3 research outputs found

    Evaluation du potentiel ethnobotanique des populations rurales au Sud et au centre du BĂ©nin

    Get PDF
    Les ressources végétales constituant pour les ruraux, d’importantes sources de soins médicaux et d’aliments, sont mal gérées du fait de la forte emprise humaine. Cette étude diagnostique, évalue les connaissances ethnobotaniques des populations rurales au Bénin, en vue d’analyser le niveau de conservation par rapport aux anciennes collections des années 1935 et 1940 effectuées par Laffite. La méthode de collecte de données est faite d’enquêtes ethnobotaniques et de relevés floristiques. Au total, 232 espèces utiles ont été collectées dont 25,86% recensées par Laffite. Parmi elles, 96% sont notamment utilisées en médecine traditionnelle, 20% en spiritualité, 13% dans l’alimentation et 3% en technologie. Certaines espèces mentionnées par Laffite ont disparu (Milletia thonningii, Premna hispida, Bryophyllum pinnatum, Spilanthes uliginosa, Caesalpinia bonduc, Tephrosia vogelii et Cissampelos mucronata) des terroirs, tandis que d’autres sont vulnérables en déclin (Afraegle paniculata, Antiaris toxicaria, Carissa edulis, Commiphora africana, Crateva adansonii, Pseudocedrela kotschyi, Securidaca longipedunculata, Leptadenia hastata et Tylophora camerunica). L’urbanisation, l’agriculture itinérante, les changements climatiques et l’introduction d’espèces exotiques sont autant de facteurs expliquant cette vulnérabilité. La prise de mesure de protection, l’installation de jardins de case et l’adoption d’approche de gestion durable de cette phytodiversité sont urgentes.Keywords: Ethnobotanique, Laffite, phytodiversité, vulnérabilité, conservation, Béni

    Dead wood and saproxylic beetle assemblages in a semideciduous forest in Southern Benin

    No full text
    Saproxylic (dead wood associated) beetles play an important role in all forest ecosystems and are known to be highly susceptible to forest management and fragmentation. Contrary to temperate forests, there has been very little research on saproxylic beetle assemblages in tropical forests. In Africa, large tracts of natural forest have been converted to tree plantations (mainly exotic species) and cropland, and these land use changes are expected to have a dramatic effect on saproxylic beetle assemblages. In the Lama forest reserve in Southern Benin, we conducted an inventory of dead wood and the associated saproxylic beetle fauna, focusing on three different forest types, natural semi-deciduous forest, teak plantations and fuelwood plantations. The dead wood recorded included all coarse woody debris (CWD), standing dead trees (snags) and dead branches or stems on live trees (limbs). Saproxylic beetles were reared from dead wood of different decay stages and tree species, using emergence traps. Both the quantity and quality of dead wood resources differed greatly among natural forest and plantations. Average volumes were about 30, 4 and 1 m3 ha−1 in natural forest, teak and fuelwood plantations, respectively. Dead wood of advanced decay was basically absent in plantations, due to wood-collecting activities of the local population. The overall species richness of saproxylic beetles was higher in natural forest, and detrended correspondence analysis (DCA) clearly segregated dead wood beetle assemblages from natural forest and plantations. Multiple regression found three significant predictors of the first ordination axis, the volumes of (a) recently dead wood; (b) large pieces of dead wood; and (c) coarse woody debris. Despite the overall paucity of dead wood, in particular the lack of strongly decayed wood, saproxylic beetle diversity in teak and fuelwood plantations was surprisingly high, providing evidence of the importance of dead wood and the potential of dead wood management for biodiversity conservation
    corecore