Nature’s contributions to people from church forests in a fragmented tropical landscape in southern Ethiopia

Sahle, Mesfin, Saito, Osamu and Reynolds, Travis W., (2021). Nature’s contributions to people from church forests in a fragmented tropical landscape in southern Ethiopia. Global Ecology and Conservation, 28 1-16

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  • Sub-type Journal article
    Author Sahle, Mesfin
    Saito, Osamu
    Reynolds, Travis W.
    Title Nature’s contributions to people from church forests in a fragmented tropical landscape in southern Ethiopia
    Appearing in Global Ecology and Conservation
    Volume 28
    Publication Date 2021-06-09
    Place of Publication Amsterdam
    Publisher Elsevier B.V.
    Start page 1
    End page 16
    Language eng
    Abstract Despite expanding interest in nature's contributions to people (NCP) studies, understanding of sacred natural sites’ contributions to human society and the restoration of fragmented landscapes remains relatively limited. This study examines the diversity and extent of NCP by church forests in a fragmented tropical landscape in southern Ethiopia. We identify 339 church forests in the Gurage Zone and examine them using a combination of historical (1967) aerial photographs and recent (2017) orthophoto images, supplemented by vegetation sampling and in-depth interviews with key informants from 42 selected church communities. Church forests can be found in all agro-ecological zones and across the entire vegetation types in the Gurage socio-ecological landscape. In the last five decades, the extent of church forests has been remarkably persistent, and 67% of the forests have seen an increase in size even while surrounding state- and community-controlled forestland has been degraded over time. Interview findings suggest the church forests' persistence is in large part due to the church compound being seen as a sacred space and hence respected and protected by the community. This powerful social norm has allowed for multiple uses of the church forest to continue over time through sustained forest management. More than 15 distinct contributions of church forests to local communities were identified including material, nonmaterial, and regulating NCP categories, suggesting church forests deliver a wide range of NCP in addition to their well-established ecological and conservation value. Findings underscore the current contributions of church forests to local people in southern Ethiopia, as well as the potential for church forests to support the restoration of degraded landscapes through integration into regional landscape planning and management policies.
    Keyword Sacred natural sites
    Gurage
    Nature’s contributions to people
    Nonmaterial values
    Restoration
    Copyright Holder The Authors
    Copyright Year 2021
    Copyright type Creative commons
    DOI https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gecco.2021.e01671
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    Created: Thu, 15 Jul 2021, 16:18:18 JST by Rachel Nunn on behalf of UNU IAS