“Forest is integral to life”: people-forest relations in the lower river region, the Gambia

IF 2.7 3区 农林科学 Q2 ECOLOGY
Sarata Darboe, Lamin Manneh, Nataliya Stryamets, Baiba Prūse, Andrea Pieroni, Renata Sõukand, Giulia Mattalia
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Abstract

Introduction Forests play a crucial role in the lives of millions of people worldwide by providing material and non-material contributions. Despite forests’ paramount importance from ecological, economic, and cultural perspectives, the long-term relationship between forests and local communities living in their proximity is often an undervalued contribution to our understanding of local ecological knowledge systems and forest changes. Methods We studied the interrelationships between the Mandinka peoples and forests in an understudied area of West Africa, the Gambia’s Lower River Region (LRR). Through 35 semi-structured interviews, we documented the forests’ contributions to local Mandinka peoples and their perception of forest changes. We also used geographic information systems (GIS software) for remote sensing satellite imagery to establish a baseline for these complex connections and changes. Results This research revealed the crucial importance of the forest’s contributions to Mandinka communities and specifically to their psychological well-being. In addition, the interviewees revealed how ongoing socio-economic changes are affecting the human-forest relationship and possibly eroding the local ethnoforestry knowledge in the LRR of the Gambia. The most common forest contributions are those that provide material goods, serving as the driving force in connecting people with the forest, while non-material contributions are eroding due to complex socio-economic changes. Major socio-economic changes are also believed to drive the shift from dense forest to mixed forest and grassland. Discussion In line with the state of the art, the knowledge and perception of changes documented in this article underline the quintessential need to include local communities’ views in shaping forest management, in order to better fine-tune the strategies to safeguard biocultural diversity across forest areas.
“森林是生命不可或缺的一部分”:冈比亚河下游地区的人与森林的关系
森林通过提供物质和非物质贡献,在全世界数百万人的生活中发挥着至关重要的作用。尽管从生态、经济和文化的角度来看,森林具有至关重要的意义,但森林与邻近的当地社区之间的长期关系对我们了解当地生态知识系统和森林变化的贡献往往被低估。方法在西非冈比亚河下游地区(LRR)研究了Mandinka人与森林的相互关系。通过35次半结构化访谈,我们记录了森林对当地曼丁卡人的贡献以及他们对森林变化的看法。我们还使用遥感卫星图像的地理信息系统(GIS软件)来为这些复杂的联系和变化建立基线。结果本研究揭示了森林对曼丁卡人社区的贡献,特别是对他们的心理健康的重要性。此外,受访者还揭示了正在进行的社会经济变化如何影响人与森林的关系,并可能侵蚀冈比亚LRR地区当地的民族林业知识。最常见的森林贡献是提供物质产品,作为将人与森林联系起来的驱动力,而非物质贡献由于复杂的社会经济变化而正在受到侵蚀。重大的社会经济变化也被认为推动了从茂密森林到混交林和草地的转变。根据目前的技术状况,本文所记录的知识和对变化的认识强调了在制定森林管理时纳入当地社区观点的基本需要,以便更好地调整保护森林地区生物文化多样性的战略。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
4.50
自引率
6.20%
发文量
256
审稿时长
12 weeks
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