Chocolate
is leaving a bitter taste in the mouth. New research shows that illegal cocoa
plantations have massively encroached on many of Cote d'Ivoire's protected
areas and decimated primate populations.
Since the country's independence, Cote d'Ivoire has become the world's largest producer of cocoa,
supplying 33% of the world's cocoa to chocolate producers. As plantations age, they become less productive, so
cocoa farming policies have favoured the practice of clearing new arable land rather than maintaining old pastures. Over the last 3 decades, as global demands for
chocolate have increased, cocoa producers have sought out new areas of productive pasture - contributing to wide-scale deforestation. According to Global Forest Watch, between
2001-2013, Cote d'Ivoire lost about 1.3 million hectares of forest, cleared
at a rate of about 100,000 hectares a year. In addition, political and economic instability during the 2000's led to widespread human migrations, the erosion of conservation capacity and the installation of thousands of people adjacent to, and within protected areas.
Researchers
recently conducted primate surveys in 23 protected areas in Cote d'Ivoire, and
the results are depressing. Illegal farms - the majority cocoa plantations- were found in nearly all the protected areas, 16 of them with more than 65% of the forest degraded. Overall, about 74% of the
total surveyed area had been
transformed into plantations, with some protected areas having being entirely
converted. The researchers estimate that this converted land amounts to about 195,600 tons cocoa per year- about 12% of
the country's annual yield. Human settlements were found in 15 of the 23 protected areas, with over 10,000 people living within some of them, and there was significant
hunting pressure in areas that were still forested.
Not
surprisingly, this has taken a heavy toll on the country's primate populations. Every protected area had lost at least one primate species, with 13
having lost all of their primates. Four taxa were completely absent from all 23
protected areas, and for one, Miss Waldron's red colobus- which has not been sighted since
1978- it seems more likely that the species has become extinct in the
wild. Human population pressure has led to widescale deforestation and over-hunting in many parts of West Africa, where the conservation toll is high and the outlook is bleak. This study illustrates just how valuable- and vulnerable- are Central Africa's remaining intact rainforests. Gabon still harbours globally significant tracts of tropical forest, yet any number of changes in economic policy and population demography could spark rapid land transformations and losses to biodiversity.
For the chocoholics among us, make sure your chocolate is Rainforest Alliance Certified.
Reference (pdf at this link)
Bitty EA, Gonedelé Bi S, Béné JCK, Kouassi PK and McGraw WS (2015) Cocoa farming and primate extirpation inside Cote d'Ivoire's protected areas. Tropical Conservation Science,Vol.8 (1): 95-113
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