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At ICRAF Southeast Asia
Southeast Asia and neighbouring parts of South and East Asia include areas of very high population densities (over 500 persons per km2), often supported by intensive paddy rice production as well as industrial activity, as well as forested areas where population densities are low (1 - 10 persons per km2). Rural poverty exists both in the high and low population density areas, but tends to have a different character.
Climatically the equatorial parts are humid (more than 1.5 m rainfall per year), except for the Australian ‘rain shadow’ in eastern Indonesia, while with increasing latitude the climate becomes more seasonal and generally drier. Most of the people live at low elevations (0 - 100 m above sea level), but their livelihoods are influenced by land use at higher elevations. Soils vary from recent volcanic soils of high fertility to highly leached infertile soils, with many types in between. Little is left on the original rain forest cover, but part of the forest-derived landscapes can maintain important parts of the ‘environmental service functions’, except for the core biodiversity values.
Southeast Asia is a global leader in many of the most profitable tree crops of the world (including the introduced oil palm, rubber, coffee and cacao, and the indigenous coconut, citrus, tea, cinnamon, mango, nutmeg, pepper, clove, several resins, bamboos and rattans), but the benefits of these ‘cash trees’ tend to be unequally shared. Most of these tree crops grow well in mixed agroforestry systems, but some tend to be grown in monocultural plantations. A large number of indigenous fruit trees and ‘lesser known’ tree products does play an important role in local livelihoods and is in various stages of ‘domestication’.
Apart from many commonalities, Southeast Asia contains a wide diversity of cultural and ethnic identities, religions, history of pre-colonial, colonial and post-colonial periods and political systems, that all shape the rural livelihood opportunities of today. In our ‘core’ research and development sites we try to address this diversity.

WORLD AGROFORESTRY CENTRE - SOUTH EAST ASIA
http://www.worldagroforestrycentre.org/sea