Some socioeconomic and environmental aspects of forest use by lowland farmers in Leyte, Philippines and their implications for agricultural development and forest management

TitleSome socioeconomic and environmental aspects of forest use by lowland farmers in Leyte, Philippines and their implications for agricultural development and forest management
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication1985
AuthorsSiebert, SF, Belsky, JM
JournalPhilippine Quarterly of Culture and Society
Volume13
Issue4
Pagination282-296
Date PublishedDecember 1985
LanguageEnglish
Keywordsforest resources; lowlands; public forests; rattan work; social forestry; soil conservation; soil erosion; sustainable agriculture
Abstract

Public forests in central Leyte, Philippines provide an important source of annual food crops, perennial cash crops, and rattan and timber to lowland farmers. Household economic dependence upon and uses made of forest resources are associated with relative access to lowland-based activities, especially production of irrigated rice. Households unable to procure sufficient food staples through on or off-farm labor in the lowlands utilize adjacent public forests to cultivate subsistence food crops and to collect forest products. Households able to procure a larger portion of their food staples from lowland-based enterprises depend less upon forests and utilize them primarily for supplementary food production and perennial cash cropping. Current forest farming and forest product collecting activities, especially in annual food-focussed farms, result in erosion, soil degradation and gradual destruction of the indigenous flora. The importance of understanding and incorporating variable household economic dependence on and uses made of forest resources is discussed in relation to the introduction of appropriate strata-specific soil conservation, agroforestry and forest management measures.

URLhttp://www.jstor.org/stable/29791868
Journal Abbreviation

Philippine Quarterly of Culture and Society

ISSN

0115-0243

Collection Topic: