fbpx
Wikipedia

Deforestation in Madagascar

Deforestation in Madagascar is an ongoing environmental issue. Deforestation[1] creates agricultural or pastoral land but can also result in desertification, water resource degradation, biodiversity erosion and habitat loss, and soil loss.

Illegal slash-and-burn practice in the region west of Manantenina.

It has been noticed that Madagascar has lost 80 or 90% of its "original" or "pre-human" forest cover, but this claim is difficult to prove and is not supported by evidence.[2][3] What is certain is that the arrival of humans on Madagascar some 2000+ years ago began a process of fire, cultivation, logging and grazing that has reduced forest cover. Industrial forest exploitation during the Merina monarchy[4] and French colonialism[5] contributed to forest loss. Evidence from air photography and remote sensing suggest that by c. 2000, around 40% to 50% of the forest cover present in 1950 was lost.[3][6][7] Current hotspots for deforestation include dry forests in the southwest being converted for maize cultivation and rain forests in the northeast exploited for tropical hardwoods.[8]

Primary causes of forest loss include slash-and-burn for agricultural land (a practice known locally as tavy) and for pasture, selective logging for precious woods or construction material, the collection of fuel wood (including charcoal production) and, in certain sites, forest clearing for mining.[9][10]

History of deforestation in Madagascar edit

Early history edit

Deforestation by life in Madagascar by human intervention first made an impact on its highland forests as early as AD 600 in the establishment of swidden fields by Indonesian settlers.[11] The creation of swidden fields is a subsistence method of agriculture that has been practiced by humans across the globe for over 12000 years by means of a slash-and-burn technique that clears an area in preparation for crop growth.[12] An increase in the rate of forest removal was seen around AD 1000 with the introduction of cattle from Africa, compelling Malagasy islanders to expand their grassland grazing areas. Historical records point to the importance that this impact has caused with the disappearance of most of Madagascar's highland forest by 1600 AD.[13] Attempts to conserve Madagascar's forests were introduced by rulers in the establishment of environmental regulations, the earliest being seen in 1881 when Queen Ranavalona II placed a ban on using slash-and-burn techniques in agriculture.[14] These efforts aimed to protect the future of the countries rainforests, however, it has been estimated that over 80 percent of Madagascar's original forests are gone with half of this loss occurring since the late 1950s.[14]

Recent history edit

Early estimates of deforestation in Madagascar were unreliable until using data taken over a 35-year period from a combination of aerial photography, taken in 1950, and more recently data from satellite imagery available since 1972 were used to clearly see the extent of rainforest cleared in the eastern areas of Madagascar.[15] By 1985, only 50 percent of the 7.6 million hectares that existed in 1950 remained equating to an average deforestation rate of over 111,000 hectares per year[15] and by 2005 the country had seen a total of 854,000 hectares of forest lost since 1990.[14] Since the first evidence of human occupation less than 2000 years ago the island of Madagascar's population in 2002 had grown to about 12 million people (McConnell, 2002). Agricultural fires, erosion and soil degradation continue to contribute to the degradation of the countries ecological stability impeding forest regrowth[13] and according to recent data taken over the 2001 – 2012 period the rate of forest loss in Madagascar's has continued to increase.[14]

 
Ecoregions and forest types in Madagascar [16]

As shown in the diagram on the left, Madagascar can be divided into four climatic ecoregions with four forest types: moist forest in the East (green), dry forest in the West (orange), spiny forest in the South (red), and mangrove forests along the West coast (blue). Ecoregions were defined following climatic [17] and vegetation criteria.[18] The dark grey areas represent the remaining natural forest cover for the year 2014. Forest types are defined on the basis of their belonging to one of the four ecoregions.[16]

 
Forest cover change on six decades from 1953 to 2014 [16]

The main figure in the diagram on the right shows the changes in forest cover from 1973 to 2014. Forest cover in 1953 is shown in the bottom-right inset. Two zooms in the western dry (left part) and eastern moist (right part) ecoregions present more detailed views of (from top to bottom): forest cover in 1953, forest cover change from 1973 to 2014, forest fragmentation in 2014 and distance to forest edge in 2014. Data on water bodies (blue) and water seasonality (light blue for seasonal water to dark blue for permanent water) have been extracted from Pekel et al. (2016).[19][16]

Causes edit

Agriculture edit

The primary cause for deforestation in Madagascar is the slash-and-burn practice. Historically and culturally known as tavy, the process involves setting vegetation alight after being cut down, creating potential land for rice cultivation.[20] Coupled with the establishment of rural communities who undertake farming,[21] hectares of forest are lost to agriculture.

Population increase edit

Since the 1940s, the population in Madagascar has rapidly increased, putting pressure on the land available for housing and farming. Thousands of hectares of rainforests have been cut down in order to provide for the increased population.

Firewood edit

As 40% of Madagascar's rural population lives in poverty and has little to no access to electricity, they have to resort to using firewood for completing daily tasks. Consuming approximately 100 kg of firewood monthly, Madagascan households use this energy for cooking, home heating and lighting.[22]

Timber edit

 
Illegal export of rosewood from Marojejy National Park

The Masoala Peninsula, in Madagascar's east, consists of valuable hardwood timber. Mostly ebony and rosewood, rainforests are degraded in order to satisfy a high demand within the international market.[14][10]

Illegal logging edit

Illegal logging in Madagascar has been a problem for decades and is perpetuated by extreme poverty and government corruption. Often taking the form of selective logging, the trade has been driven by high international demand for expensive, fine-grained lumber such as rosewood and ebony.[23] Historically, logging and exporting in Madagascar have been regulated by the Malagasy government, although the logging of rare hardwoods was explicitly banned from protected areas in 2000. Since then, government orders and memos have intermittently alternated between permitting and banning exports of precious woods. The most commonly cited reason for permitting exports is to salvage valuable wood from cyclone damage, although this reasoning has come under heavy scrutiny. This oscillating availability of Malagasy rosewood and other precious woods has created a market of rising and falling prices, allowing traders or "timber barons" to stockpile illegally sourced logs during periodic bans and then flood the market when the trade windows open and prices are high.[24]

Environmental impacts edit

Biodiversity edit

 
Lemurs in Madagascar's dry deciduous forests are threatened by deforestation for the creation of farmland and pasture.

Since its divergence from Africa over 88 million years ago, Madagascar has evolved into an incredibly biodiverse island.[25] Including more than 13000 plants and 700 vertebrates,[25] close to 90% of Madagascar's species are endemic and are found nowhere else in the world.[26] However, with deforestation depleting key habitats and food resources, over 8000 species are either classified as vulnerable or endangered and some, including 15 species of lemur, have actually gone extinct.[27] Coupled with its geographic isolation thus increasing vulnerability to destruction,[26] deforestation will continue to impact Madagascar's flora and fauna, increasing rates of extinction.

Lemurs are an endemic species of primates to the island of Madagascar.[28] They act as pollinators, seed dispersers, and prey in their ecosystems.[29] The majority of lemurs are classified as endangered due to human activities, including deforestation.[28] This deforestation has led to different forest types in Madagascar: primary or intact forests, secondary or intermediate forests, mosaic forests, and agricultural land.[28] The primary forests have not been deforested and are the most biodiverse.[30] These forests have the highest abundance of lemurs.[29] The secondary forests are somewhat degraded, but some lemur species are just as abundant in these areas.[29] Mosaic forests are fragmented and are heavily affected by deforestation. Some species of lemurs cannot survive in these forests,[28] while others can.[30] Survival in these mosaic forests depends on a variety of factors, such as diet.[29] Research suggests that omnivores and folivores can tolerate these varying habitats since their diets include a wide variety of food sources.[29] For example, microcebus, an omnivore, has been found living in these forests and takes advantage of the abundance of insects here.[30] However, lemurs that have specialized diets, such as frugivores, are more sensitive to habitat disturbance.[29] These lemurs are found more often in primary forests.[30]

Research in Masoala National Park, the largest protected forest in Madagascar,[29] showed that there was a positive correlation between mean tree height and lemur abundance.[30] This explains why the primary lowland forests, which had the tallest trees and most canopy cover, had the greatest number of lemurs.[30] Lepilemur scotterum, avahi mooreorum,[30] and eulemur albifrons were mostly found in the greatest densities in these areas.[29] Other species, like avahi laniger, allocebus, and microcebus, were found in equal densities in primary, secondary, and degraded forests.[29]

A study of the Antserananomby Forest in western Madagascar in the 1960s and 1970s showed it had the highest population densities for each lemur species living there.[31] A more recent study has shown that much of the forest has been cleared for agricultural use and population densities of lemurs have declined significantly.[31] Reduced forest size has been shown to have a direct negative effect on lemur diversity.[28]

Soil and water edit

 
Deforestation of the Highland Plateau has led to extensive siltation and unstable flows of western rivers.

Like many habitats that undergo deforestation, Madagascar experiences soil erosion, of which can adversely affect river systems and lakes. In the case of Lake Alaotra in Ambatondrazaka area, in the country's east, deforestation in the hills above has caused heavy erosion, leading to increased sedimentation in the lake. As result, Lake Alaotra has actually decreased in size by approximately 30% in last 40 years. Moreover, the water quality of the lake has suffered, thus reducing the productivity of neighbouring rice cultivations.[32] Soil can also become infertile after vegetation clearing. When plants die or shed their leaves, micro-organisms in soil decompose the leaf litter as they consume it, breaking it down to key nutrients valuable to future plant growth. Should this biomass be removed, there will be no nutrient recycling, reducing soil fertility and reducing plant growth.[26]

Atmosphere and climate edit

Deforestation in Madagascar, as well as other parts of the world, can have an influence on climate. When the forest is cleared, the understorey is left exposed to the sun to a greater extent than before. This increased sunlight reduces soil moisture and increases rates of evapotranspiration in plants, ultimately dehydrating them and stunting growth.[33] At a global level, deforestation is also known to have an effect on carbon dioxide levels in the atmosphere through;

  • Slash-and-burn practices: Used primarily to create agricultural land, it involves the logging of forests and burning debris afterwards.[33]
  • Disruption of photosynthesis: Plants absorb atmospheric carbon dioxide, as well water, in order to form their biomass and oxygen.[34] Without plants, carbon dioxide is not absorbed.

It is with the loss of crucial carbon sinks and continuation of slash-and-burn deforestation that carbon dioxide levels will continue to increase in the atmosphere, ultimately contributing to global warming.[33]

Economic impacts edit

Economic impacts of deforestation in Madagascar closely align with the degradation of its natural environment and resources. Examples exist within;

Agriculture edit

 
Deforested agricultural countryside in Madagascar

While a key cause of deforestation,[20] agriculture can also be one of its victims. Without vegetation to anchor soil, the chance of erosion increases, sending close to 400 tonnes/ha of sediment into waterways annually.[20] As a result, water quality decreases and coupled with a lack of nutrient cycling due to minimal biomass, plant productivity is reduced, including valuable rice crops.[35][36]

Medicine edit

As a product of its biodiversity, Madagascar has a vast array of plant species, with 2,300 having medicinal properties that treat many illness, from common ailments to cancers.[37] Should deforestation continue, the pharmaceutical industry will lose a key resource, eventually suffering decreases in profit.[38]

Ecotourism edit

Madagascar possesses a vast array of species, 90% of which are only unique to the island.[36] With deforestation destroying habitats and causing increased extinctions, Madagascar will potentially lose a great tourism asset, eliminating incentive to invest in ecotourism operations (such as resorts, recreational facilities, and national parks), thus decreasing long-lasting employment opportunities for local communities.[37]

Reforestation efforts edit

Despite the deforestation trend, tree cover is increasing in some parts of the country, though largely of introduced (non-native) species such as Eucalyptus (various species), pine (Pinus kesiya, Pinus patula,) silver wattle (Acacia dealbata), silky oak (Grevillea banksii), and paperbark/niaouli ("Melaleuca quinquenervia"). Some of these trees are planted by foresters and farmers; others have become invasive of their own accord.[39][40][41] Reforestation by eucalypts, pines, and wattles has been demonstrated, for instance, in the central highlands.[42]

Reforestation efforts with native species, particularly in rainforest corridors, have had mixed success. Some reforestation efforts have been conducted by Rio Tinto, a mining organization. This effort includes the set-up of 2 tree nurseries near Fort Dauphin. The nurseries are called the Rio Tinto QMM's nurseries. The nurseries plant some 600 tree species native to Madagascar.[43][44] However, in 2003, Rio Tinto also announced plans to mine ilmenite (used to make toothpaste and paint) in southern Madagascar. These plans included the creation of a new port, roads, and other facilities. Mostly migrant workers would be employed, despite high levels of unemployment in the region. This unemployment and poverty drives charcoal production, which is a major factor in deforestation in that region.[45]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ , Time, September 25, 2008.
  2. ^ McConnell, William; Kull, Christian (2014). "Protecting lemurs: Madagascar's forests". Science. 344 (6182): 358. Bibcode:2014Sci...344..358M. doi:10.1126/science.344.6182.358-a. PMID 24763569.
  3. ^ a b McConnell, William; Kull, Christian (2014). Ivan R. Scales (ed.). "Deforestation in Madagascar: debates over the island's forest cover and challenges of measuring forest change" (PDF). Conservation and Environmental Management in Madagascar. London: Routledge-Earthscan: 67–104.
  4. ^ Campbell, Gwyn (2013). "Forest Depletion in Imperial Madagascar, c.1790–1861". Contest for Land in Madagascar: Environment, Ancestors and Development, Edited by S. Evers, G. Campbell & M. Lambek (Leiden: Brill).: 63–96.
  5. ^ Jarosz, Lucy (1993). "Defining and explaining tropical deforestation: shifting cultivation and population growth in colonial Madagascar (1896-1940)". Economic Geography. 69 (4): 366–379. doi:10.2307/143595. JSTOR 143595. PMID 12318844.
  6. ^ Allnutt, Thomas; et al. (2008). "A method for quantifying biodiversity loss and its application to a 50-year record of deforestation across Madagascar". Conservation Letters. 1 (4): 173–181. doi:10.1111/j.1755-263X.2008.00027.x.
  7. ^ Deforestation causes species extinction in Madagascar
  8. ^ Harper, Grady; Steininger, Marc; Tucker, Compton; Juhn, Daniel; Hawkins, Frank (2007). "Fifty years of deforestation and forest fragmentation in Madagascar". Environmental Conservation. 34 (4): 325–333. doi:10.1017/s0376892907004262. S2CID 86120326.
  9. ^ Mittermeier, R.A.; Konstant, W.R.; Hawkins, F.; Louis, E.E.; Langrand, O.; Ratsimbazafy, J.; Rasoloarison, R.; Ganzhorn, J.U.; Rajaobelina, S.; Tattersall, I.; Meyers, D.M. (2006). "Chapter 4: Conservation of Lemurs". Lemurs of Madagascar. Illustrated by S.D. Nash (2nd ed.). Conservation International. pp. 52–84. ISBN 1-881173-88-7.
  10. ^ a b Zhu, Annah (2017). "Rosewood Occidentalism and Orientalism in Madagascar". Geoforum.
  11. ^ Gade, D; Sussman, R (1996). "Deforestation and Its Effects in Highland Madagascar". Mountain Research and Development. International Mountain Society. 16 (2): 101–116. doi:10.2307/3674005. JSTOR 3674005.
  12. ^ Stief, C (2017). "Slash and Burn Agriculture- An Overview of Slash and Burn". Geography.about.com.
  13. ^ a b Gade, D (1996). "Deforestation and Its Effects in Highland Madagascar". Mountain Research and Development. International Mountain Society. 16 (2): 101–116. doi:10.2307/3674005. JSTOR 3674005.
  14. ^ a b c d e Butler, R. "Madagascar".
  15. ^ a b Green, M; Sussman, R (1990). "). Deforestation History of the Eastern Rain Forests of Madagascar from Satellite Images". Science. New Series. 248 (4952): 212–215. Bibcode:1990Sci...248..212G. doi:10.1126/science.248.4952.212. PMID 17740137. S2CID 8288722.
  16. ^ a b c d Vieilledent, Ghislain; Grinand, Clovis; Rakotomalala, Fety A.; Ranaivosoa, Rija; Rakotoarijaona, Jean-Roger; Allnutt, Thomas F.; Achard, Frédéric (2018). "Combining global tree cover loss data with historical national forest cover maps to look at six decades of deforestation and forest fragmentation in Madagascar". Biological Conservation. Elsevier BV. 222: 189–197. doi:10.1016/j.biocon.2018.04.008. ISSN 0006-3207.   Modified material was copied from this source, which is available under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
  17. ^ Cornet A. (1974) "Essai De Cartographie Bioclimatique à Madagascar", Tech. Rep, Orstom.
  18. ^ Ministère de l’Environnement (1996) "IEFN: Inventaire Ecologique Forestier National", Tech. Rep., Ministère De l’Environnement De Madagascar, Direction Des Eaux Et Forêts, DFS Deutsch Forest Service GmbH, Entreprise d’études de développement rural “Mamokatra”, FTM.
  19. ^ Pekel J.F., Cottam A., Gorelick N., Belward A.S. (2016) "High-resolution mapping of global surface water and its long-term changes", Nature, 540: 418–422.
  20. ^ a b c Jorgen, K (2002). "Deforestation in the Madagascar Highlands". GeoJournal. 56 (3): 191–199. doi:10.1023/A:1025187422687. S2CID 150928630. ProQuest 223672089.
  21. ^ Brooks, C.P.; Holmes, C; Kramer, K; Barnett, B; Keitt, T.H. (2009). "The Role of Demography and Markets in Determining Deforestation Rates Near Ranomafana National Park, Madagascar". PLOS ONE. 4 (6): e5783. Bibcode:2009PLoSO...4.5783B. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0005783. PMC 2691994. PMID 19536282.
  22. ^ NASA. "Deforestation in Madagascar". Lcluc.umd.edu.
  23. ^ Zhu, Annah (2020). "China's Rosewood Boom: A Cultural Fix to Capital Overaccumulation". Annals of the American Association of Geographers.
  24. ^ Anonymous (2018). "Rosewood democracy in the political forests of Madagascar". Political Geography.
  25. ^ a b Scales, Ivan R. (2014). Conservation and Environmental Management in Madagascar (1st ed.). Hoboken: Taylor and Francis.
  26. ^ a b c Smith, Thomas M.; Smith, Robert Leo (2015). Elements of Ecology (9h ed.). Harlow, England: Pearson. ISBN 9781292077406.
  27. ^ Clark, Megan (2015). "Deforestation in Madagascar: Consequences of Population Growth and Unsustainable Agricultural Processes" (PDF). Global Majority e-Journal. 3 (1): 61–71.
  28. ^ a b c d e Schüßler, Dominik; Radespiel, Ute; Ratsimbazafy, Jonah Henri; Mantilla-Contreras, Jasmin (2018-12-01). "Lemurs in a dying forest: Factors influencing lemur diversity and distribution in forest remnants of north-eastern Madagascar". Biological Conservation. 228: 17–26. doi:10.1016/j.biocon.2018.10.008. ISSN 0006-3207. S2CID 92420538.
  29. ^ a b c d e f g h i Murphy, Asia J.; Farris, Zach J.; Karpanty, Sarah; Ratelolahy, Felix; Kelly, Marcella J. (2016-06-01). "Estimating Encounter Rates and Densities of Three Lemur Species in Northeastern Madagascar". International Journal of Primatology. 37 (3): 371–389. doi:10.1007/s10764-016-9906-0. ISSN 1573-8604. S2CID 7670062.
  30. ^ a b c d e f g Sawyer, Rachel Mary; Fenosoa, Zo Samuel Ella; Andrianarimisa, Aristide; Donati, Giuseppe (2017-01-01). "The effect of habitat disturbance on the abundance of nocturnal lemur species on the Masoala Peninsula, northeastern Madagascar". Primates. 58 (1): 187–197. doi:10.1007/s10329-016-0552-0. ISSN 1610-7365. PMID 27394434. S2CID 25928477.
  31. ^ a b Kelley, Elizabeth A.; Sussman, Robert W.; Muldoon, Kathleen M. (January 2007). "The Status of Lemur Species at Antserananomby: An Update". Primate Conservation. 22 (1): 71–77. doi:10.1896/052.022.0105. ISSN 0898-6207.
  32. ^ Bakoariniaina, Lao Nathalie; Kusky, Timothy; Raharimahefa, Tsilavo (2006). "Disappearing Lake Alaotra: Monitoring catastrophic erosion, waterway silting, and land degradation hazards in Madagascar using Landsat imagery". Journal of African Earth Sciences. 44 (2): 241–252. Bibcode:2006JAfES..44..241B. doi:10.1016/j.jafrearsci.2005.10.013.
  33. ^ a b c "Soil Erosion and Degradation". World Wildlife Foundation. World Wildlife Foundation. Retrieved 24 November 2021.
  34. ^ Reece, Jane B.; Taylor, Martha R.; Simon, Eric J.; Dickey, Jean L. (2015). Campbell Biology Concepts & Connections (8th ed.). England: Pearson Education Limited.
  35. ^ Bakoariniaina, L; Kusky, T; Raharimahefa, T (2006). "Monitoring catastrophic erosion, waterway silting, and land degradation hazards in Madagascar using Lansat imagery". Journal of African Earth Sciences. 44 (2): 241–252. Bibcode:2006JAfES..44..241B. doi:10.1016/j.jafrearsci.2005.10.013.
  36. ^ a b Smith, T.M.; Smith, R.L (2015). Elements of Ecology (9 ed.). Harlow, Essex: Pearson.
  37. ^ a b "Making conservation work in Madagascar". Wildmadagascar.org. 2017.
  38. ^ "ecoDestinations-Madagascar". ecotourism.org. The International Ecotourism Society.
  39. ^ Carriere, Stephanie; Randriambanona. (PDF). Bois et Forêts des Tropiques. 292 (2): 5–21. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2015-10-24.
  40. ^ Kull, Christian; Tassin, Jacques; Rangan, Haripriya (2007). "Multifunctional, scrubby, and invasive forests? Wattles in the highlands of Madagascar". Mountain Research and Development. 27 (3): 224–231. doi:10.1659/mrd.0864. S2CID 106404585.
  41. ^ Tassin, Jacques (2009). "Evaluation préliminaire des risques d'invasion par les essences forestières à Madagascar". Bois et Forêts des Tropiques. 299 (1): 27–36. doi:10.19182/bft2009.299.a20420.
  42. ^ Kull, Christian (2012). "Air photo evidence of historical land cover change in the highlands: wetlands and grasslands give way to crops and woodlots". Madagascar Conservation & Development. 7 (3): 144–152. doi:10.4314/mcd.v7i3.7.
  43. ^ IUCN report on Rio Tinto mines in Madagascar
  44. ^ Indian Ocean With Simon Reeve documentary
  45. ^ (PDF). Geocases. 2005. Archived from the original (PDF) on 1 November 2013. Retrieved 30 October 2013.

deforestation, madagascar, ongoing, environmental, issue, deforestation, creates, agricultural, pastoral, land, also, result, desertification, water, resource, degradation, biodiversity, erosion, habitat, loss, soil, loss, illegal, slash, burn, practice, regio. Deforestation in Madagascar is an ongoing environmental issue Deforestation 1 creates agricultural or pastoral land but can also result in desertification water resource degradation biodiversity erosion and habitat loss and soil loss Illegal slash and burn practice in the region west of Manantenina It has been noticed that Madagascar has lost 80 or 90 of its original or pre human forest cover but this claim is difficult to prove and is not supported by evidence 2 3 What is certain is that the arrival of humans on Madagascar some 2000 years ago began a process of fire cultivation logging and grazing that has reduced forest cover Industrial forest exploitation during the Merina monarchy 4 and French colonialism 5 contributed to forest loss Evidence from air photography and remote sensing suggest that by c 2000 around 40 to 50 of the forest cover present in 1950 was lost 3 6 7 Current hotspots for deforestation include dry forests in the southwest being converted for maize cultivation and rain forests in the northeast exploited for tropical hardwoods 8 Primary causes of forest loss include slash and burn for agricultural land a practice known locally as tavy and for pasture selective logging for precious woods or construction material the collection of fuel wood including charcoal production and in certain sites forest clearing for mining 9 10 Contents 1 History of deforestation in Madagascar 1 1 Early history 1 2 Recent history 2 Causes 2 1 Agriculture 2 2 Population increase 2 3 Firewood 2 4 Timber 3 Illegal logging 4 Environmental impacts 4 1 Biodiversity 4 2 Soil and water 4 3 Atmosphere and climate 5 Economic impacts 5 1 Agriculture 5 2 Medicine 5 3 Ecotourism 6 Reforestation efforts 7 See also 8 ReferencesHistory of deforestation in Madagascar editEarly history edit Deforestation by life in Madagascar by human intervention first made an impact on its highland forests as early as AD 600 in the establishment of swidden fields by Indonesian settlers 11 The creation of swidden fields is a subsistence method of agriculture that has been practiced by humans across the globe for over 12000 years by means of a slash and burn technique that clears an area in preparation for crop growth 12 An increase in the rate of forest removal was seen around AD 1000 with the introduction of cattle from Africa compelling Malagasy islanders to expand their grassland grazing areas Historical records point to the importance that this impact has caused with the disappearance of most of Madagascar s highland forest by 1600 AD 13 Attempts to conserve Madagascar s forests were introduced by rulers in the establishment of environmental regulations the earliest being seen in 1881 when Queen Ranavalona II placed a ban on using slash and burn techniques in agriculture 14 These efforts aimed to protect the future of the countries rainforests however it has been estimated that over 80 percent of Madagascar s original forests are gone with half of this loss occurring since the late 1950s 14 Recent history edit Early estimates of deforestation in Madagascar were unreliable until using data taken over a 35 year period from a combination of aerial photography taken in 1950 and more recently data from satellite imagery available since 1972 were used to clearly see the extent of rainforest cleared in the eastern areas of Madagascar 15 By 1985 only 50 percent of the 7 6 million hectares that existed in 1950 remained equating to an average deforestation rate of over 111 000 hectares per year 15 and by 2005 the country had seen a total of 854 000 hectares of forest lost since 1990 14 Since the first evidence of human occupation less than 2000 years ago the island of Madagascar s population in 2002 had grown to about 12 million people McConnell 2002 Agricultural fires erosion and soil degradation continue to contribute to the degradation of the countries ecological stability impeding forest regrowth 13 and according to recent data taken over the 2001 2012 period the rate of forest loss in Madagascar s has continued to increase 14 nbsp Ecoregions and forest types in Madagascar 16 As shown in the diagram on the left Madagascar can be divided into four climatic ecoregions with four forest types moist forest in the East green dry forest in the West orange spiny forest in the South red and mangrove forests along the West coast blue Ecoregions were defined following climatic 17 and vegetation criteria 18 The dark grey areas represent the remaining natural forest cover for the year 2014 Forest types are defined on the basis of their belonging to one of the four ecoregions 16 nbsp Forest cover change on six decades from 1953 to 2014 16 The main figure in the diagram on the right shows the changes in forest cover from 1973 to 2014 Forest cover in 1953 is shown in the bottom right inset Two zooms in the western dry left part and eastern moist right part ecoregions present more detailed views of from top to bottom forest cover in 1953 forest cover change from 1973 to 2014 forest fragmentation in 2014 and distance to forest edge in 2014 Data on water bodies blue and water seasonality light blue for seasonal water to dark blue for permanent water have been extracted from Pekel et al 2016 19 16 Causes editAgriculture edit The primary cause for deforestation in Madagascar is the slash and burn practice Historically and culturally known as tavy the process involves setting vegetation alight after being cut down creating potential land for rice cultivation 20 Coupled with the establishment of rural communities who undertake farming 21 hectares of forest are lost to agriculture Population increase edit Since the 1940s the population in Madagascar has rapidly increased putting pressure on the land available for housing and farming Thousands of hectares of rainforests have been cut down in order to provide for the increased population Firewood edit As 40 of Madagascar s rural population lives in poverty and has little to no access to electricity they have to resort to using firewood for completing daily tasks Consuming approximately 100 kg of firewood monthly Madagascan households use this energy for cooking home heating and lighting 22 Timber edit nbsp Illegal export of rosewood from Marojejy National ParkThe Masoala Peninsula in Madagascar s east consists of valuable hardwood timber Mostly ebony and rosewood rainforests are degraded in order to satisfy a high demand within the international market 14 10 Illegal logging editMain article Illegal logging in Madagascar Illegal logging in Madagascar has been a problem for decades and is perpetuated by extreme poverty and government corruption Often taking the form of selective logging the trade has been driven by high international demand for expensive fine grained lumber such as rosewood and ebony 23 Historically logging and exporting in Madagascar have been regulated by the Malagasy government although the logging of rare hardwoods was explicitly banned from protected areas in 2000 Since then government orders and memos have intermittently alternated between permitting and banning exports of precious woods The most commonly cited reason for permitting exports is to salvage valuable wood from cyclone damage although this reasoning has come under heavy scrutiny This oscillating availability of Malagasy rosewood and other precious woods has created a market of rising and falling prices allowing traders or timber barons to stockpile illegally sourced logs during periodic bans and then flood the market when the trade windows open and prices are high 24 Environmental impacts editBiodiversity edit nbsp Lemurs in Madagascar s dry deciduous forests are threatened by deforestation for the creation of farmland and pasture Since its divergence from Africa over 88 million years ago Madagascar has evolved into an incredibly biodiverse island 25 Including more than 13000 plants and 700 vertebrates 25 close to 90 of Madagascar s species are endemic and are found nowhere else in the world 26 However with deforestation depleting key habitats and food resources over 8000 species are either classified as vulnerable or endangered and some including 15 species of lemur have actually gone extinct 27 Coupled with its geographic isolation thus increasing vulnerability to destruction 26 deforestation will continue to impact Madagascar s flora and fauna increasing rates of extinction Lemurs are an endemic species of primates to the island of Madagascar 28 They act as pollinators seed dispersers and prey in their ecosystems 29 The majority of lemurs are classified as endangered due to human activities including deforestation 28 This deforestation has led to different forest types in Madagascar primary or intact forests secondary or intermediate forests mosaic forests and agricultural land 28 The primary forests have not been deforested and are the most biodiverse 30 These forests have the highest abundance of lemurs 29 The secondary forests are somewhat degraded but some lemur species are just as abundant in these areas 29 Mosaic forests are fragmented and are heavily affected by deforestation Some species of lemurs cannot survive in these forests 28 while others can 30 Survival in these mosaic forests depends on a variety of factors such as diet 29 Research suggests that omnivores and folivores can tolerate these varying habitats since their diets include a wide variety of food sources 29 For example microcebus an omnivore has been found living in these forests and takes advantage of the abundance of insects here 30 However lemurs that have specialized diets such as frugivores are more sensitive to habitat disturbance 29 These lemurs are found more often in primary forests 30 Research in Masoala National Park the largest protected forest in Madagascar 29 showed that there was a positive correlation between mean tree height and lemur abundance 30 This explains why the primary lowland forests which had the tallest trees and most canopy cover had the greatest number of lemurs 30 Lepilemur scotterum avahi mooreorum 30 and eulemur albifrons were mostly found in the greatest densities in these areas 29 Other species like avahi laniger allocebus and microcebus were found in equal densities in primary secondary and degraded forests 29 A study of the Antserananomby Forest in western Madagascar in the 1960s and 1970s showed it had the highest population densities for each lemur species living there 31 A more recent study has shown that much of the forest has been cleared for agricultural use and population densities of lemurs have declined significantly 31 Reduced forest size has been shown to have a direct negative effect on lemur diversity 28 Soil and water edit nbsp Deforestation of the Highland Plateau has led to extensive siltation and unstable flows of western rivers Like many habitats that undergo deforestation Madagascar experiences soil erosion of which can adversely affect river systems and lakes In the case of Lake Alaotra in Ambatondrazaka area in the country s east deforestation in the hills above has caused heavy erosion leading to increased sedimentation in the lake As result Lake Alaotra has actually decreased in size by approximately 30 in last 40 years Moreover the water quality of the lake has suffered thus reducing the productivity of neighbouring rice cultivations 32 Soil can also become infertile after vegetation clearing When plants die or shed their leaves micro organisms in soil decompose the leaf litter as they consume it breaking it down to key nutrients valuable to future plant growth Should this biomass be removed there will be no nutrient recycling reducing soil fertility and reducing plant growth 26 Atmosphere and climate edit See also Climate change in Madagascar Deforestation in Madagascar as well as other parts of the world can have an influence on climate When the forest is cleared the understorey is left exposed to the sun to a greater extent than before This increased sunlight reduces soil moisture and increases rates of evapotranspiration in plants ultimately dehydrating them and stunting growth 33 At a global level deforestation is also known to have an effect on carbon dioxide levels in the atmosphere through Slash and burn practices Used primarily to create agricultural land it involves the logging of forests and burning debris afterwards 33 Disruption of photosynthesis Plants absorb atmospheric carbon dioxide as well water in order to form their biomass and oxygen 34 Without plants carbon dioxide is not absorbed It is with the loss of crucial carbon sinks and continuation of slash and burn deforestation that carbon dioxide levels will continue to increase in the atmosphere ultimately contributing to global warming 33 Economic impacts editEconomic impacts of deforestation in Madagascar closely align with the degradation of its natural environment and resources Examples exist within Agriculture edit See also Agriculture in Madagascar nbsp Deforested agricultural countryside in MadagascarWhile a key cause of deforestation 20 agriculture can also be one of its victims Without vegetation to anchor soil the chance of erosion increases sending close to 400 tonnes ha of sediment into waterways annually 20 As a result water quality decreases and coupled with a lack of nutrient cycling due to minimal biomass plant productivity is reduced including valuable rice crops 35 36 Medicine edit As a product of its biodiversity Madagascar has a vast array of plant species with 2 300 having medicinal properties that treat many illness from common ailments to cancers 37 Should deforestation continue the pharmaceutical industry will lose a key resource eventually suffering decreases in profit 38 Ecotourism edit Madagascar possesses a vast array of species 90 of which are only unique to the island 36 With deforestation destroying habitats and causing increased extinctions Madagascar will potentially lose a great tourism asset eliminating incentive to invest in ecotourism operations such as resorts recreational facilities and national parks thus decreasing long lasting employment opportunities for local communities 37 Reforestation efforts editDespite the deforestation trend tree cover is increasing in some parts of the country though largely of introduced non native species such as Eucalyptus various species pine Pinus kesiya Pinus patula silver wattle Acacia dealbata silky oak Grevillea banksii and paperbark niaouli Melaleuca quinquenervia Some of these trees are planted by foresters and farmers others have become invasive of their own accord 39 40 41 Reforestation by eucalypts pines and wattles has been demonstrated for instance in the central highlands 42 Reforestation efforts with native species particularly in rainforest corridors have had mixed success Some reforestation efforts have been conducted by Rio Tinto a mining organization This effort includes the set up of 2 tree nurseries near Fort Dauphin The nurseries are called the Rio Tinto QMM s nurseries The nurseries plant some 600 tree species native to Madagascar 43 44 However in 2003 Rio Tinto also announced plans to mine ilmenite used to make toothpaste and paint in southern Madagascar These plans included the creation of a new port roads and other facilities Mostly migrant workers would be employed despite high levels of unemployment in the region This unemployment and poverty drives charcoal production which is a major factor in deforestation in that region 45 See also edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Deforestation in Madagascar Deforestation by region Environment of Madagascar Wildlife of MadagascarReferences edit Saving the Wildlife of Madagascar Time September 25 2008 McConnell William Kull Christian 2014 Protecting lemurs Madagascar s forests Science 344 6182 358 Bibcode 2014Sci 344 358M doi 10 1126 science 344 6182 358 a PMID 24763569 a b McConnell William Kull Christian 2014 Ivan R Scales ed Deforestation in Madagascar debates over the island s forest cover and challenges of measuring forest change PDF Conservation and Environmental Management in Madagascar London Routledge Earthscan 67 104 Campbell Gwyn 2013 Forest Depletion in Imperial Madagascar c 1790 1861 Contest for Land in Madagascar Environment Ancestors and Development Edited by S Evers G Campbell amp M Lambek Leiden Brill 63 96 Jarosz Lucy 1993 Defining and explaining tropical deforestation shifting cultivation and population growth in colonial Madagascar 1896 1940 Economic Geography 69 4 366 379 doi 10 2307 143595 JSTOR 143595 PMID 12318844 Allnutt Thomas et al 2008 A method for quantifying biodiversity loss and its application to a 50 year record of deforestation across Madagascar Conservation Letters 1 4 173 181 doi 10 1111 j 1755 263X 2008 00027 x Deforestation causes species extinction in Madagascar Harper Grady Steininger Marc Tucker Compton Juhn Daniel Hawkins Frank 2007 Fifty years of deforestation and forest fragmentation in Madagascar Environmental Conservation 34 4 325 333 doi 10 1017 s0376892907004262 S2CID 86120326 Mittermeier R A Konstant W R Hawkins F Louis E E Langrand O Ratsimbazafy J Rasoloarison R Ganzhorn J U Rajaobelina S Tattersall I Meyers D M 2006 Chapter 4 Conservation of Lemurs Lemurs of Madagascar Illustrated by S D Nash 2nd ed Conservation International pp 52 84 ISBN 1 881173 88 7 a b Zhu Annah 2017 Rosewood Occidentalism and Orientalism in Madagascar Geoforum Gade D Sussman R 1996 Deforestation and Its Effects in Highland Madagascar Mountain Research and Development International Mountain Society 16 2 101 116 doi 10 2307 3674005 JSTOR 3674005 Stief C 2017 Slash and Burn Agriculture An Overview of Slash and Burn Geography about com a b Gade D 1996 Deforestation and Its Effects in Highland Madagascar Mountain Research and Development International Mountain Society 16 2 101 116 doi 10 2307 3674005 JSTOR 3674005 a b c d e Butler R Madagascar a b Green M Sussman R 1990 Deforestation History of the Eastern Rain Forests of Madagascar from Satellite Images Science New Series 248 4952 212 215 Bibcode 1990Sci 248 212G doi 10 1126 science 248 4952 212 PMID 17740137 S2CID 8288722 a b c d Vieilledent Ghislain Grinand Clovis Rakotomalala Fety A Ranaivosoa Rija Rakotoarijaona Jean Roger Allnutt Thomas F Achard Frederic 2018 Combining global tree cover loss data with historical national forest cover maps to look at six decades of deforestation and forest fragmentation in Madagascar Biological Conservation Elsevier BV 222 189 197 doi 10 1016 j biocon 2018 04 008 ISSN 0006 3207 nbsp Modified material was copied from this source which is available under a Creative Commons Attribution 4 0 International License Cornet A 1974 Essai De Cartographie Bioclimatique a Madagascar Tech Rep Orstom Ministere de l Environnement 1996 IEFN Inventaire Ecologique Forestier National Tech Rep Ministere De l Environnement De Madagascar Direction Des Eaux Et Forets DFS Deutsch Forest Service GmbH Entreprise d etudes de developpement rural Mamokatra FTM Pekel J F Cottam A Gorelick N Belward A S 2016 High resolution mapping of global surface water and its long term changes Nature 540 418 422 a b c Jorgen K 2002 Deforestation in the Madagascar Highlands GeoJournal 56 3 191 199 doi 10 1023 A 1025187422687 S2CID 150928630 ProQuest 223672089 Brooks C P Holmes C Kramer K Barnett B Keitt T H 2009 The Role of Demography and Markets in Determining Deforestation Rates Near Ranomafana National Park Madagascar PLOS ONE 4 6 e5783 Bibcode 2009PLoSO 4 5783B doi 10 1371 journal pone 0005783 PMC 2691994 PMID 19536282 NASA Deforestation in Madagascar Lcluc umd edu Zhu Annah 2020 China s Rosewood Boom A Cultural Fix to Capital Overaccumulation Annals of the American Association of Geographers Anonymous 2018 Rosewood democracy in the political forests of Madagascar Political Geography a b Scales Ivan R 2014 Conservation and Environmental Management in Madagascar 1st ed Hoboken Taylor and Francis a b c Smith Thomas M Smith Robert Leo 2015 Elements of Ecology 9h ed Harlow England Pearson ISBN 9781292077406 Clark Megan 2015 Deforestation in Madagascar Consequences of Population Growth and Unsustainable Agricultural Processes PDF Global Majority e Journal 3 1 61 71 a b c d e Schussler Dominik Radespiel Ute Ratsimbazafy Jonah Henri Mantilla Contreras Jasmin 2018 12 01 Lemurs in a dying forest Factors influencing lemur diversity and distribution in forest remnants of north eastern Madagascar Biological Conservation 228 17 26 doi 10 1016 j biocon 2018 10 008 ISSN 0006 3207 S2CID 92420538 a b c d e f g h i Murphy Asia J Farris Zach J Karpanty Sarah Ratelolahy Felix Kelly Marcella J 2016 06 01 Estimating Encounter Rates and Densities of Three Lemur Species in Northeastern Madagascar International Journal of Primatology 37 3 371 389 doi 10 1007 s10764 016 9906 0 ISSN 1573 8604 S2CID 7670062 a b c d e f g Sawyer Rachel Mary Fenosoa Zo Samuel Ella Andrianarimisa Aristide Donati Giuseppe 2017 01 01 The effect of habitat disturbance on the abundance of nocturnal lemur species on the Masoala Peninsula northeastern Madagascar Primates 58 1 187 197 doi 10 1007 s10329 016 0552 0 ISSN 1610 7365 PMID 27394434 S2CID 25928477 a b Kelley Elizabeth A Sussman Robert W Muldoon Kathleen M January 2007 The Status of Lemur Species at Antserananomby An Update Primate Conservation 22 1 71 77 doi 10 1896 052 022 0105 ISSN 0898 6207 Bakoariniaina Lao Nathalie Kusky Timothy Raharimahefa Tsilavo 2006 Disappearing Lake Alaotra Monitoring catastrophic erosion waterway silting and land degradation hazards in Madagascar using Landsat imagery Journal of African Earth Sciences 44 2 241 252 Bibcode 2006JAfES 44 241B doi 10 1016 j jafrearsci 2005 10 013 a b c Soil Erosion and Degradation World Wildlife Foundation World Wildlife Foundation Retrieved 24 November 2021 Reece Jane B Taylor Martha R Simon Eric J Dickey Jean L 2015 Campbell Biology Concepts amp Connections 8th ed England Pearson Education Limited Bakoariniaina L Kusky T Raharimahefa T 2006 Monitoring catastrophic erosion waterway silting and land degradation hazards in Madagascar using Lansat imagery Journal of African Earth Sciences 44 2 241 252 Bibcode 2006JAfES 44 241B doi 10 1016 j jafrearsci 2005 10 013 a b Smith T M Smith R L 2015 Elements of Ecology 9 ed Harlow Essex Pearson a b Making conservation work in Madagascar Wildmadagascar org 2017 ecoDestinations Madagascar ecotourism org The International Ecotourism Society Carriere Stephanie Randriambanona Biodiversite introduite et autochtone antagonisme ou complementarite Le cas de l eucalyptus a Madagascar PDF Bois et Forets des Tropiques 292 2 5 21 Archived from the original PDF on 2015 10 24 Kull Christian Tassin Jacques Rangan Haripriya 2007 Multifunctional scrubby and invasive forests Wattles in the highlands of Madagascar Mountain Research and Development 27 3 224 231 doi 10 1659 mrd 0864 S2CID 106404585 Tassin Jacques 2009 Evaluation preliminaire des risques d invasion par les essences forestieres a Madagascar Bois et Forets des Tropiques 299 1 27 36 doi 10 19182 bft2009 299 a20420 Kull Christian 2012 Air photo evidence of historical land cover change in the highlands wetlands and grasslands give way to crops and woodlots Madagascar Conservation amp Development 7 3 144 152 doi 10 4314 mcd v7i3 7 IUCN report on Rio Tinto mines in Madagascar Indian Ocean With Simon Reeve documentary Deforestation of Tropical Rainforests A Case Study of Madagascar PDF Geocases 2005 Archived from the original PDF on 1 November 2013 Retrieved 30 October 2013 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Deforestation in Madagascar amp oldid 1182657946, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.