform appropriate management responses. We conducted a questionnaire survey of 208 charcoal producers to ascertain the mix of livelihood activities they practised in 2010/2011 and 5 years previously. Respondents had diversified their livelihood activities over time, and cultivation and pastoralism had decreased as primary sources of revenue. Reasons for the growing reliance on charcoal production include the reduced viability of alternative livelihoods (primarily farming), as a result of changing rainfall patterns and the loss of irrigation infrastructure, as well as a growing need for cash to support themselves and their families. Our results suggest that charcoal production is not a desirable activity but a safety net when times are difficult. Conservation efforts to ameliorate underlying factors driving livelihood change, such as dam restoration, could reduce the prevalence of charcoal production, but simultaneous action to cut demand is also required. We recommend that mechanisms to detect, understand and respond to social change are integrated systematically into protected area management planning, alongside traditional biodiversity monitoring

U2 - 10.1017/S0030605315000071

DO - 10.1017/S0030605315000071

M3 - Article

VL - 50

SP - 495

EP - 505

JO - Oryx

JF - Oryx

SN - 0030-6053

IS - 3

ER -