Forest Products, Livelihoods and Conservation

(Darren Dugan) #1
298 Rattan exploitation in the Yaoundé Region of Cameroon

Rattan harvesting takes place exclusively in natural rattan stands in an
archaic manner and without any management plan: Rattan is not cultivated in
this region. The only tools used by harvesters are a machete and a file, which
are used not exclusively for the harvesting of rattan, but equally for almost all
production activities. Mature stems are selected (the rate of stem harvesting
per cluster varies from approximately 40% to 100%), drawn, carefully stripped
of their leaves, cut into pieces (eguainées) and/or scraped off (preprocessing
operations) and stacked in parcels or bundles.
Extraction output is low: 28% of the length of L. secundiflorum and 44% of
usable E. macrocarpa is abandoned on branches or simply in the forest because
they are entangled in the canopy, retained by a device or an environment that
hooks and twist them up (Defo 1998). Natural populations suffer not only from
these huge losses, but also from the harvesting pressure (high demand in
some villages), which is sharply detrimental to its dynamics. The exaggerated
harvesting of mature stems from clusters limits the production of suckers by
clones, or vegetative regeneration (Nzooh Dongmo personal communication).
Furthermore, the fact that the clones are permanently besieged does not give
the rattan population the possibility of getting to the reproductive and seedling
stages. In addition, rattan populations in some sites are subjected to clearing
for agricultural purposes.
The extraction of rattan has an impact that is far from being harmless or
neutral on the ecosystem. Harvesting in most cases results in the destruction
of grass, seedlings, bushes or shrubs and support branches. It deprives some
grasses or herbs of their support and sometimes some beetles or coleopterous
insects and ants of their habitat (Defo 1998). If perhaps these insects play a
fundamental role in vital functions of rattan and if the relationship of
dependence at this level is rather specific, the destruction of their habitat
would certainly have negative impacts on the dynamics of the plant
populations^2. Furthermore, rattan harvesting in the Yaoundé region frequently
contributes to promoting hunting, which in any case is not surprising given the
context within which rattan harvesters evolve.

Rattan harvesters and the socio-economic context
Most of the local rattan harvesters are relatively young married men: 96.4% of
harvesters-sellers are male and 85% are between 16 and 40 years of age;
63.1% of harvesters-craftsmen are 18 to 40 years old and 78.0% of these actors
are married; 1.2% are illiterate, 60.0% went only to primary school, 38.8%
reached secondary school and none had higher education. They have on the
average six persons under their care. Those who presently harvest and sell
rattan have not actually been in the business for long, for their average
experience or seniority is only approximately four years and 92% have less
than 10 years of experience. These rural harvesters come from average and
low social categories from the viewpoint of material wealth. But at the village
level they are far from being marginalised persons because they are well
integrated in the local socialisation and economic systems. They do not
constitute any proper or specific social class or category.

17Rattan.P65 298 22/12/2004, 11:05

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