TY - JOUR T1 - Land-use by immigrant Baoulé farmers in the Taï region, South-west Côte d'Ivoire (Ivory Coast) JF - Agroforestry Systems Y1 - 1990 A1 - Arnoud Budelman A1 - Peter M. Zander KW - agriculture KW - cacao KW - Humid Côte d'Ivoire KW - Ivory Coast KW - land shortage KW - soil fertility KW - transition shifting cultivation KW - yams AB -

This paper discusses the cropping system of immigrant Baoulé farmers in the rain-forest area of South-west Côte d'Ivoire (Ivory Coast). The area harbours one of the last substantial rain-forest reserves of humid West Africa. Part of it is known as Taï National Park, and has been adopted as one of UNESCO's Man and Biosphere Programme areas. The park area is threatened by farmers in search of land. Soils in the area typically show a low intrinsic nutrient content (particularly phosphorus and potassium), low pH values, a low CEC, and, locally, high levels of gravel. In the Baoulé cropping system fields are kept under perennial crops, mainly cacao, after having been used for food crop cultivation during the first two years. Yam, the most important food crop is grown on mounds. Next to the inherent poverty of the soil, this cropping technique, which disrupts the structure of the top soil is seen as one of the causes for low yields of cocoa on Baoulé farms in the area. Yields per ha amount to c. 60% of that of the national average. The conclusion is that the Baoulé agricultural production system is ill-adapted to the local ecosystem. Measures to improve adaptation include: Introduction of crop species adapted to adverse soil conditions (e.g. rubber, oilpalm), to buffer cacao plantations through planting of shade trees, to apply fertilisers, and to make use of biological nitrogen-fixation. Generally, the remedies proposed involve investments in terms of cash and labour on the part of the farmers. It is argued that farmers will not change their current cropping practices as long as there is forested land in the vicinity. The presence of the Taï forest, c. 300.000 ha of virgin rain-forest, impedes the process of change towards more intensive land-use practices.

VL - 11 UR - http://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/BF00838724 IS - 2 U1 - Agroforest Syst ER - TY - BOOK T1 - Land and tree tenure in humid West Africa: A bibliography Y1 - 1987 A1 - Paul Francis A1 - Getachew Bulfeta KW - agroforestry KW - Benin KW - Cameroon KW - Cape Verde KW - chiefs KW - collateral KW - commons KW - communal tenure KW - customary law KW - forestry KW - fragmentation KW - Ghana KW - Guinea KW - inheritance KW - Ivory Coast KW - land ownership KW - land reform KW - legislation KW - Liberia KW - litigation KW - nationalization KW - Nigeria KW - property transfer KW - public ownership KW - security KW - Senegal KW - Sierra Leone KW - Togo KW - tree crops KW - West Africa KW - women's rights AB - This bibliography covers land and tree tenure systems in countries all or part of which are in the humid zone of West Africa. A national, rather than strictly ecological approach was chosen to reflect the focus of much of the literature, which frequently deals with countries as a whole. Within the region diverse customary systems and land use modes have been affected by national policies of different ideologies and degrees of effectiveness. References are listed alphabetically by author, and subject and geographical indexes are also provided. (author) PB - International Livestock Centre for Africa CY - Addis Abada, Ethiopia SN - 92-9053-091-X UR - http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/17341746 JO - Land and tree tenure in humid West Africa ER -