Landscapes on the Move: Land-Use Change History in a Mexican Agroforest Frontier
Abstract
:1. Introduction
Brief Regional Environmental History
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Study Area
2.2. Ethnographic Work
2.3. Semi-Structured Interviews
2.4. Land-Use/Cover Change Analysis
3. Results
3.1. The Beginnings: 1976–1986
“I’ll give you [land], come…cut [the forest] for you; you will sow [milpa] once, and that’s it, if you want [to cultivate again] you go and cut [the forest] somewhere else; this is how many worked. Those [Mexicans] who were interested in making pastures, used this people [the refugees], who [did it] out of necessity or whatever…”
3.2. Agricultural Programs Boom: 1986–1996
“Because [here] there is enough water, because cattle take up a lot of water. The land is viable [good] for the grass; the grass grows fast, it doesn’t have problems; and then it is that it [the cattle] had a lot of market, a lot of sales here. They [the buyers] come and take [buy] them small [the calves]…here there are plenty of buyers…they come from Comitán, from Palenque, even from Veracruz. [Cattle] it is what gives the most money to the people [here] in the countryside”.
3.3. Fire, Highway, and Legalization of Loma: 1996−2005
3.4. Conservation Programs and Boom Crops: 2005–2015
“Myself with another guy, tried to get the amount [of needed forest]. But we only got 120 hectares [of conserved forest], but they weren’t connected. They need to have connectivity…so that…there is connection with the other, and the other, and the other [referring to forest patches]. So…the 120 hectares were [located] some over there, some over here [fragmented forest patches]…so we never made it [to PES]”.
3.5. The Recent: 2015–2019
“Everyone has their own plot where they work, and if I plant trees on this land [plot], where am I going to saw my milpa? Well, there is no [space] where [to plant corn]. Because here most people dedicated to cattle-ranching, they made pastures; they just left a piece of land where they will grow their milpa. And if you plant a lot of trees in your pasture, the grass will no longer grow”.
3.6. Synthesis: Historical Events and Land-Use Types
4. Discussion
4.1. Local Land-use Change in the Regional Context
4.2. Livelihood Portfolios
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A
Oral History Interview Guide about the History of Colonization
Personal Data:
- Full name
- Age
Before Arriving to Loma/Chajul:
- Where were you born? Where did you grow up?
- Where did you live prior to coming here and how long did you live there?
- How did you make a living there: agriculture, raising cattle? What benefits (self-provisioning/cash) did you derive from that/those activity/activities? Did you work for someone else?
- How was the landscape where you used to live? Was it a jungle/forest like here? Was it a desert? Was it mostly pastures? Mostly agricultural plots? Did you like it there where you lived? Why?
Colonization Loma/Chajul:
- What year did you come here?
- What did you think when you came here and saw that it was all jungle? Did you wish to go back?
- How old were you when you came here and who did you come with (parents, siblings, spouse, children, friends?)
- Why did you come? Did the government give you that option? Why did you end up here and not somewhere else?
- How did you come here (boat, walking, small plane) and how long did it take you to get here?
- What did you find here when you arrive, forest? Where there more people already here?
- What did you start doing when you got here? Cut down the forest? Why? Was that your own initiative or did somebody else tell you to do it (e.g., the government)?
- Did you cut down the forest with more people? How did you organize to do it? How did you do the forest? What tools did you use and where did you get them from?
- How long did it take you to cut down the forest?
- What did you live out of while you were cutting the forest? From where did you get food to sustain yourselves?
- Once you clear-cut the forest what did you start doing? What was the purpose of cutting down the forest? What did you want to transform the forest into?
- Did you cut down all the forest of the ejido or just where the town was going to be?
- What animals were there at the beginning? Did you kill them? If so, for food or to defend/protect yourselves?
- What did the government say to you (during this time)? Did the government send somebody to give you information? If so, how often?
- What was the process for legalizing the land? How was it divided? Between how many people? In what year?
- Are you an ejidatario? Your wife is ejidataria? Do you have a solar? Do you have a parcela (farm-plot)? If so, how many hectares is your parcela? Do all ejidatarios have same size parcelas? Who decided the size of the parcelas? And, who decided their location?
- Did you (the community) leave any forest in the ejido initially? Why and what for?
Years following the Colonization Loma/Chajul:
- Did more people start coming after the first families settled here? In what years? Why? Do you know where they came from? Were they able to become ejidatarios?
- What were the first agricultural activities you started doing after cutting down the forest? Milpa? And the other families? Did you do it for subsistence? Did you sell something of what you produced?
- According to your knowledge, what agricultural activity is the soil of Loma/Chajul good for? To grow crops, which? For pasture for cattle-ranching?
- Is the soil quality of Loma/Chajul the same in the entire ejido? Or, how is the soil quality distributed in the ejido? Is the soil more fertile near the river? Less fertile the farther it is from the river?
- Has the quality of the soil been the same since you came here? Or, has it decreased?
- What else have you grown other than the maize: beans, pumpkin, chili peppers? Fruits: which ones?
- When was cattle introduced to Loma/Chajul? Why? Was it the people’s own initiative to raise cattle? Or cattle raising was part of a government program?
- Do you also have pasture for cattle raising in your parcela? Do you have cattle? If so, how many heads of cattle do you have? Is it beef or dairy cattle?
- When did you start raising cattle? Where did you get the resources to buy cattle?
- Do you like raising cattle? Has it helped you economically to survive?
- Do you think that cattle-ranching has improved your family’s life in any way? Do you think that your life and your family’s life would have been different if you had not had cattle?
- What other crops have you had other than maize? Cacao, coffee, rice, rubber, oil palm? Why did you plant that/those crops? What was the purpose?
- Planting that/those crops was it your own initiative? Or, was it a program from the government or any other organization; if so, which one? What was the program about? What happened with that/those crops? What happened with the program/s?
- What other programs there have been in Loma/Chajul? When? Have you benefited from them? Who brought them (the government, NGO, etc.)?
- Do you have in your parcela any part that is still forest, meaning that you have never cut it down since you came, or that you cut down at some point but after you used it you left it as acahual (secondary forest)? If the latter, how old is that acahual? Why do you have that forest reserve/acahual? Do you have that forest reserved for something? Or, would you like to leave it as a forest forever?
- What do you think about the forest? Do you like it? What is your relationship with it? Does it have any meaning for you?
- Would you like that there was more forest like before? Or, would you prefer for all the forest to be cut down and replace it with something else? Is the forest useful to you? Do you get any benefits from it? If so, which ones?
- Does Loma/Chajul currently have a forest area that is a community reserve? If so, do you know how many hectares it is? What do you think about that area? Does it make any sense to have that forest there without cutting it? Or, do you think that it would be more beneficial if the forest reserve was turned into more parcelas for growing crops or pasture for cattle?
- Have there been any forest restoration/conservation programs in Loma/Chajul? If yes, who has brought those programs, why and when? What has happened with that/those program/s? Do you think people in the ejido do not want the forest? Do they prefer agriculture or cattle?
- Do you think that the way you lived in (place of origin) and the agricultural activities you practiced there have had any influence on the agricultural/cattle activities that you have performed here in Loma/Chajul during all these years since you got here? Why? How?
- Do you think that Loma/Chajul has changed a lot since you came here for the first time? Has the landscape changed for better or for worse? Do you like it better the way it looks now or the way it looked back when you first arrived? Or, when did you like it more, when the landscape looked how?
Appendix B
Methodology to Establish the Areas Affected by the 1998 Fire in the Study Area
1 | One of the principal forms of land tenure in Mexico that consists of communal land rights by a group of people who manage the use of the land and natural resources collectively; see [34]. |
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Coding Theme | Original Settlers | Ejido Council | NGO Personnel | Researcher |
---|---|---|---|---|
Livelihood in place of origin | x | |||
Reasons to settle in Loma/Chajul | x | |||
Life at the beginning in Loma/Chajul | x | |||
History of land-tenure and land division | x | x | ||
Guatemalan civil war refugees | x | x | ||
Local ecological knowledge and perceptions about forest | x | x | x | |
Agriculture development: milpa, cacao | x | |||
Pastures and cattle-ranching development | x | |||
Oil palm and rubber | x | x | ||
Governmental programs for conservation and rural development | x | x | x | |
Communal forest reserves | x | x | ||
PES Program | x | x | x | |
Off-farm economic activities | x | |||
Perceptions about temporal changes (landscape and infrastructure, etc.) | x | x | x | |
Ejido structure and functioning and natural resource management rules | x | |||
Research | x | x | x |
Land-Use Class | Description |
---|---|
Forest | Includes mature tall and medium evergreen rainforest. It also includes secondary forest (secondary arboreal vegetation that emerges after a disturbance *) |
Secondary shrub vegetation | Includes young fallow areas (vegetation in early successional stages), characterized by secondary shrub elements, resulting from a disturbance |
Pasture/agriculture | Includes areas were pastures for cattle-ranching or agriculture are practiced. These areas can be covered by cultivated grasses or secondary herbaceous vegetation, or in the case of agriculture can be land in preparation for sowing or crops already in development. Milpa agriculture has historically been carried in the fertile riverine areas in the study area and practiced mainly for subsistence. The area required for auto-consumption agriculture is minimal when compared to the area utilized for extensive cattle-ranching, thus, this land-use class is dominated mainly by pastures |
Oil palm plantation | Oil palm plantations over 3-years-old (there is a lower probability of identifying younger plantations through remote sensing) |
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Berget, C.; Verschoor, G.; García-Frapolli, E.; Mondragón-Vázquez, E.; Bongers, F. Landscapes on the Move: Land-Use Change History in a Mexican Agroforest Frontier. Land 2021, 10, 1066. https://doi.org/10.3390/land10101066
Berget C, Verschoor G, García-Frapolli E, Mondragón-Vázquez E, Bongers F. Landscapes on the Move: Land-Use Change History in a Mexican Agroforest Frontier. Land. 2021; 10(10):1066. https://doi.org/10.3390/land10101066
Chicago/Turabian StyleBerget, Carolina, Gerard Verschoor, Eduardo García-Frapolli, Edith Mondragón-Vázquez, and Frans Bongers. 2021. "Landscapes on the Move: Land-Use Change History in a Mexican Agroforest Frontier" Land 10, no. 10: 1066. https://doi.org/10.3390/land10101066
APA StyleBerget, C., Verschoor, G., García-Frapolli, E., Mondragón-Vázquez, E., & Bongers, F. (2021). Landscapes on the Move: Land-Use Change History in a Mexican Agroforest Frontier. Land, 10(10), 1066. https://doi.org/10.3390/land10101066