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Wild meat sharing among non-indigenous people in the southwestern Amazon

机译:亚马逊西南部非土着人民共享的野生肉

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Food sharing is found in many traditional societies around the world. The uniqueness of pervasive sharing among humans, especially among non-related individuals, has been explained by a variety of social and ecological models. Here, we investigated whether the sharing of wild meat among hunters in an extractive reserve in a tropical forest is influenced by the kinship, social structure, and biomass of hunted species. Data were collected through semi-structured interviews with 59 households from 12 villages along the Liberdade River in the Amazon forest. The interviewees mentioned approximately 1.8 tons of hunted animals (25 species) during 177 incursions, and donated 890kg of wild meat to other households. The meat-sharing was mainly mediated by the biomass hunted. The higher the biomass, the greater the sharing among households, either between related or non-related hunters. The inter-household sharing of wild meat was dominated by medium- and smaller-bodied species that are commonly hunted. When we look at hunters' importance in the sharing network, the older hunters and those returning higher biomass were more prone to share in their villages. The overall meat-sharing pattern indicates that hunting activity is involved with social bonds, and it may ultimately favor food security in the studied villages.Significance statementWe found that Amazonian non-indigenous populations descended from rubber tapper colonists present an inter-household and within-village network of wild meat sharing that mostly depends on the biomass hunted by different households, rather than on the social structure, kinship, or prey species, which are relevant factors for food sharing in other indigenous or non-indigenous populations. In addition to hunted biomass, hunter age affects the importance of hunters' contribution to the meat-sharing network within the villages. The sharing pattern, mainly driven by the hunted biomass, can collectively improve the cost-benefit balance of hunting and contributes to food security through social ties, strengthening the socio-ecological system of these non-indigenous populations in Amazonia.
机译:在世界各地的许多传统社会中发现了食品分享。通过各种社会和生态模型解释了人类普遍分享的独特性,特别是非相关人物。在这里,我们调查了热带森林中的猎人之间的野生肉类是否受到血缘关系,社会结构和猎物生物量的影响。通过半结构化访谈收集数据,来自亚马逊森林的Liberdade River沿线的12个村庄的59户。受访者在177次入侵期间提到了大约1.8吨猎物(25种),并向其他家庭捐赠了890公斤的野生肉。肉类分享主要由生物量追捕。生物质越高,家庭之间的共享越大,无论是相关还是非关联的猎人之间。野生肉的家庭间共享由常常被猎杀的中型和较小的物种主导。当我们看着猎人在分享网络中的重要性时,较老的猎人和回归更高生物量的人更容易分享在村庄。整体肉类分享模式表明,狩猎活动涉及社会债券,最终可能最终有利于研究的村庄中的粮食安全。尊严的声明我们发现,亚马逊非土着人群从橡胶敲击者中解除的植物群和内部野生肉类分享的村网主要取决于不同家庭追捕的生物量,而不是社会结构,血缘关系或猎物物种,这是其他土着或非土着人群的食品分享的相关因素。除了猎生物质外,猎人年龄还影响猎人对村庄内肉类分享网络的贡献的重要性。分享模式主要由猎物生物量驱动,可以通过社会关系,通过社会关系,加强亚马逊这些非土着人群的社会生态体系,促进狩猎的成本效益平衡,并为粮食安全做大贡献。

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