Tapping and selling pine sap provides alternative work to picking tea leaves, but few people pursue it. One worker can...

Tapping and selling pine sap provides alternative work to picking tea leaves, but few people pursue it. One worker can...

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Tapping and selling pine sap provides alternative work to picking tea leaves, but few people pursue it. One worker can collect up to 40 kg of pine sap in a month and sell it for 7000 rupiah (US$0.70) per kg. But the sap can only be sold to forestry officials. When this photo was taken in May, 2008, officials had not visited in two months and the workers could not sell elsewhere, affecting their income.

Photo by Aulia Erlangga/CIFOR

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Keywords:

Rubber, Secondary Forest Products, Ecosystems, Globalization, Land Tenure, Farmers, Natural Resources, CIFOR, Java, Nontimber Forest Products, Forests, Household Expenditure, Agroforestry Systems, West Java, Ecosystem Services, Private Sector, Community Forestry, Environmental Legislation, Horizontal, Household Income, Tenure Systems, Forestry Law, Livelihoods, Income, Environmental Management, National Park, NTFP, Tropics, Women Health, Private Ownership, Indonesia, Private Forestry, Halimun Salak, Nature Conservation, Habitats, Smallholders, Citizen Participation, National Parks, Forest Resources, Agroforestry, Biodiversity, Gender Relations, Women, Socioeconomics, Poverty Alleviation, Pine Sap, Forest Ecosystems, Secondary Forests, Rainforests.

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