Adverse Effects of Human Activities on Forest Reserves in Ghana: Lessons of Experience from the Yenku Forest Reserve in the Central Region

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.54536/ajec.v4i1.3727

Keywords:

Climate Change, Environment and Forest, Forest Reserve, Sustainable Forest

Abstract

This study examines the threat posed to sustainable forest management of human activities of communities within the Yenku Forest Reserve in the Central Region of Ghana. The reserve was identified for the study because it is the largest forest reserve has the highest number of fringe communities and is one of the most degraded forest reserve in the Winneba Forest District. Da, and observations and semi-structured were deployed for soliciting series of individual semi-structured interviews, focus group discussions, and observations were deployed to solicit data from residents within the fringe communities of the Yenku forest reserve. The findings of the study are that farming, charcoal burning, hunting, and harvesting of non-timber forest products are the major human activities and constitute the livelihood and survival of the fringe communities. The consequence of these human activities is the continuous degradation of the land, a decline of soil fertility, soil erosion, deforestation, and forest degradation, wildfires, and depletion of wildlife. The interviewees reported that they have little or no role to play when the issue of sustainability comes up in the management of the Yenku Forest Reserve. It emerged from the study findings that traditional authorities within the fringe communities and all relevant stakeholders needed to be actively engaged in the making of decisions regarding the Yenku forest reserve so as to integrate local peoples’ knowledge and livelihood objectives and strategies into the choices made and to improve the management of forest resources.

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Author Biography

Emmanuel Kojo Sakyi, University of Ghana Business School, Ghana

Emmanuel Kojo Sakyi is a Professor of Public Administration and Management at the Department of Public Administration and Health Services Management, University of Ghana Business School. He obtained his PhD from the University of Manchester. He is currently the Chairman of the Accreditation Committee of the University of Ghana Business School and an Academic Consultant/Course/holder for the Master of Public Administration (MPA) program at the Euro-Mediterranean University, Slovenia. Professor Sakyi was the foundation Vice-Chancellor of the Ho Technical University, 2014 to 2018. During his years at Ho Technical University, he introduced significant qualitative institutional and human development policies/programmes, which made the University one of the indispensable Polytechnics which were converted to Technical University in 2016. Professor Sakyi has been involved in higher education development in Ghana for two and half decades.

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Published

2025-01-29

How to Cite

Sakyi, E. K., & Ameko, S. K. (2025). Adverse Effects of Human Activities on Forest Reserves in Ghana: Lessons of Experience from the Yenku Forest Reserve in the Central Region. American Journal of Environment and Climate, 4(1), 52–63. https://doi.org/10.54536/ajec.v4i1.3727