It is a privilege to be asked and a pleasurable duty for me to write the
foreword of this book. The conservation and wise utilisation of the
humid tropical forests, a unique biome, are matters of great concern and
importance to millions living within and around these forests and,
perhaps, less directly, to the totality of mankind. These forests
provide many essential products and services for mankind. The list is
lengthy and need not be repeated here. Suffice it to say that there are
not many aspects of human activity which do not utilise some of these
products, services or derivatives therefrom. Yet it is the view of those
most closely associated with the study of these forests that what is
known is but a minuscule portion of whatthere is to know. The products
and services now utilised, are perhaps some infinitesimal part of the
full potential. All over the tropical world, however, these forests are
being destroyed. At first, slowly, but now surely gathering tempo. This
is true also of Ghana. Tracts offorest land are converted to other uses,
often ephemeral and not sustained. Irreversible changes take place in
our environment. The gains are shortlived, the losses unobtrusively
accumulate and stay forever. The accelerating rate of deforestation, in
the face of our relatively scanty knowledge of this biome, is indeed a
sad reflection of the state of human affairs. It is in this setting that
one welcomes this book by Messrs. J. B. Hall and M. D. Swaine.