Eroding knowledge: an ethnobotanical inventory in Eastern Amazonia's logging frontier

Responding to the decline of game, fruit and fiber, post-logging, communities along the Capim River in Pará, Brazil, requested that research be initiated into the value of non-timber forest products. As a first step, an ethnobotanical inventory of one hectare of mature terra firme forest was conduct...

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Veröffentlicht in:Economic botany 2004, Vol.58 (2), p.135-160
Hauptverfasser: Shanley, P, Rosa, N.A
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description Responding to the decline of game, fruit and fiber, post-logging, communities along the Capim River in Pará, Brazil, requested that research be initiated into the value of non-timber forest products. As a first step, an ethnobotanical inventory of one hectare of mature terra firme forest was conducted. The percentage use-values described reflect that Capimenses know and use many species (60% of inventoried species). Differences between use-values reported in other South American inventories include: a higher degree of trade in timber; a lack of trade in non-timber products; the decreasing use of plants for technological purposes and the description of the use of many species in the past tense. During the longitudinal study, the 15 most highly valued fruit, nut, game attracting and medicinal species became included in the suite of species extracted by the timber industry.
doi_str_mv 10.1663/0013-0001(2004)058[0135:EKAEII]2.0.CO;2
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source BioOne Complete; Jstor Complete Legacy; Springer Nature - Complete Springer Journals
subjects Agronomy. Soil science and plant productions
Biological and medical sciences
Commercial forests
community forestry
Ethnobotany
Forest conservation
Forest products
forest products industries
Fruits
Fundamental and applied biological sciences. Psychology
inventories
Logging
Longitudinal studies
non-timber forest products
Non-timber forest resources
Plant species
Plants
Population decline
Species
Timber
Timber industry
Trees
Tropical rain forests
Use value
uses
values
title Eroding knowledge: an ethnobotanical inventory in Eastern Amazonia's logging frontier
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