Forest Products, Livelihoods and Conservation

(Darren Dugan) #1
78 The informal trade of Cassipourea flanaganii as a cosmetic in South Africa

that C. flanaganii is a generalist in where it grows within the south-facing
Afromontane forests, being present in a variety of canopy heights and forest
types. The coppicing potential of C. flanaganii appears to be limited as all
ring-barked trees were dead.
It has been reported that between 1986 and 1989, at the peak of the trade
in C. flanaganii, uncontrolled harvesting was undertaken on a large scale in
Pirie State Forest resulting in an almost total loss of adult trees (C. Kameni
personal communication). Within the study site all C. flanaganii material is
harvested from Pirie Forest. There are no managed or cultivated populations
and there are no recognisable trends towards domesticating or cultivating the
species. In addition to C. flanaganii, 11 other species are regularly harvested
for their bark for the medicinal plant trade. These are Cassine papillosa
(Hochst.) Kuntze, Curtisia dentata (Burm.f.) C.A.Sm., Harpephyllum caffrum
Bernh. ex Krauss, Hippobromus pauciflorus (L.f.) Radlk., Pleurostylia capensis
(Turcz.) Loes., Protorhus longifolia (Bernh.) Engl., Ptaeroxylon obliquum
(Thunb.) Radlk., Rapanea melanophloeos L. Mez, Schotia latifolia Jacq.,
Scolopia zeyheri (Nees) Harv. and Strychnos henningsii Gilg. It has been
established that approximately 4 tons of forest-harvested plant material, with
a value of approximately US$9,000 is harvested annually from the Pirie State
Forest. Just over 50% of this is derived from the bark of these 11 tree species
with a street market value of approximately US$4,000 (Cocks and Dold 2000).
An ecological survey was undertaken to determine the density of, and
assess harvesting damage to, the populations of C. flanaganii in Hobo and
Cwengcwe forests. These two forests form part of the larger Pirie State Forest
(Figure 1). The survey sampled two representative areas of Hobo and
Cwengcwe. Two 1,000 m transects were plotted and random 100 m^2 quadrates
sampled along the transects; in this way reliable density estimates where
made. In total, 156 quadrates comprising 249 C. flanaganii trees were sampled.
The parameters recorded for each tree were the diameter at breast height
(DBH) where applicable, total height and level of bark damage to the tree
following Cunningham’s (1988) seven-point scale.
Hobo forest has a density of approximately 125 C. flanaganii trees per
hectare; 76% of these are seedlings (0 mm–10 mm in diameter); 19.7% are
saplings (10 mm–46 mm in diameter) and only 4.3% are above 46 mm DBH, the
minimum reproductive diameter encountered in the study. Cwengcwe forest
has a density of approximately 210 trees per hectare, 94.4% of which are
seedlings and 5.6% saplings. No reproductive or potentially reproductive trees
were found.
Plots of comparable sizes in inaccessible areas of Pirie forest, with
consequently low intensity harvesting, revealed tree density to be
approximately 588 individuals per hectare with 35.5 trees per hectare above
the minimum harvesting size, whereas in Hobo only 5.2 harvestable trees per
hectare were recorded while in Cwengcwe none were found. In the survey of
Hobo and Cwengcwe all sampled trees were undamaged as only 2.1% of the
trees had a diameter greater than 41 mm. Furthermore only a single
reproductive tree was found with a DBH of 46 mm.
No data were found in the literature reviewed on the reproduction of the
species, and therefore the reproductive size is unknown. One individual of

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