利用自然资源改善马达加斯加Kianjavato森林内的家庭收入、健康和营养

C. Borgerson, Steig E Johnson, E. Louis, Sheila M. Holmes, Evelin Jean Gasta Anjaranirina, H. Randriamady, C. Golden
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引用次数: 27

摘要

了解马达加斯加的自然资源开采情况,对于制定更广泛的保护和管理战略,确保继续提供基本的生态系统服务,以及制定卫生和经济战略,以满足不断增长的人口的需求至关重要。在马达加斯加东南部的Kianjavato低地雨林中,78%的狐猴物种、83%的本土食肉动物物种和67%的食果蝙蝠物种面临灭绝的威胁。在马达加斯加的其他地区,这三种哺乳动物都是经常被猎杀的食物,但我们对目前的狩猎水平知之甚少,也不知道森林资源的使用是否会显著影响该地区的人类福利。我们对Kianjavato 17个社区的1 267名居民进行了健康评估,并对336个家庭成员进行了半结构化访谈,以调查人与环境的相互作用。我们发现儿童和青少年营养不良的发生率很高。20岁以下人口中有一半以上发育不良,一半以上体重过轻,五分之一以上消瘦。此外,六分之一的居民患有贫血症。我们发现,Kianjavato的森林为农村社区提供了必要的生态系统服务。随着Kianjavato的森林被改变以满足不断增长的人口的需求,这些直接利用的生态系统服务(例如利用野生动物作为食物或植物作为药物)无法同样扩大以满足生活在这些森林中的家庭的基本需求。令人担忧的是,Kianjavato人口的比例依赖森林来满足他们的医疗保健、营养和经济需求,但他们可能没有做到这一点。所有接受调查的家庭(100%)依靠森林来满足其保健需求,40%的区域经济涉及开采有限的森林资源(即宝石)。大多数家庭很少食用野生动物(每户每年2只),而且他们食用的绝大多数(83%)森林动物没有灭绝的危险。40%的野生动物是非法捕获的。虽然目前狩猎可能不会危及当地野生动物,但Kianjavato人口中有16%的人狩猎野生动物,20%的人营养不良。Kianjavato森林的生态系统服务目前可能不足以满足居民的需求。因此,通过提高当地农产品的产量和稳定性,有针对性地努力增加当地获得医疗保健系统的机会,改善家庭营养和经济状况,可能会增加野生动物狩猎的长期可持续性、家庭收入和区域粮食安全。诸如此类可以随着人口增长而扩大以满足未来需求的努力,可能有助于确保长期可持续地利用基本的生态系统服务,改善当地人民的健康,并保持他们生活的森林的完整性。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The use of natural resources to improve household income, health, and nutrition within the forests of Kianjavato, Madagascar
Understanding natural resource extraction in Madagascar is key to developing wider conservation and management strategies that ensure the continued delivery of essential ecosystem services, and the development of health and economic strategies to meet the demands of a growing human population. In the Kianjavato lowland rainforest of southeastern Madagascar, 78% of lemur species, 83% of native carnivoran species, and 67% of frugivorous bat species are threatened with extinction. All three of these groups of mammals are commonly hunted for food in other regions of Madagascar, yet we knew little about current levels of hunting or whether the use of forest resources significantly affects human welfare in this region. We used health assessments of 1 267 Kianjavato residents and semi-structured interviews of members of 336 households in 1 7 communities in Kianjavato to investigate human-environmental interactions. We found high prevalence of child and teenage malnutrition. More than half of the population under 20 years old was stunted, more than half was underweight, and more than one fifth was wasted. Further, one in six residents were anemic. We found that Kianjavato’s forests provided essential ecosystem services for its rural communities. As Kianjavato’s forests are altered to meet the needs of a growing human population, these direct-use ecosystem services (such as the use of wild animals for food or plants for medicine) are unable to similarly expand to meet the basic needs of the families living in these forests. A worrying proportion of the Kianjavato population depends on forests to meet their healthcare, nutritional, and economic needs, yet they may be failing to do so. All surveyed households (1 00%) depended on forests to meet their healthcare needs and 40% of the regional economy involved the extraction of finite forest resources (i.e., precious stones). Most  households consumed very little wildlife (two animals per household per year) and the great majority (83%) of the forest animals they ate were not threatened with extinction. Forty percent of wildlife were caught illegally. Although hunting is likely not imperiling local wildlife at present, 1 6% of the Kianjavato population hunts wildlife and 20% are malnourished. The ecosystem services of Kianjavato’s forests may currently be insufficient to meet the needs of residents. Therefore, targeted efforts to increase local access to the healthcare system and to improve household nutrition and economy by improving the production and stability of local agricultural products may increase the long-term sustainability of wildlife hunting, household incomes, and regional food security. Efforts such as these that can expand with the growing population to meet future needs may help secure the sustainable use of essential ecosystem services for the long term, improving the health of local people and maintaining the integrity of the forests in which they live.
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