Esbach Michael S, Correia Joel E, Valdivia Gabriela, Lu Flora
Human Dimensions of Natural Resources, Colorado State University, Fort Collins, Colorado, USA.
Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation, Palo Alto, California, USA.
Conserv Biol. 2025 Apr;39(2):e14407. doi: 10.1111/cobi.14407. Epub 2024 Oct 22.
Indigenous stewardship is essential to the conservation of biocultural diversity, yet conventional conservation models often treat Indigenous territories (ITs) as homogeneous or isolated units. We propose that archipelagos of Indigenous territories (AITs), clusters of ITs that span geographies but are connected through shared cultural or political ties maintained by Indigenous nations, are crucial for understanding and enhancing conservation strategies that recognize the complexity of Indigenous stewardship. We classified 3572 ITs in the Amazon into 4 categories-single or multiple nations with either singular IT or AIT-to assess their spatial heterogeneity, governance, and conservation potential. We then assessed species richness, carbon stocks, and pressures across these different categories. To examine how AITs can enhance biocultural conservation efforts, we conducted a case study of the Cofán Nation in Ecuador. AITs covered 45% of the Amazonian land area and had higher species richness and carbon stocks than single IT configurations. However, AITs faced greater pressures from development and extractive activities. In the case study, the Cofán AIT was shaped by colonization and land titling challenges, but their community-driven governance, cross-territorial collaboration, and adaptive responses-such as comanagement agreements and resisting extractive activities-enhanced their ecological and cultural resilience amid growing development pressures. Our findings suggest that AITs facilitate the exchange of resources, knowledge, and cultural practices, which strengthens social connectivity, reinforces governance structures, and enables adaptive management across ITs, thereby enhancing biocultural resilience across discontinuous spaces. This work advocates for a paradigm shift in conservation planning and practice that recognizes the vital role of AITs in sustaining Amazonian ecosystems and Indigenous lifeways, particularly in the face of increasing pressures.
本土管理对于生物文化多样性的保护至关重要,然而传统的保护模式往往将本土领地视为同质或孤立的单元。我们提出,本土领地群岛(AITs),即跨越地理区域但通过本土民族维持的共享文化或政治联系相连的本土领地集群,对于理解和加强认识本土管理复杂性的保护策略至关重要。我们将亚马逊地区的3572个本土领地分为四类——拥有单一或多个本土领地的单一或多个民族,以评估其空间异质性、治理和保护潜力。然后,我们评估了这些不同类别中的物种丰富度、碳储量和压力。为了研究AITs如何加强生物文化保护工作,我们对厄瓜多尔的科范民族进行了案例研究。AITs覆盖了亚马逊地区45%的土地面积,其物种丰富度和碳储量高于单一本土领地配置。然而,AITs面临着来自发展和采掘活动的更大压力。在案例研究中,科范AITs受到殖民化和土地所有权挑战的影响,但其社区驱动的治理、跨领地合作以及适应性应对措施——如共同管理协议和抵制采掘活动——在不断增加的发展压力下增强了其生态和文化恢复力。我们的研究结果表明,AITs促进了资源、知识和文化实践的交流,加强了社会联系,强化了治理结构,并使跨本土领地的适应性管理成为可能,从而增强了不连续空间的生物文化恢复力。这项工作倡导在保护规划和实践中进行范式转变,认识到AITs在维持亚马逊生态系统和本土生活方式方面的重要作用,特别是在面对日益增加的压力时。