Assessing Wa-u Agroforestry in the Course of Swidden Transformation: A Case Study in Southern Chin State, Myanmar
Swidden cultivation has been gradually transformed into other types of land-uses because of economic, political and social changes. In southern Chin State, Myanmar, the traditional swidden agriculture is being replaced by Wa - u ( Amorphophallus bulbifer ) cultivation in the fallows due to the incre...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Small-scale forestry 2019-12, Vol.18 (4), p.353-372 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Swidden cultivation has been gradually transformed into other types of land-uses because of economic, political and social changes. In southern Chin State, Myanmar, the traditional swidden agriculture is being replaced by
Wa
-
u
(
Amorphophallus bulbifer
) cultivation in the fallows due to the increasing abandonment of swidden fallows and recent development of
Wa
-
u
market access. Also, the government of Myanmar promoted community participation in commercialized agriculture and forestry activities through community-based agroforestry systems. This study was carried out in two villages in southern Chin State, Myanmar to fill the research gap about the different
Wa
-
u
cultivation methods commonly applied in swidden cultivated fallows in term of cost-benefit and biomass analysis, socio-economically and environmentally contributing to community-based agroforestry systems in the region. The cost-benefit analysis showed that a modified traditional taungya method (mTTM) produced the best profit (228,571 Kyats per acre) among the cultivation methods. Also, the biomass analysis of tree vegetation showed that the
Wa
-
u
cultivated sites by mTTM has significantly higher basal area (21.1 ± 3.57 m
2
ha
−1
) and biomass accumulation (65.4 ± 11.17 Mgha
−1
) than other methods. As a result,
Wa
-
u
cultivation with maintenance of the tree stands could be promoted not only for socio-economic development but also for environmental conservation. This study suggests that
Wa
-
u
is promising as an intercrop species in agroforestry systems, and can be effectively incorporated into community-based agroforestry systems. |
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ISSN: | 1873-7617 1873-7854 |
DOI: | 10.1007/s11842-019-09422-8 |