Forests and biodiversity in Madagascar
How can biodiversity conservation and improving living conditions for local people be reconciled?
CIRAD’s Southern Africa and Madagascar regional office is based in Antatanarivo, and CIRAD operates out of three sites: Antananarivo, Antsirabe and Taomasina.
CIRAD is involved in training through research with 30 supervised or co‑supervised theses, 250 hours of courses given each year at the University of Antananarivo, and more than 50 Malagasy and French trainees instructed in Madagascar, Réunion, or Montpellier over the past five years.
The research carried out in Madagascar benefits from the diversity and richness of some very different agroecosystems: Highlands, Lake Alaotra, the East Coast, etc.
Madagascar offers a wide range of observation, experimental and application sites in highly differentiated agroecosystems (Highlands, Lake Alaotra, East Coast, etc). CIRAD’s research in Madagascar is totally in line with its six priority research topics.
From its outset, CIRAD has had a strong presence in Madagascar and the Indian Ocean and has established some long-standing partnerships built on trust with most of the research and development operators, be it with national institutions (research institute, universities, ministries, etc), local institutions (administrations, farmer organizations, NGOs and development operators, etc) and international organizations (FAO, EU, IOC, etc.).
CIRAD maintains a daily partnership with development stakeholders: ministries, farmer organizations, the voluntary and private sectors, major AFD, FFEM and EU projects, etc. It is also responsible for representing Agreenium, the French national consortium for agriculture, food, animal health and the environment, and for promoting French research for development (AIRD) in synergy with IRD’s representatives for Madagascar, the Comoros, the Seychelles and other island states in the Indian Ocean.
CIRAD researchers are hosted on the premises of certain partners: FOFIFA, CTHT, FIFAMANOR, Land Tenure Observatory and Pasteur Institute Madagascar.
How can biodiversity conservation and improving living conditions for local people be reconciled?
How can we boost agricultural production on family farms in the highlands of Madagascar, while preserving natural resources?
Improving monitoring of infectious animal and human diseases through an integrated, interdisciplinary and intersectoral regional approach (One Health), with a long-term interface between research and monitoring.
Ministries
National research centres
National NGOs
National producer associations and organizations
Private operators