The Baka wholly rely on the forest for their livelihood.
They harvest honey, wild mangoes, yams, medicinal plants as well as hunt in the forests of Cameroon . These indigenous forest people live in and around three national parks and make up some 30 percent of the 100,000 people living in the heart of the Congo Basin rain forest in Southeast Cameroon . These natural parks are being threatened by logging companies and poachers. Between the years 1990 and 2010, deforestation has claimed 18.1% of Cameroon's forest
cover, or around 4,400,000 hectares.
This map shows the region that the Baka need for their foraging and hunting territory. This information is being used by the WWF, or the World Wildlife Fund, to propose natural resource management policies that will help preserve the cultural heritage and reinforce community identity among the Baka and manage conflicts between local communities and administrative authorities.
A study
by Olivier Niounan Tegomo, a WWF Senior Field Research Assistant, reveals that Baka
pygmies are excellent nature conservationists. It is forbidden by the Baka to set
up snares or hunt female animals. They discourage the habit of hoarding food
and consuming large quantities of meat and encourage their kin to eat
moderately. It is also prohibited to stay in the same place in the forest for
too long so as not to place too much of a strain on the resources in the area.
In the Baka world, resources are used based on their abundance and there are
internal social control mechanisms for natural resource use. The study
recommends that the Baka be given more access beyond agro-forestry zones, to be
allowed to enter the park between June and September to harvest wild mangoes, to use footpaths within the park, and
unfettered access to harvest medicinal plants throughout the year.
MongaBay.com
2000 Cameroon Forest
Information and Data. Electronic document, http://rainforests.mongabay.com/deforestation/2000/Cameroon.htm, accessed November, 20 2012
WWF
2008 Protecting Baka Pygmies Access
to Forest Resources in Southeast Cameroon . Electronic document, http://wwf.panda.org/who_we_are/wwf_offices/cameroon/news/,
accessed November, 20 2012.
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