| Literature DB >> 24416449 |
Rodrigo Cámara-Leret1, Narel Paniagua-Zambrana2, Henrik Balslev3, Manuel J Macía1.
Abstract
A main objective of ethnobotany is to document traditional knowledge about plants before it disappears. However, little is known about the coverage of past ethnobotanical studies and thus about how well the existing literature covers the overall traditional knowledge of different human groups. To bridge this gap, we investigated ethnobotanical data-collecting efforts across four countries (Colombia, Ecuador, Peru, Bolivia), three ecoregions (Amazon, Andes, Chocó), and several human groups (including Amerindians, mestizos, and Afro-Americans). We used palms (Arecaceae) as our model group because of their usefulness and pervasiveness in the ethnobotanical literature. We carried out a large number of field interviews (n = 2201) to determine the coverage and quality of palm ethnobotanical data in the existing ethnobotanical literature (n = 255) published over the past 60 years. In our fieldwork in 68 communities, we collected 87,886 use reports and documented 2262 different palm uses and 140 useful palm species. We demonstrate that traditional knowledge on palm uses is vastly under-documented across ecoregions, countries, and human groups. We suggest that the use of standardized data-collecting protocols in wide-ranging ethnobotanical fieldwork is a promising approach for filling critical information gaps. Our work contributes to the Aichi Biodiversity Targets and emphasizes the need for signatory nations to the Convention on Biological Diversity to respond to these information gaps. Given our findings, we hope to stimulate the formulation of clear plans to systematically document ethnobotanical knowledge in northwestern South America and elsewhere before it vanishes.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24416449 PMCID: PMC3887111 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0085794
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Figure 1Communities and ecoregions in northwestern South America where palm ethnobotanical data were gathered.
Ethnobotanical data collected by fieldwork in northwestern South America.
| Country | Ecoregion | No. Useful species | No. Palmuses | Average number ±SDof uses per species | No. Palm use reports | No. Informants | No. Communities | No. Amerindian groups interviewed(% total Amerindian groups) |
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| Total |
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| Amazon | 102 | 1664 | 16.3±16.2 | 62,749 | 1277 | 48 | 33 (33) | |
| Andes | 47 | 507 | 10.8±9.0 | 13,488 | 610 | 13 | 5 (71) | |
| Chocó | 49 | 550 | 11.2±9.1 | 11,649 | 314 | 7 | 3 (50) | |
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| Total |
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| Amazon | 67 | 990 | 14.8±12.7 | 16,070 | 205 | 9 | 17 (44) | |
| Andes | 21 | 121 | 5.8±6.5 | 1959 | 169 | 3 | 3 (60) | |
| Chocó | 44 | 411 | 9.3±7.3 | 7850 | 174 | 3 | 1 (25) | |
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| Total |
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|
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| Amazon | 47 | 331 | 7.0±5.5 | 8622 | 147 | 6 | 3 (38) | |
| Andes | 18 | 119 | 6.6±4.7 | 2233 | 173 | 2 | – | |
| Chocó | 26 | 237 | 9.1±7.1 | 3799 | 140 | 4 | 2 (50) | |
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| Total |
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| Amazon | 57 | 625 | 11.0±9.3 | 24,236 | 523 | 13 | 8 (17) | |
| Andes | 28 | 237 | 8.5±6.1 | 4093 | 90 | 2 | 1 (100) | |
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| Total |
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| Amazon | 36 | 372 | 10.3±8.4 | 13,821 | 402 | 20 | 7 (41) | |
| Andes | 16 | 167 | 10.4±8.3 | 5203 | 178 | 6 | 1 (50) |
Total number of Amerindian groups was obtained from Lewis et al. [51].
Figure 2Difference in ethnobotanical data-collecting efforts between fieldwork and literature for three indicators at multiple scales, including Geography (A–C), Human groups (D–F), Amerindian groups (G–I), and Use categories (J–L).
For each of the three indicators (useful palm species, palm uses, average number of uses per palm species), a bar under “Fieldwork” indicates that the fieldwork yielded more data whereas a bar under “Literature” indicates that the literature reported more data. Significance values are expressed by bar color: red, P<0.001; blue, P<0.01; yellow, P<0.05; and white: not significant.