Close
Home
Help
Library
Login
FAO Staff Login
Register
0
Selected
Invert selection
Deselect all
Deselect all
Click here to refresh results
Click here to refresh results
Digital Asset Management (DAM) by Orange Logic
Go to Login page
Hide details
Alternative Versions
Tags
Cooperative farms
Men
Watering
Explore More Collections
Conceptually similar
MOZAMBIQUE 1997. Support to Community Forestry and Wildlife Management
MOZAMBIQUE 1997. Support to Community Forestry and Wildlife Management
MOZAMBIQUE 1997. Support to Community Forestry and Wildlife Management
MOZAMBIQUE 1997. Support to Community Forestry and Wildlife Management
MOZAMBIQUE 1997. Support to Community Forestry and Wildlife Management
MOZAMBIQUE 1997. Support to Community Forestry and Wildlife Management
MOZAMBIQUE 1997. Support to Community Forestry and Wildlife Management
MOZAMBIQUE 1997. Support to Community Forestry and Wildlife Management
MOZAMBIQUE 1997. Support to Community Forestry and Wildlife Management
MOZAMBIQUE 1997. Support to Community Forestry and Wildlife Management
MOZAMBIQUE 1997. Support to Community Forestry and Wildlife Management
MOZAMBIQUE 1997. Support to Community Forestry and Wildlife Management
MOZAMBIQUE 1997. Support to Community Forestry and Wildlife Management
MOZAMBIQUE 1997. Support to Community Forestry and Wildlife Management
MOZAMBIQUE 1997. Support to Community Forestry and Wildlife Management
MOZAMBIQUE 1997. Support to Community Forestry and Wildlife Management
Tule tree
A village community gathering at the communal water well pumping and collecting water for household use.
A village community gathering at the communal water well pumping and collecting water for household use.
A village community gathering at the communal water well pumping and collecting water for household use.
Similar tones
View images with similar tones
Add to collection
MOZAMBIQUE 1997. Support to Community Forestry and Wildlife Management
1997. Nampula, Mozambique. Farmers water plants on a plot of land that they have cultivated using seeds provided by the Support for Community Forestry and Wildlife Management Project.
Technical support, including the provision of a water pump, was provided to the local community to help care for and manage the natural resources.
01/01/1997
Credit
© FAO/Jon Spaull
File size
368.75 KB
Unique ID
UF1ZUG
FAO. Editorial use only. Photo credit must be given.
Photo-Library@fao.org
Background Information
The Support for Community Forestry and Wildlife Management Project (GCP/MOZ/056/NET) started in 1997 to assist Mozambique institutions in developing and implementing policies for community involvement in sustainable forest management.
The project has three components directly related to its immediate objectives. It aims to:
Motivate rural communities and make them capable of caring for and managing the natural resources that surround them for their benefit.
Provide an institutional environment for the implementation of community forestry and wildlife management by strengthening the forest services at national, provincial, and local levels with regard to the legal status and land use rights of the communities and
provide formal forestry education and strengthen forestry research to support the implementation of community-based natural resources management.
Field activities are concentrated in the provinces of Maputo and Nampula, which have the highest deforestation rates in the country. Deforestation is mainly caused by poor agricultural productivity associated with high population growth, forest fires, and high demand for fuelwood both in urban and rural areas. The local communities are being supported through the Provincial Forest and Wildlife Services so they can gradually assume the management of the Narini Community Forest, comprising an area of 12,000 ha. The area is now being used for community-based management for sustainable timber and fuelwood production, carpentry, and non-wood forest products.
The forest is an important source of timber (produced by pit sawing) and fuelwood and a key source of income and food security for the 600 families that live in the area.