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西苏里南商业非木材森林产品开采的可持续性问题。

Sustainability issues of commercial non-timber forest product extraction in West Suriname.

机构信息

Forest Resources Management, Faculty of Forestry, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, Canada.

Sauder School of Business, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, Canada.

出版信息

J Ethnobiol Ethnomed. 2018 Jun 28;14(1):44. doi: 10.1186/s13002-018-0244-5.

Abstract

BACKGROUND

Non-timber forest products (NTFPs) have been traded for millennia by indigenous communities. Current increased demands driven by globalisation, however, put more pressure on local harvesters and their surrounding ecosystems. The safeguarding of indigenous access rights to harvesting grounds is needed, either through communal land titles or collaborative management agreements, both to secure prior indigenous rights and to minimise further negative ecological impacts.

METHODS

This study was carried out in two indigenous communities in West Suriname located along the Corentyne River. We assessed the three economically most important NTFPs for each community. We determined the land tenure status of harvesting grounds and negative impacts on target species and/or ecosystem. Ethnobotanical data were collected (n = 53), and semi-structured interviews were held with hunters and gatherers (n = 13). Local and national maps were acquired, and their data merged.

RESULTS

Results showed that the communities have no tenure security over their most important harvesting sites. These collection sites are State owned and some under (active) logging concession. All of the traded wild animal populations had decreased because of increased local and non-local commercial interest, especially the stingray Potamotrygon boesemani (first described in 2008), which was traded for US$250 per live specimen. The stingray population had become imperilled within months as local and (inter-) national regulations for this species are non-existent.

CONCLUSIONS

We stress the urgent need for collaborative management agreements over the harvesting sites between the government of Suriname and the indigenous communities to prevent further non-local developments and harvesting to disturb the local economy. An immediate moratorium on the export of P. boesemani is necessary to prevent the extinction of this endemic stingray.

摘要

背景

非木材森林产品(NTFPs)已经被土著社区交易了几千年。然而,全球化带来的当前需求增长给当地采集者及其周围的生态系统带来了更大的压力。需要保护土著社区获取采集地的权利,无论是通过社区土地所有权还是合作管理协议,这既可以确保原住民的权利,又可以尽量减少对生态系统的进一步负面影响。

方法

本研究在西苏里南的两个沿科伦蒂尼河的土著社区进行。我们评估了每个社区三种经济上最重要的 NTFPs。我们确定了采集地的土地保有权状况以及对目标物种和/或生态系统的负面影响。收集了民族植物学数据(n=53),并与猎人、采集者(n=13)进行了半结构化访谈。获取了当地和国家的地图,并合并了它们的数据。

结果

结果表明,社区对其最重要的采集地没有保有权。这些采集点属于国有,有些属于(正在进行)伐木特许权。由于当地和非当地商业利益的增加,所有交易的野生动物种群都减少了,特别是 Potamotrygon boesemani 黄貂鱼(于 2008 年首次描述),其活体标本的交易价格为 250 美元。由于当地和(国际)国家对该物种的规定不存在,黄貂鱼种群在几个月内就面临濒危。

结论

我们强调,苏里南政府与土著社区之间急需就采集地达成合作管理协议,以防止进一步的非本地开发和采集干扰当地经济。立即暂停 P. boesemani 的出口是防止这种特有黄貂鱼灭绝的必要措施。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/2ddf/6027770/756b4080ff81/13002_2018_244_Fig1_HTML.jpg

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