Ethiopia Project
Permanent URI for this community
These digital collection contains materials related to the NSF-funded project "CNH: Assessing Vulnerability of Provisioning Services in the Southern Highlands of Ethiopia," which highlighted the importance of biodiversity in providing ecosystem services that support traditional and non-traditional livelihoods for rural communities in the Bale Mountains of Ethiopia.
Browse
Browsing Ethiopia Project by Subject "conservation"
Now showing 1 - 2 of 2
Results Per Page
Sort Options
Item Open Access Demographic observations of mountain nyala Tragelaphus buxtoni in a controlled hunting area, Ethiopia(Colorado State University. Libraries, 2015) Evangelista, Paul, author; Young, Nicholas, author; Swift, David, author; Wolde, Asrat, author; OMICS International, publisherThe highlands of Ethiopia are inhabited by the culturally and economically significant mountain nyala Tragelaphus buxtoni, an endemic spiral horned antelope. The natural range of this species has become highly fragmented with increasing anthropogenic pressures; driving land conversion in areas previously considered critical mountain nyala habitat. Therefore, baseline demographic data on this species throughout its existing range are needed. Previous studies on mountain nyala demographics have primarily focused on a confined portion of its known range where trophy hunting is not practiced. Our objectives were to estimate group size, proportion of females, age class proportions, and calf and juvenile productivity for a sub-population of mountain nyala where trophy hunting is permitted and compare our results to recent and historical observations. We collected four years of demographic data using direct point counts in a controlled hunting area and summarized the data using the R statistical software. Our results show that estimated proportion of females (0.63; 0.56-0.69) was similar to recent studies of non-hunted populations, but group size (3.74; 3.34-4.13), juvenile productivity (0.47; 0.35-0.62) and age class proportions (calves: 0.17 juveniles: 0.19 adults: 0.64) were considerably different. Our results are more similar to historical accounts than those in a national park. We demonstrate that the mountain nyala's population structure and health varies across its range and may relate to the different management strategies and policies. We recommend using similar methods for remaining under surveyed sub-populations of mountain nyala to inform conservation actions at the landscape scale.Item Open Access Local knowledge of plants and their uses among women in the Bale Mountains, Ethiopia(Colorado State University. Libraries, 2013) Luizza, Matthew W., author; Young, Heather, author; Kuroiwa, Christina, author; Evangelista, Paul, author; Worede, Aserat, author; Bussmann, Rainer W., author; Weimer, Amber, author; Botanical Research Institute of Texas, publisherWomen's local ecological knowledge (LEK) is noted by many scholars to be unique and important for local conservation and development planning. Although LEK integration is inherent to ethnobotanical research, in Ethiopia, the knowledge-gender link has not been fully explored, and few studies focus on women's distinct plant knowledge. We catalogued rural women's knowledge of a wide range of plant uses in south-central Ethiopia, conducted through picture identification of 337 local plants. Fifty-seven plant species were identified, constituting 38 families, with the top five families being Lamiaceae, Solanaceae, Asteraceae, Rosaceae, and Pteridaceae. An array of uses were identified ranging from food, livestock and wildlife forage, to honey production and cosmetics. The most prevalent use noted (nearly 70%) was human medicine. This study reveals the important contribution of rural women's plant knowledge in the Bale Mountains, and the potential benefits of including this gender-distinct understanding of local flora in community-based conservation planning.