Dissertations / Theses on the topic 'Mont Cameroun'
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Lemoigne, Nicolas. "Mémoire des hommes, mémoire des sols : étude ethno-pédologique des usages paysans du Mont Cameroun." Bordeaux 3, 2010. https://tel.archives-ouvertes.fr/tel-00466511.
Full textAbstract: Soil fertility of Mount Cameroon volcano has been attracting, for centuries, a mosaic of populations in sometimes delicate cohabitation, in a context of intense cultural melting pot. Acting as living archives of history jolts, the pedological memory records and restores the brand of uses, and by there the brand of tragic episodes of human occupation. In return, the social memory highlights the peculiarities of the environment, appropriates its originalities and adapts a system of representations and diversified agrarian practices: commanded by the survival of the group when it is about peasant communities but also by the financial motivations of industrial plantations of international dimensions. The last decades, particularly rich in social transformations, gave place to an acceleration of the events chronology which repercussions at soil scale are readable. The analogy of functioning of the social and pedological memories, both by their structural resemblance and by their permanent interactions, constitutes the foundations of this work. The study of some memory indicators allows us to know, in an accurate way, the health of soils as that of the societies which live from them. This thesis contributes, through the implementation of a multidisciplinary approach allying ethnology and pedology, to identify the mechanisms of the interaction between the social and pedological memory of Mount Cameroon
Nkoumbou, Charles. "I. Étude géologique des Monts Roumpi : un ensemble plutonique et volcanique de la "Ligne du Cameroun"II. Données pétrologiques sur les néphélinites du Mont Etinde (Cameroun)." Nancy 1, 1990. http://docnum.univ-lorraine.fr/public/SCD_T_1990_0460_NKOUMBOU.pdf.
Full textBulourde, Marc. "Processus d'altération des basaltes du Mont Cameroun : approche géochimique." Phd thesis, Université Rennes 1, 2001. http://tel.archives-ouvertes.fr/tel-00619383.
Full textBulourde, Marc. "Processus d'altération des basaltes du Mont Cameroun : approche géochimique /." Rennes : Université de Rennes I, Géosciences, 2001. http://catalogue.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/cb389404259.
Full textMomo, Solefack Marie Caroline. "Influence des activités anthropiques sur la végétation du Mont Oku (Cameroun)." Amiens, 2009. http://www.theses.fr/2009AMIED013.
Full textMount Oku, situated in north-west Cameroon, supports the largest remnants of the Central African montane forest habitat, which is considered as a biodiversity hotspot, hence is undergoing strong species loss. Our objective was to quantify changes in the land cover of Mount Oku over the last four decades, in order to assess the causes of forest regression and to evaluate the future of the forest on this site. We also describe a variation in plant species composition and richness along an altitudinal gradient, that were subsequently linked to environmental changes. For this purpose, we compared changes in land cover, using Landsat satellite images acquired in 1978, 1988 and 2001. Then 102 sample plots were randomly set up in forest fragments along an altitudinal gradient ranging from 1800 m to 2749 m. Although remnant forests were naturally protected by elevation and slope, they lost 62. 1% of their area between 1978 and 2001, corresponding to a mean deforestation rate of 579 ha. Year-1. Deforested lands have been replaced by crops or savanna, while few secondary forest recolonizations occurred. New farmland has extended rapidly to fulfill the demands of an increasing population density. Our study also revealed that it is difficult to disentangle the effects of altitude and human activities on vegetation because these two factors are inextricably linked and form a single gradient with antagonistic effects at the extremes. Human activities and natural vegetation belts were organized with respect to the altitudinal gradient: the summit of Mount Oku supported the largest, oldest forest fragments; while areas of low altitude have experienced intense deforestation to provide agricultural land and supported disturbance-related plant communities. However, human activities altered plant assemblages. Even old-growth forests contained species indicative of human presence (due to grazing, fire or former cultivation). Some pioneer species assemblages were very heterogeneous and their altitudinal distribution has spread
Lemoigne, Nicolas. "Mémoire des hommes, mémoire des sols. Etude ethno-pédologique des usages paysans du Mont Cameroun." Phd thesis, Université Michel de Montaigne - Bordeaux III, 2010. http://tel.archives-ouvertes.fr/tel-00466511.
Full textBindzi, Tsala Joseph. "Alteration et evolution des sols sur materiaux volcaniques de la region orientale du mont cameroun." Paris 6, 1992. http://www.theses.fr/1992PA066417.
Full textRiotte, Jean. "Etude du déséquilibre 234U-238U dans les eaux de rivière : cas du Strengbach, du mont Cameroun et de l'Himalaya." Université Louis Pasteur (Strasbourg) (1971-2008), 2001. http://www.theses.fr/2001STR13094.
Full textTalla, Tankam Narcisse. "Une nouvelle approche d'analyse automatique de texture d'images : application à l'étude de la dynamique d'occupation spatiale sur le Mont Cameroun." Dijon, 2009. http://www.theses.fr/2009DIJOS017.
Full textThe main objective of this thesis is to develop a new image processing technique that could better be adapted to the processing of large and complex images, especially SAR images, in relation to the former methods of our works. On the one hand, we propose a new approach of textural parameters evaluation which is about (Ng+1)n-1 times faster than the co-occurrence matrix approach, where n is the order of the textural parameter and Ng being the maximum grey level in the image. The resulted model enables us a gain of about (Ng+1)n octets of memory space. On the second hand, we propose a new approach in image classification, based on the analysis of statistical textural parameters. This approach combines various orders of textural parameters that consequently conserve most of the information. It enabled us to obtain an enhancement in the quality of classification reaching for some images a classification precision of more than 99%. This evaluation was conducted in order to classify two SAR images covering the Atlantic coast of Cameroon and the Cameroon littoral mangrove respectively. A third part is focused on the study of the dynamic state of soil occupation in the Mount Cameroon region, using the proposed approach
Ambella, Isidore. "La Mort chez les Mvelé du Cameroun." Lille 3 : ANRT, 1986. http://catalogue.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/cb37595434p.
Full textAmbella, Isidore. "La mort chez les Mvele du Cameroun." Paris 5, 1986. http://www.theses.fr/1986PA05H049.
Full textAmbeh, William Bah. "Seismicity and seismological studies of Mount Cameroon, Cameroon, West Africa." Thesis, University of Leeds, 1989. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.328923.
Full textMoundo, Elizabeth E. "La mort, le deuil et les conduites funéraires chez les Sawa du Cameroun." Rennes 2, 1986. http://www.theses.fr/1986REN20016.
Full textThis study on death, mourning and funerals conducts, is a tentative reflexion on man in three dimensions : ontological, ethical, and metaphysical. For example with the Sawa of Cameroon, there exist two aspects of funerals conducts; one liturgical and the other therapeutic. These two aspects manage the equilibrium of the individual as well as that of the community involved. There is significance in the analysis of these conducts. Then, the scene of the funerals is entirely representational structure. The space of death, modified on the arrival of death is sacred. This dramatic production allows the emergence of significants majors in order to expel the "evil" of death. The principal significant persons being the dying and the widow. The body of the dying person concerned is magnified and subinised by the way of aesthetic and harmony, until it becomes a symbolical "figure". The widow is taken care on three stages: the "prosecuted", the condemnation and the rebirth. The purpose of which is significant on two levels: the change of the name and the attribution of a colour symbolical of widowhood. Thus the widow as metaphor of the community as well as the metonymy of "evil". The parallel setting of these two persons engenders two paradigms: the precariosity the disorder, the unbalance, the order of death; the permanence, the order, the harmony, and order of life. From a therapeutic point of view, the treatment of dying person and the charge of the widow on the scene of funerals, permits the emergence of a funeral "us" as an affirmation of the community "us". This brings us to the reflexion of death as "evil" and the search for meaning of death as a search for the meaning of life
Ekane, Duone. "The Exploitation and Conservation of prunus africana in the Mount Cameroon Region of Cameroon." Thesis, Södertörn University College, School of Life Sciences, 2008. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:sh:diva-1876.
Full textThe exploitation of natural resources in general and biodiversity in particular by human beings, is remarked to be associated with unsustainable practices that place the survival of these resources at stake. An assessment of the exploitation of prunus africana around the mount Cameroon region can be linked with the trend of unsustainable exploitation prevailing in other parts of the world. Prunus africana, is a tree cherished by the local population for its varied values, with its medicinal values propelling it to international popularity. This has been characterized by the massive demand for its bark by western pharmaceutical companies. The huge demand of the tree in the international market is remarked to be a major factor that contributed to the tree’s mass unsustainable exploitation by the local population in the studied region. This paper has looked at the factors responsible for the mass unsustainable exploitation of prunus and the measures that local based organizations, MOCAP-CIG and MCP had adopted to promote participatory management of the tree. Three major factors; poverty, the issuing of 50 exploitation permits and international demand were identified to have contributed to the involvement of the local population in unsustainable exploitation of the tree. The concept of sustainable development was used as the theoretical framework to examine if the three dimensions can be attained without one affecting the other. The results showed that it is quite difficult to achieve this especially in the case of the exploitation and conservation of prunus africana.
Enyong, Peter Ayuk. "Étude de l'onchocercose dans la région des Monts Rumpi (Sud-Ouest Cameroun) : comparaison entre la transmission en plaine et en altitude." Paris 11, 1987. http://www.theses.fr/1987PA112493.
Full textKamga, André. "Crise économique, retour des migrants, et évolution du système agraire sur les versants oriental et méridional des monts Bamboutous (Ouest-Cameroun)." Toulouse 2, 2002. http://www.theses.fr/2002TOU20001.
Full textThe economic crisis of the 80's had for consequences the State disengagement in agricultural domain and the liberalization of the export crop chain. In addition to these two internal factors, the drop in coffee world price has fastened the decline of coffee and his substitution by vegetable and food crops to compensate losses of income from coffee. Moreover, the state as well as many private enterprises have closed down and send out thousands of workers. Many of these unemployed workers returned in their native village. The return of migrants and the economic crisis have deeply modify the bamileke agrarian system. For their survival, they are practising vegetable cropping and by so doing, accentuate land pressure. Contrary to the traditionnal cropping system practiced by female, they cultivate vegetable using high fertilisation and without associating other crops. But the phytosanitary problems and the cost of input have enable the association of crops. The 90' had also many other changes in the bamileke agrarian system: not only male farmers are now doing works that were in the past reserved to female, but also, some female are acquiring land. The non practice of fallow has caused the regression of small animal rearing and therefore the lost of the importance of the hedge. So, one of the component of the bamileke "bocage" is disappearing. During the same period, we have noticed the extension of vegetable crop in the pasture highland, reducing the pasture zone with a risk of erosion of soil. The economic crisis and the return of migrants have also fastened the anarchic occupation of pasture land and the use for agriculture of marginal lands. By so doing, these marginal lands are also exposed to erosion and in a long term, this can cause environmental problems
Wetie, Ngongang Ariane. "Seismic and Volcanic Hazard Analysis for Mount Cameroon Volcano." Diss., University of Pretoria, 2016. http://hdl.handle.net/2263/60871.
Full textDissertation (MSc)--University of Pretoria, 2016.
Geology
MSc
Unrestricted
Tafon, Voma Ralph. "The Actor-Interface Case of Development Intervention in the Conservation of Mount Cameroon National Park, Buea, Cameroon." Thesis, Södertörns högskola, Institutionen för naturvetenskap, miljö och teknik, 2013. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:sh:diva-19702.
Full textEwombe-Moundo, Elizabeth. "La Mort, le deuil et les conduites funéraires chez les Sawa du Cameroun." Lille 3 : ANRT, 1987. http://catalogue.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/cb37599839g.
Full textDatouang, Djoussou Jean-Marie. "Patrimoine et patrimonialisation au Cameroun : les Diy-gid-biy des monts Mandara septentrionaux pour une étude de cas." Thesis, Université Laval, 2014. http://www.theses.ulaval.ca/2014/30415/30415.pdf.
Full textEntitled Patrimony and patrimonialization in Cameroon: the DGB sites of the northern Mandara Mountains as a case study, my thesis presents a linked series of arguments designed to clarify the concept of “patrimonial good”. It falls within a field of research that considers patrimony and patrimonialization as an ensemble of discursive codes, of which the interest to anthropologists lies in the understanding of meaning rather than in ontological characteristics. The thesis is concerned with the intelligibility of relationships to elements of patrimony arrived at by a process involving the identification of patrimoniality, the expression of changes and patrimogenic social consequences. Thus this work discusses the identification of patrimony and the relationships that underlie the concept of patrimonial element. In a general way, it is a presentation on the overall state of patrimony in Cameroon from a viewpoint that is both vertical and horizontal and which focuses on the different forms of construction of patrimony existing in that country. Identification of the alchemy of patrimonial construction is thus a subject of enquiry, as is the how of things becoming patrimonial. To achieve its results, the thesis relies on analysis of the processes of identification of patrimony, considering them in terms of two timescales, one focused on their historical genesis, the other on the construction procedures taking place in the present. These two levels of analysis lead to the finding that patrimonialization is a process embedded in the linkage of various actors and social contexts in the domains of ideology and politics as well as the social and religious. With the example of the DGB sites, the thesis brings out certain of the characteristics that allow determination of the attribution of a property to the sphere of goods laden with symbolic charges.
Nama, Ernest Ekodo. "Detection of landscape changes arising from tectonism and volcanism on Mount Cameroon." Thesis, University of Salford, 2001. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.395921.
Full textMbiabo, Tchakounte Louis. "La Mort dans la vie africaine les rites de deuil au pays Bamiléké au Cameroun." Lille 3 : ANRT, 1988. http://catalogue.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/cb37599548m.
Full textNvenakeng, Suzanne Awung. "Assessing community involvement in the design, implementation and monitoring of REDD+ projects : a case study of Mount Cameroon National Park, Cameroon." Thesis, University of York, 2015. http://etheses.whiterose.ac.uk/11152/.
Full textTambe-Ebot, Mathias Ashu Tako. "Proposing a Theoretical GIS Model for Landslides Analysis : The Case of Mount Cameroon." Thesis, Linköpings universitet, Institutionen för datavetenskap, 2011. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:liu:diva-65899.
Full textMorin, Renaud. "Les paysages Mandara (Nord Cameroun) : de la continuité au renversement, entre crises des milieux et mutations territoriales : essai de géographie globale d'un massif montagnard soudano-sahélien." Bordeaux 3, 2010. http://www.theses.fr/2010BOR30067.
Full textSoudano-Sahelian mineral citadel, Mount Mandara are subject to a resumption of erosion that we could correlate in the recurrence of dry years between 1960 and 1991. At the same time mountain societies knew profound turnovers: transformations of the agrarian systems, introduction of commercial cultures, the monetarization of the economy, the influence of the Islam and the cultural model Fulani, acceleration of the mobilities, descent in plain of mountain dwellers. This resumption of erosion must be envisaged in a complex way, according to the holistic conception of the relationship of the men to their environment in farming societies Mandara. Considering that the dynamics of ecosystems are inseparable territorial transformations which liven up the socio-spatial formations Mandara, the analysis of the mountain landscaped models allows to seize collectively all the strengths livening up these spaces. Figures of continuity or fragments of disorder, these strengths harmonize locally according to the ecosystems, the societies and their inheritances. The variety of the human groups in contrasted ecosystems explains the strong nuances in the relationship to the space developed by every group, guiding its landscaped displays. It is in this relationship in the space, indossociably imaterial and material, that live the elements of understanding of the dynamics of the ecosystems and the localized territorial transformations. The transformations of the territorial constructions explain more certainly the resumption of erosion which know mountains and piedmont, within the framework of a climatic crisis which constitutes in the end a usual chance for societies rooted in their territory
Ntoko, Vivian [Verfasser], and Matthias [Akademischer Betreuer] Schmidt. "Climate Change in the Mount Cameroon National Park Region: local perceptions, natural resources and adaptation strategies, the Republic of Cameroon / Vivian Ntoko ; Betreuer: Matthias Schmidt." Augsburg : Universität Augsburg, 2020. http://d-nb.info/122063204X/34.
Full textChetima, Melchisedek. "Discours sur la maison et dynamiques identitaires chez les Podokwo, Muktele et Mura (monts Mandara du Cameroun) Une approche à l'ethnicité et au statut social." Doctoral thesis, Université Laval, 2015. http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11794/26788.
Full textThis thesis examines the architectural identity dynamics and practices among the Podokwo, Muktele and Mura of the mounts Mandara (Cameroon). It is organized around the assumption that practical and functional logic that guide the construction, the extension and the transformation of house evolves in tandem with symbolic considerations, such as the production of ethnic distinctions (Hodder, 1982) and the quest of social prestige within the community (Duncan, 1982; Roux, 1976). Based on the approach developed by authors like Ian Hodder (2012, 2006, 1999, 1982), Daniel Miller (2010, 2007, 2005, 2001, 1987) and Christophey Tilley (2010, 2006, 2004, 2002, 1999), I argue that the house, through its multi-purpose uses, can become an active agent for the production of identity belonging, both at a societal and individual level (Bromberger, 1980). For this reason, I have focused my attention not only on what people do with the house, but also on how the house that people built, built also people (Miller 2001: 119). I have also focused my analysis on several key moments of the history of Podokwo, Muktele and Mura such as the plain downhill (1963), the rural exodus and civil service (1980) and the democratic transition (1990) that affect the architectural practices and the identity discourses which are its corollaries.
Enyong, Peter Ayuk. "Etude de l'onchocercose dans la région des monts Rumpi, sud-ouest Cameroun comparaison entre la transmission en plaine et en altitude /." Grenoble 2 : ANRT, 1987. http://catalogue.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/cb37604827k.
Full textEkane, Bellewang Nelson. "Socio-economic impact of Prunus africana management in the Mount Cameroon region : A case study of the Bokwoango community." Thesis, KTH, Urban Planning and Environment, 2006. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:kth:diva-3968.
Full textIn most developing countries, forest resources are a major source of livelihood for forest dwellers. Forests provide fuel wood, farm products, meat, timber and plants of high medicinal value, including Prunus africana. The collection of medicinal plants is also an important source of cash income for some forest communities, and widely relied on to cure illnesses (Poffenberger, 1993). Because of this, the poor forest dwellers in particular are forced to exert pressure on their surrounding environment to make ends meet. Indiscriminate exploitation of forest resources has cost some forest dwellers dearly as they are now experiencing marked reduction of wildlife, forest cover, soil fertility and most importantly water supply, which is a key to life. Prunus africana has a very high economic and medicinal value locally as well as internationally. The exploitation of this species is a very profitable activity in most parts of Africa where it occurs, including the Mount Cameroon region. In recent years, most youths and young men in the Mount Cameroon region have seemingly become less interested in their usual income generating activities (farming, hunting, etc.) because of reduced productivity and have taken up Prunus harvesting as their major source of income. Increase in demand for this species by the French pharmaceutical company (Plantecam), weak institutional capacity to control exploitation, uncontrolled access into the forest, scramble for diminished stock by legal and illegal exploiters, destruction of wild stock by unsustainable practices, and insufficient regeneration of the species in the past have almost driven this species to extinction in certain parts of Cameroon and made it severely threatened in others. Prunus africana is presently threatened with extinction in the entire Mount Cameroon region. In response to this, the Mount Cameroon Project (MCP) and the Ministry of Environment and Forests (MINEF) helped some communities (Bokwoango and Mapanja) in the Mount Cameroon region to form Prunus africana harvesters’ unions with the aim of preserving the resource and improving the socio-economic benefits. The principal aim of the Bokwoango Prunus africana harvesters’ union is to ensure sustainable exploitation of Prunus africana while saving money for important development projects for individual members, their families and the entire community. This piece of work highlights the different facets of Prunus africana management in Cameroon in general and the Bokwoango community in particular. The study examines the socio-economic impact of Prunus africana management in the Bokwoango community and shows specifically the management role played by the Bokwoango Prunus africana harvesters’ union to reduce the rate of exploitation of Prunus africana and also to ensure benefit sharing of the earnings from sales of Prunus bark. It at the same time brings out the constraints encountered by harvesters as well as the opportunities that can make the union become more viable to the socio-economic development of the Bokwoango community. Results of this study show that for the short period that the Bokwoango Prunus africana harvesters’ union has existed, the socio-economic changes in this community are encouraging if one compares the present situation with that before the formation of the union. Most importantly, there has been increased awareness on the great need to conserve not only the threatened Prunus africana species but also other threatened plant and animal species in the region through sustainable hunting, harvesting and regeneration. Some proposals are made for efficient natural resource management and improvements on livelihood through alternative income generating activities. The study ends with recommendations for policy and institutional reforms as well as suggestions for further research in sustainable management of Prunus africana.
Pouakouyou, Daniel. "The reproductive biology of Prunus africana (Rosaceae) on Mount Cameroon and its implications for in situ conservation and management." Thesis, Bangor University, 2002. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.394986.
Full textNdam, Nouhou. "Tree regeneration, vegetation dynamics and the maintenance of biodiversity on Mount Cameroon : the relative impact of natural and human disturbance." Thesis, Bangor University, 1999. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.285517.
Full textCobham, Leona Barbara. "Tradition, innovation and economic transformation : the role of indigenous plant domestication in forest-based agriculture in the foothills of Mount Cameroon." Thesis, King's College London (University of London), 1997. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.267890.
Full textColombel, Véronique de. "Comparaison des noms et usages de six cents plantes dans le groupes tchadiques des monts du mandara (cameroun) synchronie dynamique et diachronie linguistique et ethnolinguistique." Paris 5, 2000. http://www.theses.fr/2000PA05H007.
Full textHiol, Hiol François. "Structure et fonctionnement des terrasses de cultures des monts mandara (nord - cameroun). Bilans d'eau et de matiere de systemes agraires traditionnels et ameliore a differents echelles spatiales." Université Louis Pasteur (Strasbourg) (1971-2008), 1999. http://www.theses.fr/1999STR1GE03.
Full textSenterre, Bruno. "Recherches méthodologiques pour la typologie de la végétation et la phytogéographie des forêts denses d'Afrique tropicale." Doctoral thesis, Universite Libre de Bruxelles, 2005. http://hdl.handle.net/2013/ULB-DIPOT:oai:dipot.ulb.ac.be:2013/210954.
Full textII. Field data consisted in phytosociological homogeneous sample plots localized within different recognized phytogeographical entities, in a region of tropical Africa where these entities are known to be well conserved. A total of 37 such plots were inventoried in the region extending from the littoral forests of Ndoté, Equatorial Guinea, which are wet evergreen forests, to the continental forests of the Dja, Cameroon, known as evergreen seasonal forests. The studied region also included the oriental Atlantic forests of Equatorial Guinea, known as moist evergreen forests or caesalp forests. In various parts of this continentality gradient, some plots were localized within climax non-zonal formations, namely the submontane rain forests. The emphasis was put on the vegetation of the Monte Alén National Park.
The sampling methodology was willing to be as "complete ", including all strata, "quantitative ", enumerating all individuals, and "representative ", within each stratum, as possible. These multi-layers plots were realised using nested sub-plots, with a sampling size of 100 individuals for every ligneous stratum recognized (dominant trees, dominated trees and shrubs) and a sampling size of 200m² for the herbaceous and suffrutex stratum.
Forest types were defined independently for each stratum and the differences were analysed. A method was proposed for the simultaneous analysis of all floristic data, converting and standardizing the values from ligneous strata, on the one hand, and from understorey strata, on the other hand.
III. Ten forest types were described using IndVal and discussed in the general context of the guineo-congolian region, from a syntaxonomic view point (agglomerative classification) and from a phytogeographical view point (divisive classification). Homologies between these two approaches are described. The proposed phytogeographical system is based on an "open " conception of hierarchical classifications, combining advantages of agglomerative and divisive classifications. In concrete terms, the non-zonal criteria, for example the submontane variants, are categorised separately and in analogy with the zonal criteria, related to the usual phytochoria.
Analysis of ecological relationships for the 10 communities showed that the main variables related to the floristic variability in our mainland rain forests are elevation, rainfall, hygrometry (estimated using bryophytes cover levels) and distance to the ocean. The two extremes on the vertical microclimatic gradient, dominant trees stratum and herbaceous stratum, give similar typologies, however canonical analysis showed that for the herbaceous layer, non-zonal variables (hygrometry and elevation) were gaining more importance when the influence of the two zonal variables was attenuated. In every case, spatial autocorrelation was less important than the environment in explaining floristic variability but its role increased in the spatial arrangement of understorey species, whose dispersal capacity is generally lower than canopy trees. The phytosociological, phytogeographical and ecological description of forest types is accompanied by a physiognomical description using biological types spectrum, as well as architectural models, leaf sizes, etc.
With regard to diversity, we have demonstrated that species richness was higher from upper to lower strata because of the accumulation in lower strata of species from various strata. On the other hand, the proper stratum diversity, i.e. the structural set, decreased from dominant trees to shrubs. The proper diversity of the herb layer showed relatively high figures mainly due to the higher individual density in relation to the existence of microstrata. Within the 37 sample plots, 1,050 taxa have been identified to species or morpho-species levels, for a total of 25,750 individuals. These taxa represent 442 genus among 104 families. The richest forest type is found on the foothills of the Niefang range, on the windward side. This forest type is also characterised by a high number of oligotypic genus and by species belonging to functional types indicators of glacial refuges. These functional types are defined on the basis of the dispersal capacity and on kind of stand needed for effective germination. We formulated the hypothesis that this kind of "foothills refuge ", characterised by his zonal nature, could have been one of the rare refuges for species from mainland rain forests, while montane and fluvial refuges would mainly have preserved species from non-zonal forest types: (sub)montane and riverine.
Based on indicator species of submontane forests, a potential distribution map of this forest type has been realised at the Atlantic central African scale. More than 400 submontane forest localities have been mapped. These forests begin at 400m of altitude near the ocean, and progressively at higher altitude for increasing distance to the ocean. Many lowland localities also comprised submontane species, which could indicate the existence of ecological transgressions. These transgressions would allow migratory tracks for submontane species between isolated mountain ranges, not only during glacial periods, through heights at the northern and southern borders of the congo basin, but also contemporarily through the lowland riverine forest network, in the centre of this basin. Finally, a special attention has been attributed to littoral forests and to some cases of choroecological transgressions, coupled to the ecological equalization phenomenon.
Doctorat en sciences agronomiques et ingénierie biologique
info:eu-repo/semantics/nonPublished
MAICHER, Vincent. "Biodiversity patterns of butterflies and moths on Mount Cameroon." Doctoral thesis, 2019. http://www.nusl.cz/ntk/nusl-396464.
Full textJanson, Rébecca. "Frontières et identités : étude des décors céramiques dans la région des monts Mandara et de ses plaines (Nord-Cameroun/Nord-Nigéria) à l'Âge du Fer." Thèse, 2015. http://hdl.handle.net/1866/18428.
Full textFor the last 500 years at least, in the southern area of Lake Tchad, the Mandara Mountains region represents the geographical and cultural meeting point of two contrasting ways of thinking: the egalitarian and non-Muslim populations of the mountains; and the populations of the surrounding plains—dominated by the hierarchical authority of Islamic states, including Bornou and Wandala states. This thesis is the continuation of a long tradition of archaeological and ethnological research completed during the last 40 years in this region. Its aim is to document the ambiguous relationship that exists between these two socio-political systems, in the past and the present. Between 1993 and 2012, teams of archaeologists working on both the Projet Maya Wandala (PMW) and the Projet DGB (Diy-gyd-bay) established one of the largest ceramic databases in the region. Following a holistic, diachronic and regional approach regarding the issue of cultural contacts in the border area, the present thesis focuses on the analysis on ceramic decoration from this dataset. These potsherds (n=150,000), originating from eight key archaeological sites located in Northern Cameroon and Northern Nigeria, tell the story of the region spanning more than 3000 years, dating from the Neolithic to the end of the Late Iron Age (LIA). Methods of statistical analysis, such as cluster analysis by dynamic clustering (K-Means) and Ward aggregation, have been used in order to explore both similarities and differences present in these collections, through time and space. After a comparison of my results with the archaeological, ethnological and historical data of the study area, a chronology of these sites is proposed based on the ceramic data. On the DGB- 1/-2 site, the most important evidence of prehistoric occupation of the mountains, the domestic spaces, such as the cooking area, are differentiated from those used for redeposited materials, despite the similarity of ceramic decorations found there. The identification of four groups of distinct ceramic decorations underlines the differences that arise between the lowland populations and those from the mountains, as well as between the lowland populations associated with the Wandala elite, and other groups. In the context of the emergence of the first centralised states in this region, we can see how this important historical phenomenon had consequences, not only on occupation and the use of the landscape, but also on ceramic identity.
Zama, Isaac F. "Land tenure rights, community participation and conflict management in community forestry in Cameroon : a study of the Mount Kilum/Ijim community forestry project /." 2002. http://www.library.wisc.edu/databases/connect/dissertations.html.
Full textMwambo, Francis Molua. "Human and climatic change impact modelling on the habitat suitability for the chimpanzee (Pan troglodytes ellioti) – Case study: The proposed Mount Cameroon National Park." Master's thesis, 2010. http://hdl.handle.net/10362/2734.
Full textThe prediction of species' distribution is fundamental to many applications in ecology, wildlife conservation and the science of evolution. Variations in the abundance within a species' geographic range provide the connection between the disciplines of ecology, geostatistics and biogeography. Species predictive modelling is quite intricate considering the spatial and aspatial variables that both play interactive roles in predicting a species' occurrence. Like many primates across Africa, Pan troglodytes ellioti has both the least geographic distribution and population relative to the other chimpanzee subspecies continent wide. With the proposed Mount Cameroon National Park as the study area, predictions displayed as maps further enhance spatial visualisation. Predictions in Maxent had an estimated accuracy assessment of approximately 0.7 and 67.41% being currently suitable respectively. The observed shift in the habitat suitability from lower to higher altitudes suggests climatic conditions prevailing in the suitable range will likely be attainable only at much higher altitudes in the future. A likely consequence on species shall be to ascend towards the summit in order to meet their needs both physiologically and resource wise.
Siwe, Ngamabou René [Verfasser]. "Evaluating the efficacy of remote sensing techniques in monitoring forest cover and forest cover change in the Mount Cameroon region / vorgelegt von René Siwe Ngamabou." 2007. http://d-nb.info/98363503X/34.
Full textZenklová, Tereza. "Hnízdní a zpěvní aktivita ptáků afrotropického deštného lesa podél gradientu nadmořské výšky." Master's thesis, 2016. http://www.nusl.cz/ntk/nusl-351449.
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