Deforestation
for charcoal burning, slash and burn cultivation, and tobacco curing is
threatening human survival and the entire ecosystem of this African rift
country. Salt build up has been noted along the shore of Lake Malawi and the
surrounding areas, and wildlife habitat is disappearing as a result of
widespread logging.
The
Forest Act prohibits clearing of indigenous forests, but a tour of the lands
along Lake Malawi shows that areas that were covered with woodlands just a few
years ago are now bare. The brachystegia trees, their pale golden heartwood
striped with dark brown, are gone.
Alarming
Rate of Deforestation
Conservationists
have expressed alarm at the rate of land clearing by those intending to open new
farms.
David
Bradfield, project manager for the German funded Frankfurt Zoological Society,
runs a project in Liwonde National Park. Holding a Global Positioning System
device that he uses to map the deforested areas, he warns that deforestation is
taking its toll on the environment in the areas surrounding Liwonde National
Park and the forest areas in the Namwera area all the way to the Mozambique
border.
“When
I came here two years ago there were trees in these mountains,” he said,
pointing to the Mlindi Hills close to the newly opened Mangochi-Naminga road.
“This time around there are no trees left.”
When a region is deforested, said Anscombe, the negative environmental impact
has numerous delayed effects that may not appear for a decade or two, but
the situation becomes irreversible. |
|
Bradfield
has spent his time in the country protecting both wildlife and tree species
through funding environmental projects in the Liwonde, Mangochi area.
Photographs
taken by another concerned conservationist reveal alarming levels of wood being
chopped from the mountains and hills and ferried by tractors to the tobacco
barns.
Eyewitnesses
report that often many tractors and trucks travel from the mountains with wood
for the many tobacco estates in the area.
Cheap
local labor is used to facilitate logging in the mountains, according to Karen
Nakonya and Thousand James, both employed as firewood cutters for one of the
tobacco estates in the district.
“We
are only doing this as a job as you can see that we have nowhere to go. We have
to do it as we have an obligation to support ourselves and our families,” says
Nakonya who has been a logger for more than 10 years.
Long-term
Damage
The
large scale tree cutting has created large chunks of bare land on the mountains
and hills. The deforestation is difficult to reverse and will pose longer term
environmental challenges for the country, scientists say.
Consulting
hydrogeologist Jim Anscombe, who has been working in the area, says the forest
acts like a blanket over the land, and the trees work like a water pump.
“Driven
by energy from the sun, the trees pump water from the water table, through the
roots, trunk and leaves, up into the atmosphere through the process of
transpiration,” he said. “Collectively, the forest pumps millions of liters
of water daily to the atmosphere.”
“In
subtropical climates such as Malawi,” said Anscombe, “transpired water
condenses in the stratosphere, creating thunderheads, which push up the breeze,
redistributing the water as summer rain. Under these conditions, crops are
reliably grown on the plains between the forested uplands. Families are fed, and
drought and famine are rare.”
“Rain
falling on a forested slope is absorbed into the root biomass and dispensed
slowly to the plains below,” he explained. “In subtropical environments, it
is common for the dispensing streams and rivers to flow even through the dry
season, as the summer rain slowly percolates in, through and out of the
system.”
“Land
and soil degradation are minimized because the trees and their root network
provide restraining protection,” he said.
But
when a region is deforested, said Anscombe, the negative environmental impact
has numerous delayed effects that may not appear for a decade or two, but the
situation becomes irreversible.
Rainfall
from summer thunderheads decreases as the trees are felled. Rainfall
distribution deteriorates and becomes dependent on more erratic regional weather
patterns such as those pushed by pressure changes from distant oceans. Crop
yields suffer from reduced rainfall and degraded soils, increasing the incidence
of crop failure and famine.
Anscombe
has been conducting ground water surveys on where boreholes will be sunk for
wells under a German funded GITEC project. He says deforestation is having a
devastating effect on the water table.
On
the plains between deforested areas, the water table has become shallower
because there are no trees left to pump the water to the atmosphere, he
explained.
Direct
sunlight on the soil surface increases the amount of water loss to the
atmosphere from the now shallow water table. This leads to salt buildup in the
soil layers and the progressive reduction in soil fertility.
In
a worst case scenario, the deforested land is rendered saline, barren and
infertile within a decade.
Furthermore,
the situation is threatening elephant’s migration to and fro with neighboring
Mozambique. At different times of the year, the large Jumbos migrate in search
of food, creating an environment for the habitat in Liwonde National Park to
regenerate. The cutting down of the strip of land used by elephants during
migration will exert pressure on Liwonde National Park and its resources, as
elephants will ravage whatever is in their sight.
A
77-year-old Greek farmer interviewed at one of the tobacco estates, Peter
Panariwtu, said that efforts by the commercial farming communities to secure
land for woodland plantations to avert these problems have hit a blank wall.
Panariwtu
acknowledged that indigenous trees are being used for curing tobacco on his
estate, most of them bought from other estates in the area.
Keith
Eden, a South African farmer growing seed maize in Malawi, said that most of the
farmers know there is good money in tobacco. He expressed concern at the rate at
which indigenous trees are being chopped to fuel the tobacco curing sheds.
Forestry
officials in Mangochi said that although they have produced a plan of work for
the year, no funding trickles in from headquarters to keep the work going.
“It
is now eight years since we last conducted patrols for our forest reserves,”
said Mangochi District Forestry Officer Vita Kanyemba.
“We
have no uniforms, no fuel and no houses,” Kanyemba said. “We have the drive
but resources are a limiting factor here. How can we work under these
conditions?”
The
Ministry of Natural Resources and Environmental Affairs said in its 2002 State
of the Environment Report that Malawi's forest resources declined from 47
percent of the total land area to around 28 percent in 2000.
Population
growth, poverty, agricultural expansion, wood energy demands, and wildfires
continue to erode Malawi's forest resources, the ministry reports.
And
now there are fears that forest cover may have shrunk below 20 percent, as
massive tree cutting continues uninterrupted in most areas of the country.