保护野生食用植物免受木材使用的影响:支持巴西东北部保护假说的证据。

IF 2.9 2区 医学 Q1 BIODIVERSITY CONSERVATION Journal of Ethnobiology and Ethnomedicine Pub Date : 2024-08-28 DOI:10.1186/s13002-024-00719-3
Roberta de Almeida Caetano, Emilly Luize Guedes da Silva, Luis Fernando Colin-Nolasco, Rafael Ricardo Vasconcelos da Silva, Adriana Rosa Carvalho, Patrícia Muniz de Medeiros
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:我们对木本植物不同用途之间的相互作用仍未进行充分的研究,这使我们无法了解植物的某一用途价值如何使其免受其他更有害用途的影响。本研究通过确定食物用途是否能保护木本植物(乔木和灌木)免受木材用途的影响,对保护假说进行了研究。我们从两种不同的可能性来探讨这一假说:(1) 保护作用与物种用于食用目的的强度成正比;(2) 保护作用只针对用于食用目的的关键物种:研究在巴西东北部 "Restinga "植被中的一个农村社区进行。为了确定重要的食用和收入来源物种(关键物种)及其自然分布的采集区域,我们举办了参与式研讨会。然后,我们在这些地区进行了植物学调查,以确定与关键物种共存的木本物种。我们利用凭证标本制作了一个野外植物标本室,在核对表访谈过程中,标本和照片可作为视觉刺激。受访者使用五点李克特量表从木材质量、可用性、食物和木材用途等方面对物种进行评价。为了验证我们的假设,我们使用了累积链接混合模型(CLMMs),将木材用途作为响应变量,食物用途、可得性感知和质量感知作为解释变量,受访者作为随机效应。我们使用了相同的模型,将关键树种的食物使用情况替换为关键树种的食物使用情况(这是一个二进制变量,当信息涉及到有实际食物使用情况的关键树种时,其值为 1;当信息不涉及到关键树种或涉及到不用于食物目的的关键树种时,其值为 0):结果:与我们的假设一致,我们发现食物使用对木材使用具有保护作用。然而,这种效应与物种的食用性并不成正比,而是仅限于在国内具有相当重要食用意义的植物。可获得性和质量是木材使用的显著预测因素:我们主张采取生物文化保护战略,提高植物的食用价值,同时对使用压力较大的非食用木质物种采取措施。
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Conservation of wild food plants from wood uses: evidence supporting the protection hypothesis in Northeastern Brazil.

Background: The interplay between different uses of woody plants remains underexplored, obscuring our understanding of how a plant's value for one purpose might shield it from other, more harmful uses. This study examines the protection hypothesis by determining if food uses can protect woody plants (trees and shrubs) from wood uses. We approached the hypothesis from two distinct possibilities: (1) the protective effect is proportional to the intensity of a species' use for food purposes, and (2) the protective effect only targets key species for food purposes.

Methods: The research was conducted in a rural community within "Restinga" vegetation in Northeast Brazil. To identify important food species for both consumption and income (key species) and the collection areas where they naturally occur, we conducted participatory workshops. We then carried out a floristic survey in these areas to identify woody species that coexist with the key species. Voucher specimens were used to create a field herbarium, which, along with photographs served as visual stimuli during the checklist interviews. The interviewees used a five-point Likert scale to evaluate the species in terms of perceived wood quality, perceived availability, and use for food and wood purposes. To test our hypothesis, we used Cumulative Link Mixed Models (CLMMs), with the wood use as the response variable, food use, perceived availability and perceived quality as the explanatory variables and the interviewee as a random effect. We performed the same model replacing food use for key species food use (a binary variable that had value 1 when the information concerned a key species with actual food use, and value 0 when the information did not concern a key species or concerned a key species that was not used for food purposes).

Results: Consistent with our hypothesis, we identified a protective effect of food use on wood use. However, this effect is not directly proportional to the species' food use, but is confined to plants with considerable domestic food importance. Perceived availability and quality emerged as notable predictors for wood uses.

Conclusion: We advocate for biocultural conservation strategies that enhance the food value of plants for their safeguarding, coupled with measures for non-edible woody species under higher use-pressure.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
7.30
自引率
16.70%
发文量
66
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: Journal of Ethnobiology and Ethnomedicine publishes original research focusing on cultural perceptions of nature and of human and animal health. Journal of Ethnobiology and Ethnomedicine invites research articles, reviews and commentaries concerning the investigations of the inextricable links between human societies and nature, food, and health. Specifically, the journal covers the following topics: ethnobotany, ethnomycology, ethnozoology, ethnoecology (including ethnopedology), ethnogastronomy, ethnomedicine, ethnoveterinary, as well as all related areas in environmental, nutritional, and medical anthropology. Research focusing on the implications that the inclusion of humanistic, cultural, and social dimensions have in understanding the biological word is also welcome, as well as its potential projections in public health-centred, nutritional, and environmental policies.
期刊最新文献
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