Resumo
Ethnopharmacological relevance: Without an understanding of the geography of traditional knowledge, implementing the Nagoya Protocol and national or regional strategies for benefit-sharing with local and indigenous communities will be difficult. We evaluate how much traditional knowledge about medicinal palm (Arecaceae) uses is unique and how much is shared across (i) four countries (Colombia, Ecuador, Peru, Bolivia), (ii) two cultural groups (Amerindian and non-Amerindian), (iii) 52 Amerindian tribes, (iv) six non-Amerindian groups, (v) 41 communities, and (vi) individuals in the 41 communities. Materials and methods: We first sampled traditional knowledge about palms from 255 references and then carried out 2201 field interviews using a standard protocol. Using the combined data set, we quantified the number of “singletons” that were unique to one of the analyzed scales. For the 41 communities, we evaluated how many uses were cited by o10% and by Z50% of informants. We performed a Kruskal–Wallis test to evaluate whether the number of unshared uses (cited by o10%) differed significantly in relation to the informants' gender and degree of expertise, and performed a two way ANOVA to test for differences in the number of unshared and shared uses accounted for by the five birth cohorts. Results: We found that most knowledge was not shared among countries, cultural groups, tribes, communities, or even individuals within them. Still, a minor knowledge component was widely shared, even across countries. General informants cited a significantly higher number of unshared uses than experts, whereas no significant differences were found in the number of unshared uses cited by men and women or by different age groups. Conclusion: Our region-wide analysis highlights the geospatial complexity in traditional knowledge patterns, underscoring the need for improved geographic insight into the ownership of traditional knowledge in areas where biocultural diversity is high. This high geographic complexity needs consideration when designing property right protocols, and calls for countrywide compilation efforts as much localized knowledge remains unrecorded.
Autor
CÁMARA-LERET, R. | PANIAGUA-ZAMBRANA, N. | SVENNING, J. | BALSLEV, H. | MACÍA, M. J.
Ano da publicação
2014
Palavras-Chave
Biocultural diversity | Convention of Biological Diversity | ethnobotany | Indigenous people | Nagoya Protocol | South America
Tipo de publicação
Idioma
Inglês
Produção dos Grupos de Pesquisa?
Não