09/12/2005
- Suva, Fiji – A local community on one of Fiji's islands
has taken the lead in initiating the development of a
community-based forest reserve to save the native vesi
tree population from extinction.
According to WWF research, vesi (Intisia
bijuga), a high-value native timber, is being overexploited
on the island of Kabara as a result of commercial logging
and the wood carving trade, particularly in the production
of making tanoas (a wood basin used for mixing the traditional
kava drink). In addition, wood carving off-cuts are not
being utilized and no re-forestation is taking place to
replenish diminishing vesi stock.
Tanoa carving is the backbone of many
Kabara villagers' livelihoods. More then 400 people live
on the island, and only 8 per cent of Kabara’s 35km2 land
area is still covered with vesi forest.
"The species faces the possibility
of imminent disappearance as an economic and cultural
plant resource," said Francis Areki, WWF Fiji's Sustainable
Forests Project Officer.
"This is due to a number of factors
which include unsustainable and poorly planned logging
and tree harvest, lack of awareness to which the diversity
of value these trees provide, and the failure to protect
and facilitate the regeneration of these native trees."
To reverse the trend, WWF and the
government of Fiji have set up the first tree nursery
on Kabara, which will enable the community to collect
and nurture vesi seedlings.
“The nursery will help with our reforestation
programme on Kabara," said Areki. "We are training
villagers to diversify their carving skills by utilizing
the off-cuts and by working with wood resources other
than vesi. We are also initiating a reforestation programme
to ensure the community takes an active approach towards
sustainability.”
Recently, a team of experts from WWF
and the Fijian government were in Kabara to set up the
nursery , as well as to conduct land surveys that assess
agricultural development possibilities, and a community-based
resource management plan workshop.
“There is no other way for a sustainable
supply of vesi in Kabara unless we implement a replanting
programme," said Temo Gade Raravula from Fiji's Ministry
of Forestry.
"From my observation in the forest
here, there is hardly any re-germinating going on. Not
many trees are bearing seeds. The villagers have to now
plant where they have already logged. Together with replanting,
the use of timber has to be improved.” |