HomeAnnals of Tropical Researchvol. 32 no. 2 (2010)

The Seedling Nursery Survey on Leyte Island, the Philippines

Nestor Gregorio | Steve Harrison | John Herbohn

 

Abstract:

Private and government nurseries in the Philippines are not delivering high quality planting materials of a wide species base for smallholder forestry, tree farming and reforestation programs in the country. A project supported by the Australian Centre for International Agricultural Research (ACIAR) has been conducted to improve the operational effectiveness of the forest nursery sector in the Philippines. Surveys involving personal interviews of nursery operators, observations of the nursery design and facilities and assessment of seedling quality have been undertaken in Leyte (reported in this paper) and in Mindanao to provide baseline information for designing possible interventions. The Leyte study revealed that the low operational effectiveness of forest nurseries is a result of a combination of social, economic, technical and political factors. The majority of private nurseries are managed by resourceconstrained smallholders with little access to high quality seedling production technologies. Seedling production, both in private and government nurseries, is largely quantity-oriented and the pathway of high quality germplasm is not well developed. Government nurseries operate to provide free seedlings but this scheme results in crowding out the small-scale private nurseries, reducing the operational effectiveness of the private nursery sector. It appears that improving the operational effectiveness of the forest nursery sector in the Philippines requires policy changes to re-organize the operation of private and government nurseries and to strengthen the implementation of existing policies regulating the quality of planting stock from the forest nursery sector.



References:

  1. CEDAMON, E.D. and N.F. EMTAGE. 2005. Present tree planting and management activities in four rural communities in Leyte Province. In: ACIAR Smallholder Forestry Project - Redevelopment of a Timber Industry Following Extensive Land Clearing: Proceedings from the End-of-Project Workshop (S.R. Harrison, J.L. Herbohn, J. Suh, E. Mangaoang and J. Vanclay, eds). 19-21 August, 2004, Ormoc City, the Philippines. pp. 37-50.
  2. EMTAGE, N. 2004. An Investigation of the Social and Economic Factors Affecting the Development of Small-scale Forestry in Leyte Province, the Philippines. PhD thesis. The University of Queensland, Brisbane.
  3. EVANS, J. and J. TURNBULL. 2004. Plantation Forestry in the Tropics: the Role, Silviculture and Use of Planted Forest for Industrial, Social, Environmental and Agroforestry Purposes. 3rd edn, Oxford University Press. Oxford.
  4. GREGORIO, N, HERBOHN, J.L. and S.R. HARRISON. 2004. Small-scale forestry development in Leyte, the Philippines: the central role of nurseries. Small-scale Forest Economics, Management and Policy. 3(3): 337-351.
  5. GREGORIO, N.O. 2006. Improving the Effectiveness of the Forest Nursery Industry in Leyte Province. PhD thesis. The University of Queensland, Brisbane.
  6. GUNASENA, H. and J.M. ROSHETKO. 2000. After the Romance: Rethinking Community, Participation and Sustainability in the Philippine CBNRM. Ford Foundation, Manila.
  7. HARRISON, S.R. and J.L. HERBOHN (eds). 2001. Socio-economic Evaluation of the Potential for Australian Tree Species in the Philippines. ACIAR Monograph 75, CSIRO Publishing, Melbourne. 192 pp.
  8. HERBOHN, J.L., HARRISON, S.R. and B.J. NIXON. 2001. Social and economic factors affecting the use of Australian species in community based forest management in the Philippines uplands. In: Socio-Economic Evaluation of the Potential for Australian Tree Species in the Philippines (S.R. Harrison and J.L. Herbohn, eds). A report prepared for the Australian Centre for International Agricultural Research. Department of Economics, The University of Queensland, Brisbane.
  9. JAENICKE, H. 1999. Good Tree Nursery Practices: Practical Guidelines for Research Nurseries. ICRAF, Nairobi. pp. 8-15.
  10. LAWRENCE, A. 1999. Tree domestication in Leyte and Bohol, the Philippines: the farmers perspectives. In: Domestication of Agroforestry Trees in Asia (J. Roshetko and D. Evans, eds). Proceedings of a regional workshop held in Yogyakarta, Indonesia. 4-7 November 1997. Forest Farm and Community Tree Research Reports, special issue. Taiwan Forestry Research Institute and Council of Agriculture, Taiwan, Republic of China; Winrock International, Morrilton, Arkansas, USA and International Centre for Research in Agroforestry, Nairobi, Kenya.
  11. MANGAOANG, E.O. 2002. A forester’s perspective of the socio-economic information requirements for forestry in Leyte. In: Socio-economic Research Methods in Forestry: A Training Manual (S. Harrison, J. Herbohn, E. Mangaoang and J. Vanclay, eds). Cooperative Research Centre for Tropical Rainforest Ecology and Management. Rainforest CRC, Cairns. pp. 1-14.
  12. MULAWARMAN, ROSHETKO, J.M., SASONGKO, S.M. and D. IRIANTO. 2003. Tree Seed Management, Seed Sources, Seed Collection and Seed Handling: a Field Manual for Field Workers and Farmers. International Centre for Research in Agroforestry (ICRAF) and Winrock International. Bogor, Indonesia.
  13. NIXON, B.J., HERBOHN, J.L. and S.R. HARRISON. 2001. Social and economic factors affecting community based forest management in the Philippines uplands. In: Socio-economic Evaluation of the Potential for Australian Tree Species in the Philippines (S.R. Harrison and J.L. Herbohn, eds). ACIAR Monograph 75, ACIAR, Canberra. pp. 111-124.
  14. SY, M. 1998. Rehabilitation of natural logged-over forests: the Philippines scenario. Canopy International.