Abundance and commercialization of Phoenix Reclinata in the King Williamstown area, South Africa

In the Eastern Cape of South Africa the fronds of the wild palm Phoenix reclinata are harvested by rural women and manufactured into hand brushes, which are sold in urban centres. This paper reports on the abundance of P. reclinata palms, the profile of the harvesters, and the economic returns from...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Gyan, C A, Shackleton, Charlie
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: 2005
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10962/d1006829
id ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-rhodes-vital-6634
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-rhodes-vital-66342018-12-11T04:30:24ZAbundance and commercialization of Phoenix Reclinata in the King Williamstown area, South AfricaGyan, C AShackleton, CharlieIn the Eastern Cape of South Africa the fronds of the wild palm Phoenix reclinata are harvested by rural women and manufactured into hand brushes, which are sold in urban centres. This paper reports on the abundance of P. reclinata palms, the profile of the harvesters, and the economic returns from trading in palm brushes as a case study of locally driven non-timber forest product commercialization. The palm resource was in a reasonable state with most clumps being lightly (36%) or moderately (43%) harvested, with many others uncut due to physical or culturally defined refugia. Tall trees within a clump were uncut because the fronds were too high. The estimated production of fronds was less than 25 per cent of the local demand. Consequently, harvesters were seeking alternative areas and species. Mean gross monthly income was R475 (USD45) which was an important cash contribution. Net income was 75 per cent of this. Income earned per seller was influenced by factors such as age, education, hours in the trade, and whether any household member received an old-age pension from the State. Older and less educated sellers had been trading longer than younger or more educated vendors.2005Article12 pagespdfvital:6634http://hdl.handle.net/10962/d1006829English
collection NDLTD
language English
format Others
sources NDLTD
description In the Eastern Cape of South Africa the fronds of the wild palm Phoenix reclinata are harvested by rural women and manufactured into hand brushes, which are sold in urban centres. This paper reports on the abundance of P. reclinata palms, the profile of the harvesters, and the economic returns from trading in palm brushes as a case study of locally driven non-timber forest product commercialization. The palm resource was in a reasonable state with most clumps being lightly (36%) or moderately (43%) harvested, with many others uncut due to physical or culturally defined refugia. Tall trees within a clump were uncut because the fronds were too high. The estimated production of fronds was less than 25 per cent of the local demand. Consequently, harvesters were seeking alternative areas and species. Mean gross monthly income was R475 (USD45) which was an important cash contribution. Net income was 75 per cent of this. Income earned per seller was influenced by factors such as age, education, hours in the trade, and whether any household member received an old-age pension from the State. Older and less educated sellers had been trading longer than younger or more educated vendors. ===
author Gyan, C A
Shackleton, Charlie
spellingShingle Gyan, C A
Shackleton, Charlie
Abundance and commercialization of Phoenix Reclinata in the King Williamstown area, South Africa
author_facet Gyan, C A
Shackleton, Charlie
author_sort Gyan, C A
title Abundance and commercialization of Phoenix Reclinata in the King Williamstown area, South Africa
title_short Abundance and commercialization of Phoenix Reclinata in the King Williamstown area, South Africa
title_full Abundance and commercialization of Phoenix Reclinata in the King Williamstown area, South Africa
title_fullStr Abundance and commercialization of Phoenix Reclinata in the King Williamstown area, South Africa
title_full_unstemmed Abundance and commercialization of Phoenix Reclinata in the King Williamstown area, South Africa
title_sort abundance and commercialization of phoenix reclinata in the king williamstown area, south africa
publishDate 2005
url http://hdl.handle.net/10962/d1006829
work_keys_str_mv AT gyanca abundanceandcommercializationofphoenixreclinatainthekingwilliamstownareasouthafrica
AT shackletoncharlie abundanceandcommercializationofphoenixreclinatainthekingwilliamstownareasouthafrica
_version_ 1718801391622815744