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Nontimber forest product gathering in Ritigala forest (Sri Lanka): Household strategies and community differentiation

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Abstract

Sri Lanka has a long tradition of forest product use. The relationship of people with a dry zone forest was studied using a sample of 48 households in two villages that varied in distance to the forest and access to the market. All households interviewed collected subsistence forest products and a majority of them also collected commercial products. The daily peak-season income from commercial gathering was 4.5 to 7.7 times the daily labor wage. There is a strong gender specialization, with commercial gathering dominated by men whereas subsistence gathering is almost exclusively the task of women. The average forest-derived household income in the village closer to the forest and with better market access was nearly double that of the other village. Family size as a proxy of labor availability was the main discriminating factor between those households who did and those who did not gather commercial products. A small inverse relationship between forest gathering and size of household agricultural land (particularly paddy rice) was observed. No clear relationship was found between total household income and forest derived income, contradicting the view that commercial forest gathering is an exclusive activity of the poorest households.

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Wickramasinghe, A., Pérez, M.R. & Blockhus, J.M. Nontimber forest product gathering in Ritigala forest (Sri Lanka): Household strategies and community differentiation. Hum Ecol 24, 493–519 (1996). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF02168864

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