Approaching Local Perceptions of Forest Governance and Livelihood Challenges with Companion Modeling from a Case Study around Zahamena National Park, Madagascar
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Study Area
2.2. Companion Modeling and Role-Playing Games
2.2.1. Development of an RPG
2.2.2. Game Workshop Structure
2.2.3. Game Workshop Participants
2.3. Land-Cover Mapping and Dynamics Assessment
2.4. Analysis of Gaming and Debriefing Data
3. Results
3.1. Understanding the Socio-Ecological System
3.1.1. Interactions of Actors and Resources
3.1.2. Land-Type Dynamics
3.2. Forest Change, Livelihood Challenges, and Governance
3.2.1. Virtual World—Gaming
3.2.2. Land-Cover Mapping and Dynamics Assessment
3.2.3. Real World—Land-Use Narratives and Perceptions
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A
Appendix A.1. Approaches Used during the Game Development Process
Appendix A.1.1. Diagnosis Phase
Parameters | Focus Group 1 | Focus Group 2 | Focus Group 3 |
---|---|---|---|
Topic | Identification of land-cover types: characteristics, the existing and used resources. Land tenure dynamics. | Land tenure rules for each land use: rules and rights in force (who can do what, where does this right come from, what are the problems/conflicts encountered, etc.). Land acquisition patterns and types of land transactions. Evolution of rules over time and space. | Role and function of VOI in forest tenure. Views of VOIs on the use of forests and community mgmt. VOI links with the forestry administration and the NPM. |
Participants | 4: 2 men and 2 women | 6: 3 men and 3 women | 4: 2 office members maximum |
Age | Belonging to different age groups: young people (20 to 30 years) and adults | ||
Origin | Residents | Autochthonous and migrants | - |
Main activity | Agriculture | Agriculture | - |
Others | Knowing the reality in the fokontany (village), able to discuss in group |
Authority (n = 8) | Interview Topics |
---|---|
Fokontany (village) chiefs, or their assistants |
|
Sector Head of Zahamena National Park |
|
Forest managers (Head of Forestry, Director DREEF Alaotra-Mangoro) |
|
Land Office Agent Antanandava and Deputy Mayor |
|
Service domain |
|
Participants and Approach | Topics | Details |
---|---|---|
Authority interviews (n = 17) | Main sources of income of the population Main uses of the open landscape (in terms of agriculture) Problems related to tavy (slash and burn) practices Circuit flow of agricultural products and market problems * | Mayor and Deputy Mayors of the communes Ambohijanahary, Antanandava, and Vavatenina Agricultural Service Center of Vavatenina President of Water Users around Lake Alaotra Presidents of the VOI of Antanandava Chief sectors responsible for the conservation of the NP Zahamena-Antanadava and head of the conservation component of the NP at Fénérive Est |
Miner interviews (n = 30) | Participants’ perceived impacts of mining, on a personal and community level ** | The village heads helped in the search for miner participants, in order to follow the cultural etiquette. |
Farmer ARDI (n = 19) | Problem definition Main actors involved Resources needed for this use: land tenure, existing labor management systems Dynamic: ecological changes and dynamics on the evolution of forest cover, open and swampy landscapes | In three workshops; village heads helped in the search for suitable participants. |
Ethno-photography of sciences | What is your landscape? Which aspects are missing in the presented pictures/should we include and why? | Random selection on village markets; criteria: natural resource users and village residents |
Appendix A.1.2. Game Development and Calibration Phase
Appendix A.2. Game Description of the Zahamena RPG
- Firewood. Each round, players had to collect firewood in the form of stacks of wood in the forest plots. The number of stacks of wood to collect was equal to the number of people in a household. Players could still take more stacks of wood than necessary and keep the surplus for the next rounds. If a player failed to obtain the required number of stacks of wood, he had to cut a tree if the number of stacks of wood missing was less than five and two trees if the missing number was greater than five. However, if the player had a reforestation plot (aged from T2 = 10 years), it was assumed that he collected his firewood in his reforestation plot and no longer needed to cut trees in the forest.
- Living costs. When a player did not have enough money to pay the obligatory costs of living at the end of a turn, he had to cut down a number of trees proportional to the amount he had to pay (one tree = 250). Each forest cell carried 10 trees and two piles of wood (corresponding to dead branches collected for firewood). The piles of wood were renewed at each turn in the following way: if the number of trees in the parcel was greater than five then there would still be two piles of wood; if the number of trees was less than five, there would be one pile of wood; if there were no trees on the plot, there would be no pile of wood.
Variable | t | df | p | 95% Confidence Intervals | Sample Estimates | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Mean of x | Mean of y | ||||||
Very degraded forest (S1–S2) | 2.1038 | 51.764 | 0.04028 | 0.01791148 | 0.75986630 | 0.6388889 | 0.2500000 |
Livelihood | 4.3275 | 202.23 | 2.37 × 10−5 | 6507.807 | 17402.060 | 17975.667 | 6020.733 |
Moderately degraded forest | 2.2297 | 62.928 | 0.02934 | 0.05763622 | 1.05347489 | 1.2222222 | 0.6666667 |
Very degraded forest | 2.1038 | 51.764 | 0.04028 | 0.01791148 | 0.75986630 | 0.6388889 | 0.2500000 |
Completely deforested plots | −2.3073 | 47.361 | 0.02545 | −1.14383016 | −0.07839206 | 0.3055556 | 0.9166667 |
Variable | W | p | More in |
---|---|---|---|
Clove in tanety (number) | 10,176.5 | 0.02893 | Scenario 1 |
Reforestation in tanety (number) | 11,930 | 0.02396 | Scenario 1 |
Maize/bean in forest (number) | 12,530.5 | 0.0145 | Scenario 1 |
Activities in forest (total number) | 13,631 | 0.0008079 | Scenario 1 |
Loss of forest to maize/bean | 12,223.5 | 0.002153 | Scenario 1 |
Active loss | 13,109 | 0.004556 | Scenario 1 |
Variable | W | p | More in |
---|---|---|---|
Charcoal in forest (nb) | 12,000 | 0.01529 | W1–3 |
Forest exploitation (nb) | 13,275 | 6.608 × 10−7 | W1–3 |
Restoration exploitation (nb) | 10,800 | 0.01361 | W4–6 |
Fertilizer, big (nb) | 7651.5 | 3.422 × 10−8 | W4–6 |
Fertilizer, small (nb) | 7622.5 | 1.194 × 10−7 | W4–6 |
Reforestation in forest (nb) | 10,579 | 0.03441 | W4–6 |
Maize/bean in tanety (nb) | 8170 | 8.176 × 10−7 | W4–6 |
Mines (nb) | 12,675 | 6.965 × 10−6 | W1–3 |
Tobacco/cassava in forest (nb) | 9841 | 0.0007592 | W4–6 |
Tobacco/cassava in tanety (nb) | 9615 | 0.0003511 | W4–6 |
Firebreak (nb) | 9660 | 0.004117 | W4–6 |
Rice in forest (nb) | 12,075 | 0.006133 | W1–3 |
Activities (nb) | 8199 | 4.127 × 10−5 | W4–6 |
Loss for livelihood (nb) | 8092 | 2 × 10−8 | W4–6 |
Forced loss (nb) | 7862 | 1.465 × 10−7 | W4–6 |
Production (nb) | 13,796 | 0.0007046 | W1–3 |
Reforestation tanety (nb) | 10,434 | 0.006736 | W4–6 |
Maize/bean in forest (nb) | 12,601 | 0.009898 | W1–3 |
Activities in forest (nb) | 14,484 | 5.352 × 10−6 | W1–3 |
Active loss (nb) | 14,602 | 3.137 × 10−7 | W1–3 |
1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | Total | Users (%) | Commission (%) | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Dense forest (1) | 45 | 3 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 45 | 100 | 0 |
Sparse/degraded forest (2) | 0 | 45 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 45 | 100 | 0 |
Grass/shrub-dominant (3) | 0 | 0 | 36 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 37 | 97.3 | 2.7 |
Soil-dominant (4) | 0 | 0 | 0 | 36 | 0 | 0 | 36 | 100 | 0 |
Water (5) | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 36 | 0 | 36 | 100 | 0 |
Vegetation swamp; wet agriculture (6) | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 35 | 35 | 100 | 0 |
Total | 45 | 45 | 36 | 36 | 36 | 36 | 234 | ||
Producers (%) | 100 | 100 | 100 | 100 | 100 | 97 | |||
Amission (%) | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 3 | |||
Overall | 99.6 | ||||||||
Kappa | 0.99 |
Appendix A.3. Perceptions on Livelihoods and Change in the Zahamena Socio-Ecological System (Statements of Miners in Interviews, and Farmers in Game Workshops)
Appendix A.4. Perceptions of Farmers on the Best-Suited Forest Management System (Statements of Game Workshop Debriefings)
Appendix A.5. Authority Perceptions of Forest Governance Issues in the Alaotra Mangoro Region
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Bodonirina, N.; Reibelt, L.M.; Stoudmann, N.; Chamagne, J.; Jones, T.G.; Ravaka, A.; Ranjaharivelo, H.V.F.; Ravonimanantsoa, T.; Moser, G.; De Grave, A.; et al. Approaching Local Perceptions of Forest Governance and Livelihood Challenges with Companion Modeling from a Case Study around Zahamena National Park, Madagascar. Forests 2018, 9, 624. https://doi.org/10.3390/f9100624
Bodonirina N, Reibelt LM, Stoudmann N, Chamagne J, Jones TG, Ravaka A, Ranjaharivelo HVF, Ravonimanantsoa T, Moser G, De Grave A, et al. Approaching Local Perceptions of Forest Governance and Livelihood Challenges with Companion Modeling from a Case Study around Zahamena National Park, Madagascar. Forests. 2018; 9(10):624. https://doi.org/10.3390/f9100624
Chicago/Turabian StyleBodonirina, Nathalie, Lena M. Reibelt, Natasha Stoudmann, Juliette Chamagne, Trevor G. Jones, Annick Ravaka, Hoby V. F. Ranjaharivelo, Tantelinirina Ravonimanantsoa, Gabrielle Moser, Arnaud De Grave, and et al. 2018. "Approaching Local Perceptions of Forest Governance and Livelihood Challenges with Companion Modeling from a Case Study around Zahamena National Park, Madagascar" Forests 9, no. 10: 624. https://doi.org/10.3390/f9100624
APA StyleBodonirina, N., Reibelt, L. M., Stoudmann, N., Chamagne, J., Jones, T. G., Ravaka, A., Ranjaharivelo, H. V. F., Ravonimanantsoa, T., Moser, G., De Grave, A., Garcia, C., Ramamonjisoa, B. S., Wilmé, L., & Waeber, P. O. (2018). Approaching Local Perceptions of Forest Governance and Livelihood Challenges with Companion Modeling from a Case Study around Zahamena National Park, Madagascar. Forests, 9(10), 624. https://doi.org/10.3390/f9100624