Instituto de Investigaciones en Ecosistemas y Sustentabilidad (IIES), Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México (UNAM), Campus Morelia, Antigua Carretera a Pátzcuaro No. 8701, C.P, 58190, Morelia, Michoacán, Mexico.
J Ethnobiol Ethnomed. 2019 Nov 27;15(1):58. doi: 10.1186/s13002-019-0340-1.
The Tehuacán-Cuicatlán Valley is a region of outstanding biocultural diversity, harboring eight indigenous ethnic groups and a remarkable biodiversity in a territory 10,000 km extent. Ethnobotanical studies of the region are among the most complete in Mexico; contrarily, ethnozoological studies are still limited. But information on both flora and fauna use and management is relevant for understanding local cultural and ecological issues, and for planning integral strategies of biodiversity conservation. Our study focused on analyzing knowledge and use of animals and their relationship with faunistic management by the Cuicatec, an ancient human culture whose distribution is restricted to the region. We hypothesized that wild animals still have significant contributions to diet, medicine, and spiritual life of the Cuicatec people. In addition, we expected to find a gradient of interactions, from simple gathering and hunting to communitarian regulations of use, specialized management techniques and care, nurturing, and domestication of animals. Such gradient of management interactions would be influenced proportionally with cultural and economic values, viability maintenance, and scarcity of animals.
Our study was carried out in San Lorenzo Pápalo, Oaxaca. We conducted surveys and semi-structured and open interviews to people to document the Cuicatec nomenclature, classification, use, and management of fauna, as well as their perceptions about abundance, risks of disappearance, and availability of wild animals. We used images of animal species reported for the area as communication stimuli for confirming their local presence. Also, we recorded skins and skulls used as trophies and ornamental objects, pawprints, and excretes. Through free listing, we identified the most meaningful species of different animal groups. Whenever possible, we evaluated amounts of animals obtained from the wild, and for some species, we compared this information with data on their distribution and abundance evaluated through ecological sampling, to explore indicators on their sustainable use.
The Cuicatec name all animals through the term i-ti and classify them in several groups of vertebrates, arthropods, and mollusks, some of them coinciding with the formal taxonomy and some others based on their social-cultural role. The most meaningful animals are 23 species of edible organisms, outstandingly the chicatana ants (Atta mexicana) and the cuetla Lepidoptera larvae (Arsenura armida), the lizard Sceloporus grammicus, and among the mammals some squirrels (Sciurus spp.), badgers (Nasua narica), and deer (Odocoileus virginianus). Some species were reported to be used for medicinal purposes, among them opossum (Didelphis spp.) and macaws (Ara militaris), used to ease childbirths, but this use almost disappeared. Local perception of availability of animal resources is associated to forest conservation. Regulations for protecting forests and the most used animal species were recorded; the rules are mainly associated to hunting and gathering seasons, respecting females of vertebrate species, and permits for gathering and hunting given by local authorities. Nurturing of animals was recorded in bird and mammal species, but in no case, their breeding was achieved.
Animals are important elements of the Cuicatec culture and subsistence, complementing their diet based on agricultural products. Animals used as medicine were still reported but substituted by modern medicine. There is a consensus about the need to conserve forests to ensure the maintenance of animals, which are valued as part of nature, the beauty of their territory, and culture. Communitarian regulations are the main ways for conserving fauna, but local techniques of animal management may help in designing conservation strategies.
特瓦坎-夸特卡特兰山谷是一个具有杰出生物文化多样性的地区,拥有 8 个土著民族和在 1 万平方公里范围内的显著生物多样性。该地区的民族植物学研究在墨西哥是最完整的之一;相反,民族动物学研究仍然有限。但是,关于动植物的使用和管理的信息对于理解当地的文化和生态问题以及规划生物多样性保护的综合战略是相关的。我们的研究集中在分析 Cuicatec 人对动物的知识和使用及其与动物群管理的关系上,Cuicatec 是一种古老的人类文化,其分布仅限于该地区。我们假设野生动物仍然对 Cuicatec 人的饮食、医学和精神生活有重要贡献。此外,我们预计会发现从简单的采集和狩猎到使用的社区规则、专门的管理技术和护理、动物的培育和驯化的交互梯度。这种管理交互的梯度将与文化和经济价值、生存能力维持和动物的稀缺性成比例地受到影响。
我们的研究在瓦哈卡州的圣洛伦索帕帕洛进行。我们通过调查和半结构化和开放式访谈,记录了 Cuicatec 人的动物分类学、分类、使用和管理,以及他们对动物丰度、消失风险和野生动物可用性的看法。我们使用该地区报告的动物物种的图像作为确认其本地存在的交流刺激。此外,我们还记录了用作奖杯和装饰品的兽皮和头骨、爪印和排泄物。通过自由列表,我们确定了不同动物群体中最有意义的物种。只要有可能,我们就评估了从野外获得的动物数量,对于一些物种,我们将这些信息与通过生态采样评估的分布和丰度数据进行了比较,以探索可持续利用的指标。
Cuicatec 人通过术语 i-ti 来命名所有动物,并将它们分为几类脊椎动物、节肢动物和软体动物,其中一些与正式分类学相符,另一些则基于它们的社会文化角色。最有意义的动物是 23 种可食用的生物,特别是 Chicatana 蚂蚁(Atta mexicana)和 Cuetla 鳞翅目幼虫(Arsenura armida)、蜥蜴 Sceloporus grammicus,以及一些松鼠(Sciurus spp.)、獾(Nasua narica)和鹿(Odocoileus virginianus)等哺乳动物。一些物种被报告用于药用目的,其中包括负鼠(Didelphis spp.)和金刚鹦鹉(Ara militaris),用于缓解分娩,但这种用途几乎消失了。对动物资源可用性的当地看法与森林保护有关。记录了保护森林和最常用的动物物种的规定;这些规定主要与狩猎和采集季节、尊重脊椎动物物种的雌性以及当地当局颁发的狩猎和采集许可证有关。在鸟类和哺乳动物中记录了动物的饲养,但在任何情况下,都没有成功繁殖。
动物是 Cuicatec 文化和生计的重要组成部分,补充了以农产品为基础的饮食。虽然仍有报道称动物被用作药物,但已被现代医学所取代。人们普遍认为需要保护森林以确保动物的维持,这些动物被视为自然的一部分、他们领土的美丽和文化的一部分。社区规则是保护动物群的主要方式,但当地的动物管理技术可能有助于设计保护策略。