Letsela, T.Witkowski, E. T. F.Balkwill, K.2016-04-192016-04-192003Economic Botany 57(4): 619-6390013-00011874-9364http://hdl.handle.net/10919/68934Metadata only recordThe communities of Tsehlanyane and Bokong depend on subsistence agriculture and harvesting natural resources for a variety of needs. These areas have the longest history of conservation placed by a local traditional authority in Lesotho. The researchers conducted a survey that was aimed at making an inventory of resources, that will be affected by the establishment of a biosphere reserve linking the Tsehlanyane National Park and the Bokong Nature Reserve.text/plainen-USIn CopyrightLivelihoodsPlantsSubsistence productionIncome generationConservationPlant resourcesLesothoSubsistenceAfricaBiological resourcesBiosphere reserveConservationDependenceIncomeUnemploymentEcosystem Field Scale GovernancePlant resources used for subsistence in Tsehlanyane and Bokong in LesothoAbstractCopyright 2003 by The New York Botanical Garden Press, Bronx, NY 10458-5126 U.S.A.