| PLANATATION
AREAS AND PLANTING RATES
Teak plantations constitute about 8 percent of the total
plantation area in countries with climates suitable for teak
growing. In 1995, about 94 percent of global teak plantations
were in tropical Asia, with India (44 percent) and Indonesia
(31 percent) accounting for the bulk of the resource. Other
countries of the region with significant planted teak resources
were Thailand (7 percent), Myanmar (6 percent), Bangladesh
(3.2 percent) and Sri Lanka (1.7 percent). About 4.5 percent
of global teak plantations were in tropical Africa (largely
in moist West Africa, particularly in Côte d'Ivoire
and Nigeria) and the remainder were in tropical America (mostly
in Costa Rica and Trinidad and Tobago) and the Pacific Islands.
FAO's most recent regional estimates suggest that the increase
in the global net area of teak plantations has been negligible
since 1990 (FAO, 1995), despite a reported rate of new planting
of more than 100,000 ha. per year. This anomalous result reflects
discrepancies in historical reported national plantation areas
as well as the fact that a large, although unquantified, part
of the reported new planting is actually replanting of existing
plantations following harvest. The rate of new plantation
establishment in many tropical countries does, however, appear
to have slowed notably since 1990. Most planting reported
in 1995 was in India, Myanmar, Thailand and Indonesia in tropical
Asia, and in Costa Rica and Panama in tropical America.
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