What Governs Tree Harvesting in Community Forestry—Regulatory Instruments or Forest Bureaucrats’ Discretion?
Abstract
:1. Introduction
- investigate the tree harvesting practices in selected case studies, focusing on the compliance of regulatory instruments, including FMP, and on what guides harvesting decisions;
- compare the quantity of harvest of economically valuable species (Shorea robusta Gaertn. f. hereafter S. robusta) with that of other species;
- quantify the effects of harvesting practices on tree quality, health, regeneration and stand composition and appraise the reasons for the observed changes; and
- appraise whether it is the FMP or forest bureaucrats who determine the number of trees to be harvested.
2. Regulatory Instruments Render Tree Harvesting: An Analysis
3. Materials and Methods
3.1. Study Area
3.2. Data Collection
3.3. Data Analysis
4. Results
4.1. Harvesting Practices
“The decision on the harvesting of the tree is taken by forest bureaucrats. The harvesting team (forest guards and crew) mainly focuses on finishing the task and doesn’t take any precautions for protecting seedlings and saplings. Every other year, new forest bureaucrats come up with their own ideas and impose them based on their own interests or government’s ad hoc decisions. This creates confusions and delays in harvesting operations”(Field note, 2017)
Harvesting is guided not by the FMP, but by the discretion of the forest bureaucrats’, FMP is like an “elephant’s tusk” only an adornment but not of use(Field note, 2017)
“the government allows harvesting of the annual increment of 1% of the growing stock volume, where only 60% of the increment can be harvested for external use and 80% for internal use. Only 4D trees can be harvested. As this CF had a lot of fallen trees, harvesting covered only the collection of fallen trees that got distributed to users within the volume allowed by a decree”.
“I don’t believe in the inventory results of this CF, especially the growing stock volume. We are bound to follow many regulations on harvesting; so, the FMP has little role in harvesting.”(Field note, 2017)
“During harvesting, we generally select standing dead trees as DFO staff does not allow us to harvest green trees while 4D trees are in the forest.”(Field note, 2017)
4.2. Comparing Actual and Allowable Harvesting Quantities
“We could hardly distinguish any difference between the harvesting practices during two periods, but the prescribed amount has reduced drastically between the two FMPs; the only difference we observed was in the quantity”(Field note, 2018)
4.3. Effect on Forest Condition
4.3.1. Stand Condition and Tree Species Composition
4.3.2. Tree Basal Area Variation
4.3.3. Changes in Tree Health and Quality
5. Discussion
5.1. Tree Harvesting Practices—Are They in Compliance with FMPs?
5.2. Tree Harvesting Quantity—What Governs It?
5.3. How Tree Harvesting Decision Affect Tree Quality?
5.4. How Harvesting Practices Affect Stand Condition?
6. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Policy Document(s) | Key Features | Implications |
---|---|---|
Forest Act 1993 & Forest Regulation 1995 | A national forest handed over to a local community for conservation, utilization & management according to the forest management plan (FMP) prepared by community forest user group (CFUG) and approved by the District Forest Officer (DFO) | The users can sustainably harvest forest products within the quantity specified in the FMP |
Forest Products (Timber/Fuelwood) Collection, Sale and Distribution Directives 2000 | It prescribed for harvesting | The user can follow prescribed procedures to be followed during harvesting |
Community Forestry Guidelines, 2000 | Estimating growing stock and allowable annual harvest (AAH) | Provisions for tree harvesting in relation to increment. It remains silent on the quality of tree to harvest. The inventory-based provisions were enforced at the FMP preparation stage only |
Community Forest Inventory Guideline, 2004 | Inventory based FMP institutionalized. Harvesting as the % of annual increment of growing stock volume | |
“Plant Holiday” declared-MFSC, (21 May 2010) | Restriction on the harvesting of timber throughout the country especially in Terai | The forest could not be harvested according to FMP. The quantity of the harvest reduced substantially |
Circular-MFSC, 2 December 2011 | The decision to harvest fallen trees only within the AAH | Discouraged harvesting of green trees, & promote the 4D collection, causes improvement in forest quality |
Circular-MFSC, 6 March 2012 | While estimating AAH, growing stock volume of the forest should not exceed 178 m3 per ha | The blanket approach undermines the provisions of continuous harvesting in uneven-aged forests, & encourages manipulation of the growing stock volume to align with the national average |
Annual harvesting is limited between 1 to 2 m3 per ha of the forest, which is nearly 1% of growing stock volume (assuming 178 m3 per ha) | ||
Except fallen, harvesting restricted for a year from FMP approval | It undermines the guidelines; inventory remains silent on species to be harvested but encourages harvesting “4D” | |
The decision to grant approval to CFUG for harvesting a maximum of 85% of the approved AAH for internal use only, and 60% in the case it is also for external sale | ||
Community Forest Product Collection and Sale Guideline 2014 | Elaborates on processes and procedures to be followed for harvesting timber from CFs and sale of it on the market | The guideline expanded bureaucratic control over harvesting decisions; involvement of forest bureaucrats is required on all decisions, i.e., harvesting and distribution |
Scientific Forest Management Guideline, 2014 | Forest management planning and harvesting decisions with the active involvement of forest bureaucrats | It encourages retaining mother tree (seed tree) to promote regeneration by an opening canopy |
Category | Diameter | Plot Size |
---|---|---|
Seedlings | <2.0 cm | (1 × 1) m2 |
Saplings | 2.0–3.9 cm | (5 × 5) m2 |
Established Saplings | 4.0–9.9 cm | (10 × 15) m2 |
Trees | ≥10 cm | (20 × 25) m2 |
FMP Allowable Prescriptions | Actual Practice |
---|---|
Forest divided into 5 blocks & collection of fallen trees allowed throughout the year; not exceeding growing stock volume of particular blocks | Timber and firewood collection allowed to harvest according to the growing stock volume of the block |
Harvesting of the trees are taking place only in the few blocks | |
Fixing the % of annual increment, allowed to cut on the basis of species types and forest condition | The annual increment is fixed based on the growing stocks |
AAH is estimated and green felling (harvesting) will be carried out | Harvesting amount fixed by the administrative rules such as circulars irrespective of the AAH |
AAH estimation is conservative; the users are compromising with the potential volume of harvest | |
No harvesting since fallen trees already reach AAH | |
Harvesting of trees within the block carried out on a periodic basis according to AAH | No such practices are being carried out, harvesting as per the forest guard judgment while cleaning forest or inspecting forest |
Trees should be selected for harvesting | DFO staff select tree and hallmark for harvesting considering the “4D” quality |
The basis for selection not known, depend on DFO staff judgment | |
Harvesting of the timber and fuelwood during November–February | Harvesting in practice taking place from February to May |
Users are only allowed to harvest trees | Users also collecting pole from forests especially “4D” |
Number of harvesting in a year | Annually |
Selective harvesting system prescribed in the FMP | Selective harvesting in practice, however, users are only considering “4D” trees |
Block | Harvest (m3/ha per/year) Period I: (2011–2013) | Harvest (m3/ha per/year) Period II: (2013–2016) | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Allowable (Plan) | Actual (Inventory) | ∆ Change | Allowable (Plan) | Actual (Inventory) | ∆ Change | |
I | 2.0 | 0.8 | (0.6) | 1.0 | 2.0 | 1.0 |
II | 3.3 | 1.9 | (0.4) | 1.6 | 5.0 | 2.1 |
III | 3.6 | 1.5 | (0.6) | 1.8 | 1.4 | (0.2) |
IV | 2.3 | 1.1 | (0.5) | 1.1 | 1.1 | (0.0) |
V | 1.9 | 1.4 | (0.2) | 0.9 | 1.2 | 0.3 |
Species Type | S. robusta | Others | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Diameter Categories | 2010 | 2013 | 2016 | 2010 | 2013 | 2016 |
Seedling (>2 cm) | 26,842 | 12,982 | 13,421 | 6930 | 12,456 | 6316 |
Sapling (2–3.9 cm) | 337 | 84 | 21 | 225 | 91 | 21 |
Est. sapling (4–9.9 cm) | 675 | 504 | 323 | 486 | 336 | 215 |
Pole (10–30 cm) | 410.2 | 482.5 | 487.0 | 191.6 | 224.2 | 226.0 |
Tree (30–50 cm) | 8.8 | 7.4 | 11.9 | 7.0 | 8.4 | 9.5 |
Mature Tree (<50 cm) | 7.4 | 4.2 | 1.1 | 1.4 | 4.6 | 1.1 |
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Baral, S.; Vacik, H. What Governs Tree Harvesting in Community Forestry—Regulatory Instruments or Forest Bureaucrats’ Discretion? Forests 2018, 9, 649. https://doi.org/10.3390/f9100649
Baral S, Vacik H. What Governs Tree Harvesting in Community Forestry—Regulatory Instruments or Forest Bureaucrats’ Discretion? Forests. 2018; 9(10):649. https://doi.org/10.3390/f9100649
Chicago/Turabian StyleBaral, Sony, and Harald Vacik. 2018. "What Governs Tree Harvesting in Community Forestry—Regulatory Instruments or Forest Bureaucrats’ Discretion?" Forests 9, no. 10: 649. https://doi.org/10.3390/f9100649
APA StyleBaral, S., & Vacik, H. (2018). What Governs Tree Harvesting in Community Forestry—Regulatory Instruments or Forest Bureaucrats’ Discretion? Forests, 9(10), 649. https://doi.org/10.3390/f9100649