African Journal of Ecology and Ecosystems

ISSN 2756-3367

African Journal of Ecology and Ecosystems ISSN 2756-3367 Vol. 12 (3), pp. 001-013, March, 2025. Available online at www.internationalscholarsjournals.org © International Scholars Journals

Review

Conservation Status and Management of Prunus Africana: A Review of Threats and Strategies

Luke Jimu

Department of Environmental Science, Bindura University of Science Education (BUSE), P. Bag 1020, Bindura, Zimbabwe. E-mail: [email protected].

Accepted 21 January, 2025

The world’s PRUNUS AFRICANA bark demand used to be satisfied by exports, approximately 4000 tonnes per year from a few African countries, led by Cameroon exporting 62%, Madagascar, 20% and Uganda and Equatorial Guinea, 7% each. This coupled with unsustainable bark harvesting methods created pressure on the natural resource which suffered population decline and resulted in the species listing in Appendix II of CITES and EU’s bark export ban. In other range countries where no commercial harvesting has taken place, the species is under threat from other anthropogenic threats which include local use, deforestation and habitat fragmentation which is affecting populations in Ethiopia, Madagascar, Zimbabwe and South Africa as well as Cameroon, Uganda and Equatorial Guinea. Wildfires burn P. AFRICANA seedlings, saplings and mature trees throughout the species’ range every year. Invasive alien species have mainly affected P. AFRICANA populations in Zimbabwe and South Africa. Climate change is projected to affect populations in southern Africa and Madagascar than those in East and West Africa. The fact that the threats vary or are common among countries calls for different or similar P. AFRICANA conservation strategies respectively. Strategies may vary from country to country or region to region depending on the type and magnitude of threats. These strategies include IN SITU, CIRCA SITU and EX SITU conservation. In this paper, the various threats to P. AFRICANA populations across the species’ natural range are investigated together with the conservation strategies which can be put in place to ensure sustainability.

Key words: Threat, climate change, habitat fragmentation, endangered species, conservation strategies, commercial harvesting, forest management, international regulation.