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dc.creatorBananali Y., Banana,
dc.date2013-07-05T05:49:20Z
dc.date2013-07-05T05:49:20Z
dc.date2003-05-28
dc.date.accessioned2018-09-04T13:02:11Z
dc.date.available2018-09-04T13:02:11Z
dc.identifier
dc.identifierhttp://hdl.handle.net/10570/1544
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/10570/1544
dc.descriptionNational Stakeholder's Workshop to Review the sustainable Management of Non Wood Forest Products in Uganda Focussing on Bamboo and Rattan
dc.descriptionEchuya was gazetted in 1939 as 'a Forest Reserve. At that time, the forest vegetation consisted of dense evergreen stands of Arundinaria alpina (bamboo) (Howard 1991). .Kingston (1968) report that in 1947the bamboo stems in Echuya were big tall and dense, and hardwood trees and shrubs were scattered in a few places. Botanical field trips conducted by Eggeling (1934), Watt (1956). Kingston (1968) and Davenport. Howard & Mathews (1996) recorded Arundinaria alpina as the dominant grass. Other conspicuous plants in the vegetation included Cassipourea malosana. Afircania volkenii, Dombeya spp. Hagenia abyssinia, Hypericum species, Nuxia congesta. Myrica salicifolia and Faurea salign. However, the present concern by forest ecologists, environmentalists and the local community is that the bamboo shrubs are losing ground to other vegetation types (Banana et a1. 1993). No previous studies have documented this ecological change and the major question answered by this study was, what are the factors leading to the current ecological changes in Echuya Forest Reserve?
dc.languageen
dc.publisherNARO
dc.relationResearch;
dc.subjectEchuya
dc.subjectForest Reserve
dc.titleBamboo regeneration and succession in Echuya
dc.typeJournal article, peer reviewed


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