Abstract
Swidden agriculture, commercial logging and plantation development have been considered to be the primary common causes of degradation and loss of tropical rain forests in Southeast Asia. In this paper, I chose a part of northeastern Sarawak, East Malaysia as my case study area to analyze the changes in its land-use characteristics. In the study area, as well as primeval forests, we see that land use began about 100 years ago by a native group called the Iban; commercial logging began in the 1960s, and the development of oil palm plantations began recently. I describe the changes in land use as well as their social and economic causes by referring to aerial photographs, literature surveys, interviews with government officers and the Iban, and observation of land use. My analysis of land use demonstrates that on “state land”, where commercial logging and oil palm plantation development are occurring, large areas of forest have been disturbed in a short period of time. The objective is to benefit economically in response to the social and economic conditions surrounding the study area. On the other hand, in the “I territory,” where the Iban practice their land use, land conversion has not occurred on a large scale and in a short period of time, even though the forest has been cut and agricultural fields have been created in response to social and economic conditions as well. They disperse small agricultural fields throughout their forest land. Therefore, the landscape of the “Iban territory” is based on secondary forest, composed of patches of forest in various stages and with several types of agricultural land. Today in Sarawak, monocrop plantations are rapidly expanding and little primeval forest remains. Given these conditions, the land-use practices of natives such as the Iban will be evaluated from the viewpoint of ecosystem and biodiversity conservation. It could play an important role in providing habitats for natural wildlife.
Access provided by Autonomous University of Puebla. Download to read the full chapter text
Chapter PDF
Similar content being viewed by others
Keywords
References
Aummeeruddy Y, Sansonnens B (1994) Shifting from simple to complex agroforestry systems: an example for buffer zone management from Kerinci. Agrofor Syst 28:113–141
Chan B (1998) Concerns of the industry on tree plantations in Sarawak. In: Chan B, Kho PCS, Lee HS (eds) Proceedings of Planted Forests in Sarawak, an International Conference, 16–17 February 1998, Kuching, Sarawak (vi–xii)
Chin SC (1987). Do shifting cultivators deforest? In: Forest resource crisis in the third world, Sahabat Alam Malaysia, Penang
Coomes OT, Grimard F, Burt G (2000) Tropical forests and shifting cultivation: secondary forest fallow dynamics among traditional farmers of the Peruvian Amazon. Ecol Econ 32:109–124
Department of Agriculture, Sarawak (1981) A digest of agricultural statistics, Kuching
Department of Agriculture, Sarawak (1991) Agricultural statistics of Sarawak 1990, Kuching
Department of Statistics, Malaysia, Sarawak (2004) Yearbook of statistics Sarawak 2002, Kuching
Freeman JD (1955) Iban agriculture: a report on the shifting cultivation of hill rice by the Iban of Sarawak. H.M.S.O, London
Hong E (1987) Native of Sarawak. Institut Masyrakat, Pulau Pinang
Ichikawa M (2000) Swamp rice cultivation in an Iban Village of Sarawak: planting methods as an adaptation strategy (in Japanese with English summary). Southeast Asian Studies 38(1):74–94
Ichikawa M (2003a) Shifting swamp rice cultivation with broad-casting seeding in Insular Southeast Asia. Southeast Asian Studies 41(2):239–261
Ichikawa M (2003b) Choice of livelihood activities by Iban household members in Sarawak, East Malaysia (in Japanese with English summary). Tropics 12(3):201–219
Ichikawa M (2003c) One hundred years of land use changes: political, social, and economic influences on an Iban village in the Bakong River basin, Sarawak, East Malaysia. In: Tuck Po L, De Jong W, Abe K (eds) The political ecology of tropical forests in Southeast Asia: historical perspectives. Kyoto University Press, Kyoto, pp 177–199
Ichikawa M (2004) Relationships among secondary forests and resource use and agriculture, as practiced by the Iban of Sarawak, East Malaysia. Tropics 13(4):269–286
Ichikawa M (2005a) Herbicide use in hill swidden agriculture and its background in Sarawak, East Malaysia (in Japanese). Tech Cult Agric (in press)
Ichikawa M (2005b) Inheritance of natural resources and their sustainable use by the Iban of Sarawak, East Malaysia—lands as a common resource among generations. Full paper submitted to the international symposium on Eco-human interactions in tropical forests organized by JASTE
Lanly JP (1982) Tropical forest resources. FAO Forestry Paper 30, FAO, Rome
Lee HS, Davies JV, La Frankie JV, Tan S et al (2002) Floristic and structural diversity of mixed dipterocarp forest in Lambir Hills National Park, Sarawak, Malaysia. J Trop For Sci 14:379–400
Padoch C (1982) Migration and its alternatives among the Iban of Sarawak. KITLV, Leiden
Primack R, Corlett R (2005) Tropical rain forests. Blackwell, Oxford
Pringle R (1970) Rajahs and Rebels: the Iban of Sarawak under brooke rule, 1841–1941. Cornell University Press, Ithaca
Ross ML (2001) Timber booms and institutional breakdown in Southeast Asia. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge
Salafsky N (1993) Mammalian use of a buffer zone agroforestry system bordering Gunung Palung National Park, West Kalimantan, Indonesia. Conserv Biol 7(4):928–933
Sandin B (1994) Sources of Iban traditional history. The Sarawak Museum Journal 67, special monograph no 7
Walker B, Steffen J (1999) The nature of global changes. In: Walker B, Steffen J, Canadell J, Ingram J (eds) The terrestrial biosphere and global changes. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, pp 1–18
Washitani I, Yahara T (1996) An introduction to conservation ecology (in Japanese). Bunichi sogo shuppan, Tokyo
Author information
Authors and Affiliations
Editor information
Editors and Affiliations
Rights and permissions
Copyright information
© 2007 The Ecological Society of Japan
About this chapter
Cite this chapter
Ichikawa, M. (2007). Degradation and loss of forest land and land-use changes in Sarawak, East Malaysia: a study of native land use by the Iban. In: Nakashizuka, T. (eds) Sustainability and Diversity of Forest Ecosystems. Springer, Tokyo. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-4-431-73238-9_5
Download citation
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-4-431-73238-9_5
Received:
Accepted:
Published:
Publisher Name: Springer, Tokyo
Print ISBN: 978-4-431-73237-2
Online ISBN: 978-4-431-73238-9
eBook Packages: Biomedical and Life SciencesBiomedical and Life Sciences (R0)