Indigenous Perceptions of Tree Species Abundance Across an Upper Amazonian Landscape

Indigenous cultures know a great deal about the landscape they inhabit, and their knowledge can be a valuable tool for ecologists. In order to explore how residents' knowledge might help characterize a large and diverse forest type in southeastern Peru, we asked plant experts of the local Cashi...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of ethnobiology 2011-12, Vol.31 (2), p.233-243
Hauptverfasser: Pitman, Nigel C. A., Cecilio, Marcelino Pinedo, Pudicho, Mikias Pinedo, Graham, James G., Núñez V., M. Percy, Valenzuela, Mónica, Terborgh, John W.
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container_end_page 243
container_issue 2
container_start_page 233
container_title Journal of ethnobiology
container_volume 31
creator Pitman, Nigel C. A.
Cecilio, Marcelino Pinedo
Pudicho, Mikias Pinedo
Graham, James G.
Núñez V., M. Percy
Valenzuela, Mónica
Terborgh, John W.
description Indigenous cultures know a great deal about the landscape they inhabit, and their knowledge can be a valuable tool for ecologists. In order to explore how residents' knowledge might help characterize a large and diverse forest type in southeastern Peru, we asked plant experts of the local Cashinahua culture to predict whether the tree species recorded in a single 1-ha plot in upland forest were common on the surrounding landscape. We then compared their answers with data collected in four other 1-ha plots scattered over an area of about 7,000 km2. Cashinahua predictions matched tree plot data for 66% of the species examined. Species labeled as common by the Cashinahua included 9 of the top 11 most common species in the 5 plots and 39% of all trees in the plots. We discuss three obstacles to using local knowledge in large-scale vegetation studies: 1) the often-confusing relation between indigenous and Linnaean taxonomic nomenclature, 2) differing cultural conceptions of commonness and rarity, and 3) the limitations of describing tree species abundance via 1-ha tree plots. Where these limitations can be overcome, studies of large-scale vegetation patterns stand to benefit greatly from incorporating local knowledge of regionally abundant species.
doi_str_mv 10.2993/0278-0771-31.2.233
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subjects Amazon
Anthropology of landscape
Cashinahua
Forests
Indexing in process
Indigenous knowledge
Land
Matsigenka
Peru
Purus
Species
tree species abundance
Trees
title Indigenous Perceptions of Tree Species Abundance Across an Upper Amazonian Landscape
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