Agroecology Lab, Université Libre de Bruxelles (ULB), Boulevard du Triomphe CP 264/02, 1050, Brussels, Belgium.
International Centre of Insect Physiology and Ecology (Icipe), P.O. Box 30772-00100, Nairobi, Kenya.
J Ethnobiol Ethnomed. 2023 Sep 28;19(1):42. doi: 10.1186/s13002-023-00614-3.
Stingless bee honey (SBH) is a natural remedy and therapeutic agent traditionally used by local communities across the (sub-)tropics. Forest SBH represents a prime non-timber forest product (NTFP) with a potential to revitalize indigenous foodways and to generate income in rural areas, yet it is also used in a variety of non-food contexts that are poorly documented in sub-Saharan Africa and that collectively represent a significant part of the local traditional ecological knowledge (TEK) passed on across generations. Documenting TEK of local communities in African tropical forests facing global change is a pressing issue to recognize the value of their insights, to evaluate their sustainability, to determine how they contribute to enhancing conservation efforts, and how TEK generally contributes to the well-being of both the natural environment and the communities that rely on it. This is particularly important to achieve in Kenya's only tropical rainforest at Kakamega where SBH production and non-food uses have evolved and diversified to a remarkable extent.
We used ethnographic techniques and methods, including semi-structured questionnaires and recorded interviews. We used snowball sampling, a non-probability sampling method where new interviewees were recruited by other respondents, to collectively form a sample consisting of 36 interviewees (including only one woman).
Our results indicate that local communities in Kakamega were able to discriminate between six different and scientifically recognized stingless bee species, and they provided detailed accounts on the species-specific non-food uses of these SBH. Collectively, we recorded an array of 26 different non-food uses that are all passed on orally across generations in the Kakamega community.
Our results uncover the vast and hitherto unexpected diversity of TEK associated with SBH and pave the way for a systematic survey of SBH and their non-food uses across a network of communities in different environments and with different cultural backgrounds in the Afrotropics. This, along with parallel and more in-depth investigations into honey chemistry, will help develop a comprehensive understanding of SBH, offering insights into holistic ecosystem management, resilience and adaptation while in the mid- to long-term promoting cross-cultural exchanges and pathways for the revitalization of cultural practices and traditions.
无刺蜂蜂蜜(SBH)是一种天然药物和治疗剂,传统上被(亚热带)各地的当地社区使用。森林 SBH 是一种主要的非木材森林产品(NTFP),具有振兴本土食物方式和在农村地区创造收入的潜力,但它也用于各种在撒哈拉以南非洲记录不佳的非食品领域,这些领域共同构成了通过几代人传承的当地传统生态知识(TEK)的重要组成部分。记录面临全球变化的非洲热带森林中当地社区的 TEK 是一个紧迫的问题,这是为了承认他们的观点的价值,评估其可持续性,确定他们如何有助于加强保护工作,以及 TEK 如何普遍有助于自然环境和依赖它的社区的福祉。在肯尼亚唯一的热带雨林卡卡梅加实现这一点尤为重要,在那里,SBH 的生产和非食品用途已经发展和多样化到了显著的程度。
我们使用了民族志技术和方法,包括半结构化问卷和记录访谈。我们使用雪球抽样,这是一种非概率抽样方法,其中新的受访者通过其他受访者招募,共同形成了一个由 36 名受访者(仅包括一名女性)组成的样本。
我们的结果表明,卡卡梅加的当地社区能够区分六种不同的、经科学认可的无刺蜂物种,并详细描述了这些 SBH 的特定物种的非食品用途。我们总共记录了 26 种不同的非食品用途,这些用途在卡卡梅加社区都是通过口口相传代代相传的。
我们的结果揭示了与 SBH 相关的 TEK 的广泛而出乎意料的多样性,并为在不同环境和具有不同文化背景的社区网络中对 SBH 及其非食品用途进行系统调查铺平了道路。这与对蜂蜜化学的平行和更深入的调查一起,将有助于全面了解 SBH,为整体生态系统管理、弹性和适应提供见解,同时在中长期内促进跨文化交流和文化实践与传统的振兴途径。