The Rain Forests of Cameroon

The Rain Forests of Cameroon
Author: Giuseppe Topa,Alain Karsenty,Carole Megevand,Laurent Debroux
Publsiher: World Bank Publications
Total Pages: 176
Release: 2009-07-29
Genre: Political Science
ISBN: 0821379372

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Starting in 1994, Cameroon introduced regulatory and market-based reforms to regulate access to its rainforests, balance public and private interests in those forests, and integrate wider economic, cultural, and environmental perspectives of the value of forests. Based on historical data and extensive interviews, this report concludes that the reforms brought order over the most aggressively competing interests and started to address deeper social and environmental issues, but a significant unfinished agenda remains. On the positive side, information on the boundaries, ownership, use rights, and management of Cameroon s rainforests has become available for public scrutiny, along with information on detection and prosecution of illegal activities. Better and better known rules of the game have improved forest governance and collaboration between forest institutions and civil society. More than 60 percent of Cameroon s rainforests are under management systems that emphasize sustainability. Illegal logging has declined sharply managed parks and production forests, although it persists in rural areas. The restructured forest industry has adopted internationally recognized management practices that have started to align logging with the forest s capacity to regenerate. Cameroon has established rules to preserve customary rights to forests, and community forests have progressed despite unanticipated challenges. Yet further reform is needed. Deeper recognition of the customary rights of all people who depend on Cameroon s forests, regardless of ethnicity, is vital. Timber and nontimber forest products like medicinal plants and bush meat remain subject to illegal exploitation outside state forests. Cameroon needs qualified eco-investors to sustain conservation and diminish reliance on timber production. Community involvement in the management of all types of forests should expand further. Great attention to local markets and small firms will strengthen forest governance and the forest industry in important ways. Rewarding responsible corporate behavior with more lenient bank guarantees and tax incentives may prove as important for conserving forests as punishing corporate misbehavior.

Sustainable Management of Rainforest in Cameroon

Sustainable Management of Rainforest in Cameroon
Author: W. B. J. Jonkers
Publsiher: Unknown
Total Pages: 122
Release: 2003
Genre: Forest management
ISBN: CORNELL:31924097726966

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Plant Diversity in a Central African Rain Forest

Plant Diversity in a Central African Rain Forest
Author: Gildas Peguy Tchouto Mbatchou
Publsiher: Unknown
Total Pages: 208
Release: 2004
Genre: Biodiversity conservation
ISBN: 9051130686

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The Rainforests of West Africa

The Rainforests of West Africa
Author: MARTIN
Publsiher: Birkhäuser
Total Pages: 234
Release: 2013-11-11
Genre: Science
ISBN: 9783034877268

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Nowhere eise in the world did industrialized countries leave such early marks in the rainforest as in West Africa. Past and present developments here are in one way or the other significant for rainforests on other continents as weil. West Africa is a pioneer in both a good and a bad sense. This is reason enough to take a closer Iook at the history of moist tropical West Africa. Until recently, no one really seemed to be interested in the rainforests except for a few specialists. The world's scientific community neglected to study the incalculable riches of tropical forests, to make the public aware of them and their due importance. Although interdisciplinary research has been a popular topic for some decades now, it was not applied to just the most complex habitat on earth. Scientists from all fields studied only that which was easiest to record, seemingly blind to a myriad of details awaiting closer examination. Botanists wentabout establishing their herbariums and paid much too little attention to the vegetation as a whole, or to the significance of useful plants for local populations. Zoologists, too, busied themselves with collecting and describing species. Anthropologists, on the other hand, tended to overlook faunal details: in their ignorance of the animal world, they wrote of tigers and deer in Africa. And finally, foresters saw neither the forest nor the trees for the timber - and even confused rainforests with monocultures of fir trees.

Plant Diversity in a Central African Rain Forest

Plant Diversity in a Central African Rain Forest
Author: Gildas Peguy Tchouto Mbatchou
Publsiher: Unknown
Total Pages: 230
Release: 2004
Genre: Biodiversity conservation
ISBN: MINN:31951D02058302P

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The Conservation Atlas of Tropical Forests

The Conservation Atlas of Tropical Forests
Author: Jeffrey Sayer
Publsiher: Springer
Total Pages: 287
Release: 1992-06-18
Genre: Science
ISBN: 9781349129614

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Recognizing that sound information is vital to the progress of conservation, IUCN have gathered together a visual portfolio of maps of rain forests in Africa. The accompanying text analyzes the extent and causes of deforestation and points a way towards sustainable forest development.

Tropical Rainforests

Tropical Rainforests
Author: Chris C. Park
Publsiher: Routledge
Total Pages: 365
Release: 2002-09-26
Genre: Science
ISBN: 9781134925018

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Tropical Rainforests presents the most up-to-date and wide-ranging review of the problems and prospects of the world's most complex and abundant ecosystem. Chris Park examines where and how fast rainforests are being cleared, drawing on examples from all major forest areas. The consequences of clearance are examined at local, regional and global scales. The author achieves a balanced overview of the current state of the world's rainforests, discussing both the consequences of clearance (for ecology, environments and peoples) and the possible solutions (such as conservation and protection, reforestation, sustainable management, changing tropical timber trade and international investment programmes). Well illustrated with maps, figures and photographs and with a comprehensive bibliography, Tropical Rainforests provides an essential introduction for students of Geography, Ecology and the environment, teachers, environmentalists, development practitioners and the general public.

Tropical Rain Forest A Wider Perspective

Tropical Rain Forest  A Wider Perspective
Author: F.B. Goldsmith
Publsiher: Springer Science & Business Media
Total Pages: 363
Release: 2012-12-06
Genre: Nature
ISBN: 9789401149129

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The international perspective for this book is the unprecedented level of concern over deforestation, recognized by the meeting of world leaders at the 1992 Earth Summit, in Rio do Janeiro, and culminating in the appoint ment of the Intergovernmental Panel on Forests (IPF), under the auspices of the UN Commission on Sustainable Development. The wide range of issues covered by the authors in this volume reflects the breadth of the interna tional debate, from national policies and activist campaigning, through eco nomic and social objectives, to the sustainable management of forest and soil resources. Since the conservation campaigns of the 1980s, the focus of international concern has widened from tropical rain forests to all forest formations, in all regions, with increased recognition of global values and common responsibil ities. However, while forest cover in some temperate countries is increasing, irrational deforestation, at historically unprecedented levels of damage to biodiversity and to other environmental values, remains most acute in tropi cal countries, where the need to use the natural resources for sustainable development is greatest, and the capability weakest. While accepting the urgency of the situation, and the need for greater coherence of action at a global level, the 1997 report of the IPF to the UN Commission emphasized the powers and responsibilities of national governments, and the importance of National Forest Programmes, but with the fuller participation of local communities, and with enhanced access to international assistance.