Department of Botany and Zoology, University of Guadalajara, Apdo. postal 1-139, Zapopan, Jal., 45147, Mexico.
Department of Biology, Instituto de Ciencias Biológicas, Universidad de Ciencias y Artes de Chiapas, Tuxtla Gutiérrez, Mexico.
Mycologia. 2022 Jul-Aug;114(4):645-660. doi: 10.1080/00275514.2022.2068114. Epub 2022 Jun 9.
The greatest diversity of culturally relevant fungi in Mexico has been recorded in temperate forests. Likewise, it has been proven that people who live in such environments possess greater ethnomycological knowledge, compared with people in the lowlands. In this study, we investigated whether the uses and perceptions of fungi were different between people living near forests in highlands and those living in lowlands near grasslands and subtropical scrublands. We selected seven communities from the municipality of Tlaltenango, Zacatecas, Mexico, where we conducted guided tours, 35 semistructured interviews, and free lists to 420 people. Since highlands surrounded by temperate forests give rise to high species diversity, we expected that the inhabitants, in comparison with those of the lowlands where there is less diversity, would recognize a larger number of fungi. To test this hypothesis, we employed discriminant function analysis, principal coordinate analysis, Mann-Whitney test, and linear regression. The cultural importance of each species was calculated based on the frequency with which it was mentioned and the first principal coordinate. Although the highlanders have a deeper knowledge of mushrooms, lowlanders and highlanders had similar fungal backgrounds and preferred the same species, regardless of the fungi surrounding their territory. The lack of differences among communities was due in part to the fact that the most culturally important species were those that grew in grasslands and subtropical scrub areas. was the most culturally prevalent and only commercialized species both in the highlands and lowlands, followed by and . None of the mushrooms growing in the pine-oak forest had a high cultural importance value, even for the communities living in the vicinity of this forest, forcing them to travel long distances to collect . Further investigations are needed in order to assess the relevance of sociocultural factors, and their potential influence in the preference for particular mushrooms in this region.
墨西哥温带森林中具有最多与文化相关的真菌多样性。同样,事实证明,生活在这种环境中的人比生活在低地的人拥有更多的民族真菌学知识。在这项研究中,我们调查了生活在高地森林附近的人与生活在低地草原和亚热带灌木丛附近的人对真菌的使用和认知是否存在差异。我们从墨西哥萨卡特卡斯州 Tlaltenango 市选择了七个社区,在那里我们对 420 人进行了导游、35 次半结构化访谈和自由列表。由于被温带森林环绕的高地产生了高物种多样性,我们预计与低地相比,那里的多样性较低,居民会识别出更多的真菌。为了验证这一假设,我们采用了判别函数分析、主坐标分析、曼-惠特尼检验和线性回归。基于被提及的频率和第一主坐标,计算了每个物种的文化重要性。尽管高地人对蘑菇有更深入的了解,但无论其周围环境中是否有真菌,低地人和高地人对真菌的背景和偏好相似。社区之间没有差异的部分原因是,最具文化重要性的物种是生长在草原和亚热带灌木丛地区的物种。是在高地和低地都最具文化意义且唯一商业化的物种,其次是 和 。即使是生活在这片森林附近的社区,也没有一种生长在松-栎林中的蘑菇具有很高的文化重要性价值,这迫使他们长途跋涉去采集 。为了评估社会文化因素的相关性及其对该地区特定蘑菇偏好的潜在影响,还需要进一步调查。