The Historiography of Forests use Types and Implication for Forest Conservation in the Montane Forests of Ngongbaa, Kilum, Kovifem and Kovkinkar


Authors : Dr. Tatah Jean-Louis Banadzem

Volume/Issue : Volume 9 - 2024, Issue 9 - September


Google Scholar : https://tinyurl.com/3px75vua

Scribd : https://tinyurl.com/rzb2e8e8

DOI : https://doi.org/10.38124/ijisrt/IJISRT24SEP1646

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Abstract : This study explores the timeline history of forest use types and beneficial relationship of forest, forest communities and conservation in the montane forests of Ngongbaa, Kilum, Kovifem and Kovkinkar from the mid-1970s to 2015. Data and/or information collected for this study comprise literary, questionnaire, interview, focused group discussions and observations. Data for the study was secured from person directly resident adjacent forest in 29 villages. The study shows that apart from being asource of food and medicine, forest first served as settlement and refuge sites for the Nso, Mbiame and Oku people. Today, forest serves as cemetery for the fons (kings), and host shrines which have become conservation hot spots and nurseries for engendered plants and animal species, where the Nso, Mbiame and Oku also performed sacrifices. These conservation hot spots help to sustain the forest in montane ecosystems where pressure on land and forest is high and on the rise. Due to population pressure and limited grazing the grassland compartments in the above forests have been transformed into grazing ground. The long period of intercourse between the Nso, Mbiame, Oku people and their forest enabled them to accumulate rich and useful knowledge of the forest and established customary (non- statutory or quasi-statutory) regulatory frameworks for effective management of forest resources to improve their livelihood and culture. Due to the depletion of forest and the adoption of stricter conservation policies, some forest activities particularly carving and hunting have decreased in intensity while some like Ngwa’a (royal hunt) has simply phased out due to the extinction of animal species which were hunted. The paper recommends that traditional systems of managing forest be reinforced to enhance the conservation of resources in sacred groves that are nurseries for threatened and extinct species in degraded ecosystems. The state should recognise and integrate non-statutory forestry policy frameworks established in the Nso, Mbiame and Oku into the national forestry policy as village-based institutions for the management of land and forest in forest communities. The government should also empower traditional authorities (Fon,Nwerong and Lanlords (ataangven) and support reforestation and forest restoration programmes formulated by them. This is because laws put in place by these institutions are respected in the most part by their subjects without being forced to do so, unlike in the Ngongbaa and Kilum forests managed by the state, where forestry laws are permanently violated by local people who consider forestry authorities as state agents who are depriving them of their right of tenure and usufruct. This would likely help to maintain biodiversity and knowledge attached to it, which is gradually disappearing due to forest depletion.

Keywords : Historiography, Forest use Types, Implication, Conservation, and Montane Forest.

References :

  1. Banadzem,Tatah J. L., (2018).The Impact of Forest Depletion on Indigenous Homelands and on Statutory and Non-Statutory Forest Policies:A Study of Ngongbaa, Kilum, Kovifem and Kovkinkar Montane Forests in Bui Division-Cameroon. (Unpublished Ph.D. Thesis, University of Yaounde I, Cameron.
  2. Banadzem,Tatah J.L., (2010). Impact of the Cameroon Forestry Policy on the Indigenous Forest Management System in Ngongbaa Forest Area in Nso, Bui Division.(Unpublished Masters Dissertation, University of Yaounde I, Cameron.
  3. Banadzem, Tatah J.L.,(2008).The Role of Indigenous Peoples in forest Management: Case Study of the Nso community of Ngongbaa Forest Area, Bui Division. Unpublished Maîtrise Dissertation, Department of Geography, University of Yaounde I, Cameroon.
  4. Binla, E. (2001). Population Pressure on Kilum Mountain Forest Reserve in OkuSubdivision.Unpublished Maîtrise dissertation, Department of Geography, University of Yaounde I.
  5. Fon Ngum III (2001). The Oku Forest- Our Life and our Future. In Forests, trees and people News Letter. No.45 pp.19-21.
  6. Chilver, E.M., & Kebemy, P.M. (1992). From Tribute of Taxation in a Tikar Chiefdom, Africa.Vol.xxx.No. 1 p.95
  7. Deutsches Kolonialblatt. (1906). Vol. 17, 236-241,
  8. Enchaw, G.B. (2009). An Assessment of Modern Conservation Strategies Adopted for the Management of Natural Resources in Kilum-Ijim project area. Unpublished Ph.D. Thesis, Department of Geography, University of Yaounde I, Cameroon.
  9. Enchaw, G.B. (2004). Major Conservation Strategies Adopted for the Sustainable Management of Natural Resources in the Kilum-Ijim Forest Project area. Unpublished DEA Dissertation, Departmetn of Geography, University of Yaounde I, Cameroon.
  10. Fanso, V. G. (1989).Cameroon History for Secondary Schools and Colleges: The colonial and post-Colonial periods.Vol.2.
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  12. Lamnso Literate Language Association, (2010). Ngòn Nso Woo Ngaà Màa Wong. Unpublished Work on the Nso Cultural History Produced on the Occassion of the Nso cultural Festival, 2010).
  13. Lantum, D.N. (2000).Fon Nso’ Sehm Ataar (1947-1972). (Father of Nso Development. Nso, History Society Publication, Kumbo, Bui Division, North West Province-Cameroon. B.P Nlongkak, Yaounde, Cameroon. 93p.
  14. Lantum, D.N. (1985). Traditional Medicine-men of Cameroon: The Case of Bui Division. Traditional medicines. Report series N°1 UCHS/CUSS Yaounde.
  15. Mbenkum, F.T. (1993). Ethnobotanical survey of the Kilum Mountain Forest and surrounding areas in Bui Division. Project CMOO14, Yaounde.
  16. Mbinkar, J.B. (1991). Anthropic activities in the Oku montane forest: The Causes of Forest Degradation. Post Graduate Diploma (Maîtrise), University of Yaounde I89p.
  17. Ntaimah, P.T. (2012). The Oku Trail (Ketiãntian ∂bkuo): Tracing Roots, Footprints and the Edification of a Cultural Space. AuthorHouse 1663 Liberty Drive Bloomington. 47403 www.authorhouse.com.
  18. Nso Heritage Association (2007). E-mail: [email protected]. ©2007.
  19. Shey Ghanghanin. (2012). Understanding the Nso-Oku Grinding Boundary Conflict. Bamenda, North West Region-Cameroon. Ebook by amazon.com. Email: Shey Ghanghanin @yahoo.com.
  20. Tsalefac, M., Nkwambi, W., Tatah, P., Ngoufo, R., & Djoumessi, T. (1999). The Integration of Ethnoclimatological Data in Environmental Management in a humid Tropical Mountain. Case Study of Mount Oku, Cameroon. The University of Yaounde I.
  21. (Microsoft ® Encarta ® medicinal properties of Ricinus communis. 2009. © 1993-2008)
  22. Twitter.com, 26 December 2023 at 9. 07 a.m.). rfi/Africa. Cameroon–wildlife: Cameroon hunter awarded a red feather for capturing leopard in Kilum-Ijim protected. Forest.

This study explores the timeline history of forest use types and beneficial relationship of forest, forest communities and conservation in the montane forests of Ngongbaa, Kilum, Kovifem and Kovkinkar from the mid-1970s to 2015. Data and/or information collected for this study comprise literary, questionnaire, interview, focused group discussions and observations. Data for the study was secured from person directly resident adjacent forest in 29 villages. The study shows that apart from being asource of food and medicine, forest first served as settlement and refuge sites for the Nso, Mbiame and Oku people. Today, forest serves as cemetery for the fons (kings), and host shrines which have become conservation hot spots and nurseries for engendered plants and animal species, where the Nso, Mbiame and Oku also performed sacrifices. These conservation hot spots help to sustain the forest in montane ecosystems where pressure on land and forest is high and on the rise. Due to population pressure and limited grazing the grassland compartments in the above forests have been transformed into grazing ground. The long period of intercourse between the Nso, Mbiame, Oku people and their forest enabled them to accumulate rich and useful knowledge of the forest and established customary (non- statutory or quasi-statutory) regulatory frameworks for effective management of forest resources to improve their livelihood and culture. Due to the depletion of forest and the adoption of stricter conservation policies, some forest activities particularly carving and hunting have decreased in intensity while some like Ngwa’a (royal hunt) has simply phased out due to the extinction of animal species which were hunted. The paper recommends that traditional systems of managing forest be reinforced to enhance the conservation of resources in sacred groves that are nurseries for threatened and extinct species in degraded ecosystems. The state should recognise and integrate non-statutory forestry policy frameworks established in the Nso, Mbiame and Oku into the national forestry policy as village-based institutions for the management of land and forest in forest communities. The government should also empower traditional authorities (Fon,Nwerong and Lanlords (ataangven) and support reforestation and forest restoration programmes formulated by them. This is because laws put in place by these institutions are respected in the most part by their subjects without being forced to do so, unlike in the Ngongbaa and Kilum forests managed by the state, where forestry laws are permanently violated by local people who consider forestry authorities as state agents who are depriving them of their right of tenure and usufruct. This would likely help to maintain biodiversity and knowledge attached to it, which is gradually disappearing due to forest depletion.

Keywords : Historiography, Forest use Types, Implication, Conservation, and Montane Forest.

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