Literature DB >> 24229063

Evidence of the shifting baseline syndrome in ethnobotanical research.

Natalia Hanazaki1, Dannieli Firme Herbst, Mel Simionato Marques, Ina Vandebroek.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: The shifting baseline syndrome is a concept from ecology that can be analyzed in the context of ethnobotanical research. Evidence of shifting baseline syndrome can be found in studies dealing with intracultural variation of knowledge, when knowledge from different generations is compared and combined with information about changes in the environment and/or natural resources.
METHODS: We reviewed 84 studies published between 1993 and 2012 that made comparisons of ethnobotanical knowledge according to different age classes. After analyzing these studies for evidence of the shifting baseline syndrome (lower knowledge levels in younger generations and mention of declining abundance of local natural resources), we searched within these studies for the use of the expressions "cultural erosion", "loss of knowledge", or "acculturation".
RESULTS: The studies focused on different groups of plants (e.g. medicinal plants, foods, plants used for general purposes, or the uses of specific important species). More than half of all 84 studies (57%) mentioned a concern towards cultural erosion or knowledge loss; 54% of the studies showed evidence of the shifting baseline syndrome; and 37% of the studies did not provide any evidence of shifting baselines (intergenerational knowledge differences but no information available about the abundance of natural resources). DISCUSSION AND
CONCLUSIONS: The general perception of knowledge loss among young people when comparing ethnobotanical repertoires among different age groups should be analyzed with caution. Changes in the landscape or in the abundance of plant resources may be associated with changes in ethnobotanical repertoires held by people of different age groups. Also, the relationship between the availability of resources and current plant use practices rely on a complexity of factors. Fluctuations in these variables can cause changes in the reference (baseline) of different generations and consequently be responsible for differences in intergenerational knowledge. Unraveling the complexity of changes in local knowledge systems in relation to environmental changes will allow the identification of more meaningful information for resource conservation.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2013        PMID: 24229063      PMCID: PMC3842669          DOI: 10.1186/1746-4269-9-75

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Ethnobiol Ethnomed        ISSN: 1746-4269            Impact factor:   2.733


Background

Traditional ecological knowledge (TEK) is an important component in the improvement of natural resource management [1-4] and in the practices related to protection of ecosystems and species [5]. This kind of knowledge is developed by local communities through adaptive experiences with natural resources. It is dynamic and continuously modified, yet generally little emphasis is given to understanding changes as adaptive responses to new environmental, social, and economic conditions [6]. Such changes can also be related to a “loss of knowledge”, especially when the social reproduction of people holding TEK is at risk, resulting in the loss of local knowledge systems. The loss of local knowledge can result in a diminished ability to cope with environmental alterations, and also can be related to a changing baseline in the perception of natural resources. These different references in relation to a baseline can be understood under the  shifting baselines syndrome’, proposed by Pauly [7] in a seminal paper describing the reasons and implications of a syndrome occurring among fishery scientists. Pauly [7] noticed that each generation of scientists considers as a baseline the abundance and composition of species observed at the beginning of their careers, and use this baseline to evaluate changes along time. Following the discussion of this syndrome some authors argue that a similar trend may be occurring among fishermen [8-12], in studies about forest cover changes [13,14], bird fauna, and agriculture [15]. This syndrome allows a historical approach in assessing an environment, which can be combined with aspects of the current local situation [16]. For a study on shifting baseline it is necessary to analyze information on processes of change in the environment, resources, or any other conditions, using the perception of the people who observe or follow this process [4]. One of the problems is that, for several areas and species, there are no well-known starting points, or baselines [16]. This indicates a potential weakness in studies where researchers may not be comparing the environment (or a resource) from an earlier baseline, since reference points are considered dynamic. Combining data from different sources may be the only way to derive trends on the shifting baseline syndrome, when no consistent historical data is avaliable [17]. Ethnobotanical research addressing the shifting baseline on vegetation or plant resources is still very scarce and recent [13,14]. Similar to changes in fish stocks observed under the shifting baseline perspective, vegetation and forest cover change over time; along with it people’s perceptions about plant species and landscapes are also subject to change, yet those changes may remain unnoticed or underperceived by different generations. Several factors resulting from socioeconomic changes influence landscape alterations and the use and availability of plant resources, such as monoculture farming, real estate speculation, tourism, and urbanization, among others. As changes occur in social, economic and environmental conditions at a given location, it is expected that local people’s knowledge also changes between different generations [18]. These changes can be accompanied by a gradual accommodation of people’s perceptions, with which the dynamics of reference points are directly related. If changes in vegetation, terrestrial landscapes and the co-ocurrence of people’s accommodations of these changes (for example through studies of plant knowledge across different generations) were analyzed together, then there would be a better understanding of people’s tolerance in relation to biodiversity loss. The main objective of this paper is to analyze the ideas behind the shifting baseline in the context of ethnobotanical research. Evidence of the shifting baseline syndrome can be found in studies dealing with intracultural variation of knowledge, when knowledge from different informant generations is compared and changes in the environment and/or resources are also mentioned. In other words, we are assuming that there is evidence of shifting baseline in a study when: (1) research data in the paper point to differences in intergenerational knowledge, with knowledge being lower in younger generations; (2) local community members or the researchers themselves mention that one or more biological resources are disappearing. The latter information was most often encountered in the papers as anecdotal evidence. Our main argument is to reinforce the role of this evidence of environmental change when analyzing age differences found in studies dealing with the distribution of ethnobotanical knowledge in a given group. A review of ethnobotanical studies was conducted, which investigated age differences and changes in local knowledge. The intent is to add more elements to the analysis of traditional knowledge in ethnobotany, where traditions and transformations are intrinsically mixed.

Methods

We used the bibliographic databases Scopus, Biological Abstracts and Medline for this review, covering studies published between 1993 and 2012. The goal was to select studies with comparisons of ethnobotanical knowledge according to different classes of age or age groups, in order to make inferences regarding changes in baselines interfering in people’s perceptions. Thus, the variable “age” was a priority for the selection of studies, recognizing that there are other important variables influencing the ethnobotanical repertoire. In this search the keyword “ethnobotany” was used added to a combination of expressions: “shifting baseline”, “age”, “age comparisons”, “older” and “younger”, “age class”, “age group”, “knowledge”, “knowledge loss”. A total of 168 studies were found, of which 84 were selected for analysis, according to two inclusion criteria: the studies had to involve age group comparisons of ethnobotanical knowledge and to show results on, or discuss changes in, the abundance of local plant resources. Excluded were studies, for example, that focused on the ethnopharmacology of a given plant without information about age comparisons. Analysis consisted of ranking the papers from the literature search into four categories: (1) evidence of shifting baseline; (2) no evidence of shifting baseline; (3) no changes in knowledge occur; and (4) ambiguous. We considered “evidence of shifting baseline” when a paper showed differences in intergenerational knowledge (lower knowledge levels in younger generations) and mentioned declining abundance of natural resources (through own research or from the literature). “No evidence of shifting baseline” occured when there were intergenerational differences in knowledge but there was no information in the paper about the environment or abundance of natural resources. “No changes” was when there were no intergenerational differences, usually when knowledge was widely shared, independent of perceived changes in the environment. Some studies were not clear about evidence of declining of resources or changes in the environment and were considered “ambiguous”. After analyzing the studies for evidence of the shifting baseline syndrome, we also searched within these studies for the use of the expressions “cultural erosion”, “loss of knowledge”, or “acculturation”. These concepts are often used to explain differences in knowledge and perceptions occurring in different age classes. We believe that these concepts should be treated with a lot of caution, since one cannot conclude straightforward that there is a process of cultural erosion, acculturation, or loss of knowledge when simply making comparisons between observed knowledge in different age groups. First of all, learning and experiences require time. Therefore, an alternative explanation is that older people tend to accumulate knowledge over time compared to younger people. Second, older people have different perceptions than younger people because their reference points are different.

Results

The 84 selected studies (Table  1) comprised ethnobotanical research from different parts of the world, predominantly Brazil (17 studies) and Ethiopia (13 studies), followed by Argentina, Burkina Faso, and Mexico (5 studies each), India and Peru (3 studies each), and lastly Benin, Italy, Kenya, Micronesia, Phillipines, Spain, Thailand, Turkey and Uganda (2 studies each). Fifteen studies were conducted in other countries. Some of these studies included more than one paper published from the same original dataset (e.g. [19-22]), and in this case we analyzed their results as a group to avoid pseudo-replication.
Table 1

Studies analyzed, studied region, and type of resource

ReferenceStudied regionResource
Albino-García et al. [23]
Puebla, Mexico
weeds
Albuquerque et al. [24]
Northeastern Brazil
medicinal plants
Almeida et al. [25]
Northeastern Brazil
medicinal plants
Almeida et al. [26]
Northeastern Brazil
medicinal plants
Awas et al. [27]
Blue Nile, Ethiopia
useful plants
Ayantunde et al. [28]
Southwestern Niger
herbaceous and woody plants
Badshah and Hussain [29]
Pakistan
medicinal plants
Balslev et al. [30]
Peruvian Amazon
uses of one species
Bognounou et al. [31]
Burkina Faso
uses of five species
Brosi et al. [32]
Pohnpei, Micronesia
plants used for canoe building
Caniago and Siebert [33]
West Kalimantan, Indonesia
medicinal plants
Carbajal-Esquivel [34]
San Luis Potosí, Mexico
food plants
Case et al. [35]
Papua New Guinea
useful plants, with medicinal emphasis
Cilia-Lopez et al. [36]
San Luis Potosí, Guanajuato, Querétaro, Mexico
uses of one species
Cruz-García [37]
Western Ghats, India
wild food plants
De Beer and Van Wyk [38]
Northern Cape Province, Southern Africa
useful plants
De Caluwé et al. [39]
Northern Benin
uses of one species
Della et al. [40]
Cyprus
wild food plants
Eilu et al. [41]
Tororo, Uganda
indigenous plants
Esser et al. [42]
Ethiopia
uses of one species
Estomba et al. [43]
Patagonia, Argentina
medicinal plants
Estrada-Castillón et al. [44]
Sierra Madre Oriental, Mexico
medicinal plants
Figueiredo et al. [45]
Sepetiba Bay, Brazil
medicinal plants
Flatie et al. [46]
Assosa Zone, Ethiopia
medicinal plants
Franco and Barros [47]
North/Northeastern Brazil
medicinal plants
Ghorbani et al. [48]
Yunnan, China
wild food plant
Giday et al.[49]
Southwest Ethiopia
medicinal plants
Giday et al.[50]
Meinit-Goldya, Ethiopia
medicinal plants
Giday et al.[51]
Southwest Ethiopia
medicinal plants
González et al.[19-22]
Spain
medicinal, cosmetic, repellent and edible plants
Hanazaki et al.[52]
Southeast Brazil
useful plants
Houessou et al.[53]
Benin
uses of one species
Idolo et al.[54]
Italian Apennines
useful plants
Karunamoorthi and Husen [55]
Oromia, Ethiopia
repellent plants
Karunamoorthi et al. [56]
Ethiopia
repellent plants
Karunamoorthi et al. [57]
Kofe Kebele, Ethiopia
repellent plants
Kristensen and Balslev [58]
Nazinga Game Ranch, Burkina Faso
woody plants
Kristensen and Lykke [59]
Burkina Faso
woody plants
Lacuna-Richman [60]
Leyte Island, Philippines
non-timber forest resources
Ladio [61]
Patagonia, Argentina
wild edible plants
Ladio and Lozada [62]
Patagonia, Argentina
wild edible plants
Lee et al. [63]
Micronesia
food plants, plants for fish poison and canoes
Lima et al. [64]
Central Brazil
native trees
Lins Neto et al. [65]
Northeast of Brazil
uses of one species
Luziatelli et al. [66]
Junín, Peru
medicinal plants
Lykke et al. [67]
Burkina Faso
woody plants
Lyon and Hardesty [68]
Madagascar
medicinal plants
Martínez and Lujan [69]
Central Argentina
veterinary plants
Matavele and Habib [70]
Mozambique
medicinal plants
Mathez-Stiefel et al. [71]
Bolivia and Peru
medicinal plants
Mcmillen [72]
Tanga, Tanzania
medicinal plants
Merétika et al. [73]
Southern Brazil
medicinal plants
Miranda et al. [74]
Southeast Brazil
useful plants
Monteiro et al. [75]
Northeastern Brazil
uses of two species
Olowa et al. [76]
Phillipines
medicinal plants
Panghal et al. [77]
India
medicinal plants
Phillips and Gentry [78]
Madre de Dios, Peru
useful plants
Polo et al. [79]
Spain
uses of one species
Quave et al. [80]
Southern Italy
medicinal plants for dermatological problems
Quinlan and Quinlan [81]
Dominica
medicinal plants
Ramos et al. [82]
Northeastern Brazil
fuelwood
Rana et al. [83]
India
wild edible plants
Sarper et al. [84]
Turkey
wild plants
Schunko et al. [85]
Austria
wild plants
Seid and Tsegay [86]
South Wollo, Ethiopia
medicinal plants
Silva and Proença [87]
Central Brazil
medicinal plants
Silva et al. [88]
Northeastern Brazil
medicinal plants
Silva et al. [89]
Northern Brazil
fruits and plants
Simsek et al. [90]
Turkey
wild plants
Smith-Oka [91]
Veracruz, Mexico
medicinal plants
Sop et al. [92]
Burkina Faso
woody plants
Srithi et al. [93]
Thailand
medicinal plants
Srithi et al. [94]
Northern Thailand
medicinal plants
Stave et al. [95]
Turkana, Kenya
woody plants
Tabuti et al. [96]
Uganda
medicinal plants
Tanaka et al. [97]
United States
medicinal plants
Teklehaymanot [98]
Dek Island, Ethiopia
medicinal plants
Terer et al. [99]
Kenya
uses of one species
Toledo et al. [100]
Central Argentina
medicinal plants
Uprety et al. [101]
Nepal
wild edible plants
Voeks and Leony [102]
Northeastern Brazil
medicinal plants
Yineger and Yewhalaw [103]
Ethiopia
medicinal plants
Yineger et al. [104]
Jimma Zone, Ethiopia
medicinal plants
Zuchiwschi et al. [105]Southern Brazilwoody plants
Studies analyzed, studied region, and type of resource The keywords used in the search resulted in a compilation of studies with different goals. Nonetheless, all studies analyzed ethnobotanical knowledge according to the age of informants. Articles were grouped by their similarity of plant uses (e.g. medicinal plants, food plants, Table  1). The studies also differed in level of detail when defining the resource type analyzed. Forty four percent of studies focused on medicinal plants (Figure  1), which included detailed uses such as “medicinal plants for dermatological problems” [80] and studies that concerned the generic grouping of medicinal plants (e.g. [66]). The category “general uses” included studies investigating a set of useful plants (e.g. [38]), herbaceous and woody plants for general uses (e.g. [28]), and indigenous plants (e.g. [41]). Some studies investigated the uses of one (e.g. [79]) or a few species (e.g. [31]) and were included since the choice to investigate their ethnobotany is already biased by the local importance of those species. Studies of food plants included studies of edible wild plants (e.g. [83]) and food plants in general, including fruits (e.g. [89]).
Figure 1

Types of plant resources investigated in 84 studies on ethnobotany and age comparisons (“other” includes plants with veterinary purposes and plants used to build canoes). Values in percentage.

Types of plant resources investigated in 84 studies on ethnobotany and age comparisons (“other” includes plants with veterinary purposes and plants used to build canoes). Values in percentage. Sampling methods and data collection varied according to the objectives of each study. Data collection through interviews included both intentional sampling, and systematic sampling, the latter being a sampling procedure with a higher degree of randomness. Other data collection tools included focus group discussions and participative workshops. Sample sizes were highly variable (Figure  2), ranging from 13 subjects [104] to more than 90,000 subjects [97]. There was also diversity among ecosystems and human groups studied, as well as types of data analyzed. For example, although most studies focused on the knowledge about plant resources, there were studies dealing with knowledge associated with the broad use of a given resource, such as in Brosi et al. [32] who studied knowledge of canoe building as a whole.
Figure 2

Number of subjects or interviews (sample units) from the 84 studies on ethnobotany and age comparisons.

Number of subjects or interviews (sample units) from the 84 studies on ethnobotany and age comparisons. It is important to consider that the comparison between age classes is relative, not absolute. Therefore, age classes vary among the studies. In some studies they were set at intervals of approximately 5 years [24,57] or 10 years [35,88]. Other studies separated the informants into two age groups, usually 40 years of age being the boundary between the groups [45,49-52,65,70,89], although this boundary varied depending on the location studied. For example, Flatie et al. [46] split informants into two age groups: those with more than 15 years of age and those younger than 15 years. In other studies comparisons were done without creating specific age classes [31,59,76,82,83,95,100,104]. Lastly, some studies did not clearly define how the separation between age groups was done [30,37,40,41,47,93]. Over half of the 84 studies discussed a concern towards cultural erosion or knowledge loss (57%), using these arguments to explain the results found. These arguments were absent in 43% of the studies. Sometimes these expressions were used with a more detailed discussion of occurring changes, such as Quinlan and Quinlan [81] who considered the subtle and complex effects of modernization on traditional medicine. Other authors mentioned cultural erosion or loss of knowledge, but considered that these phenomena would not occur in their case because ethnobotanical knowledge was widely shared (e.g. [59,95]). We also need to keep in mind that the dominant epistemological paradigms to explain observed phenomena can change over time, and the concept of “cultural erosion” could become replaced by more recent ideas linked to adaptability and environmental change. More than half of the 84 articles (54%) showed some evidence of the shifting baseline syndrome, through the existence of intergenerational differences in knowledge and information about the declining of biological resources reported by local community members or by the researchers. Usually the researchers made that observation anecdotally, either from reports by participants, or from their own observation of the local situation (Figure  3). Some of these evidences were subtle, such as in Eastern Uganda where “some indigenous plants were reported to have disappeared or become scarce” [41]. Similarly, in southern Madagascar, traditional medicine might not be threatened by the loss of primary forest, because people can turn to exotic plants from disturbed locations [68]. About 37% of the studies did not provide any evidence of shifting baselines, generally by not taking into account any reported or literature information about the environment or the abundance status of plant resources, but also because they did not show any intergenerational differences about the decline of resources reported or any knowledge changes. In 7% of the studies there were no intergenerational differences and knowledge was widely shared, and this could be independent of perceived changes in the environment. Interestingly, these studies were predominantly those that investigated the use of one or a few species [30,39,42], which tended to be selected for research precisely because they were culturally important species. In a small percentage of articles, the evidence appeared to be ambiguous. For example, in a preserved region studied by Idolo et al. [54], none of the species with reported past uses had gone extinct in the area, but less than a quarter of uses previously recorded were still present in people’s life, showing that the resources are likely to be available, but few of them currently in use. Thus, we could not clearly infer if there was evidence of shifting baseline in this case.
Figure 3

Possible evidence of shifting baselines syndrome from 84 studies on ethnobotany and age comparisons. Evidence supporting shifting baselines occur when there are age differences in combination with environmental changes reported by informants or the authors (see Methods for further details).

Possible evidence of shifting baselines syndrome from 84 studies on ethnobotany and age comparisons. Evidence supporting shifting baselines occur when there are age differences in combination with environmental changes reported by informants or the authors (see Methods for further details).

Discussion and conclusions

This article illustrates the complexity of perspectives on plant knowledge at different ages. Declining knowledge due to disruptions in the social transmission of knowledge between generations has been widely reported in ethnobotanical studies (eg. [29,40,51,80], in several cases to a worrisome degree. The results highlighted in this paper show that, in addition, it is necessary to pay concurrent attention to the status of environmental changes that may reflect declining plant resources. Such ecological changes that contribute to the loss or declining availability of plants obviously can also lead to the loss of valuable information within traditional knowledge systems [27], and this is mediated by changes in people’s perceptions about these resources. Knowledge variation over generations has been explained in different ways. Some authors associate intergenerational variations, in ethnobotanical repertoires, with loss of knowledge [35,52], acculturation [106], or modernization [81]. For resources such as medicinal plants, it is argued that there exists a trend in which this knowledge is acquired over the life of each individual, and accumulated in older age groups as compared to younger people [76,78]. Therefore, considering that more than one third of all studies analyzed in this paper focused on medicinal plants, age was identified as a major factor influencing ethnobotanical knowledge [45,68,86,93,104]. A counterpoint is provided by Luziatelli et al. [66], who considered that although there is a general trend towards acquiring medicinal plant knowledge throughout age, much of the variation between informants can be explained by personal interests and also by their relationship with a local healer, demonstrating the individual influence in knowledge transmission and maintenance. In another study, young healers who had many practicing family members had a similar amount of plant knowledge as older, more experienced healers with a smaller social entourage [107]. The authors concluded that the social component of medicinal plant knowledge may explain these results. Strong family ties enable young healers to assimilate knowledge about medicinal plants rapidly from experienced relatives, while older healers with few practicing family members but many years of experience with medicinal plants also had high knowledge scores. Another explanation for higher medicinal plant knowledge among older people is the lack of interest from youth regarding these resources and associated practices [26,47,50,73,88,104], as well as the type of health services predominating among younger people and their accessibility [45,70,73,81], and changes in lifestyle and the environment in terms of availability of plant resources [86]. The argument here is that decreasing knowledge and declining plant resources can be phenomena that are occurring together. It is not the goal here to find out which came first, but to acknowledge their combined effects and to recognize possible long term consequences in shifting environmental baselines regarding plant resources. Additionally, deforestation and lack of access to traditional resources (such as harvesting prohibitions due to environmental regulations) can both affect traditional knowledge of medicinal plants, making “erosion of knowledge” a complex process [24,90], which can be reinterpreted according to new theoretical perspectives and insights in scientific discourse that emerge over time. Conclusions about cultural erosion need to take into account local community voices. Community members compare the current environment and species composition with preterit situations experienced, and thus can be better actors than scientists to draw conclusions about cultural erosion. It is a limitation to use the number of species cited by each informant as the main (or only) variable to evaluate people’s knowledge because knowledge may be transformed [81,108], although it allows general comparisons. Perhaps it is not enough to analyze the dynamics of knowledge as a whole and to conclude that knowledge is being lost. We also need to consider the limitations of using plant names as a proxy for plant knowledge, since plant knowledge as a whole goes beyond the naming of plants. Also, plant names are not perfect correlated to the number of plant species, owing to under-differentiation (one local plant name refers to different botanical species) or over-differentiation (one botanical species is known by different local names). It may be necessary to associate the number of plants recognized to the type of use, because while there is a decrease of knowledge for a category of plant (eg. medicinal plants), the knowledge can remain stable or increase compared to other categories of use [6]. Also, new plants may be added to ethnobotanical repertoires. Furthermore, to understand the dynamics of knowledge and complexity of the process of “loss” (or rather, transformation), researchers must analyze the changes that occurred in the context where this knowledge exists over time, as well as its causes. Gómez-Baggethun and Reyes-García [6] consider that few researchers are trying to understand how the causes of loss of knowledge affect the mechanisms that allow the societies to generate, regenerate, transmit and apply this knowledge. In studies focused on food plants, there seems to be less evidence of knowledge misfits between different age groups, namely, the shifting baseline syndrome may not be occurring. This may happen because the contact and experience with those types of plant resources tend to be more evenly distributed within the population, even when one assumes knowledge to be patterned according to variables such as gender, social status, occupation and age itself. People usually have extensive contact with and depend on food plants since their childhood, and people usually experiment with them more often than with medicinal plants [78]. In addition, there is the secrecy aspect of medicinal plants in some human groups who recognize key individuals such as healers or herbalists (e.g. [107,109]). In the case of studies about only one or a few species, these species tend to be widely used or have a widespread importance among the communities studied; therefore these studies do not provide evidence of changes in baseline. Our main point of contention is that the general perception of knowledge loss among young people when comparing ethnobotanical repertoires among different age groups should be analyzed with caution. Almeida et al. [25] argued that this information was often used to infer incorrectly the relationship between acculturation and lack of knowledge. More attention should be given to the complexity of these changes. A comparison of knowledge about medicinal plants among Dominicans in rural and urban areas of the Dominican Republic and those who have moved to New York City showed that knowledge of food medicines was not affected by age, whereas younger people had less knowledge of nonfood medicines [108]. This indicated that ethnobotanical knowledge is still alive even in globalized contexts, challenging the paradigm of loss of knowledge about plants [108]. Sometimes medicinal plant knowledge does not depend only on the level of plant diversity, degree of modernization or absence of Western health care infrastructure; other social factors such as the healing tradition of the extensive family, can be also fundamental to the survival of medicinal plant knowledge [107]. Thus, a careful understanding of these complex transformation processes is needed [71]. This also includes an analysis of how the environment has changed over time and how these changes have affected plant resources as well as perceptions about these plant resources. Baseline changes can be related to different issues that are sometimes linked. First, changes in the landscape or in the abundance of plant resources may be associated with changes in ethnobotanical repertoires held by people of different age groups. According to Sáenz-Arroyo et al. [8], there are some species of fish that may have been abundant in certain areas in the past, but currently exist only in historical documents and in the memory of some fishermen and researchers. The same type of phenomena can be observed in ethnobotanical research, in situations where some indigenous plants were reported to have disappeared or become scarce, due to natural causes (such as drought) and/or anthropogenic causes (such as uncontrolled harvesting, clearing for cultivation, firewood extraction, among others) [41]. These losses can be reflected in the ethnobotanical repertoires of local people. Even though our analysis was focused on age differences, we do not discard the role of other variables in this scenario, including changes in gender composition over time, or changes in other important variables such as education or main economic activites. Second, the relationship between the availability of resources and the current practices of using plants rely on a complexity of factors. Changes in plant species composition over time may result from socio-cultural and economic changes affecting a given human group. Such changes can cause changes in the reference (baseline) of different generations and consequently resulting in a framework of different intergenerational knowledge. According to Baum and Meyers [110], information and knowledge of native species’ diversity and abundance from the recent past is not being transmitted to younger generations. This may be due to shifting patterns of communication between age groups (generations) or because particular resources may no longer be available or of interest. Some resources can come into disuse due to industrialization or technological facilities (such as firewood displaced by gas stoves or medicinal plants displaced by modern medicine). In another study, Rana et al. [83] considered several causes for knowledge loss, such as the association of wild food plants with low income. On the other hand, when comparing knowledge of mothers and children, Cruz-García [37] argued that all mothers used to consume more wild food plants before, and reported decreases in collection of these resources due to the decreasing availability of plants rather than to increasing social stigma. Culture and knowledge are dynamic components in people’s lives, as well as the environment in which they live. According to Brosi et al. [32] people often change their techniques when easier methods become available, as part of a gradual cultural evolution. When investigating people’s knowledge about the environment and resources, as well as the dynamics of their knowledge and practices, both changes in the environment and in local livelihoods over time should be considered. Reports based on memories about the past situation of plant resources can be biased by the gradual acceptance of a new baseline [15]. Thus, complementary methodologies in studying human perception and knowledge are needed to reduce biases and assumptions that may arise from local ecological knowledge [17]. Despite the need to collect data that indicate changes in knowledge over time, as well as its causes, we have to assume that there exists a limitation of the human perception about changes in vegetation, because the knowledge about the environment’s past may not show an original condition. In other words, some changes that occurred over time may not be recorded or remembered by individuals and not be known by science [16]. Without historical knowledge about the environment or about a given species, the baseline will continue to change and the risk is gradual acceptance of increasingly lost of rare species [7,8,110]. It is essential to use an interdisciplinary approach, based on a wide variety of data to estimate historical changes and to understand the current changes in a social and historical context [11], since complementary data may support and provide reliability to informant’s reports. In the case of fish stocks and tree resources, older popular literature can be accessed, as well as naturalistic observations, photographs, ancient accounts [8], logbooks [17], monitoring of fish landings [7,17], maps, and other historical data [14]. In the case of plant resources, historical data, old photos, aerial photos, satellite images, and other records of different times may detect changes in vegetation and support data on people’s perceptions of a particular site or resource. Methodologically, the most interesting would be the integration of different methods of collecting and analyzing data, in order to better understand the changes occurring over time and the origin of these changes. According to Godoy et al.[111] and Quinlan and Quinlan [81], we still have to face the problems derived from a lack of a reliable baselines to estimate changes in traditional knowledge, which can be partially solved through longitudinal studies replicating the same study in a given place after a time span [81]. Furthermore, comparative ethnobotanical studies spanning multiple generations become increasingly possible due to methodological standardization, which has occurred in the past two decades. Once the extent of the environmental changes and their causes are known, it becomes possible to better understand the changes in knowledge of different generations. Thus, more elements may be added to the simplistic argument of “acculturation” or “loss of knowledge”. Ethnobotany and other areas such as historical ecology can contribute to understanding the changes in reference points through critical analysis of intracultural variations in the perception of local stakeholders, involving both plant species and resources, as well as the landscapes that include them.

Competing interests

The authors declare that they have no competing interests.

Authors’ contributions

NH, DFH and MSM, conceptual idea, literature review, data analysis, discussion and writing; IV, literature review, discussion and writing. All authors read and approved the final manuscript.
  45 in total

1.  Ethnobotanical study of medicinal plants traditionally used in the Arribes del Duero, western Spain.

Authors:  José A González; Mónica García-Barriuso; Francisco Amich
Journal:  J Ethnopharmacol       Date:  2010-07-17       Impact factor: 4.360

2.  The use of plants in the medical system of the Fulni-ô people (NE Brazil): a perspective on age and gender.

Authors:  Ulysses Paulino de Albuquerque; Gustavo Taboada Soldati; Shana Sampaio Sieber; Marcelo Alves Ramos; Jemerson Caetano de Sá; Liliane Cunha de Souza
Journal:  J Ethnopharmacol       Date:  2010-11-18       Impact factor: 4.360

3.  Medicinal plant knowledge and its erosion among the Mien (Yao) in northern Thailand.

Authors:  Kamonnate Srithi; Henrik Balslev; Prasit Wangpakapattanawong; Prachaya Srisanga; Chusie Trisonthi
Journal:  J Ethnopharmacol       Date:  2009-03-04       Impact factor: 4.360

4.  Ethnomedicinal study of plants used by Sheko ethnic group of Ethiopia.

Authors:  Mirutse Giday; Zemede Asfaw; Zerihun Woldu
Journal:  J Ethnopharmacol       Date:  2010-07-30       Impact factor: 4.360

5.  Integrating local ecological knowledge and management practices of an isolated semi-arid papyrus swamp (Loboi, Kenya) into a wider conservation framework.

Authors:  Taita Terer; A Muthama Muasya; Farid Dahdouh-Guebas; George G Ndiritu; Ludwig Triest
Journal:  J Environ Manage       Date:  2011-09-18       Impact factor: 6.789

6.  Medicinal plants used in Hmong women's healthcare in northern Thailand.

Authors:  Kamonnate Srithi; Chusie Trisonthi; Prasit Wangpakapattanawong; Henrik Balslev
Journal:  J Ethnopharmacol       Date:  2011-10-28       Impact factor: 4.360

7.  Asháninka medicinal plants: a case study from the native community of Bajo Quimiriki, Junín, Peru.

Authors:  Gaia Luziatelli; Marten Sørensen; Ida Theilade; Per Mølgaard
Journal:  J Ethnobiol Ethnomed       Date:  2010-08-13       Impact factor: 2.733

8.  Intracultural variation of knowledge about wild plant uses in the Biosphere Reserve Grosses Walsertal (Austria).

Authors:  Christoph Schunko; Susanne Grasser; Christian R Vogl
Journal:  J Ethnobiol Ethnomed       Date:  2012-07-06       Impact factor: 2.733

9.  An ethnobotanical survey of wild edible plants of Paphos and Larnaca countryside of Cyprus.

Authors:  Athena Della; Demetra Paraskeva-Hadjichambi; Andreas Ch Hadjichambis
Journal:  J Ethnobiol Ethnomed       Date:  2006-09-04       Impact factor: 2.733

10.  Reinterpreting change in traditional ecological knowledge.

Authors:  Erik Gómez-Baggethun; Victoria Reyes-García
Journal:  Hum Ecol Interdiscip J       Date:  2013-08
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  13 in total

1.  Integrated approach to the understanding of the degradation of an urban river: local perceptions, environmental parameters and geoprocessing.

Authors:  Carolina A Collier; Miguel S de Almeida Neto; Gabriela M A Aretakis; Rangel E Santos; Tiago H de Oliveira; José S Mourão; William Severi; Ana C A El-Deir
Journal:  J Ethnobiol Ethnomed       Date:  2015-09-15       Impact factor: 2.733

2.  Gendered medicinal plant knowledge contributions to adaptive capacity and health sovereignty in Amazonia.

Authors:  Isabel Díaz-Reviriego; Álvaro Fernández-Llamazares; Matthieu Salpeteur; Patricia L Howard; Victoria Reyes-García
Journal:  Ambio       Date:  2016-12       Impact factor: 5.129

3.  Traditional knowledge on herbal drinks among indigenous communities in Azad Jammu and Kashmir, Pakistan.

Authors:  Neelam Rashid; Rodrigue Castro Gbedomon; Mushtaq Ahmad; Valère Kolawolé Salako; Muhammad Zafar; Khafsa Malik
Journal:  J Ethnobiol Ethnomed       Date:  2018-02-21       Impact factor: 2.733

Review 4.  Global trends of local ecological knowledge and future implications.

Authors:  Shankar Aswani; Anne Lemahieu; Warwick H H Sauer
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2018-04-05       Impact factor: 3.240

5.  Ethnobotany in a coastal environmental protected area: shifts in plant use in two communities in southern Brazil.

Authors:  Rafaela H Ludwinsky; Natalia Hanazaki
Journal:  J Ethnobiol Ethnomed       Date:  2018-11-03       Impact factor: 2.733

6.  What interferes with conducting free lists? A comparative ethnobotanical experiment.

Authors:  Melise Pessôa Araujo Meireles; Ulysses Paulino de Albuquerque; Patrícia Muniz de Medeiros
Journal:  J Ethnobiol Ethnomed       Date:  2021-01-23       Impact factor: 2.733

7.  Growing up in the Betsileo landscape: Children's wild edible plants knowledge in Madagascar.

Authors:  Vincent Porcher; Stéphanie M Carrière; Sandrine Gallois; Herizo Randriambanona; Verohanitra M Rafidison; Victoria Reyes-García
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2022-02-17       Impact factor: 3.240

8.  Rapid ecosystem change challenges the adaptive capacity of Local Environmental Knowledge.

Authors:  Álvaro Fernández-Llamazares; Isabel Díaz-Reviriego; Ana C Luz; Mar Cabeza; Aili Pyhälä; Victoria Reyes-García
Journal:  Glob Environ Change       Date:  2015-03-01       Impact factor: 9.523

9.  Who should conduct ethnobotanical studies? Effects of different interviewers in the case of the Chácobo Ethnobotany project, Beni, Bolivia.

Authors:  Narel Y Paniagua-Zambrana; Rainer W Bussmann; Robbie E Hart; Araceli L Moya-Huanca; Gere Ortiz-Soria; Milton Ortiz-Vaca; David Ortiz-Álvarez; Jorge Soria-Morán; María Soria-Morán; Saúl Chávez; Bertha Chávez-Moreno; Gualberto Chávez-Moreno; Oscar Roca; Erlin Siripi
Journal:  J Ethnobiol Ethnomed       Date:  2018-01-26       Impact factor: 2.733

10.  Renegotiating situativity: transformations of local herbal knowledge in a Western Alpine valley during the past 40 years.

Authors:  Michele F Fontefrancesco; Andrea Pieroni
Journal:  J Ethnobiol Ethnomed       Date:  2020-10-01       Impact factor: 2.733

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