Forest Products, Livelihoods and Conservation

(Darren Dugan) #1
Kathrin Schreckenberg 93

including yield estimates for shea and African locust-bean (Parkia biglobosa
(Jacq.) Benth). This was combined with an inventory of land-use types and
tree densities in a circle (with 3.3 km radius) around each village, this being
the approximate area from which NTFPs were collected and in which the
majority of fields lay. On the demand side, community-level meetings were
followed by regular group discussions with women in all three villages to discuss
the role of NTFP incomes in their livelihoods as well as weekly observations at
two weekly markets for a whole calendar year. This was supplemented by a
complete household survey to determine the amounts of NTFPs used (for
subsistence and sale) in the previous year.
Much NTFP research focuses on products that have suddenly caught the public
eye because of the rapid decline in resources (e.g., woodcarving and trophy
hunting in southern Africa), the boom-and-bust nature of markets (e.g., rubber
and brazil nut in Bolivia), the impact of high-profile outside interventions
(‘rainforest crunch’ literature) and concern for the empowerment of local people
(e.g., Brazilian chicleros and rubber tappers). This shea case study is perhaps
unusual in that it is a by-product of a larger study on NTFPs in an area that was
chosen primarily for logistical reasons^2 rather than because NTFPs were
considered to be an issue of any particular importance, and where processing
and trade have not been supported by any external interventions. While the
chapter refers to the shea trade more generally, the specific case study is not
representative of the key shea-producing areas in the drier Sahelian region.

Regional setting
The research was carried out in three villages (Kodowari, Djantala and Diepani
PK8) in the Bassila subprefecture, Atacora Department, Benin. The three
villages were selected as being average-sized (50–500 inhabitants) communities
representing a cross-section of ethnic groups. Bassila, a small town of 5,500
inhabitants, lies about 350 km inland, close to the Togo border (Figure 1).
Together with most of the local villages it is sited along the main road leading
from the coast to Burkina Faso in the north. Although unpaved, this road is a
major trade route and two of the study villages (Djantala and Diepani PK8)
were established here by immigrants in the late 1960s and early ’70s to take
advantage of relatively empty land along a good road. The indigenous village,
Kodowari, moved from its original forest location to its present roadside location
at the same time.
Vegetation in the Bassila region is a typical ‘savanna landscape’ (Bourlière
and Hadley 1983), in which savanna vegetation dominates but is interrupted
by a series of distinctive gallery forests along mostly seasonal watercourses.
With its unimodal rainfall (May–October) of around 1,300 mm, the Bassila region
falls into the Northern Guinea savanna category in the Keay (1953) classification
or the broader category of ‘Sudanian woodland’ according to White (1983).
This is the southern and wettest end of the shea distribution.
This area of Benin was once the ‘wood-basket’ of the country. By the time
this study was carried out in 1992/3, however, the area around the villages was
dominated by field, fallow, bush savanna (savane arbustive) and tree savanna
(savane arborée) in almost equal proportions (around 20% each), the remainder

06SHEA.P65 93 22/12/2004, 11:04

Free download pdf