The complex agroforests of the Iban in West Kalimantan, and their possible role in fallow management and forest regeneration. In: voices from the forest: integrating indigenous knowledge into sustainable farming.Swidden swid·den n. An area cleared for temporary cultivation by cutting and burning the vegetation. [Dialectal alteration of obsolete swithen, from Old Norse svidhna, to be burned.] cultivation with a long fallow period has long been a central component in a complex agroforestry ag·ro·for·est·ry n. A system of land use in which harvestable trees or shrubs are grown among or around crops or on pastureland, as a means of preserving or enhancing the productivity of the land. system practiced by the Iban of Northwest Borneo. Importantly, the system has also included permanent and semi-permanent groves and tracts of forest, and gardens of rubber, fruit, and bamboo. These have not only been preserved and managed for gathering forest products and hunting, but the Iban also recognize longer-term benefits such as the protection of watersheds and regeneration of the forest after farming. This chapter proposes that the managed forest in the Iban system may have provided not only the seed necessary to reforest re·for·est tr.v. re·for·est·ed, re·for·est·ing, re·for·ests To replant (an area) with forest cover. re fallowed fields, but also the habitat needed by animals that pollinate pol·li·nate also pol·len·ate tr.v. pol·li·nat·ed also pol·len·at·ed, pol·li·nat·ing also pol·len·at·ing, pol·li·nates also pol·len·ates To transfer pollen from an anther to the stigma of (a flower). and disperse seed. These animals may thus have helped sustain both preserved and fallow forests, which, when seen as part of the total agroforestry system, may both have been essential elements in the long fallow cultivation cycle [author]. M. Cairns, ed., pp. 497-508. Washington, D.C.: RFF RFF Resources For the Future RFF Réseau Ferré de France RFF Reseau Ferre de France (French: Network Bottle Pincers of France) RFF Request For Forces RFF Right Foot Forward (Tae Kwan Do) Press. |
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