Androy Forests

Majestic Ceiba Tree  photo by Yasmin HernandezThe “spiny forests” of southern Madagascar, including Sakoantovo and Vohimasio, are like no other forests on Earth: unique desert-adapted plants like the prickly-stalked didierea form a dense thicket of flora that curls around the coast of this island southeast of Africa. With the forests endangered by overuse, in 2003 the government took the unprecedented step of returning two regions of the Androy region to local control in an effort to use traditional cultural practices to preserve the biodiversity. Evoriraza, a member of the Mahafaly people, says of the Sakoantovo forest: “This forest is a burial site for our ancestors. There is a sacred tree in the middle of the forest that cannot be touched, and also sacred animals such as tortoises, lemurs, and birds…Some animals are like spirits or ghosts, and can harm people if they transgress these prohibitions.”

Report by Amy Corbin
Dr. Herilala Randriamahazo for reviewing the text.

History

Some ancestors of the people of Madagascar came from what is now the Indonesian island of Borneo about 1500-2000 years ago. Soon after, scientists now believe that a wave of immigrants from East Africa mixed with the Indonesians and that population became today’s linguistically and religiously diverse Malagasy people. The African immigrants also introduced the zebu cattle which has become an important animal in Malagasy economic and spiritual life. Bounded on the west by plateaus and on the east by a mountain range, the Tandroy (“people of the land of thorns”) and the Mahafaly (“those who are happy to be together”) live in a dry climate with unpredictable rain, and have developed the tenacity and creativity necessary to survive in such a harsh land. Many cultural rituals surround the zebu cattle, which the men herd in addition to goat and sheep. The communities also cultivate maize, manioc, sweet potato and beans. Ombiasas (traditional healers) administer ceremonies for the ancestors and enforce taboos, known as fady, regarding the use of the forests. As the primary means through which life is sustained, both the spiny forests and the zebu cattle are sacred. The spiny forests are also the homes of ancestral spirits and the source of medicinal plants.

Madagascar’s many clans have been ruled by many powerful kingdoms throughout history until the rise of the modern nation-state. Around the 16th century, kings united many villages in the southern part of the island, forming political states and erecting fortifications and moats to guard their territory. By the end of the 19th century, however, the French colonized Madagascar, and ruled the country until independence in 1960. Today, the people believe there are nine types of sacred forests ranging from groves where royal ancestors are buried to areas that uniquely provide particular resources. The Mahafaly guard tombs and burial caves that hold their royal ancestors the Maroseranana in the Sakoantovo forest and the Tandroy protect traditional medicinal plants and a burial ground in the Vohimasio forest. Traditional taboos on who can enter any type of forest and what can be harvested from the areas have protected these forests from logging and other other destructive forces throughout history.

The island of Madagascar is known world-wide as a place of extraordinary biodiversity and high endemism (the rate of species found nowhere else in the world). As a whole, 80-90% of the island’s plant species are endemic, including 1,000 species of orchids, and Madagascar is the only home for lemurs. In the spiny forests, fully 95% of the species are endemic. Red sand covers much of the ground, topped by a “scrub layer” of thick bushes 3-6 meters high, out of which rises desert-adapted succulents (including the Didiereaceae family), cactuses, and baobabs up to 10 meters tall that outside observers often describe as “alien-looking.” As the forest transitions to riparian, trees that require more moisture like tamarind start to appear.

Challenges and Preservation Efforts

This dry and delicate climate works for its historically low-density population, but is being severely tested by an expanding population. Nearly all land that can support rice and other agriculture is already being used. Madagascar as a whole has lost 80% of its original forest cover. Since 1960, the island’s population has doubled while its forest area has shrunk in half. When the population was controlled, the islanders could practice tavy, a system for rotating crop cultivation, followed by natural re-growth, but now the land’s nutrients are being consumed faster than they can regenerate.

The island’s northern rainforests have historically been at the top of the conservation community’s agenda, and in 2007, six rainforest parks were designated the Atsinanana World Heritage Site. The WWF declared the southern forest area a Gift to the Earth in 2003. However, the southern area of Madagascar has continued to sustain damage and depletion; even though the population is sparser in the south, the climate is harsher and the people are under more immediate pressure to survive. While the Mahafaly and Tandroy have continued to practice fady, their system of taboos, which relate to the management and protection of the forests, their economic circumstances has changed their ability to adhere to its strictures.

It is a measure of the people’s desperation that many have started to encroach on sacred forests, clearing them for agriculture and cattle grazing, burning wood for fuel and for sale as charcoal, and hunting species that were previously taboo. Deforestation is small-scale but widespread—most people are cutting down wood for their own needs and to sell as charcoal. Due to its dry climate, the spiny forest flora grows back more slowly than other habitats. The government of Madagascar, headed by President Marc Ravalomanana, has vowed to make conservation a top priority and use Madagascar’s unique biodiversity to the advantage of the people. However, even when protected areas are declared in poverty-stricken areas, there is rarely the means to enforce protection laws.

Meanwhile, on the southeastern coast around the town of Taolagnaro (Ft Dauphin), the international mining giant Rio Tinto plans to open an ilmenite mine by the end of 2008. The mine, which is expected to run for 40 years, will necessitate the destruction of up to 1,000 hectares of land on the edge of the spiny forest eco-region, as it transitions to rainforest. Ilmenite is used to make a titanium dioxide pigment for paint, for which demand increased when lead paint was banned. The mine will be operated by QIT Madagascar Minerals, a subsidiary of Rio Tinto, with a minority 20% share in the mine owned by the government of Madagascar and funded by the World Bank. Rio Tinto has promised the mine will bring desperately needed jobs, but activists suspect that many jobs will go to foreigners. The company also says it will replace the sand (from which ilmenite is extracted) and then replant trees. Currently construction is underway, including mine infrastructure and a harbor.

One recent preservation effort came in the form of the transfer of stewardship of the Sakoantovo and Vohimasio spiny forests to the local Mahafaly and Tandroy people, respectively. Local management committees were established in 2003 under a national legal framework for community management known as Gestion Locale Sécurisée and Gestion Contractualisée des Forêts (Local Security Administration and Forest Contracting Administration). The Sakoantovo Forest (6,163 ha) and Vohimasio Forest (30,170 ha), which after a community management plan is approved will become protected areas, go a long way towards protecting the total 60,000 ha of sacred forests in the spiny forest ecoregion.

Madagascar is also a prime candidate for eco-tourism, which, if run properly, can give locals an economic stake in preserving their natural resources rather than harvesting them. The World Bank and the World Wildlife Fund have together negotiated a “debt for nature” deal that allows some debt relief, funds for conservation, and strategies for involving local people in park management.

What You Can Do

Support the World Wildlife Fund’s ecoregion action project in southern Madagascar, which includes community education projects about the value of conservation and the development of eco-tourism. For information about donating money or equipment, volunteering, or eco-tourism, you can email Dr. Herilala Randriamahazo.

Volunteer to with the Tandroy Conservation Trust in the Commune Ifotaka on Madagascar working on their ongoing projects focused on education, sustainable development and anthropological field research.

Resources

  • World Wildlife Fund full report on the spiny forest ecoregion and a more general interest version
  • ‘The Pressures on Madagascar’s Spiny Forest: Patterns in resource use in a transforming environment. A Case Study. An analysis of forest resource use in the Antandroy village of Amboetsy’, Caroline Hotham and Christale Robelle Razafindrahova, Tandroy Conservation Trust paper, 2001.
  • Tandroy Conservation Trust – an NGO that promotes sustainable development and conservation of biodiversity in the Tandroy spiny forest
  • The Wildlife Conservation Society’s Madagascar page focuses on endemic animal species
  • QIT Madagascar Minerals (Rio Tinto) – official site
  • Madagascar Parks – official site (in French)

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