33 research outputs found

    The Great Green Forest is here and expanding all on its own: A call for action

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    Prosopis juliflora is recognized as one of the most invasive tree species worldwide. Following widespread introductions throughout arid and semi-arid regions of Africa and throughout the world, it has spread rapidly, threatening natural ecosystems and livelihoods. Control through utilization as a resource is now accepted as the way forward in developing countries, but efforts have so far been uncoordinated, with only isolated impacts. This paper reports on the global state of knowledge and recent advances, but focuses on prosopis-related research and innovations from IGAD member countries; the successes, failures, challenges and opportunities. It underlines the need to build and apply scientific knowledge to scale up new, resilient, drought-proof livelihood options in the Greater Horn of Africa and elsewhere where introduced, from value-added prosopis wood and non wood products. The authors estimate that there are at least five million hectares of prosopis forest across the region of the perhaps ten million throughout Africa, and growing significantly in extent every year. Experiences from the native range such as in Peru are well documented, where community associations sustainably manage and make a living from fuel, fodder, food, honey and timber from their prosopis forests. Efforts in Ethiopia, Djibouti and Kenya have had mixed results, but milling the sweet protein-rich pods into animal feed is becoming increasingly popular with the introduction of appropriate small scale technologies. Its use as a human food ingredient has also been promoted, though with little uptake, but there is sharp rise in the use of prosopis charcoal in the region, and the possibility of electricity generation using wood chips (bioenergy), with the transfer of experiences from India where there are at least 15 power stations fueled entirely by prosopis. But much more can be done by applying scientific knowledge and innovation to enhance the role of prosopis in improving food security, climate change mitigation and adaptation, and building resilience for millions of the poorest rural and urban people in the Greater Horn of Africa, with great potential for exchange and scaling up in other arid areas in Africa, Asia and the Americas. This paper is a call to the African Union, national governments, IGAD, IFAD, FAO, the Arab League and other international, regional and bilateral donors, to come together and support a regional research and development programme to push the frontiers on prosopis management and utilization and develop a transnational strategy, as the impacts are potentially enormous and immediate. The initial objectives are to take stock of existing knowledge and practices, assess prosopis forest areas throughout the region, estimate wood and pod volumes and production rates, document prosopis management and utilization experiences, enhance South-South knowledge sharing, and rapidly and effectively scale up the successes

    Reimagining invasions; the social and cultural impacts of Prosopis on pastoralists in Southern Afar

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    Abstract Whilst the environmental impacts of biological invasions are clearly conceptualised and there is growing evidence on the economic benefits and costs, the social and cultural dimensions remain poorly understood. This paper presents the perceptions of pastoralist communities in southern Afar, Ethiopian lowlands, on one invasive species, Prosopis juliflora. The socio-cultural impacts are assessed, and the manner in which they interact with other drivers of vulnerability, including political marginalisation, sedentarisation and conflict, is explored. The research studied 10 communities and undertook semi-structured interviews and focus group discussions with pastoralists and agro-pastoralists. These results were supported by interviews with community leaders and key informants. The benefits and costs were analysed using the asset-based framework of the Sustainable Livelihoods Framework and the subject-focused approach of Wellbeing in Development. The results demonstrate that the costs of invasive species are felt across all of the livelihood capital bases (financial, natural, physical, human and social) highlighted within the framework and that the impacts cross multiple assets, such as reducing access through blocking roads. The concept of Wellbeing in Development provides a lens to examine neglected impacts, like conflict, community standing, political marginalisation and cultural impoverishment, and a freedom of definition and vocabulary to allow the participants to define their own epistemologies. The research highlights that impacts spread across assets, transcend objective and subjective classification, but also that impacts interact with other drivers of vulnerability. Pastoralists report deepened and broadened conflict, complicated relationships with the state and increased sedentarisation within invaded areas. The paper demonstrates that biological invasions have complex social and cultural implications beyond the environmental and economic costs which are commonly presented. Through synthesising methodologies and tools which capture local knowledge and perceptions, these implications and relationships are conceptualised

    Restoring African Drylands

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    ETFRN News 60 focuses on dryland restoration in the Sahel and the Greater Horn of Africa. It collates 36 articles from more than 100 contributors, including examples of remarkable increases in tree cover and improved agricultural yields over large areas of the Western Sahel, landscape restoration in Ethiopia, and examples from many other countries

    Assessing the influence of Forest Day 5

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    Algaroba - planta invasora ou recurso florestal valioso?

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    O debate sobre algaroba; Erradicação ou exploração?; O que são algarobeiras? A invasão indesejável; A solução seria a erradicação ou o controle? Explorando a algarobeira - técnicas de manejo sustentável; Melhoramento e conversão de povoamentos; Prevenindo a reinfestação.bitstream/item/175864/1/33359.pd
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