Forest Products, Livelihoods and Conservation

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Atilade Akanmu Adebisi 119

recipes. Traditional herbalists use bitter kola in various pharmacopoeia
preparations for various ailments (Adjanouhun et al. 1991).

Impact of bitter kola production on the livelihoods of J4 Omo
Forest Reserve villagers
The production-to-consumption system of Garcinia kola seeds has an obvious
positive impact on the households of the J4 communities. In particular its
commercialisation has contributed to improving the standard of living of the
villagers. The production system of bitter kola is very simple; the fruits are
collected and the nuts extracted, washed and stored for later sale. Production
costs are minimal. The activity is usually a household affair and most of the
income generated through the sale of bitter kola nuts is spent on household
commitments such as school fees and materials and contracting out the household
work during non–cash crop season, when villagers are able to use their profits to
participate in family ceremonies. The extra income derived from the sale of
bitter kola is thus important to meeting social and educational obligations for
the rural poor from resource farmer to forest dweller (Kabuye 1998).

Economic importance of bitter kola
The economic importance of bitter kola cannot be underestimated, especially
in the area of poverty alleviation among rural people. A cursory survey of
people involved in the trade of this product established that a substantial
amount of revenue can be realised from farm gate to village and urban markets.
Table 1 clearly indicates the revenue position from the resource base (J4 area
of Omo Forest Reserve) up to the common itinerant vendor on the roadside.
The price increases as the commodity changes hands from first degree to
third degree traders. Handling costs and other expenses involved in bringing
the commodity to market contribut immensely to this increase, but looking at
the figures critically demonstrates that the base collectors are at an advantage.
Their only expenses are periodic transportation costs from their villages to
the Fowowa/J4 Junction market if the buyer could not meet them in their
enclaves. The market chain vividly describes the situation. The national,
regional, and global statistics for the economic importance of this commodity
are yet to be computed.

THE PRODUCTION-TO-CONSUMPTION SYSTEM

Resource base of bitter kola
Garcinia kola (Heckel) and its relatives—including G. livingstonei, G. gnetoides,
G. staudtii, G. smeathemannii, G. ovalivolia, G. brevipediellata and G. mannii—
are found in Nigeria as well as generally across the humid lowland plains of
West Africa extending from Sierra Leone to Zaire (Vivien and Faure 1996) and
Angola (Keay 1989).
All the Garcinia species have different uses, using different parts of the
plant, depending on the location where an individual is endemic. In the J4 area

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