An ethnomycological survey of macrofungi utilized by Aeta communities in Central Luzon, Philippines

Questionnaires and formatted interviews were used to determine mushrooms used as food and as materials for societal rituals and beliefs among six Aeta communities in three provinces of Central Luzon, Northern Philippines. Thirty-eight different fungi were utilized by the Aeta communities: 21 in Pamp...

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Main Authors: De Leon AM, Reyes RG, dela Cruz TEE
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Guizhou Academy of Agricultural Sciences 2012-04-01
Series:Mycosphere
Subjects:
Online Access:http://mycosphere.org/pdfs/MC3_2_No9.pdf
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spelling doaj-004c765b2f0d4124813f3bac67d9bcc92020-11-24T22:38:43ZengGuizhou Academy of Agricultural SciencesMycosphere2077-70002077-70192012-04-013225125910.5943/mycosphere/3/2/9An ethnomycological survey of macrofungi utilized by Aeta communities in Central Luzon, PhilippinesDe Leon AMReyes RGdela Cruz TEEQuestionnaires and formatted interviews were used to determine mushrooms used as food and as materials for societal rituals and beliefs among six Aeta communities in three provinces of Central Luzon, Northern Philippines. Thirty-eight different fungi were utilized by the Aeta communities: 21 in Pampanga, 10 in Tarlac, and 19 in Zambales. Fourteen fungal species were collected and identified based on their morphological characters: Auricularia auricula, A. polytricha, Calvatia sp., Ganoderma lucidum, Lentinus tigrinus, L. sajor-caju, Mycena sp., Pleurotus sp., Schizophyllum commune, Termitomyces clypeatus, T. robustus, Termitomyces sp. 1, Termitomyces sp. 2, and Volvariella volvacea. Twelve of the identified macrofungi were consumed as food while Ganoderma lucidum and Mycena sp. were used as house decoration and medicine, respectively. The Aeta communities also performed rituals prior to the collection of these mushrooms, including tribal dancing, praying and kissing the ground. Their indigenous beliefs regarding mushrooms are also documented. This is the most extensive enthnomycological study on the Aeta communities in the Philippines. http://mycosphere.org/pdfs/MC3_2_No9.pdfedible fungiethnomycologyindigenous communitiesmacrofungi
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author De Leon AM
Reyes RG
dela Cruz TEE
spellingShingle De Leon AM
Reyes RG
dela Cruz TEE
An ethnomycological survey of macrofungi utilized by Aeta communities in Central Luzon, Philippines
Mycosphere
edible fungi
ethnomycology
indigenous communities
macrofungi
author_facet De Leon AM
Reyes RG
dela Cruz TEE
author_sort De Leon AM
title An ethnomycological survey of macrofungi utilized by Aeta communities in Central Luzon, Philippines
title_short An ethnomycological survey of macrofungi utilized by Aeta communities in Central Luzon, Philippines
title_full An ethnomycological survey of macrofungi utilized by Aeta communities in Central Luzon, Philippines
title_fullStr An ethnomycological survey of macrofungi utilized by Aeta communities in Central Luzon, Philippines
title_full_unstemmed An ethnomycological survey of macrofungi utilized by Aeta communities in Central Luzon, Philippines
title_sort ethnomycological survey of macrofungi utilized by aeta communities in central luzon, philippines
publisher Guizhou Academy of Agricultural Sciences
series Mycosphere
issn 2077-7000
2077-7019
publishDate 2012-04-01
description Questionnaires and formatted interviews were used to determine mushrooms used as food and as materials for societal rituals and beliefs among six Aeta communities in three provinces of Central Luzon, Northern Philippines. Thirty-eight different fungi were utilized by the Aeta communities: 21 in Pampanga, 10 in Tarlac, and 19 in Zambales. Fourteen fungal species were collected and identified based on their morphological characters: Auricularia auricula, A. polytricha, Calvatia sp., Ganoderma lucidum, Lentinus tigrinus, L. sajor-caju, Mycena sp., Pleurotus sp., Schizophyllum commune, Termitomyces clypeatus, T. robustus, Termitomyces sp. 1, Termitomyces sp. 2, and Volvariella volvacea. Twelve of the identified macrofungi were consumed as food while Ganoderma lucidum and Mycena sp. were used as house decoration and medicine, respectively. The Aeta communities also performed rituals prior to the collection of these mushrooms, including tribal dancing, praying and kissing the ground. Their indigenous beliefs regarding mushrooms are also documented. This is the most extensive enthnomycological study on the Aeta communities in the Philippines.
topic edible fungi
ethnomycology
indigenous communities
macrofungi
url http://mycosphere.org/pdfs/MC3_2_No9.pdf
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