| Literature DB >> 28233252 |
Arun Kanagavel1, Sethu Parvathy2, Nithula Nirmal2, Nithin Divakar2, Rajeev Raghavan3.
Abstract
In the Western Ghats of India, amphibians are culled at cardamom plantations since they are perceived to consume cardamom. To better understand the relationship between amphibians and cardamom, a study was undertaken at these plantations, which harbor numerous threatened and range-restricted amphibians. We undertook questionnaire surveys with 298 respondents at 148 plantations across southern India. Time-activity budget and diet analysis surveys were undertaken to determine whether amphibians really consumed cardamom. The conception that amphibians eat cardamom was found to be widespread especially among small-sized plantations, leading to negative perceptions and a lack of interest in amphibian conservation. The plantation community perceives a substantial economic loss due to amphibians, even though this is non-existent as revealed by our field surveys. These perceptions would lead to a continued intolerance of amphibian presence in plantations. A suitable outreach initiative re-affirming facts and spreading awareness on the positive role of amphibians would need to be conducted to negate this age-old myth.Entities:
Keywords: Agroforestry; Cardamom plantations; Diet analysis; Frogs; Local perception; Pesticide use
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28233252 PMCID: PMC5595740 DOI: 10.1007/s13280-017-0908-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ambio ISSN: 0044-7447 Impact factor: 5.129