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Your Letters &
Comments
October-December
2005 Vol. 6 No. 4
Eat Your Vegetables
Fred Pearce's article, “The Protein Gap”
(July-September 2005, Conservation in Practice),
served as an excellent complement to Jon
Christensen's call (in the same issue) for
greater integration of conservation and human
development objectives. John Fa's detailed
studies of the types and quantities of bushmeat
consumed in West Africa provided a fascinating
glimpse into a market that directly impacts
rural poor people and wildlife. Still, I found
myself questioning Pearce's portrayal of animal
rights activists and environmentalists as
potentially caring more about the survival of a
few rare rainforest species than the survival of
their hunters. Recent efforts aimed at curbing
the bushmeat trade that I am aware of
acknowledge the economic and dietary needs of
local people and attempt to focus attention on
the detrimental impacts of factors such as
population growth, urban bushmeat consumption,
rising food prices associated with changing
agricultural policies, insecure land tenure,
lack of access to resources, political
instability, and increased forest access granted
by new roads constructed to support
resource-extractive industries. Forces that
drive many of these trends are far from the
African jungle. Also, the data presented
by Pearce regarding current and potential
sources of protein available to local villagers
in a small West African market conspicuously
omitted vegetable protein sources, providing an
incomplete view of actual protein availability
and clouding the reader's ability to understand
the real protein deficit experienced by the
villagers Fa studied. Many communities and
individuals around the world would indeed
benefit by increasing their protein consumption.
I can't think of any respected conservation
organization that advocates the opposite. Still,
the suggestion to simply ramp up domesticated
meat production would bear significant
environmental costs and would be impeded by the
same social, political, and economic forces that
affect the bushmeat industry. Efforts directed
at lowering the protein intakes and overall
consumption patterns of the wealthy (most
Americans consume well over 100 g of protein per
day) would likely relieve pressures on wildlife
and the rural poor. While the elephant in the
forest is undeniably compelling, scolding
activists and environmentalists will not bring
us any closer to dealing with the very large
elephant in our living room.
KATHLEEN GUILLOZET Portland,
Oregon
Conflict of Interest
Jon Christensen's observation in the
July-September “The Uneasy Chair” column that
conservationists are not involved in the
discussion of how to end poverty in the
developing world cuts to the heart of how
tropical conservation efforts are carried out.
Conservationists are indeed largely absent from
the key economic debates going on in places like
sub-Saharan Africa, which, as Christensen notes,
increasingly focus on governance issues.
Governance ultimately determines the fate of
forests and fisheries as well as of investments
and economic growth in African countries, and it
has belatedly moved to the center of aid
policies.
But based on my experience working in East
Africa for the past seven years on issues of
wildlife conservation, rural development, and
policy formulation, I would like to highlight a
fundamental problem with Christensen's argument.
Conservationists are unlikely to pick up his
call for greater engagement. The reason for this
is that governance is really a euphemism for
politics. And the international conservation
NGOs that represent the wealthy north in the
countries of the poor south have vested
interests in not wanting to get too involved in
politics.
International conservation NGOs are embedded
in government bureaucracies and foreign aid
donors that control power and money in African
countries. Conservation groups forge Memorandums
of Understanding with the government, which
enables them to operate in these countries and
gives them perceived access to influence
policy-making processes. Meanwhile, an
increasing amount of funding for these groups
comes from bilateral aid agencies, which are
similarly tied to their host governments through
diplomatic agreements. This means that the
conservation NGOs working in tropical countries
basically function according to diplomatic and
financial agreements tied to the host
government's interests. The NGOs are in no
position to challenge governance—such as by
criticizing policies, challenging corruption, or
taking stands on politically divisive issues. In
other words, conservation NGOs are organized to
work in the tropics in a way that emphatically
prevents them from effectively working on
governance.
Getting into the game and making the key
links between biodiversity conservation and
governance thus requires a significant
reorganization of the way international
conservation NGOs pursue their objectives and
fund their activities. While there is little
hope of the big international NGOs dislodging
themselves from the comfortable albeit
ineffective status quo in places like Kenya and
Tanzania, an array of small-scale, local, civil
society efforts are currently working to link
conservation and governance issues in a
practical and political manner. Those local
groups are unlikely to be heard from at Live8,
but they are already in the game.
FRED NELSON Sand County
Foundation, Tanzania
Mexico's Community
Forests
Katherine Ellison and Amanda Hawn are to be
congratulated for their article on the Mexican
government's visionary experimental program,
Payments for Hydrological Environmental
Services, and the inspiring work of the Sierra
Gorda Environmental Group (April-June 2005
Conservation In Practice). However, there is a
significant error in the article. The authors
state that the deforestation rate in Mexico is
over 1 million ha per year and that this is due
mostly to illegal logging. This number, which is
popularly used in the press, is exaggerated. The
most authoritative national study of
deforestation in Mexico was the 2002 Land Use
Inventory, a study led by one of the authors of
this letter. This comprehensive survey showed
that from 1976-2000 the annual rate of loss in
temperate zone forests was 0.25 and in tropical
forests 0.76 and that the annual average loss of
forests, rainforests, and scrubland (matorrales)
is some 544,789 ha—almost half the number quoted
by Ellison and Hawn. As well, most academic
studies show agriculture and pasture expansion
to be much more important deforestation drivers
than illegal logging. There has also been
vigorous forest recovery in many areas due to
agricultural abandonment. Of course, these
findings should not induce complacency, and
vigorous efforts by all segments of Mexican
society are required to reinforce these trends.
The program of payment for environmental
services described in the article is indeed one
of a new suite of options. However, Mexico also
has the developing world's largest sector of
community forests managed for the commercial
production of timber. A recent national study
(of which another one of the author's of this
letter is involved), shows that as of 2002 some
2,417 communities in Mexico had logging permits
with management plans. Many of these communities
have serious ongoing problems in forest
degradation and corruption. However, a large
percentage of them are doing an excellent to
adequate job of sustainably managing their
forests, generating income for the community,
and maintaining forest cover and hydrological
and other environmental services. These
communities are preserving millions of ha of
forest cover—far more than is being preserved by
experimental programs in environmental services.
Other recent studies in which we have been
involved have shown that a region of central
Quintana Roo dominated by community-managed
forests, has the lowest recorded rate of
deforestation in tropical southeastern Mexico.
Another study of Quintana Roo and Guerrero
showed that community-managed forests maintain
forest cover at the same or higher rates than
protected areas in Mexico, and with little
negative impact on floral or faunal
biodiversity.
DAVID BARTON BRAY Florida
International University
ALEJANDRO VELÁZQUEZ, JEAN FRANÇOIS
MAS, and ELVIRA DURÁN
Universidad Autónoma de México
Not on the Radar Screen
“Conservationists are sitting on the
sidelines,” says Jon Christensen (“Sitting Out
the Big Game”) when it comes to fighting poverty
and working for good governance. Well, it's true
that I don't wear a “Make Poverty History”
bracelet, and I never even tried to attend a
Live8 concert. But I work for a Montana
organization that has—for the past 33 years—been
organizing citizens to protect the environment,
working for sustainable development, and
pressing for good governance. Our members know
that an economically viable ranch is less likely
to be subdivided than a ranch that's struggling
to stay afloat. We know that thriving
communities are less likely to be targeted for
exploitive development. There are other groups
elsewhere in the U.S. that also organize at the
grassroots level and work on very similar
issues. It appears that locally based
organizations like these are simply not on Jon
Christen-sen's radar screen when he makes the
blanket statement that conservation groups don't
address poverty and development issues.
Overlooking the good work of groups like these
is, sadly, very common when writers generalize
what the conservation movement is all about.
STEVE PAULSON Billings,
Montana
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