View Item 
      •   IPB Repository
      • IPBana
      • Articles
      • Faculty of Forestry
      • Forest Resource Conservation and Ecotourism
      • View Item
      •   IPB Repository
      • IPBana
      • Articles
      • Faculty of Forestry
      • Forest Resource Conservation and Ecotourism
      • View Item
      JavaScript is disabled for your browser. Some features of this site may not work without it.

      The Economic Value and Business Management of Bamboo

      Thumbnail
      View/Open
      Article (287.5Kb)
      Date
      2025-06
      Author
      Rosyada, Amrina
      Metadata
      Show full item record
      Abstract
      Bamboo is a wooden grass belonging to the Bambusoideae family of the Poaceae (Gramineae) family. This ancient wood grass is found in many tropical, subtropical and temperate zones in the world. These are very diverse plants, which have diverse needs with extreme environmental and soil conditions. There are about 90 genera and around 1200 species of bamboo found throughout the world besides Europe and Antarctica (Hossain et al., 2015). Most of the bamboo is found in the forest and is also widely distributed in the outer forest, on agricultural land, river banks, roadsides, and rural areas. Bamboo is a long stick as a non-wood forest product and is sometimes used as wood. Bamboo prices are quite cheap and availability is chosen to be the right choice to meet human needs (Trojan and Xu, 2014). Bamboo is a catchable plant and some species die, so some species can be adapted to habitats that are far different from optimal conditions (Ha, 2010). Bamboo is becoming popular as wood for the paper, domestic, home, board and charcoal industries (Trojan and Xu, 2014). The people of Asia, Africa, and South America depend on the construction of houses and agriculture and in the countries of Southeast and East Asia bamboo is managed as a vegetable gave bamboo shoots. As a major non-timber forest product and substitute for wood, bamboo is increasingly in demand by ecologists because of its fast and high growth to mitigate climate change. If managed properly, bamboo plantations can conserve soil and air, and increase soil fertility and local conservation as well (Trojan and Xu, 2014). ...
      URI
      http://repository.ipb.ac.id/handle/123456789/163578
      Collections
      • Forest Resource Conservation and Ecotourism [229]

      Copyright © 2020 Library of IPB University
      All rights reserved
      Contact Us | Send Feedback
      Indonesia DSpace Group 
      IPB University Scientific Repository
      UIN Syarif Hidayatullah Institutional Repository
      Universitas Jember Digital Repository
        

       

      Browse

      All of IPB RepositoryCollectionsBy Issue DateAuthorsTitlesSubjectsThis CollectionBy Issue DateAuthorsTitlesSubjects

      My Account

      Login

      Application

      google store

      Copyright © 2020 Library of IPB University
      All rights reserved
      Contact Us | Send Feedback
      Indonesia DSpace Group 
      IPB University Scientific Repository
      UIN Syarif Hidayatullah Institutional Repository
      Universitas Jember Digital Repository