首页> 外文期刊>Journal of Ethnobiology and Ethnomedicine >Expanding the reach: ethnobotanical knowledge and technological intensification in beekeeping among the Ogiek of the Mau Forest, Kenya
【24h】

Expanding the reach: ethnobotanical knowledge and technological intensification in beekeeping among the Ogiek of the Mau Forest, Kenya

机译:扩大范围:肯尼亚大林ogiek中养蜂业的乙型言知识和技术强化

获取原文
           

摘要

Initiatives for beekeeping intensification across the tropics can foster production and income, but the changes triggered by the introduction of modern beehives might permeate traditional knowledge and practices in multiple ways, and as such should be investigated and understood. We conducted an ethnobotanical study in the Eastern part of the Mau Forest among Ogiek beekeepers who customarily practice forest beekeeping and who are involved in a project aimed at the modernization of their beekeeping activities. We aimed to document the beekeeping-associated ethnobotanical knowledge, exploring the relationships and complementarity between modern and traditional knowledge and practices. Field research was carried out through semi-structured interviews with 30 Ogiek beekeepers and 10 additional stakeholders. We collected ethnobotanical data about plants used for beekeeping purposes, and ethnographic information on traditional and modern beekeeping systems. We report 66 plant species, distributed across 36 botanical families representing 58 genera, important as melliferous, for the construction and placing of hives, attracting bees, and harvesting and storing honey. Dombeya torrida (J.F.Gmel.) Bamps, Juniperus procera Hochst. ex Endl., and Podocarpus latifolius (Thunb.) R.Br. ex Mirb. are the species with the most mentions and the highest number of uses. Our study reveals that the Ogiek possess a detailed knowledge of the forest’s flora, its importance and uses and that this knowledge underpins beekeeping practices. Under the influence of external actors, the Ogiek have progressively adopted modern versus traditional log hives and moved beekeeping out of the forest into open areas of pastures and crop fields. Beekeepers are also experimenting with combinations of practices borrowed from modern and traditional beekeeping systems, particularly in the field of hive construction and in the criteria to set up apiaries. The study indicates a complementarity and an incipient hybridization of traditional and modern beekeeping, in a way that suggests that modern beehives are instrumental in expanding the reach of beekeeping into deforested and cultivated areas. The study also points to the existence of a rift in the effects of beekeeping intensification on the livelihoods of the Ogiek and on their relationship with the forest. We argue that this intensification might be improving the former but weakening the latter, carrying the associated risk of erosion of traditional forest-based ethnobotanical knowledge.
机译:热带地区的养蜂集约化的倡议可以促进生产和收入,但引进现代蜂箱引发的变化可能以多种方式渗透传统知识和实践,因此应该调查和理解。我们在MAU森林的东部进行了ethnobotanical研究,其中ogiek养蜂人习惯于练习森林养蜂人,并且涉及旨在掌握养蜂业的现代化的项目。我们旨在记录养蜂相关的民族统计学知识,探索现代和传统知识与实践之间的关系和互补性。现场研究是通过半结构化访谈进行的30个ogiek养蜂人和10个额外的利益攸关方进行。我们收集了关于养蜂目的的植物的ethnobotanical数据,以及关于传统和现代养蜂系统的民族志信息。我们报告了66种植物物种,分布在36个植物家庭,代表58个属的植物家庭,重要的是梅尔米尔,用于建造和放置荨麻疹,吸引蜜蜂和收获和储存蜂蜜。 Dombeya Torrida(J.F.GMEL。)垃圾箱,杜松花园霍赫斯特。 ex endl。和podocarpus latifolius(thunb。)r.br. ex mirb。属于最提升的物种和最多的用途。我们的研究表明,Ogiek对森林的植物群,其重要性和用途具有详细了解,并且这些知识为养蜂业的实践为基础。在外部演员的影响下,Ogiek逐步采用了现代与传统日志荨麻疹,并将养蜂业从森林中移动到牧场和庄稼领域的开放区域。养蜂人还在试验现代和传统养蜂系统借来的实践组合,特别是在蜂巢建设领域和建立养蜂物的标准。该研究表明,传统和现代养蜂人的互补性和初期的杂交,这表明现代蜂箱在扩大养蜂成森林和耕地区域方面有助于造成工具。该研究还指出了养育养育集约化对ogiek生计的影响以及与森林的关系的影响。我们认为,这种强化可能是改善前者但削弱后者,携带相关的传统森林的民族知识侵蚀的相关风险。

著录项

获取原文

客服邮箱:kefu@zhangqiaokeyan.com

京公网安备:11010802029741号 ICP备案号:京ICP备15016152号-6 六维联合信息科技 (北京) 有限公司©版权所有
  • 客服微信

  • 服务号