Land use land cover change and the comparative impact of co-management and government-management on the forest cover in Malawi (1999-2018)

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Authors

Gondwe, Monica Fides Kalagho
Cho, Moses Azong
Chirwa, Paxie W.
Geldenhuys, Coert Johannes

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Taylor and Francis

Abstract

Miombo Woodland is the major Land use/land cover with important ecological functions in Africa. In Malawi, government-management was designed to manage Woodlands. However, when illegal activities continued, Participatory Forest Management (co-management) in forest reserves was institutionalised for woodland sustainability. Currently, information on co-management mitigating deforestation and degradation is scant. This study assessed woodland/forest through Land use/land cover (LULC) classification across the country (Malawi); compared forest cover within and between strategies using 11 co-management and 12 government-management forest reserves across the country between 1999 and 2018. Overall accuracies were >90%. Woodland net loses 8.4% (4.39–3.39 million ha) were to Plantation, Grassland and Agriculture transition intensities. Agriculture net gains 9.6% (1.87–3.00 million ha) were from Grassland, Settlement and Woodland transitions for the whole Malawi. Forest cover within co-management and government-management indicated loses. Sustainable management of degraded woodlands, integrated Agriculture and monitoring is encouraged. Further interpretation of transitions is recommended.

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Keywords

Malawi, Land use and land cover (LULC), Forest cover, Co-management, Government management, Miombo Woodlands

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Citation

Monica Fides Gondwe, Moses Azong Cho, Paxie Wanangwa Chirwa & Coert Johannes Geldenhuys (2019) Land use land cover change and the comparative impact of co-management and government-management on the forest cover in Malawi (1999-2018), Journal of Land Use Science, 14:4-6, 281-305, DOI: 10.1080/1747423X.2019.1706654.