2 research outputs found
Rural subsistence and protected areas : community use of the Miombo woodlands of Lake Malawi National Park
This study examines the utilisation of miombo woodland by fishing communities in
Lake Malawi National Park (LMNP). Combining methodologies from the natural and
social sciences, patterns of use of non-timber forest products (NTFPs), and the impact
of harvesting practices on the resource base, are described. The main focus is the
commercial and subsistence use of primary woodland resources including: fuelwood,
construction materials and grass thatch.
Aerial photographic analysis and a quadrat based vegetation survey are used to
examine the impact of local utilisation practices on the miombo woodland.
Multivariate analyses assess the importance of different environmental variables in
explaining the floristic composition of the woodland vegetation.
A range of NTFPs are used locally but market surveys indicate that few products are
traded outside the villages. A marketing analysis suggests that urban trade is
constrained by the low economic value of woodland resources compared to the high
cost of rural transport. Specific patterns of collection and use are apparent for each
resource. This thesis explores the impact of different harvesting practices on the
miombo woodlands. Using household surveys and time allocation, the effects of
children on patterns of wood collection and use are examined. The role of daughters
in fuelwood collection is discussed in relation to theories of fertility and family size.
Furthermore, behavioural ecology approaches are used to examine the decision making
in wood collection.
This research provides a useful framework for investigating resource use because it
combines concurrent studies of village and woodland communities. The quantitative
and rigorous approach enables the factors that influence resource use, and their impact,
to be defined. This study contributes to theories of conservation and the practice of
integrated management of natural resources. Furthermore, the research demonstrates
the importance of woodland resources to the subsistence strategies of rural
communities within a protected area system