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Ecological Impact of Logging for the Production of Community Beams for Local Use in the Community of Segundo Congresso in Chipanje Chetu Program Area

Published in Frontiers (Volume 6, Issue 1)
Received: 30 October 2025     Accepted: 17 November 2025     Published: 20 January 2026
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Abstract

This technical note assesses the ecological impacts of logging for beams in the community of Segundo Congresso, Niassa, Mozambique, under the Chipanje Chetu program. Dendrometric methods were used to collect diameter at breast height, commercial and total height, identification of local species, volume of standing tree, volume of logs and sawn wood, in addition to volumetric yield. Data were organized in Excel 2024 and analyzed using ANOVA in Statistix 8, with means compared by Tukey's test at a 5% significance level. From the results, it was found that the chainsaw operator lacks technical knowledge, aggravating the unsustainable exploitation, since the forest supply is critical, trees of large diameter and height are scarce and dispersed, especially Vitex doniana (Mpindimbe) and Pericospi angolensis (Muanga). The sample included 3 trees with DBH > 50 cm and total height between 16 and 21 m, generating standing volumes of 2.92–5.65 m³ and commercial volumes of 1.07–1.88 m³, with an average yield of 17.25 m³ per tree. The low yield is due to the diameter, height, morphological quality of the trees and the experience of the operator. The production of beams was 35 per log, corresponding to 0.68 m³ of sawn wood per tree, equivalent to 46.78% of commercial yield. Ecologically, the activity has positive impacts, such as the preservation of the ecosystem, as it is a semi-mechanized exploration with only a chainsaw and displacements on foot, and it also has negative impacts that are manifested in the pressure on the same large species and low availability, and the lack of technical knowledge of the operator generates operational inefficiency in the conversion of logs into beams.

Published in Frontiers (Volume 6, Issue 1)
DOI 10.11648/j.frontiers.20260601.11
Page(s) 1-12
Creative Commons

This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution and reproduction in any medium or format, provided the original work is properly cited.

Copyright

Copyright © The Author(s), 2026. Published by Science Publishing Group

Keywords

Conservation Areas, Dendrometry, Sustainability, Local Communities

References
[1] Araujo, H. J. B. (2020). Characterization of the wood material. In Environmental Education – Sustainable Development in the Globalized Economy (ISBN 978-65-5109-002-8) (Forest Engineering, M.Sc., Researcher at Embrapa Acre). Embrapa Acre.
[2] Biasi, C. P., & Rocha, M. P. (2007). Yield in sawn wood and quantification of residues for three tropica species. Floresta, 37(1).
[3] Chapagain, U., Chapagain, B. P., Nepal, S., & Manthey, M. (2021). Impact of disturbances on species diversity and regeneration of Nepalese Sal (Shorea robusta) forests managed under different management regimes. Earth, 2(4), 826-844.
[4] Conselho Nacional do Meio Ambiente (CONAMA). (2016). Resolution No. 474, of April 25, 2016. Establishes procedures for inspection in industries that consume or transform native forest products and by-products. Federal Official Gazette, Brasília, DF, ed. 80, seção 1, p. 61. Available at:
[5] Electricidade de Moçambique, E. P. (2023). Environmental and social impact assessment report: Construction and operation of a 40 MWp solar photovoltaic power plant in Chiúta District, Tete Province, Mozambique. Electricidade de Moçambique, E. P.
[6] Januário, J. M. (2023). Analysis of the Nonduece River Basin in the Administrative Post of Unango – Sanga.
[7] Forest Law. (2023). Law on the Protection, Conservation and Use of Forest Resources Law on the Protection, Conservation and Use of Forest Resources). Maputo, Moçambique.
[8] Lima, L., Machado, A., & De Figueiredo, L. (2025). Mobile Apps for Estimating Tree Height in a Commercial Teca Plantation. VII MENSUFLOR, September 24 to 26. Federal University of Lavras – UFLA. Available at:
[9] Mbanze, A., Dias, C. R., Munome, A., Massingue, Y., Joaquim, R., Ferrão, R., Laisse, Y., Cassido, I., Manuel, M., Abbas, M., Mbanze, J., Soares, V., Ribeiro, P. F., Lasse, N., Buramuge, V., Canadas, M. J., Novais, A., & Lima-Santos, J. (2025). Conservation with people inside the protected areas: How to address local people’s needs with no zero-sum game. IntechOpen.
[10] Mohit Gera, Buvaneswaran, C., Murugesan, S. and Sasidharan, K. R. (Eds.) (2018). Towards Resilient Ecosystems: The Role of Forestry Research -Synthesis and A Way Forward Proceedings of National Conference onTowards Resilient Ecosystems: The Role of Forestry Researchheld on 8 - 9 May, 2018 at Institute of Forest Genetics and Tree Breeding, Coimbatore. Pp. 1-204.
[11] Natasha, R., & Buramuge, V. (2024). Assessment of tree species composition and diversity across disturbance gradients in miombo woodlands of Chipanje Chetu Community Conservation Area. Available at:
[12] Nesi, M. (2011). Identification of risks associated with semi-mechanized cutting of eucalyptus and pine in forest exploitation. University of the Extreme South of Santa Catarina, Specialization Course in Occupational Safety Engineering, Criciúma, August.
[13] Parante, P. R. F., Amaro, M. A., Lima, Q. S. de, Lobão, M. S., & Carvalho, C. A. de. (2024). Volumetric yield coefficient for timber species obtained in sawmills in Acre. Scientia Naturalis, 6(2), 779-800.
[14] Poudyal, B. H., Maraseni, T., & Cockfield, G. (2019). Impacts of forest management on tree species richness and composition: Assessment of forest management regimes in Tarai landscape Nepal. Applied Geography, 111, 102078.
[15] Rodrigues, L., Barreto-Garcia, P., Cerquera, D., Araújo, A., Rocha, I., & Dos Santos, D. (2025). Height estimates of eucalyptus using the Trees® app and the Haglöf® hypsometer: a comparative study. VII MENSUFLOR, September 24 to 26. Federal University of Lavras – UFLA. Available at:
[16] Salomão, Alda e Matose, Frank (2007) - Towards community based forest management of miombo woodland in Mozambique. CBNRM.CIFOR. Available at:
[17] Uetela, A. E. (2014). Dynamics and production prognosis of a miombo forest using transition matrix. Curitiba. Available at:
[18] Yambone's Annual Impact Report (2024): A Year of Transformative Change in Chipanje Chetu.
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  • APA Style

    Muiambo, F. G. A. (2026). Ecological Impact of Logging for the Production of Community Beams for Local Use in the Community of Segundo Congresso in Chipanje Chetu Program Area. Frontiers, 6(1), 1-12. https://doi.org/10.11648/j.frontiers.20260601.11

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    ACS Style

    Muiambo, F. G. A. Ecological Impact of Logging for the Production of Community Beams for Local Use in the Community of Segundo Congresso in Chipanje Chetu Program Area. Frontiers. 2026, 6(1), 1-12. doi: 10.11648/j.frontiers.20260601.11

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    AMA Style

    Muiambo FGA. Ecological Impact of Logging for the Production of Community Beams for Local Use in the Community of Segundo Congresso in Chipanje Chetu Program Area. Frontiers. 2026;6(1):1-12. doi: 10.11648/j.frontiers.20260601.11

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  • @article{10.11648/j.frontiers.20260601.11,
      author = {Fanuel Garai Albino Muiambo},
      title = {Ecological Impact of Logging for the Production of Community Beams for Local Use in the Community of Segundo Congresso in Chipanje Chetu Program Area},
      journal = {Frontiers},
      volume = {6},
      number = {1},
      pages = {1-12},
      doi = {10.11648/j.frontiers.20260601.11},
      url = {https://doi.org/10.11648/j.frontiers.20260601.11},
      eprint = {https://article.sciencepublishinggroup.com/pdf/10.11648.j.frontiers.20260601.11},
      abstract = {This technical note assesses the ecological impacts of logging for beams in the community of Segundo Congresso, Niassa, Mozambique, under the Chipanje Chetu program. Dendrometric methods were used to collect diameter at breast height, commercial and total height, identification of local species, volume of standing tree, volume of logs and sawn wood, in addition to volumetric yield. Data were organized in Excel 2024 and analyzed using ANOVA in Statistix 8, with means compared by Tukey's test at a 5% significance level. From the results, it was found that the chainsaw operator lacks technical knowledge, aggravating the unsustainable exploitation, since the forest supply is critical, trees of large diameter and height are scarce and dispersed, especially Vitex doniana (Mpindimbe) and Pericospi angolensis (Muanga). The sample included 3 trees with DBH > 50 cm and total height between 16 and 21 m, generating standing volumes of 2.92–5.65 m³ and commercial volumes of 1.07–1.88 m³, with an average yield of 17.25 m³ per tree. The low yield is due to the diameter, height, morphological quality of the trees and the experience of the operator. The production of beams was 35 per log, corresponding to 0.68 m³ of sawn wood per tree, equivalent to 46.78% of commercial yield. Ecologically, the activity has positive impacts, such as the preservation of the ecosystem, as it is a semi-mechanized exploration with only a chainsaw and displacements on foot, and it also has negative impacts that are manifested in the pressure on the same large species and low availability, and the lack of technical knowledge of the operator generates operational inefficiency in the conversion of logs into beams.},
     year = {2026}
    }
    

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    AU  - Fanuel Garai Albino Muiambo
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    AB  - This technical note assesses the ecological impacts of logging for beams in the community of Segundo Congresso, Niassa, Mozambique, under the Chipanje Chetu program. Dendrometric methods were used to collect diameter at breast height, commercial and total height, identification of local species, volume of standing tree, volume of logs and sawn wood, in addition to volumetric yield. Data were organized in Excel 2024 and analyzed using ANOVA in Statistix 8, with means compared by Tukey's test at a 5% significance level. From the results, it was found that the chainsaw operator lacks technical knowledge, aggravating the unsustainable exploitation, since the forest supply is critical, trees of large diameter and height are scarce and dispersed, especially Vitex doniana (Mpindimbe) and Pericospi angolensis (Muanga). The sample included 3 trees with DBH > 50 cm and total height between 16 and 21 m, generating standing volumes of 2.92–5.65 m³ and commercial volumes of 1.07–1.88 m³, with an average yield of 17.25 m³ per tree. The low yield is due to the diameter, height, morphological quality of the trees and the experience of the operator. The production of beams was 35 per log, corresponding to 0.68 m³ of sawn wood per tree, equivalent to 46.78% of commercial yield. Ecologically, the activity has positive impacts, such as the preservation of the ecosystem, as it is a semi-mechanized exploration with only a chainsaw and displacements on foot, and it also has negative impacts that are manifested in the pressure on the same large species and low availability, and the lack of technical knowledge of the operator generates operational inefficiency in the conversion of logs into beams.
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