A crude quantification of wood that is and can be harvested from bush thickening species in Namibia.

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Date

2002

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Namibia, Ministry of Environment and Tourism

Abstract

The increasing rate at which thickening bushes are being harvested in Namibia requires better information on the availability and sustainability of the resource, in order to improve management. Two sources of data from the literature were combined to give a rough approximation of the standing biomass of wood of appropriate size for charcoal production, in each of nine bush-thickened zones. The overall estimate came to roughly 135 million tons of dry wood in about 260 000 square kilometres of Namibia, or an average of just over 5 t/ha. The legal commercial harvest for the 1999/2000 financial year came to the equivalent of just under 0.2 million tons of dry wood. Interviews with ten charcoal producers, and field data gathered at one site, suggest that harvesting could take place at intervals of roughly 20 years, provided that harvesting is selective and leaves sufficient bushes of different size classes for regeneration. However, it is likely that subsequent harvests would be lower and more difficult to obtain. Previously chopped bushes could then only be re-harvested on every third or fourth cycle, preferably after being pruned to maintain a more appropriate growth form, which is easier to harvest and more conducive to grass growth.

Description

This paper was presented at the National Forestry Research Workshop held in Windhoek.

Keywords

Wood harvesting - Namibia, Bush thickening - Namibia

Citation

Zimmermann, I., & Joubert, D.F. (2002). A crude quantification of wood that is and can be harvested from bush thickening species in Namibia. Proceedings of the First National Forestry research Workshop held on 12 and 13 March 2002 in Windhoek, Namibia Ministry of Environment and Tourism, Forestry Publication, 9, 56-66.

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