Conclusions
Action should be taken now to conserve
the medicinal plant base of traditional
medicine in Africa, as well as
safeguarding its potential for western
style medicines in other parts of the
world. A shift to a cash economy and the
emergence of commercial harvesters into
what was largely a specialist activity
restricted to TMPs have resulted in
medicinal plants becoming a common
property resource with few incentives for
resource management or traditional
conservation practice. In the context of
major threats posed to natural habitats
and the survival of particular species by
agricultural expansion, deforestation,
and so on, over-exploitation of
traditional medicines is occurring.
Subject to uncertainties in demographic
and urbanization trends, the demand for
traditional medicines is set to rise,
putting increasing pressures on remaining
areas of natural vegetation. Neither
formal conservation legislation nor
customary law or conservation practices
are able to control the situation, and
even CCAs and botanical gardens are being
exploited (e.g. Albizia suluense in
Hluhluwe Game Reserve (South Africa),
Erythrophleum suaveolens and Pterocarpus
angolensis in Zomba Botanical Gardens
(Malawi), Securidaca longipedunculata in
Harare Botanical Gardens (Zimbabwe).
Traditional conservation policy for CCAs
which are set up to maintain the status
quo will only succeed when supported by
ex-situ conservation methods including
large scale cultivation, buffer zones,
public awareness and research. In the
longer term, however, the success of
conservation will depend upon national
and international policy and cooperation
which will lead to improvement of the
socio-economic framework within African
nations.
Acknowledgments
Essential background to this study was
provided by resource users (herbalists,
gatherers and herb traders) and
conservation bodies in Natal, South
Africa who funded the Natal survey
(particularly M. Ntimbane, S. Jamile, N.
Tembe, S. Gumede, Mr L. Govender and B.
Naidoo).
This study was funded by the World
Wide Fund for Nature (WWF) (Project
3331). I am extremely grateful to J.
Seyani (Malawi), J. Chapman (UK/Malawi),
S. Mavi, T. Muller and B. Drummond
(Zimbabwe), M. Bingham and R. Nefdt
(Zambia), L. Ake-Assi, M. Egnankou Wadja,
and M. Prager (Côte dIvoire) and
the late A. Maite-Santos (Mozambique).
Without their assistance, as well as that
of the medicinal plant sellers and TMPs
at urban markets in all of the above
countries, this survey would not have
been possible.
I thank also S. Dipper, A. Hamilton,
T. Johns, I. Kamau, T. Fonki Mbenkum and
D. Taylor for their comments and
suggestions on earlier drafts of this
paper. Any errors are, of course, my own.
Personal
communications
Ake Assi, L., Centre National de
Floristique de lUniversite, BP 322,
Abidjan 322, Côte d`Ivoire.
Gautier-Beguin, D., Centre Suisse de
Recherches Scientifiques en Cote
dIvoire CSRS 01 Bp 1303, Abidjan,
Côte dIvoire.
Hines, C., c/o Institute of Natural
Resources, University of Natal, P O Box
375, Pietermaritzburg, 3200, South
Africa.
Horenburg, F., c/o Thusano Lefatsheng,
P O Gaborone, Botswana.
Louis, A.M., Le Chef de lHerbier
National, Centre National de la Recherche
Scientifique et Technologie, Commissariat
General, BP 842, Libreville, Republique
Gabonaise.
Maite, A., Faculdade de Biologia,
Universidade Eduardo Mondlane, C P 275,
Maputo, Mozambique.
Mavi, S., National Herbarium and
National Botanic Garden, PO Box 8100,
Causeway, Zimbabwe.
Smith, R.M. Royal Botanic Gardens,
Edinburgh
Seyani, J., National Herbarium and
Botanic Gardens, P O Box 528, Zomba,
Malawi.
Sturton, C., Royal Botanic Gardens,
Kew, Richmond, Surrey, U.K..
Venter, F., University of Venda, P/Bag
X 2220, Sibasa, South Africa.
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