Publications des agents du Cirad

Cirad

State of the art on drivers of deforestation in the Congo basin tropical forest

Gillet P., Vermeulen C., Feintrenie L., Dessard H., Garcia C.. 2015. In : Kettle Chris J. (ed.), Magrach Ainhoa (ed.). Resilience of tropical ecosystems: future challenges and opportunities. Frankfurt am Main : Society for Tropical Ecology, p. 52. Annual Conference of the Society for Tropical Ecology, 2015-04-07/2015-04-10, Zurich (Suisse).

In comparison to other rainforests around the world, the pressure on biodiversity is comparatively low in the Congo Basin. But land use intensification and climate change are poised to increase the rate of forest loss. The changes to the landscapes and the development pathways that the Congo basin will follow will result from the complex interplay of ecological, economic and social drivers. To account for this complexity and to represent it in models of land use and forest cover change, we analyzed the existing literature in search of the current direct and indirect drivers of deforestation in the Congo Basin forest and in Cameroon and Gabon specifically. We identified and documented the following direct drivers of deforestation: (i) the expansion of agriculture-either family farming or agribusiness; (ii) the extraction of timber for commercial timber (iii) the development of infrastructure leading to the opening up of forested land and populations, and (iv) the mining industries, a driver so important in the future of the forests of the Congo Basin that it warranted a category on its own. The underlying causes mentioned in the literature relate to (i) the economic factors such as the demand for environmental resources in local and global markets and the need for national income; (ii) the technological factors allowing more cost-efficient timber removal; (iii) cultural factors like the perception of the forest as a frontier for development and an important source of economic income for populations and decision makers alike ; (iv) institutional factors like the informal taxation system on logging for the domestic markets; and (v) the demographic drivers such as the increased local densities resulting from migration and the demographic transition. In doing so, we refine and expand the framework proposed by Geist & Lambin in 2002 and adapt it to the Central African context. (Texte intégral)

Documents associés

Communication de congrès

Agents Cirad, auteurs de cette publication :