Conservation strategies for biodiversity and indigenous people in Chilean forest ecosystems
Artículo
Open/ Download
Publication date
2001Metadata
Show full item record
Cómo citar
Armesto, Juan J.
Cómo citar
Conservation strategies for biodiversity and indigenous people in Chilean forest ecosystems
Author
Abstract
The distribution
of
Chilean temperate forests
has
been greatly disrupted
by
human
activities, mainly through logging, land clearing
for
agriculture,
and
replacement
of
native forests
by
extensive commercial plantations
of
exotic trees More than
Vi
million
people
of
indigenous ancestry (mainly Pehuenche
and
Huilliche) still live
in
close
association with forests
in
south-central Chile Indigenous people have been forced
to
retreat, along with
the
last remains
of
native forests, towards marginal lands, characterised
by
low
productivity
and
limited accessibility This process
has
been driven
by a
historical trend that reassigned public
and
indigenous land
to
private
or
industrial
landowners,
and by a
Chilean forestry policy that
has
ignored biodiversity
and non-
timber forest products,
and
undervalued native forests
by
providing costly subsidies
to
industrial plantations
for
timber
and
pulp production
As a
result
of
these policies,
two
major conflicts have emerged indigenous people encroached
by
timber plantations
are
resisting
the
expansion
of
commercial forestry,
and the
conservation
of
the last remains
of biologically valuable habitat
is at
odds with land
use
claims
by
indigenous groups
in
less accessible areas
A
promising solution
to
these problems
is the
development
of
mixed
use
landscapes
or
"extractive reserves", where non-degrading economic uses
of
forests, such
as
ecotounsm
and
harvesting
of
non-timber products, coexist with
the
provision
of
ecosystem services
and
protection
of
biodiversity within indigenous land
Regulation
of
land
use in
extractive reserves requires strengthening traditional knowledge
of natural resource
use and
government incentives
to
manage
and
conserve native
forests.
Indexation
Artículo de publicación SCOPUS
Identifier
URI: https://repositorio.uchile.cl/handle/2250/157117
DOI: 10.1080/03014223.2001.9517681
ISSN: 03036758
Quote Item
Journal of the Royal Society of New Zealand, Volumen 31, Issue 4, 2018, Pages 865-877
Collections