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The Traditional Knowledge of Quilombola About Plants: Does urbanization matter?

机译:Quilombola关于植物的传统知识:城市化重要吗?

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Quilombolas, or Maroons, are traditional groups of people of African-Brazilian descent, who self-identify as such, with their own historical background, which includes black ancestors and an identity related to the historical resistance to oppression. Studying three Quilombola communities as a case study, we aim to investigate their current relationship with plant resources. These communities exist in different types of environments, both rural and urban (Fortunato has rural characteristics, Aldeia is enclosed in a growing urban area, and Santa Cruz has intermediate characteristics). After obtaining prior informed consent, we interviewed 184 inhabitants of these communities, using free-lists of plants that the participants know and use. We collected additional data during participatory workshops. We registered 322 plants that were known and used. Of these plants, 48% were cultivated, 25% extracted, and 27% bought in local markets. The main uses of the listed plants were for medicine (31%) and food (28%), but the most citations were for food plants, showing that, individually, the people listed more food plants than plants for other uses. Quilombolas, from the three communities studied, maintain similar ethnobotanical repertoires, relying on several introduced plants. However, we were still able to register less frequent knowledge about native plant resources. When separated by plant uses, the results showed that more plants were known in the most urbanized area, with no clear gradient toward the rural area. The understanding of this new context of ethnobotanical knowledge, in communities that face transformations due to urbanization, can be deepened in further studies, including investigations into the role of managed environments, such as home gardens, as well as investigations into the cultural and ecological significance of plants and deeper analyses of medicinal plants and medicinal practices within these communities.
机译:Quilombolas(或栗色)是非洲巴西裔的传统人群,他们具有自身的历史身份,具有自己的历史背景,其中包括黑人祖先和与历史上对压迫的抵抗有关的身份。通过研究三个Quilombola社区作为案例研究,我们旨在调查它们与植物资源的当前关系。这些社区存在于农村和城市的不同类型的环境中(Fortunato具有农村特征,Aldeia被封闭在不断增长的城市区域中,Santa Cruz具有中等特征)。在获得事先知情同意后,我们使用参与者知道和使用的植物的免费清单采访了这些社区的184名居民。我们在参与性研讨会期间收集了其他数据。我们注册了322种已知和使用过的植物。在这些植物中,有48%被种植,25%被提取,27%在当地市场购买。所列植物的主要用途是用于药用(31%)和食品(28%),但引用最多的是食用植物,这表明,与其他用途的植物相比,人们单独列出的食用植物更多。来自所研究的三个社区的Quilombolas依靠着几种引进的植物来维持相似的民族植物学资源。但是,我们仍然能够注册较少的有关本地植物资源的知识。当按植物用途分开时,结果表明,在城市化程度最高的地区已知更多的植物,而向农村地区的梯度则不明显。在由于城市化而面临转型的社区中,对植物学知识这一新背景的理解可以通过进一步的研究来加深,包括对诸如家庭花园之类的管理环境的作用进行调查,以及对文化和生态意义进行调查。植物以及这些社区内药用植物和药用方法的更深入分析。

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