Changes in the users of the social‐ecological system around a reciprocal human‐dolphin relationship

Mauricio Cantor, Bruna Santos‐Silva, F. Daura-Jorge, Alexandre M. S. Machado, Débora Peterson, Daiane X. da‐Rosa, P. C. Simões‐Lopes, João V. S. Valle‐Pereira, Sofia Zank, N. Hanazaki
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Abstract

In contrast to many contemporary negative human‐nature relationships, Indigenous Peoples and Local Communities have stewarded nature through cultural practices that include reciprocal contributions for both humans and nature. A rare example is the century‐old artisanal fishery in which net‐casting fishers and wild dolphins benefit by working together, but little is known about the persistence of the social‐ecological system formed around this cultural practice. Here, we frame the human‐dolphin cooperative fishery in southern Brazil as a social‐ecological system based on secondary data from the scientific and grey literature. To investigate the dynamics of this system, we survey the local and traditional ecological knowledge and examine potential changes in its main component—the artisanal fishers—over time and space. Over 16 years, we conducted four interview campaigns with 188 fishers in fishing sites that are more open (accessible) or closed (restricted) to external influence. We investigated their experience, engagement and economic dependence on dolphin‐assisted fishing, as well as the learning processes and transmission of the traditional knowledge required to cooperate with dolphins. Our qualitative data suggest that fishers using accessible and restricted fishing sites have equivalent fishing experience, but those in more restrictive sites tend to be more economically dependent on dolphins, relying on them for fishing year‐round. The traditional knowledge on how to cooperate with dolphins is mostly acquired via social learning, with a tendency for vertical learning to be frequent among fishers using sites more restrictive for outsiders. Experience, economic dependence and reliance on vertical learning seem to decrease recently, especially in the accessible site. Our quantitative analyses, however, suggest that some of these fluctuations were not significant. Our study outlines the key components of this social‐ecological system and identifies changes in the attributes of a main component, the users. These changes, when coupled with changes in other components such as governance and resource units (fish and dolphins), can have implications for the persistence of this cultural practice and the livelihoods of Local Communities. We suggest that continuous monitoring of this system can help to safeguard the reciprocal contributions of this human‐nature relationship in years to come. Read the free Plain Language Summary for this article on the Journal blog.
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围绕人豚互惠关系的社会生态系统用户的变化
与当代许多消极的人与自然关系不同,土著人民和当地社区通过文化习俗管理自然,其中包括对人类和自然的互惠贡献。一个罕见的例子是拥有百年历史的手工渔业,在这种渔业中,撒网捕鱼者和野生海豚通过合作而获益,但人们对围绕这种文化习俗而形成的社会生态系统的持续性知之甚少。为了研究该系统的动态变化,我们调查了当地传统生态知识,并研究了其主要组成部分--个体渔民--在时间和空间上的潜在变化。在 16 年中,我们在对外部影响较为开放(可进入)或封闭(受限)的捕鱼地点对 188 名渔民进行了四次访谈。我们调查了他们的经验、对海豚辅助捕鱼的参与度和经济依赖性,以及与海豚合作所需的传统知识的学习过程和传承情况。我们的定性数据表明,在可进入渔场和限制性渔场捕鱼的渔民拥有同等的捕鱼经验,但在限制性渔场捕鱼的渔民往往在经济上更加依赖海豚,全年都依靠海豚捕鱼。关于如何与海豚合作的传统知识主要是通过社会学习获得的,在对外来者限制较多的渔场,渔民经常进行纵向学习。经验、经济依赖和对纵向学习的依赖最近似乎有所减少,尤其是在可进入的地点。然而,我们的定量分析表明,其中一些波动并不显著。我们的研究概述了这一社会生态系统的主要组成部分,并确定了主要组成部分--使用者--属性的变化。这些变化与其他组成部分(如管理和资源单位(鱼类和海豚))的变化结合在一起,会对这种文化习俗的持续性和当地社区的生计产生影响。我们建议对这一系统进行持续监测,这将有助于在未来保护这种人与自然关系的互惠贡献。
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