People and Plants
applied ethnobotany project at Ayubia
National Park (ANP), Pakistan
by Yildiz
Aumeeruddy-Thomas
People and Plants Co-ordinator,
Himalayas Programme
Institut de Botanique
Laboratoire de Botanique
163, rue Auguste Broussonnet
34090 Montpellier
France
Fax (33) 467 04 18 70
E-Mail : yildiz@isem.univ-montp2.fr
Introduction
to the site
Ayubia National Park is located
three hours drive north of Islamabad in
the Galliat Hills (North West Frontier
Province). It was declared a national
park in 1984 with the aims of preserving
its beautiful landscapes, forests and
biodiversity for scientific research,
education and recreation. The average
altitude is 2300 m (maximum 3000 m at
Mukspuri Top). The initial area of the
park was 1684 ha, expanded through a
northern extension in 1998 to make a
total of 3312 ha. The park supports one
of the best remaining examples of moist
Himalayan temperate forest in Pakistan
and is surrounded by seven major villages
and three small towns (Nathiagali, Ayubia
and Khanspur). On the basis of a 1988
census and an estimated growth rate of
3.3%, it is estimated that there are
18,097 people in 2311 households living
around the periphery of the park. Most of
these people depend on the natural
resources of the park for their
livelihoods.
A general description of the geography
and demography of the villages in which
the People and Plants project has been
undertaken follows. The villages of
Malachh (683 households/4,510
inhabitants, source: 1988 census) and
Pasala (1300 households/10,000
inhabitants, source: local) are located
on the western side of the park and
inhabitants from these villages go to the
small towns of Nathiagali and Dunga Gali
for bazaars; villages in Khanspur area
(2,069 households/11,453 inhabitants,
1988 census) are located in the southern
part of the park and people in that area
go to the bazaar in Khanspur. Lahur Kas
(225 households, source: local) is a
remote village located on the eastern
edge of the park accessible only by small
paths in addition to a poor tract
accessible by four-wheel drive vehicles
and which links it to the small town of
Berote. Habitations in Malachh and Pasala
are scattered and distributed among a
number of sub-villages, Kalaban, Kanisan,
Bata, Jaswara and Ser (Malachh),
Toheedabad and Kundla (Pasala), whereas
habitations in sub-villages of Khanspur
e.g. Darwaza, Mominabad, Riala and
Ramkot, are grouped closer together. The
distance of sub-villages to the National
Park is variable (1-3 kms) and villages
and sub-villages lie either on the main
road or at a close walking distance (half
an hour walk) from it, with the exception
of Lakur Kas as previously mentioned.
The main bazaars, Nathiagali, Khanspur
and Ayubia form a concentrated nucleus of
market places, shops, hotels and summer
houses. The best represented ethnic
groups in the region in terms of numbers
are Karalls and Abassis. Villages are
formed of a mixture of these two ethnic
groups and other minor groups such as
Gujars, Syed and Rajput. Local tourists
visit the region primarily from May to
October. Most people from Khanspur
(Mominabad, Riala, Ramkot and Darwaza)
migrate to Rawalpindi, Murree and
Abottabad during the winter season
(November to April) for business reasons.
Most people from other villages remain in
place during the winter. The literacy
rate is very low, specially among women.
Higher secondary school is not available
to girls and only two schools are
available to boys. Electricity is
available in almost all villages as well
as community water pipes. Apart from
villages in Khanspur that rely mostly on
Light Petroleum Gas (LPG) and kerosene
for cooking and heating, all other
villages use firewood as the main source
of fuel. People rely on agriculture,
livestock rearing and natural resources
(fodder, fuelwood, wild vegetables and
fungi) as an economic base. In addition
most men have seasonal (summer) jobs with
revenues which vary from 1000
5000Rs (20 100 $US) per month. A
measure of the cost of living is given by
the price of main staples: rice (30 - 35
Rs/kg or 0.6 - 0.7 $US) and potatoes
(12-14 Rs/kg or 0.24 0.28 $US).
The villages are surrounded by
terraced agricultural land located mostly
on valley bottoms. Grassland and forest
occur on steeper slopes and are
proportionally more extensive. Most
forest outside the park is gazetted as
either Reserved Forest (in which the
local people have no legal rights of use)
or Guzara Forest (which is owned by
individuals or communities). Ayubia
National Park is a Reserved Forest as
well as a park. Guzara Forest can be used
by its individual or communal owners for
various purposes - such as to graze
livestock and collect deadwood and grass
for fodder, but the cutting of timber, in
particular conifers, remains under the
control of the Forest Department. Some
areas designated legally as Reserved or
Guzara Forest have been degraded through
illegal harvest and mismanagement of
trees and other processes, and are now
either grasslands or wastelands.
Most if not all of the vegetation in
and around Ayubia National Park is
heavily influenced by the action of
humans. The vegetation of the park, which
is fairly well preserved in places, is
dominated by coniferous species,
principally Pinus wallichiana (pine)
and Abies pindrow (fir), with
scattered individuals of broad-leaved
trees, such as Aesculus indica, Quercus
dilatata (oak), Prunus padus and
Ulmus wallichiana. Undoubtedly,
populations of broad-leaved trees have
declined over the years as a result of
human activities (see further on) and
those of conifers such as Pinus have
increased proportionately. Today, Pinus
wallichiana is much the commonest
tree species in the park, with Abies
pindrow on higher altitude
north-facing slopes.
Ayubia National Park is a major
recreation area visited by large numbers
of local tourists, mostly from Islamabad
and Abottabad. No official figures are
available, but local estimates suggest
that there are about 100,000 visitors per
year. Numerous hotels and summer-houses
are located on the periphery of the park
in Nathiagali, Ayubia and Khanspur. The
park administration has developed a
fairly good system of infrastructure to
serve the tourists, many of whom walk
along a well-demarcated level path that
follows a pipeline. In this way they may
cross the park from Dunga Gali to Ayubia.
It is strictly forbidden to extract
natural products from the park, but in
practice many local villagers depend on
the collection of firewood and fodder
(arborescent and herbaceous) from within
its boundaries. Collectors are almost all
women. Apart from collection by
villagers, firewood from the park is also
gathered for use by hotels and
summer-houses. Other products such as
wild fungi and vegetables are also
extracted from the park.
Conservation
and development issues
Processes inducing deforestation at
Ayubia are similar to those observed
generally in the Himalayan foothills of
Pakistan. All Himalayan forests are
important for water catchment. At ANP, it
is particularly critical because it
serves as one of the sources of water to
the major irrigated farming area of the
Punjab plain and, through small
reservoirs and a pipeline to the large
settlement of Murree situated a few
kilometres down-slope. Common leopard and
numerous bird species are found in Ayubia
National Park. Some of the bird species
pass through the park on migration. The
population of the Koklass Pheasant (Pucrasia
macrolopha) and the rare Kalij
Pheasant (Lophura leucomelana) are
the highest known for Pakistan. Only 30
individuals of the Kalij Pheasant are
known to exist in the park. Pheasant
breeding may be impeded by disturbance
from collectors of morelles, since
breeding and fungus collecting seasons
coincide (April-May). Nationally rare or
endangered tree species include Taxus
wallichiana and Ulmus wallichiana.
There are several important medicinal
plants (e.g. Paeonia emodi, Podophyllum
emodi and Valeriana wallichii)
which are restricted locally to the park.
The park and its environs provide
plant resources critical to the lives of
the local villagers. Except for winter,
women from most households embark on
daily or even twice-daily firewood and
fodder collection trips to the park and
often have to walk many kilometers. There
are many conflicts between local women
and the staff of the Wildlife and Forest
Departments, who are too few in numbers
to enforce park regulations adequately.
Although many plant resources are
available in larger quantities inside the
Park than in surrounding areas, many of
these resources are disappearing as a
result of poor management. Populations of
some tree species have been decimated and
many are not regenerating. Reserved and
Guzara forests are dominated almost
entirely by pines, with some fir at
higher altitudes especially on
north-facing slopes. The cutting of these
conifers is legally restricted wherever
they occur, helping to preserve them.
Strong official interest is lacking for
other tree species and there are either
no or unclear rules governing control and
access to the remaining plant resources.
As a consequence most plant resources
tend to be collected opportunistically
without any management. Trees of greatest
interest to the villagers as sources of
firewood and fodder, such as Quercus
dilatata, Taxus wallichiana and Ulmus
wallichiana, have disappeared
completely from Guzara forests. One
critical social issue is that women -
while being the main collectors of
natural resources - are poorly
represented in decision-making processes.
Decisions regarding official access to
resources, tree planting and the cutting
of timber are largely made by men.
Some aspects of local knowledge
related to plant resources have become
eroded, possibly due to the proximity of
several cities (1 hour drive from
Abottabad, 3 hours from Islamabad) and
because the villages are ethnically
diverse as a result of past immigration.
Only a few old people have detailed
knowledge of the uses of plants as
medicines. Links between people and
certain aspects of their natural
surroundings are therefore weak,
diminishing the incentive for
conservation. The general lack of
knowledge about medicinal plants is
unfortunate from the health-care point of
view, given the poor provision of
government-supported health services in
the region.
A serious impediment to development at
Ayubia is the shortage of fertile
agricultural land (largely restricted to
valley bottoms). Planting of trees
outside the park for fodder or firewood
is constrained by poorly defined regimes
of land tenure and resource ownership,
and a disparity in influence between
those who are most directly concerned
with wild plant resources (women) and
those who make official decisions (men).
Although pines grow quite well, it would
probably be a mistake to promote their
further use or planting by the villagers
for firewood, given that ownership of the
grown trees would likely be disputed by
the Forest Department.
In summary, cultivated land and
associated plant resources are private
(except for pines), the National Park and
Reserved Forests are the exclusive
properties of the State (which has
insufficient resources to ensure good
management) and Guzara Forest has a
complex system of tenure.
Ethnobotanical
approaches and methods
(1) Establishment of the project
The promotion of applied ethnobotany
under the People and Plants project in
Pakistan began with a training workshop
organised by the UNESCO/ICIMOD component
of the initiative in September 1996 at
Islamabad. Major national issues relating
to community-based plant conservation and
training were identified (Shinwari et
al. 1996). WWF Pakistan then selected
ANP as a site for a practical project.
The reasons ANP was chosen are: it is an
important site for Himalayan temperate
forest; conservation issues at ANP are
held to be representative of those found
elsewhere in the Himalayan forest zone,
and ANP is close to several major cities,
facilitating the use of the site for
national-level training. Planning of
on-site activities was realized after
discussions with community
representatives, local NGOs and officers
of the Wildlife and Forest Departments
(Aumeeruddy 1996).
In the field, ethnobotanical work
began in March 1997, and was inaugurated
by the appointment of a Project Officer
(Abdullah Ayaz), one Scientific Officer
(Ms Iram Ashraf), one trainee botanist
(Mr. Aneel Gilani) and two field
assistants (Ms Sabiha and Mr Gul Kitab).
A sociologist (Hasrat Jabeen) and another
trainee botanist (Asma Jabeen) joined the
project respectively in November 1997 and
during the following year of the project.
The project team was selected
deliberately to include a maximum of
specialists and local people, the former
from several disciplines - botany,
forestry and sociology. Some of the
trainees have since conducted research
towards masters-level degrees. Technical
support has been provided by the
Conservation Director of WWF Pakistan
(Ashiq Ahmad Khan) and the Regional and
Programme Coordinators of People and
Plants (Yildiz Aumeeruddy, Alan
Hamilton).
The programme of ethnobotanical work
was devised on the basis of the following
considerations: (1) the involvement of
communities in park and forest management
is poorly developed at the official level
in Pakistan; (2) ethnobotany applied to
conservation and development is a
relatively new subject in Pakistan; (3)
gender issues are important and involving
women in planning the use and management
of natural resources represents a major
challenge; and (4) consideration of
regimes of land tenure and resource
ownership needs to be given greater
prominence when making decisions of how
best to manage the environment, not only
at ANP but more widely in Pakistan.
Given the considerable challenges
confronting the project at ANP, it was
thought best to focus the project
initially on: (1) providing a good base
of factual information relating to
patterns of plant use (questions to be
answered included who is using plant
resources and for what purposes? which
plant resources? what are the impacts of
use, regimes of tenure and
decision-making processes?; (2) creating
an atmosphere of trust between project
workers and communities as it was noted
that local people are highly sensitive to
the project because it deals with their
often illegal use of plants; and (3)
encouraging better communication between
communities and government agencies.
A field office was established on site
to facilitate the involvement of project
staff with local people and officials.
Collaboration has been further promoted
through the establishment of a Project
Advisory Committee, with representatives
of local communities and NGOs, and staff
from the Wildlife and Forest Departments.
This Committee meets regularly to advise
on project activities. Local advisory
committees were established in villages.
In addition to work at the local
level, the project site was used for
national training courses in applied
ethnobotany, both as a case study and so
that the project could benefit from
pertinent experiences from elsewhere
(Aumeeruddy et al. 1998).
(2) Activities and results,
March-October 1997
Baseline information was collected to
assess: (1) overall patterns of
activities relating to the use of plant
resources, with a focus on firewood,
fodder and womens related knowledge
- subjects identified from the start as
critical; (2) formal and informal regimes
of tenure over natural resources (both
land and plants); (3) the interests of
various local actors and potential
conflicts; and (4) the status of the
vegetation (composition, regeneration
capacity), the impacts of extraction of
firewood and fodder, and grazing and
trampling. Training was provided to an
MSc student studying medicinal plants. A
national-level training workshop was
conducted and was attended by 25
participants. Additionally, lectures were
given in local schools, an ethnobotanical
trail was established along the path used
by most visitors to the park, and
pamphlets and a sticker were designed and
distributed. An informal meeting to
discuss policy was held in October 1997
with senior officials, including the
Commissioner for Hazara, the Forest
Department Secretary and members of the
Natural Resources Conservation Project,
Galiat (NRCP). The NRCP is a
government-backed social forestry project
in the region. One of its objectives is
to establish systems of joint forest
management.
Methods used included formal and
informal individual and group
discussions, a questionnaire survey
conducted in three villages (Malachh,
Pasala and Mominabad) and observations
and measurements of the vegetation. Plots
(20 x 20 m) were established at sites in
the park to record tree species presence,
densities, heights and diameters, levels
of damage and reactions to damage.
Smaller plots (10 x 10 m) were
established to record the number of tree
seedlings, and species of shrubs and
herbs. Yet smaller plots (1 x 1 m) were
used to estimate cover/abundance of
ground cover species.
Results confirmed that firewood and
fodder (arborescent and herbaceous) are
collected in the park. Large quantities
of herbaceous fodder are collected in the
park between June and September. There
was no indication that the collection of
herbaceous fodder inside the park in
itself constituted a major conservation
issue. Fodder is also collected from open
areas outside the park, including from
strips of uncultivated land between
agricultural fields. Stems of maize and
wheat provide additional fodder stored
for winter use. Goats are grazed in
wastelands and Guzara forests outside the
park (goats are not released into the
park because of fear of predation by
leopards). Villagers take oxen into the
park for free-range grazing during the
summer months, an activity which is
believed to contribute to the poor
regeneration of broad-leaved trees.
Firewood is mostly collected from the
park and although deadwood is preferred,
many live branches are cut and some young
trees felled (Ayaz 1998). The collection
of firewood and tree fodder was found to
deleteriously affect the regeneration of
some tree species. It is normal for
collectors to make informal payments to
park staff for rights to collect. Small
quantities of firewood are also collected
outside the park, mostly by pruning
branches from conifers (especially Pinus
wallichiana) growing in Reserved and
Guzara Forest.
Other items collected from the park
include fungi (morelles Morchella
sp.), medicinal plants and wild
vegetables. Local people highly prize
fungi because their sale commands a good
price. They are dried and sold for export
to Europe. Some timber is cut illegally
within the park, though this is likely to
be by influential outsiders rather than
by ordinary villagers.
Trees outside the park are sometimes
ring-barked causing them to die - a
practice apparently designed to increase
supplies of dead trees, which can be
purchased more cheaply from the Forest
Department than live trees. It is also
done sometimes to increase the area
available for pasture or cultivation.
Many plant resources, including deadwood,
broad-leaved trees, many species of
medicinal plants and morelles are absent
or uncommon outside the park in Guzara
forests, related to the constant pressure
on these resources imposed by a virtual
absence of management.
Broad-leaved trees are planted or
preserved among the terraced fields.
These include some fruit trees (e.g.
apple, walnut, apricot), but fodder trees
such as Quercus and Ulmus,
as well as shrubs e.g. Indigofera
sp. are quite abundant in some villages.
Fodder trees present in villages have
probably originated principally from
wildings that have been preserved. There
is little regeneration, probably because
tree seedlings are quickly eaten by
livestock, which are allowed free access
to the agricultural fields after the
harvest.
It was clear that alternatives to
firewood and tree fodder, as currently
collected, needed to be found. Planting
of trees among the fields cannot be a
major part of the solution, since the
areas available are small and in any case
trees are already being grown in these
places for other purposes (principally
for fruit). The conclusion was that
additional supplies of firewood and tree
fodder as a substitute for that now
collected in the park would have to come
from Guzara Forest. For this to work,
there will need to be better management
of Guzara Forest. In turn, this will
require a reform of systems of tenure and
plant resource ownership in Guzara
Forest, something which would need to be
accepted by both communities and
government. An unresolved issue from the
first phase of activities was the extent
to which fungi collectors are disturbing
pheasant breeding habits. The
policy-level meeting in October 1997
proved helpful in confirming the general
direction of the project. It was
emphasized that pertinent and reliable
data would be required to aid the
government in a review of its policies.
(3) Activities and results, October
1997-October 1998
Based on the preliminary results of
the first period of work, the approach of
the project during its next phase was
geared to providing additional data
useful for the establishment of an
envisaged pilot scheme for the greater
involvement of communities in the
management of plant resources. The
intention was to form a group of resource
users, preference being given to a small
number of neighbouring households (i.e.
those with women belonging to a
particular fodder, firewood collecting
group). This group would be assigned use
rights to manage a particular area of
Guzara for firewood and tree fodder.
Included in this would be certain rights
of access to grass fodder and other
produce within defined areas of the park.
Another aspect of the scheme was that the
user group should be provided with
subsidized firewood by the government if
they were not legally allowed to collect
deadwood from the park.
Using this model, five broad themes
were chosen for the collection of more
detailed information: firewood and fodder
demands and supplies, associated damage
levels to trees, social structures,
decision-making processes, and formal and
informal methods of licensing and fining.
Another questionnaire survey was
designed and conducted this time geared
towards assessing firewood utilisation.
Five houses in Malachh, five in Pasala
and four in Khanspur/Mominabad were
sampled. This survey was conducted by
Asma Jabeen (botanist) from 22 October to
17 December 1997. In parallel, she also
conducted field surveys to assess amounts
of firewood stored by these same
households. The firewood survey was
initiated to determine the amounts and
types of wood collected by women, the
types of wood preferred (species;
live/dead), places of collection,
calendar of collection, duration of
collecting visits and methods of storage.
Once winter set in, the survey was
discontinued until the following spring
because of heavy snow which made the site
inaccessible. In spring the survey
recommenced and included 40 more
households in Malachh, Pasala and Lahur
Kas (villages of Khanspur area use LPG,
hence surveys were discontinued in that
region). Also 21 hotels at Dunga Gali,
Nathiagali, Ayubia, Khanspur and Kooza
Gali and 20 summer houses at Nathiagali,
Ayubia and Dunga Gali were surveyed. The
spring survey on fuelwood was conducted
by Hazrat Jabeen
Another questionnaire survey relating
to fodder utilisation and agricultural
activities was also conducted by Asma
Jabeen in 22 October to 17 December 1997,
and a total of 24 households were
surveyed (10 in Malachh, 10 in Pasala and
4 in Khanspur/Mominabad). The study of
agricultural activities aimed at defining
farm size, crops grown, fodder grasses
grown or growing wild, livestock
composition and tree species cultivated
or preserved. With respect to fodder,
both the questionnaire and on farm field
assessment aimed at determining the
weight and volume of grass and maize
stacks stored, and number of local
measuring units in the stacks. This
survey also enquired about trees, herbs,
grasses and shrubs collected by the women
in forests (National Park or other),
collecting sites, timing and seasonality.
The questionnaire survey on fodder and
agricultural activities was completed by
Asma Jabeen in spring. Several questions
were added respecting veterinary diseases
and their cure and local soil
classifications in relation to
agricultural and use patterns.
In addition to questionnaire surveys
on fodder and firewood as well as field
work on farm in winter, in spring Asma
and Hasrat Jabeen accompanied local women
on firewood/fodder collecting trips
within the park. 11 trips were conducted
with nine groups of women (total of 91
women) from the villages of Malachh,
Pasala and Lahur Kas. These trips were
undertaken to assess patterns of
collection and included observations of
size and composition of womens
collecting groups, collecting zones
(topography, relative size, dominant
vegetation), time of collecting, species
and amounts collected, collecting
techniques and relative amounts of each
species in headloads. In the field,
weight was assessed by assignment of
headloads into weight categories, and
estimation of relative amounts of
deadwood (fallen or taken from standing
trees) and green wood in bundles.
Summer-houses and hotels were visited by
Hazrat Jabeen to interview owners and
managers about firewood use. The firewood
stores of the hotels and summer-houses
were examined, species determined as far
as possible and length and diameter of
stored wood were measured. Upon return to
the womens homes, fodder headloads
were weighed and tree species were sorted
to determine relative amounts collected
of each.
Biomass studies of grass and herbs
were conducted. Five plots were
established in various types of fodder
growing regions within the park and one
plot in Guzara Forest, to measure
herbaceous production over the growing
season. 4x4m2 exclosure plots
were established and sub-divided into
2x2m2 plots. Each sub-quadrat
was collected successively once every
month from June to September. Species
were separated and only the three most
abundant species weighed, of which 5
grams fresh weight was oven dried to
obtain dry matter content. It should be
noted that the trainee was to have
measured the fresh weight of the whole
sample before separating species, but
this was not done due to a
misunderstanding regarding the method.
To measure damage levels to trees,
three species were selected for
observation, Cedrus deodara, Quercus
dilatata and Taxus wallichiana.
The former was chosen because it was
believed to be a prized timber tree and
the others because they are valued both
for fuelwood and fodder. Surveys were
conducted by Abdullah Ayaz along belt
transects extending 5 m on either side of
trails, and the occurrence and sizes of
the three species were recorded, as well
as levels of damage. Data from the
firewood and fodder study allowed
identification of the collecting sites
and species used by particular villages
thus providing a method of cross-checking
results obtained in the damage level
survey.
Regarding social structures and
decision making processes, information
was obtained through informal discussion,
backed up by a questionnaire survey
conducted by Hasrat Jabeen that sampled
40 families from Malachh, Pasala and
Lahur Kas.
The delicate subject of informal
systems of fining was broached through
informal discussions with collectors.
Results
Firewood
The surveys confirmed that most
households use locally collected
firewood, the majority of which is
gathered in the park. Among the four
villages (Malachh, Pasala, Khanspur,
Lahur Kas) upon which the survey was
based, there was considerably less
dependency on local firewood at Khanspur
than the other three. This is due in part
because farms tend to be larger at
Khanspur and many people are resident
only during the summer months. In
contrast, land-holdings at Malachh and
Pasala are typically smaller and most
people are full-time residents. Moreover,
most people in Khanspur use gas as their
main source of fuel.
Women prefer deadwood, but cut live
branches or small trees if deadwood is
scarce. Deadwood is held in higher esteem
partly because it is relatively light. Pinus
wallichiana (pine) and Abies
pindrow (fir) are the most abundantly
collected species. Pine is preferred over
fir and is overall the most frequently
collected. However when women are
collecting on higher altitude
north-facing slopes, where fir is most
common, fir can be predominately gathered
over pine. Analysis of firewood bundles
revealed that Quercus diletata
(oak) and Taxus wallichiana (yew)
are rarely collected, despite: (1) the
presence of these species at many
collection sites (oak present at 5 out of
11 sites and yew present at 7 out of 11
sites) and (2) both being recognised as
excellent firewood species. Only one
group, which was from Malachh, was found
to have collected oak and only two groups
(one each from Malachh and Pasala) to
have collected yew. The reasons why these
trees are seldomly collected include: the
rarity of deadwood of oak and yew, and a
reluctance on the part of collectors to
cut or damage live specimens of these
species for firewood as they are highly
prized for fodder. There is evidence that
women manage oak on a rotational basis
for fodder, leaving some individuals to
recover for up to 10 years before
re-harvest, a practice that demonstrates
their interest in maintaining this
natural resource-base.
Collection groups for firewood and
fodder are formed mainly on the basis of
proximity. Women within a group are not
necessarily bound by family ties, even
though houses are often clustered
according to family ties. Group sizes
vary between 3 and 40, the larger tending
to be formed when houses lie at a greater
distance from the park. Both the
questionnaire and field observations
showed that altogether women from Pasala
together exploit twice as many collecting
sites in the park as do those from
Malachh. This may relate to the fact that
Pasala is a more scattered settlement,
covering a larger area, thus women tend
to be more spread out initially and then
probably select places closest to them.
Preliminary observations at Lahur Kas,
a remote village (therefore also possibly
more heavily dependant upon park
resources) noted that one womens
collecting group had felled a living tree
of Quercus incana (a lower
altitude oak). This unusual practice
might be partly explained by the
isolation of this village coupled with a
more open attitude of guards to the
'selling' of trees from the park.
Villagers from Lahur Kas were found to
sell firewood from the park to people
from the small town of Berote, a practice
not recorded at the other villages
studied.
The average weight of wood found to be
stored per household during the period
mid-June to mid-September was 2,385 kg.
Families use an average of 19.8 kg of
wood per day in summer and 42.2 kg in
winter. Assuming 150 days of winter and
215 days of summer, average annual
consumption is calculated to be 10, 587
kg.
Although some summer-houses and hotels
were found to be using firewood illegally
collected from the park, their overall
levels of use are relatively low,
especially given that they are fewer
numerically as compared with the number
of village households.
Fodder
The calendar of forest harvest is as
follows. During early spring, before the
grass has grown, women rely mostly on
tree fodder from the park. Herbaceous
plants in the park (and some tree fodder)
form the main fodder resource between
June and September (also the time of
maximum firewood collection in the park).
The sites used for harvesting fodder are
similar to those used for firewood
collection. Grasses are harvested from
the margins of agricultural fields and
from Rackhan areas of Guzara Forest from
September to October. The term Rakhan is
complex and has to do with some areas of
Guzara Forest, the land status of which
is unclear. As part of the project, we
will investigate the history and status
of Rakhan lands. The fodder grasses
together with maize and wheat stalks,
gathered after the grain is harvested,
are stored and used during the winter.
Many families need to purchase additional
fodder for use over the winter months,
the average purchases varying from 3,480
Rps (69.60 US$) for families with more
than 10 kanals (6,050m2) of
lands, 3733 Rps (74.70 US$) for families
with 5-10 kanals (3,025-6,050m2)
to 5,300 Rps (106 US$) for those with
less than 5 kanals.
Fodder is stored for winter in piles
known as Gharas. The size of Gharas may
vary considerably, grass Gharas have
volumes of 13 to 24 m3 and
maize Gharas 17 to 47 m 3.
This great variation makes the
calculation of total fodder stored per
household difficult.
Women prefer grass over
non-graminiferous species of herbs, but
measurements of fodder productivity in
the plots within the park showed that
herbs dominate in mass over grasses.
Women gather herbaceous forest species by
harvesting with small sickles. They
deliberately select patches where grass
is more abundant, but inevitably many
herbs are collected inadvertently. One
reason for grass preference is because it
is lighter (laboratory measurements made
by Asma Jabeen confirm that grasses have
significantly lower water contents than
do typical herbs). It is thought
significant that the single productivity
plot placed in Guzara Forest (in a Rakhan
area) has a much higher relative
abundance of grass over herbs compared
with any of the plots in the park;
furthermore, the dominant grass species
differ. The sole example of Rakhan
studied for biomass was privately owned
and managed deliberately for fodder
production. Unlike within the park where
the harvesting of herbaceous fodder is
effectively unmanaged, with continuous
harvesting over the growing season and
with apparent "competitive"
collection between harvesters, grass in
Rakhan areas is harvested only at the end
of the growing season.
The discovery that in places at least,
Guzara Forest is being effectively
managed for fodder production has
important implications. First, it
indicates that fodder production in the
park could be increased in quantity and
quality if effective management is
introduced. Second, the existence of
effective management of one plant
resource in Guzara Forest (i.e.grass
fodder) raises the possibility that
effective schemes for the planting and
management of trees for firewood and
fodder might be possible through village
institutions.
Asma Jabeen recorded 33 species of
grasses and herbs in fodder headloads
collected in the park. Commonly collected
grasses in the park belong to the genera:
Poa, Agrostis, Bromus,
Chrysopogon, Arthraxon, Festuca
and Panicum. Grass species
currently represent 70 to 80% of
headloads collected from ANP. Some seven
species of grass are commonly used for
fodder in the Rakhan and homestead area.
These are Aristida funiculata and Apluda
mutica, and others belonging to the
genera: Digitaria, Poa, Panicum,
Alopecurus and Festuca.
Farmers report that the production of
crops (and hence crop fodder) has been
decreasing over recent years, the causes
reportedly being an increased prevalence
of disease, reduced soil fertility, poor
seed quality and attacks by monkeys. From
March to October, tree fodder species
collected from the park are Quercus
dilatata, Taxus wallichiana, Quercus
incana, Ulmus wallichiana, Acer caesium,
Cornus macrophylla, Prunus padus,
Aesculus indica and Salix tetrasperma.
Damage levels to trees
Unfortunately, a fault in a GIS
instrument curtailed this survey.
Nevertheless, measurements did confirm
that neither oak nor yew are freely
regenerating and that they are subject to
much damage. Specimens of oak along the
main tourist track were better preserved
than elsewhere, and this relates to
greater protection in these places. It
was discovered that cedar is not a native
tree at Ayubia, but introduced. Young
individuals of this species were found in
some open places and it seems that it is
not under the same pressure as the
previously mentioned two trees. In any
case, it is not a fodder species.
Social structures and
decision-making processes.
Families are grouped into social units
known as Baradris, under the authority of
a headman called a Badka. The Badkas of
each village constitute a Village Council
(Jirga). The unit of government
administration at village-level is the
Union Council, which plays a major part
in all development activities. Quite
apart from these organisations, certain
men within the villages are particularly
influential and play major roles in
decision-making. They are not necessarily
members of the Union Council.
Men are the major decision-makers
within families, including regarding
marriages and patterns of voting in
elections. Male tasks include ploughing
of the fields, purchase of potato
"seed", house construction and
income generation. Women are responsible
for house-keeping, childcare, firewood
and fodder collection, purchase of maize
and bean seed, and looking after the
livestock. Few opportunities are open to
women to generate income for themselves,
an exception being the sale of
wild-collected fungi. Prices vary from
1500 Rps to 5000 Rps (30 100 US$)
per dry kilo. The collecting season is
from March to mid-May. An average of
seven kilos is collected per collector
per season.
Formal
and informal systems of licensing and
fining.
There is a system of legal fines
embodied in the Pakistan Forest Act of
1927 which establishes fines up to 500
Rps (10 US $) (Ayaz 1998) for all
offenses committed in Reserved Forests
(cutting of wood, setting fire, pasturing
animals, girdling of trees, lopping,
stripping etc.). Although informal fines
seem to be virtually universal, many
collectors are reluctant to provide
information on the subject (17 out of 40
women asked about this refused to
respond). In any case, it is probable
that they do not differentiate readily
between the legal and informal systems.
Informal fines per bundle of firewood
vary between 50 and 200 Rps (1 4
US$). Informal fines for cutting a small
tree are 100-400 Rps (2 8 US$) and
for a big tree 2000-5000 Rps (40
100 US$). Women tend to regard the
attitude of the Forest Department as
"bad" towards them and are
particularly annoyed when their axes are
confiscated.
A consultative workshop was
held in October 1998 to discuss the
results of the second phase of the
project's operations. This meeting
brought together representatives of the
communities (including women from
collecting groups), local NGOs, the
Divisional Forest Officer of Hazara
District and members of the Natural
Resources Conservation Project, NRCP
Galiat. It was agreed that it would be
fruitful in future for the project to
cooperate more closely with the NRCP in
the development of community forestry,
and for WWF Pakistan to become involved
in developing a new management plan for
Ayubia National Park (also an aim of the
NRCP). The NRCP has large nurseries at
Abbotabad and has the potential to
provide the present project with
seedlings for planting firewood and
fodder species. Recommendations for the
management of particular plant resources
in the park, the fruit of research from
the present project, should prove useful
in the development of the management
plan.
Perspectives
for 1999
Plans for the next phase (1999)
include contributing to the development
of community forests and, if possible,
ANP management. It has also been decided
to a meeting be held with the owners and
managers of hotels the aim of which is to
encourage them to develop and adopt a
code of ethics relating to their
utilisation of firewood. A further
activity envisaged is the testing of
various types of firewood-efficient
stoves, with selection of the type most
favoured locally followed by its
promotion for local use. The fodder
survey will be continued with research
into floristic variation related to
natural environmental parameters and
regimes of use and management. This
should eventually allow characterisation
of fodder areas inside and outside the
park according to their potentials for
fodder production. Awareness-raising will
be continued in schools and a booklet on
the useful plants of Ayubia will be
produced. Another national training
workshop is proposed, but at a different
site (not Ayubia) to allow focus on other
issues of community-based plant
conservation in Pakistan.
Lessons
learnt
The presence of a project office at
the site (in the bazaar of Nathiagali)
has helped to foster good relations with
local people. This was found to be
especially important at Ayubia where
there is considerable conflict over plant
resources.
It has proved invaluable to have
specialists from various disciplines -
botany, forestry and sociology
making up the project team. This approach
allowed for a greater diversity of
perspectives and research methodologies.
Care has been taken to include women
in the project team. Three out of the
four young professionals in the team were
women. Most use of plant resources here
is by women and, given local cultural
sensitivities, it is essential to engage
women on a project of this type to
develop an adequate understanding of
resource-use and appreciation of how
better to develop mechanisms to better
conserve plant resources. Moreover, in
this case, a certain rapport between
project members and women collectors can
only be achieved by same gender
interactions.
The project has spent two years
conducting research in the subject of
applied ethnobotany and there have been
many calls for more practical activities
by local people. In response to those
demands, the next phase of the project
will incorporate practical activities
geared towards improving management of
plant resources at Ayubia.
There is much illegal gathering of
plant resources at Ayubia and people are
often reluctant to discuss their
activities. For this reason, work can
only progress rather slowly. Furthermore
it is important to remain open to the
reorientation of project directions based
on interim results. From our study at
Ayubia, it is estimated that at least two
years are required to develop a good
understanding of the basic issues.
The project has highlighted the
critical importance of systems of land
tenure and ownership of natural resources
as factors in resource loss as well as
keys to potentially better management.
This is not only an issue at Ayubia, but
needs further consideration at the
national level.
Although calls have been made to
expand the educational and
awareness-raising aspects of the project,
it is doubtful whether these will have
much influence in themselves unless the
practical issues of decreasing supplies
of firewood and fodder are addressed
directly, and also because the main group
of resource-users (women) are nearly all
illiterate. This last fact indicates that
different educational/awareness raising
methods other than teaching in schools or
by printed materials would be better at
reaching the critical target group.
Progress in the future will depend
largely on better communication over
natural resource issues between the
various stakeholders at ANP, notably
communities and agencies, and men and
women.
The use of ANP as a base for national
training workshops has been useful, as on
its doorstep there were practical
examples for participants. In turn, the
project benefited from participants
advice.
Further
information / References
Aumeeruddy Y. 1996, People and Plants
Himalayas, Country and site planning
report for Pakistan, 17 pp. Report
prepared for the European Union.
Aumeeruddy Y. A. Ayaz, A. Gillani, AZ.
Jabeen and H. Jabeen. 1998, Detailed
workshop report: People and Plants
workshop on applied ethnobotany at Ayubia
National Park, NWFP, Pakistan 14-16
October 1998
Ayaz A. 1998, Annual technical report,
People and Plants Initiative Conservation
and Training in Applied Ethnobotany,
Pakistan, WWF Pakistan 97 pp.
Shinwari Z.K., Khan B. A., Khan A.A.
1996, Proceedings of the First Training
Workshop on Ethnobotany and its
Application to Conservation, September
16-24, PARC, WWF, ICIMOD, Islamabad, 1996
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