Between 1993 and 1996 the Nepal Australia
Community Forestry Project carried out four comparative
studies in Sindhu Palchok and Kabhre Palanchok districts
of Nepal to evaluate the impacts of Australian development
as continuous 19-year period fostering community forestry.
The four studies made use of sets of air photographs take
1992 to assess land-use changes. The samples covered almost
15 percent of the 400,000 ha land area of the two ranged
between 600 and 4,000 m in altitude. Land-use change based
on photo interpretation and ground truthing was supplemented
by Rapid Rural Appraisal and by information obtained from
local villagers.
Community forestry activities within certain
areas at the lower altitudes are having a beneficial effect
on the balance of land use as a part of a border process
of agrarian change. Shrublands and grasslands are being
converted to more productive categories of forest land,
reflecting the care of communities in managing and conserving
their own forest resources. The same cannot be said for
the upper slopes where there is evidence that the forest
cover is being denuded rapidly and that the shrubland and
grassland areas are expanding at the expense of forest cover.
Many current land-use practices need to be abandoned or
modified.
Use of land for agricultural purposes appears
to be stable. Recent evidence suggests that reliance on
subsistence farming is declining as opportunities increase
for off-farm income, but whether this has allowed population
pressure on land resources to be contained is debatable.
While it appears that community forestry has reduced the
pressure on land at the lower altitudes of Sindhu Palchok
and Kabhre Palanchok, sustained population pressures, combined
with a lack of coherent and coordinated land management
policies and practices, have resulted in a rapid decline
in forest resources on the upper slopes together with loss
of catchment stability.