Next generation may see trees only in Museums if… Olory




Monoculture, huge threat to biodiversity

Next generation may see trees only in Museums if... Olory

By Ike Uchechukwu

The Controller, Cross River National park, Mrs Caroline Olory has asserted that if nothing was done about logging, monoculture and deforestation, the next generation will only know what a tree looks like in the museums.

Mrs Olory made the assertion during a one day workshop to mark this year’s International Day Against Monoculture, with the theme, ‘The Impact of Deforestation and Making Women Voices Count Against Monoculture and Land Grabbing,’ and which was organized by the Environmental Rights Action/Friends of the Earth (ERA/FoE) Nigeria, in collaboration with Community Forest Watch, NGOCE and MOSOP.

She described the forest as the treasure base of the nation, maintained that since Cross River State houses the largest chunk of the remaining rainforest in the country, there should be collective efforts at its conservation.

“If nothing is done about conserving our forest, our children,next-generation may only see some trees only in Museums,” she said.

On his part, the ERA/FoE Executive Director, Dr Godwin Ojo said monoculture tree plantation is bad because of the high-level chemical inputs such as herbicides and pesticides which put the world food system at great risk.

His words:” It is also displacing small scale, local farmers, growing local staples such as yam, cassava and plantain.

“No matter what, trees of similar species cannot make a forest. Therefore the rich biodiversity associated with natural forest is lost in the case of monoculture such as oil palm plantations. The expansion is also endangering biodiversity.

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“We raise our voices against increasing illegal logging of trees and the appropriation of community lands by the government to make way for monoculture agro-commodities that serve the interest of big agribusiness of multinationals and to the detriment of the impacted communities.”

In a presentation, Dr Ekpenyong Ita, Director of Forestry in the Cross River State Forestry Commission said the rate of deforestation in Nigeria has risen to 50 percent and that there may be no rain forest remaining in the next 100 years if deforestation continued.

He, therefore, advised that awareness campaigns be carried out on the ills of monoculture and deforestation and that community should come up with by-laws to check the menace of logging which, he said, breeds deforestation.

According to him, “if we continue with the monoculture practice, we will destroy the forest and lose our heritage because forest is life. When you remove forest, wildlife and human’s life will be negatively affected. Danger of removing forest is far higher than the acclaimed benefits.”

Vanguard News Nigeria

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