Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://repositorio.inpa.gov.br/handle/1/13029
Title: The management of tree genetic resources and the livelihoods of rural communities in the tropics: Non-timber forest products, smallholder agroforestry practices and tree commodity crops
Authors: Dawson, Ian K.
Leakey, Roger R.B.
Clement, Charles Roland
Weber, John C.
Cornelius, Jonathan P.
Roshetko, James M.
Vinceti, Barbara
Kalinganire, Antoine
Tchoundjeu, Zacharie
Masters, Eliot T.
Jamnadass, H. R.
Keywords: Commerce
Crops
Genes
Natural Resources Management
Timber
Tropics
Agroforestry
Agroforestry System
Commercial products
Genetic Resources
Livelihoods
Non-timber Forest Products
Products and services
Sustainability Issues
Forestry
Agroforestry
Forest Management
Forestry Production
Genetic Resources
Genetic Variation
Nontimber Forest Product
Smallholder
Species Diversity
Agriculture
Forest Products
Genetic Engineering
Harvesters
Natural Resources
Tropical Atmospheres
Issue Date: 2014
metadata.dc.publisher.journal: Forest Ecology and Management
metadata.dc.relation.ispartof: Volume 333, Pags. 9-21
Abstract: Products and services provided by trees in forests and farmland support the needs and promote the wellbeing of hundreds of millions of people in the tropics. Value depends on managing both the diversity of tree species present in landscapes and the genetic variation within these species. The benefits from trees and their genetic resources are, however, often not well quantified because trade is frequently outside formal markets, there is a multiplicity of species and ways in which trees are used and managed, and genetic diversity within species is frequently not given proper consideration. We review here what is known about the value of trees to rural communities through considering three production categories: non-timber products harvested from trees in natural and managed forests and woodlands; the various products and services obtained from a wide range of trees planted and/or retained in smallholders' agroforestry systems; and the commercial products harvested from cultivated tree commodity crops. Where possible, we focus on the role of intra-specific genetic variation in providing support to livelihoods, and for each of the three production categories we also consider wider conservation and sustainability issues, including the linkages between categories in terms of management. Challenges to 'conventional wisdom' on tree resource use, value and management -such as in the posited links between commercialisation, cultivation and conservation -are highlighted, and constraints and opportunities to maintain and enhance value are described. © 2014 The Authors.
metadata.dc.identifier.doi: 10.1016/j.foreco.2014.01.021
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