Wild harvesting or cultivation of commercial environmental products: A theoretical model and its application to medicinal plants

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On average, environmental income accounts for more than a quarter of rural household income in tropical and sub-tropical countries. One way to increase incomes from wild-harvested products is cultivation. In a landmark paper, Homma (1992) identified four phases describing the economic dynamics of environmental product cultivation, emphasising product scarcity. We reviewed literature that applied and/or discussed Homma's model. This suggested that additional factors, beyond resource scarcity, induce the transition to cultivation. We propose an alternative model of the dynamics of environmental product cultivation pathways, emphasising stock size, contextual, harvester, and mediating factors. The model has four possible product-level outcomes: scarcity induced cultivation, economic extinction, abundance with cultivation, and continued sole wild harvesting. We investigated this model empirically through the case of commercial medicinal plant harvesting in Nepal, using harvester interviews (n = 362) and published monthly price data for the most commonly traded products (n = 12) during a nine-year period. We found evidence of all four possible product-level outcomes, with “abundance with cultivation” being the most common. This supports that scarcity is not sufficient to explain cultivation processes; harvester decision-making processes and contextual and mediating factors must also be assessed.

OriginalsprogEngelsk
Artikelnummer107701
TidsskriftEcological Economics
Vol/bind205
Antal sider12
ISSN0921-8009
DOI
StatusUdgivet - 2023

Bibliografisk note

Funding Information:
We are grateful to the harvesters who shared their time and knowledge. Thanks also go to Abhoy K Das, Dipesh Pyakurel, Arjun Chapagain, and Kirti Nepal for help in organising and undertaking data collection. This work was supported by the Research Committee for Development Research (FFU) of the Danish Ministry of Foreign Affairs , Grant No. 13-07KU, and the Independent Research Fund Denmark , Grant No. 217-00158B .

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© 2022 The Authors

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