Medicinal plants Agricultural
clearing, whilst increasing the amount of
weedy species used medicinally, has been
the major cause of depletion of medicinal
plants from forest. Commercial trade in
herbal medicines is not well developed,
and no sign of large-scale bark or root
harvesting was observed in Bwindi
Impenetrable National Park.
|
Photo
12.
Rytigynia kigeziensis
(nyakibazi), an effective
worm remedy, rated as the
most important medicinal
plant to people in the
DTC area. |
|
Collection of
herbal medicines is highly
species-specific, with over 100
plant species involved, primarily
for local use. Leaf material
forms the major component of
plant parts collected for
medicines used to treat people or
livestock. "Chewing
sticks" used for dental
care, are mainly from stems of
plants occurring in disturbed
areas outside the forest. Most
species collected are
fast-growing herbs gathered from
outside the forest. The impact of
medicinal plant harvesting is
low, even for favoured species
such as Rytigynia kigeziensis
(nyakibazi) (Photo 12). |
It is recommended that
traditional medical practitioners (TMPs)
and traditional birth attendants (TBAs)
be allowed to collect medicinal plant
material from multiple-use zones and that
medicinal plant gardens are promoted by
both DTC, ICRAF and local clinics through
the Ministry of Health.
Traditional medical practitioners
(TMPs) and traditional birth attendants
(TBAs) play an important role in rural
communities throughout Africa. They also
have a useful role to play in primary
health care (PHC) initiatives.
No data are available on the ratio of
TMPs or TBAs to total population in
Uganda. There is no doubt, however, that
TMPs and TBAs are more numerous than
medical doctors, with a medical doctor:
total population ratio of 1:20,000 cited
by the Ministry of Health (Kakuru, 1990).
In the Kilungu district, Kenya, for
example, rural populations of TMPs
averaged 1:224 (herbalists 1:665;
traditional birth attendants 1:1640 and
diviners also 1:665), while in urban
Mathare, the overall ratio was 1:883
(Good, 1987). Economic deterioration in
the past, and a 3.4% per annum population
growth rate, increase the difficulty of
providing adequate health services.
Although clinics are found in most
subcounties, hospitals in the
Kabale-Rukungiri districts, located at
Kabale, Kisoro, Kisizi and Kambuga are
difficult for many people to reach.
Many of the traditional medical
practitioners and traditional birth
attendants are registered members of TMP
or TBA associations, the TBAs using cards
associated with UNICEF. Traditional birth
attendants (TBAs) (or traditional
midwives) play an important role in
assisting home births in East Africa. In
Tanzania, for example, 75 -80% of births
were assisted by TBAs (Anderson and
Staugard, 1986). Similarly, in the
Machakos area, Kenya, only 26% of
pregnant women went to the hospital for
delivery (Voorhoeve et al., 1982).
With few exceptions in the DTC area,
(the use of naturalized Physalis
peruviana, Ricinus communis, or
cultivated Pennisetum purpureum,
Eucalyptus spp., etc.) traditional
medicinal plants are all gathered from
the wild.
A good example is the use of Rytigynia
kigeziensis (Rubiaceae) bark to treat
intestinal parasites ("worms").
Parasite loads are extremely high in the
Bwindi/DTC area. In an examination of
stool samples from 35 people, 89% (31)
were infested with roundworm (Ascaris),
and 34% (11) with whipworm (Trichuris)
nematodes, in addition to ten other types
of intestinal parasite (Ashford et al.,
1990). Many local people encountered
during this survey expressed the view
that if they did not have continued
access to Rytigynia kigeziensis
(nyakibazi) bark, "they would
die". Sustainable use of medicinal
plants is therefore essential, and the
focus here remains on key medicinal
plants or on those that are commercially
traded.
Sustainability
of medicinal plant use
Outside the national park, Afromontane
forest which was a source of traditional
medicines in the past has declined
drastically through clearance for
agriculture. Exclusion from Bwindi
Impenetrable National Park thus affects
TMPs who previously gathered medicines
there. TBAs, who gather most of their
medicinal plants in disturbed sites
outside of the forest, are less affected
by restrictions. In addition, supplies of
herbal medicines to TMPs are affected by
competing uses such as timber logging
(e.g. for Entandrophragma excelsum,
omuyovi). There is therefore growing
demand for fewer resources.Although a
large number of plant species are used by
TMPs, impact on medicinal plant resources
is reduced by three factors:
- the low ratio of TMP and TBA to
total population, and small
quantities of medicinal plants
gathered for use by TMPs and
TBAs;
- the low level of urbanization in
Uganda (6% of total population),
compared to many other African
countries, and the
correspondingly low level of
commercial trade in traditional
medicines. In Owino market,
Kampala, for example, 10 - 12 men
sold traditional medicines in
small quantity. By contrast,
traditional medicines are sold in
bulk in large cities such as
Abidjan, Côte dIvoire (107
bulk sellers) and Durban, South
Africa (392 bulk sellers, over
100 retail shops), generating a
long-distance, species-specific
trade which threatens popular
medicines within rural areas
(Cunningham, 1990). It is worth
noting, however, that a
small-scale trade in traditional
medicines has developed, with
bark, roots and other parts of
favoured traditional medicines
ordered from people living near
to Bwindi Forest (Table 5, Photo
13). In 1992, a single herbalist
was buying herbal material;
|
Photo
13.
The start of commercial
trade in the DTC area:
bark from Entandrophragma
excelsum (omuyovi) sold
by a herbalist at the
main village centre. |
- the fact that (in this study at
least), leaf material was the
most common part of the plant
used by TBAs (Photo 14, page 22)
and cattle owners. Although data
are incomplete, a preliminary
analysis of life forms and parts
used by TBAs suggests that of the
plant parts used, at least 62%
(96 of 154 species) is leaf
material, mostly from herbs
growing outside the forest.
|
Photo
14.
Herbalist Mr. M. Mafurira with
leaf material which forms a major
part of herbal medicines. |
Table 5.
Commercially collected
traditional medicines for
sale at Batogota. |
|
Family |
Plant Species |
Rukiga name |
Life Form |
Part Used |
Araliaceae |
Polyscias fulva |
omungo |
tree |
bark |
Clusiaceae |
Symphonia globulifera
|
omusisi |
tree |
bark (**) |
Euphorbiaceae |
Croton macrostachyus |
omurangara |
tree |
bark (**) |
Lauraceae |
Ocotea usambarensis |
omwiha |
tree |
bark (**) |
Meliaceae excelsum |
Entandrophragma |
omuyovi |
tree |
bark (**) |
Myricaceae |
Myrica salicifolia |
omujeje |
tree |
bark (**) |
Myrsinaceae |
Maesa lanceolata |
omuhanga |
shrub |
roots ? (**) |
Phytolacaceae |
Phytolacca dodecandra
|
omuhoko |
climber |
leaves |
Rubiaceae |
Hallea rubrostipulata
|
omuziku/ngomera |
tree |
bark (**) |
|
Note: (**) denotes
species collected in
maize bag (50 kg size)
lots. Other material sold
was from the following
species, identified by
local name only: omurama
(**), kashosho, omuhe,
omurahusyo, omukoko,
kaboha and omuhaka.
Information gathered by
R. Badaza and J.
Tumusiime (16 April
1992). |
|
The three most
important categories of uses of medicinal
plants by TBAs were for symbolic or
magical purposes (as protective charms
against bad omens, to ensure safe
journeys or assist in love affairs and
court cases) [22% (34 species)]; to
assist women either prior to, or shortly
after childbirth (preventing premature
labour, assisting labour, removal of
placenta, treating swollen breasts or
improving lactation) [18% (29 species]
and for treatment of internal parasites
("deworming") [7% (11
species)].
By comparison, in this preliminary
analysis, leaf material (37% (17 of 46
species) was also the largest plant part
category used by TMPs, but came from a
wider range of life forms (trees, shrubs
and climbers, in addition to herbaceous
plants). The three major categories of
use were to treat stomach aches [15% (7
species)] and internal parasites
("worms") [13% (6 species)] and
for use as antidotes to poisons (often
those administered by jealous rivals)
[11% (5 species)].
From field observation, it appears
that the impact of medicinal plant
gathering is low. Only two large
specimens of over 70 Rytigynia
kigeziensis trees seen showed signs of
bark removal, despite the popularity of
this species as a key medicinal plant.
Both of these were large plants adjacent
to paths. Debarking of Hallea
rubrostipulata was observed outside, but
not inside the national park. By
comparison, debarking by elephant of
trees such as Macaranga kilimandscharica
(omurara), Prunus africana (omumba) and
Rytigynia kigeziensis (nyakibazi) is much
greater.
Dental care:
chewing sticks
Dentists are scarce in many parts of
Africa, particularly in rural areas. The
ratio of dentist to total population in
Ghana for example, was 1:150,000
(compared to 1:3000 in Great Britain)
(Adu-Tutu et al., 1979).
Although diet plays a major role in
incidence of dental caries, dental
hygiene is also important. While
toothpaste and toothbrushes are widely
used by the sector of the population with
a high level of formal education,
toothpaste is expensive and sometimes not
available in rural areas.
In the DTC area, in common with many
rural areas in Africa, traditional
toothbrushes or "chewing
sticks" from thin branches or roots
of local plants are still in common use.
Continued access to popular and
effective sources of chewing sticks, many
of which have anti-bacterial properties,
is important. Unlike the situation in
West Africa, where a thriving trade in
chewing sticks has developed, use here is
for local purposes only and the impact on
vegetation is negligible.
Seven species used for dental care
were identified in discussions at Buhoma.
All were obtained outside the forest,
from disturbed sites near to villages and
homes; these were stems of omuhuke
(Lantana trifolium), omusinga,
omukyindezi, omuchundura, omusambya
(Dodonaea viscosa) and the leaves of two
species (ekarwe and omufumbwa).
Traditional
veterinary medicines
Although pastoralism is not the major
form of land-use in the DTC area, cattle
still have important economic and social
significance in this area. Veterinary
medicines and formally trained veterinary
doctors are scarce and expensive, and
wild plants are commonly used to treat a
wide variety of livestock diseases in
cattle and goats. Knowledge of
traditional veterinary medicines is more
widespread than knowledge of medicinal
plants used to treat people. Over 20
different types of ailments affecting
cattle are recognized. Leaf material
forms the bulk of plant parts used (64%,
16 of 25 species, %%) of this small
sample. Many of the plant species occur
outside the forest. There is no
commercial trade in plants for veterinary
medicines, impact is considered low and
the current level of use sustainable.
More detailed work is required on
traditional veterinary medicines before
firm conclusions can be drawn on major
ailments treated in livestock. This
preliminary survey showed that the most
commonly used remedies were for
diarrhoeal disease (khitwa), swellings on
the legs, ears or groin of livestock
(ekibagarila), mastitis and swellings of
the udder and teats of cows.
Traditional
medicines and hunting dogs
Hunting to provide meat and reduce
numbers of crop raiding animals such as
bush-pig has been an important
recreational activity in the DTC area in
the past. In the past, dogs were used to
run animals down, or to drive them into
nets (Butynski, 1984). Dogs are still
used for hunting in small patches of
scrub and forest outside Bwindi Forest,
with one hunt seen during this survey.
Traditional medicines, with symbolic
and possibly also physiological value,
are widely used in Africa to improve the
aggressiveness, sense of smell and
hunting ability of dogs. In the DTC area,
the use of five plant species was
recorded: the bark of Tabernaemontana
odoratissima (kinyamagozi) and Schefflera
barteri (omwamira), the fruit of Coccinia
mildbraedii and another Coccinia species
(omutanga), and the leaves of Thalictrum
rhynchocarpum (omwitango). Small
quantities of these plants are used, and
impact is considered to be negligible.
Box 3.
Recommendations for medicinal
plant use The aims
should be the improvement of
self-sufficiency of TMPs, the
reduction of harvesting demand on
wild populations of vulnerable
traditional medicinal plant
species in core conservation
areas, and the reduction of
future harvesting pressure on
wild populations. This may be
brought about through:
* mass production of rooted
cuttings and seedlings of key
species for home gardens;
* dissemination of information
on appropriate cultivation
methods for medicinal plants in
demand locally (e.g. Rytigynia
kigeziensis - nyakibazi, Piper
spp. - rokokota) or which are
known to be effective herbal
medicines and are used regionally
but not locally (e.g. Warburgia
ugandensis (= W. salutaris)),
which occurs in Kibale but not in
Bwindi forest);
* planting of popular
medicinal plants (particularly
trees and shrubs) as an important
part of the reafforestation of
slopes where soil loss is high
and sustainable agriculture is
not possible (buffer zone
management around core
conservation areas);
* supporting traditional
healer societies or associations
by national parks management.
Very little goes unnoticed in
communally owned areas, and if
problems arise regarding
depletion of valued local
resources, TMP associations or
community leaders can play an
important role in resource
controls;
* formation of rural TMP
associations (where these do not
exist already), possibly through
local health services with
support of the Ministry of
Health/UNICEF as a focal point
for establishment of medicinal
plant cultivation with assistance
of DTC and possibly ICRAF.
* investigation of the
practicality of using facilities
of government or commercial
companies (e.g. the Uganda Tea
Co-operative) to produce scarce
and popular medicinal plant
species from cuttings, using
commercially available rooting
media as an appropriate means of
boosting initial stocks for
distribution at cost to
herbalists and interested
farmers.
Through the Medical Faculty at
Mbarara University of Science and
Technology, investigate:
* the efficacy of popular
herbal remedies, e.g. the effects
of different concentrations of
Rytigynia kigeziensis bark
decoctions on intestinal
parasites;
* toxic species that are known
to cause problems locally through
over-dosage, e.g. due to liver
and kidney toxins;
* the desirability of
producing medicinal plants of
known toxicity through cloning as
a means of standardizing dosage
and producing a quality end
product. The approach taken to
cloning Urginea maritima
(Liliaceae) by Gentry et al.
(1987) is appropriate here.
The DTC project provides an
opportunity for
CARE-International, with its
expressed interest in primary
health care (PHC) adapted to
local technologies and responding
to local customs (Anon, 1991), to
play a greater role in the PHC
and medicinal plants issue (see
Wondergem et al., 1989; Desawadi,
1991). A similar approach is
taken on a smaller scale by
Brother A. Wassawa at Kyotera,
who produces herbal recipes for
local "first aid kits".
Monitoring is needed of:
* the development of
commercial trade. Permanent plots
may need to be set up in a few
selected sites to monitor the
status of commercially traded
"indicator" species,
e.g. Hallea rubrostipulata
populations;
* the success of cultivation,
possibly through a register of
growers and of species under
cultivation.
|
Basketry
Basketry combines traditional skills
and local materials to produce a range of
woven articles for storage and processing
of agricultural crops or home use. Plant
materials used vary from fast-growing,
productive wetland species (e.g. Cyperus
papyrus, efundjo) to scarce, slow growing
climbers that are found at low density in
forest (Loeseneriella apocynoides,
omujega).
Many species favoured for basketry are
common in disturbed sites and
over-exploitation is unlikely. Specific
recommendations are made regarding two
climbers that are popular for certain
woven baskets: Smilax anceps (enshuli)
and Loeseneriella apocynoides (omujega).
The second of these species is of
greatest concern from a sustainable use
viewpoint. Clearing of forest for
agriculture, followed by recent
development of the tea industry led to
increased use of Loeseneriella
apocynoides for tea-baskets in addition
to other competing uses (for granaries,
stretchers and as a general purpose
binding material), resulting in
over-exploitation.
Almost without exception, households
in the DTC area use baskets for
harvesting, drying, winnowing, grinding
and storing agricultural produce.
Basketry techniques and plant materials
are also used to weave granaries,
fish-traps and stretchers.
Although alternatives (e.g. plastic
bags) are occasionally used, indigenous
plants are the major source of basketry
fibre (Table 6). Despite their widespread
use, skilled basket-makers are relatively
few in number, particularly for
specialized baskets made by men, such as
winnowing trays and stretchers.
|
Photo
15.
Carrying baskets
(etchitukuru) for sale at
Batogota market. |
|
The most widely used baskets
are the flat, circular baskets
which are placed adjacent to the
grinding stone to collect ground
flour (orugali), the deep,
bowl-shaped millet basket
(echibo), a larger and shallower
bowl-shaped basket for grain
(entemere), a larger basket for
carrying headloads of crops
(etchitukuru) and the winnowing
basket (entara). The first three
basket types are mainly made by
women, using a coil-foundation
technique with grass (Eleusine
indica, enchenzi) and papyrus
(Cyperus papyrus) for the coils,
and Plantago palmata
flower-stalks for the dark
design. Women also make mats
(omucheche) for sitting or
sleeping on, as well as for
drying millet (etchigaru). These
are made from Cyperus latifolius
leaves, bound with twined
Triumfetta (omunaba) bark,
sometimes with dark banana fibre
woven in for a decorative
pattern. The etchitukuru basket
is woven using a chequer-weave by
both men and women, using either
Smilax anceps (enshuli) or bamboo
(Arundinaria alpina), and is the
type of basket most commonly sold
at markets (Photo 15).
|
The entara winnowing basket is
made mainly by men, using a
chequer-weave, often from Smilax anceps
(enshuli) weft and Grewia sp.
(omutahendeka) warp. A basket that is
probably made more commonly now than in
the past is the "tea-basket"
(orutete), which is preferentially made
from Loeseneriella apocynoides (omujega),
but as this climber has become scarce, it
is also being made from leaf-stems of
Phoenix reclinata (enchindo). Tea-baskets
are also made mainly by men. Thick (2-4
cm) climbers are used, and split into
thinner strips. All basket fibres can be
stored in a dry place for later use, and
are soaked before weaving.
Stretchers
(engozi)
|
Photo
16. Woven
stretcher, with weft of
Smilax kraussiana
(enshuli) and warp
(length wise) of Phoenix
reclinata (enchindu),
supported by bamboo poles
(the exotic Bambusa sp).
Ishasha area, May 1992. |
|
Woven stretchers
(engozi) (Photo 16) play a very
important role in rural
communities in the Rukiga
highlands for the transport of
sick (or dead) people. With the
exception of Phoenix reclinata
(enchindu) leaf-stems they are
entirely constructed from forest
plants (see Table 6) and are a
mainstay of stretcher-bearer
societies (ekyibinachengozi
(ekyibina = society; engozi =
stretcher)) that are something
like a local medical aid
association. |
These associations are well
organized, with a chairman and secretary.
Monthly financial contributions are made
by men (c. 200 shillings per month) and
women (c. 50 shillings per month) to
cover the cost of food for journeys and
for buying new stretchers, which last 2-4
years, depending on the materials used,
the toughest material being Loeseneriella
apocynoides (omujega).
There is usually one association per
"cell" and usually 7-8 per
parish. Stretchers are made mainly by
men, who sometimes also weave winnowing
baskets, and there are very few of these
specialists within the DTC area. There
are none in the Ruhija area, for example,
and society members have to get
stretchers from the Rubanda area.
Similarly, the single stretcher weaver in
the Rushaga area reportedly supplied
stretchers to stretcher-bearer societies
in the Rubuguli, Remero and Kaara
parishes.
Granaries
|
Photo
17. Granary in
the DTC area constructed
from the forest climber
Loeseneriella apocynoides
(omujega), thatched with
Imperata cylindrica
(Bujengwe parish,
adjacent to Kitahurira). |
|
Post-harvest loss is a
worldwide problem, with losses of
cereal crops of between 10-20% in
developing countries (FAO, 1981).
From discussions with local
farmers, the DTC area is no
exception, whether due to
insects, fungi or less commonly,
baboons breaking into a poorly
made granary to eat
finger-millet. Resolving this
problem complements attempts to
increase food production and
improve food security being
undertaken by CARE-International.
Granaries are the major means of
storing crops in the DTC area and
are found at every homestead. Men
construct most granaries, with
two basic types made: a smaller,
tightly woven type for beans, and
a larger granary for grain
(finger millet, sorghum) and root
crops (sweet potatoes, potatoes).
|
Materials used, and quality of
construction vary considerably, however
(see Table 6). These include crop surplus
such as sorghum stalks, cultivated plants
like Pennisetum purpureum (elephant
grass) or forest plants like bamboo and
various climbers (Photo 17).
Table
6. Main plant materials
used for basketry, woven
stretchers and granaries
in the DTC area. |
|
Family |
Plant species |
Rukiga name |
Life form |
Part used |
Use |
Agavacae |
Dracaena laxissima |
enchence |
climber |
stem |
stretchers |
Araceae |
Raphia farinifera |
ekihunje |
palm |
leaf |
basketry |
Araceae |
Phoenix reclinata |
enkindu |
palm |
leaf-stem |
basketry, stretchers |
Celastraceae |
Loeseneriella
apocynoides |
omujega |
climber |
stem |
basketry, stretchers,
granaries |
Celastraceae |
Hippocratea
odongensis |
oruyangaro |
climber |
stem |
granaries |
Celastraceae |
Salacia elegans |
orudyangara |
climber |
stem |
granaries |
Cyperaceae |
Cyperus latifolius |
ekigaga |
sedge |
leaf |
basketry |
Cyperaceae |
Cyperus papyrus |
efundjo |
sedge |
leaf cuticle,culm |
basketry granaries |
Marantaceae |
Ataenidia conferta |
ebitatara |
geophyte |
leaf |
basketry |
Marantaceae |
Marantochloa
leucantha |
omwiru |
geophyte |
leaf |
basketry |
Malphigiaceae |
Flabelleria
paniculata |
? |
climber |
stem |
granaries |
Plantaginaceae |
Plantago palmata |
embatambata |
herb |
flower stalk |
basketry |
Poaceae |
Arundinaria alpina |
omugano |
bamboo |
stem |
basketry, stretchers,
granaries |
Poaceae |
Eleusine indica |
enchenzi |
grass |
leaf |
basketry |
Poaceae |
Pennisetum purpureum |
? |
grass |
stem |
granaries |
Poaceae |
Setaria plicatilis |
ekikoka |
grass |
leaf |
basketry |
Smilacaceae |
Smilax anceps |
enshuli |
climber |
stem |
basketry, stretchers,
granaries |
Tiliaceae |
Grewia sp. |
omutahendeka |
scand. shrub |
stem |
basketry, stretchers,
granaries |
Urticaceae |
Urera hypselodenderon
|
omushe |
stem |
climber |
granaries |
|
Note: Species used
for supporting poles and
thatched roofing for
granaries are not
included. |
|
Sustainability
of basketry resources
For resource management purposes,
basketry materials could be divided into
five categories:
- species common in disturbed sites
such as roadsides and old fields:
Eleusine indica (enchenzi),
Plantago palmata (embatambata);
- locally common wetland species:
Cyperus papyrus (efundjo), C.
latifolius (ekigaga);
- bamboo, climbers, and a scandent
shrub of disturbed scrub and
forest, with Smilax anceps
(enshuli) and the scandent shrub
Grewia sp. (omutahendeka) most
popular, followed by the high
altitude bamboo, Arundinaria
alpina, and then to a lesser
extent Urera hypselodendron
(omushe) and Flabellaria
paniculata, which are used for
"bush rope" or for
granaries;
- members of the Marantaceae
restricted to moist valleys and
gullies in lower altitude
(1500-1750 m) sites in the forest
- Marantochloa leucantha (omwiru)
and Ataenidia conferta
(ebitatara); or the palm Raphia
farinifera (Arecaceae) which is
also restricted to moist valleys
in the Nteko and Buhoma areas at
1500 m;
- climbers in the Celastraceae
found in older secondary forest
and mature forest. The most
widely used is Loeseneriella
apo-cynoides (omujega) and
Salacia sp. (bwara), with others
being Hippocratea odongensis
(oruyangaro) and Salacia elegans
(orudyangara).
These categories represent
increasingly scarce species with more and
more specific habitat requirements.
Categories 1 and 2 are common and
widespread, and their use would be
sustainable. Basketmakers select patches
with a high density of Eleusine indica or
shady sites where Plantago plants have
longer flower-stalks more useful for
coil-built basketry, or cut small
quantities of Cyperus latifolius leaves
or young culms of C. papyrus.
Category 3 is limited to forest or
forest margins, with the climber species
common in canopy gaps. Of these four
species, Smilax is in the greatest
demand, despite the difficulty of working
with this tough material. Although
widespread in disturbed sites in East,
Central and southern Africa, it is
considered scarce by basketmakers in the
DTC area due to the intensive land-use
around the forest, with fallow periods
too short to enable its dispersal and
growth. Exceptions to this is the Nteko
area, where population densities are
lower, and forest patches still occurring
outside Bwindi Impenetrable National
Park. Harvesting is probably higher along
paths or roads where disturbed sites are
more accessible. Thicker stems are used,
and although local over-exploitation
takes place, recruitment with
regeneration from the root-stock,
combined with dispersal by birds into
forest margins and disturbed sites is
thought to avoid depletion of plants
within forest patches. Regeneration time
for Smilax was considered to be 6-12
months by resource users. Bamboo use is
discussed below (page 27). Use of Urera
hypselodendron and Flabellaria is limited
to granaries, and impact is considered
negligible.
Category 4: The cuticle of leaf-stems
(both Marantaceae) or of young leaves
(Raphia) is used. This limits harvesting
impact on the plants, although they are
only locally common in moist valleys. If
commercial harvesting is developed to
satisfy large-scale commercial
production, then a management problem
could arise due to high intensity and
frequency of defoliation, and possibly
also to trampling or uprooting of these
plants. This has been recorded elsewhere
for usually resilient mat-rush (Juncus)
and palm (Hyphaene) species in southern
Africa (Cunningham and Taylor, 1983;
Cunningham and Milton, 1987). Baskets
from Raphia cuticle are only made on a
limited scale, and impact is considered
to be negligible.
Category 5: The impact of cutting
Salacia sp. (bwara), Hippocratea
odongensis (oruyangaro) and Salacia
elegans (orudyangara) for granaries is
unknown, but from discussions with local
resource users is judged to be far less
than that on Loeseneriella apocynoides
(omujega), which is considered to be the
slowest growing of these forest climbers.
It is also in greatest demand for a wide
variety of uses, from a general purpose
"bush rope" of exceptional
strength, to use for tea-baskets,
stretchers and granaries. According to
resource users, it takes 10-20 years for
Loeseneriella apocynoides to reach a high
quality useable diameter (3-4 cm),
although there are no data on climber
growth rates to confirm this. From field
observation, however, it is clear that L.
apocynoides occurs at a low density in
lower altitude (1500-1750 m) forest (e.g.
Buhoma area), with single specimens seen
in the Ihihizo and Ishasha valleys.
Plants appear to sprout after cutting of
the large stems, and presumably this
removal of large stems represents loss of
mature stems producing flowers and seeds.
Loeseneriella has come under markedly
increased harvesting pressure with the
development of the tea industry around
Bwindi Impenetrable Forest, as it is the
most favoured species for making
tea-baskets. According to data from the
Uganda Tea Growers Corporation (UTGC)
factory at Batogota, there are 1597
out-growers in the DTC area. Assuming
that there are three pickers per
out-grower, each with a basket made from
L. apocynoides (weighing c. 500 g and
said to last four years), this would
represent the use of 2.4 tons of this
climber every four years (or
approximately 600 kg per year). With the
low density of this species in the
forest, presumably indicating old canopy
gaps, tea basket making has had a major
impact on this climber, in addition to
its use for stretchers and granaries. A
stretcher maker in the Rushaga area, for
example, reported having to travel an
estimated 5 km into the forest (almost to
Mubwindi swamp), spending two days to
collect enough material to make a
stretcher. Scott (1992) also encountered
many resource users, including
tea-pickers, who were having increasing
difficulty in obtaining this species.
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