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The ecology of food and medicine plants and their gathering sites as defined by Tl'azt'en Nation.

机译:Tl'azt'en Nation定义的食品和药用植物的生态及其聚集地。

摘要

Aboriginal people, including Tl'azt'en Nation, have close and long-standing relationships with the environment. Plants were, and still are, important for food, medicine, and cultural purposes. Western societies have had a negative impact on many Aboriginal communities which can be seen in the loss of Traditional Ecological Knowledge (TEK). An examples of this is with TEK regarding food and medicine plant use of Tl'azt'en Nation. This research was a collaborative project between Tl'azt'en Nation and the University of Northern British Columbia (UNBC). Tl'azt'en community members participated in every stage of the research and assisted in the determination of the research goals and objectives. This ensured that the appropriate knowledge was being documented and it was in a form that was presentable and acceptable to all involved. The study was conducted to collect TEK about the ecology of food and medicine plant gathering sites, to gain an understanding of the criteria for gathering individual plants for food or medicine use, to understand why traditional food and medicine plant gathering sites may fall out of use, and to provide information for a frame work for the protection measure that will be necessary for the continuation of plant gathering activities and sites. In order to gather TEK, fifteen plants were selected to focus on and a total of ten Tl'azt'enne, considered to be knowledgeable about food and medicine plants, participated in various meetings, focus groups, interviews, and field sessions and shared their knowledge about the fifteen plants and their gathering sites. Tl'azt'enne who use plants for food and medicine purposes do not seem to have specific sites where plants must be collected for these purposes, as long as the plant is available in an undisturbed area, away from people and in Tl'azt'en Territory, it can be gathered. Tl'azt'enne community members possess a deep understanding of plants and their gathering sites and have many concerns including the loss of TEK, changing landscapes, and ecolo
机译:包括特拉兹坦民族(Tl'azt'en Nation)在内的原住民与环境有着长期密切的关系。对于食品,药品和文化目的,植物过去和现在都很重要。西方社会对许多原住民社区产生了负面影响,这可以从传统生态知识(TEK)的丧失中看出。 TEK就是一个例子,涉及Tl'azt'en Nation在食品和药用植物方面的使用。这项研究是Tl'azt'en国家与北不列颠哥伦比亚大学(UNBC)之间的一项合作项目。 Tl'azt'en社区成员参加了研究的每个阶段,并协助确定了研究目的和目标。这确保了适当的知识被记录在案,并且其形式可以为所有相关人员所接受和接受。进行这项研究的目的是收集有关食品和药品植物采集地点的生态的TEK,以了解收集用于食品或药品用途的单个植物的标准,了解为什么传统食品和药品植物采集地点可能无法使用的原因。 ,并提供保护措施框架的信息,这对于继续进行植物收集活动和场所是必需的。为了收集TEK,选择了15种植物作为重点研究对象,总共十种Tl'azt'enne被认为对食品和药品植物知识,参加了各种会议,焦点小组,访谈和实地会议,并分享了他们的知识。有关十五种植物及其采集地点的知识。只要植物可以在不受干扰的区域,远离人和在Tl'azt'的地方使用,那些将植物用于食品和医药目的的Tl'azt'enne似乎没有特定的地点必须出于这些目的收集植物zh-领地,可以收集。 Tl'azt'enne社区成员对植物及其采集地点有深刻的了解,并担心许多问题,包括TEK的丢失,景观的变化以及生态环境的恶化。

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  • 年度 2011
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