Useful palms in three indigenous communities of La Pedrera, Colombian Amazonia

We studied the knowledge and use of palms in three indigenous communities (Angostura, Curare and Yukuna) near the corregimiento of La Pedrera, Colombian Amazonia. Between June and July of 2010 ethnobotanical data was recorded through structured interviews with 53 informants. The data was analyzed us...

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Main Authors: Mateo S. Jaimes-Roncancio, Julio Betancur, Rodrigo Cámara-Leret
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Universidad Nacional de Colombia 2018-01-01
Series:Caldasia
Subjects:
Online Access:https://revistas.unal.edu.co/index.php/cal/article/view/68851
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spelling doaj-aae76fbf20f149538262fe61fe7020d72020-11-24T20:57:42ZengUniversidad Nacional de ColombiaCaldasia0366-52322357-37592018-01-0140111212810.15446/caldasia.v40n1.6885148252Useful palms in three indigenous communities of La Pedrera, Colombian AmazoniaMateo S. Jaimes-Roncancio0Julio Betancur1Rodrigo Cámara-Leret2Universidad Nacional de Colombia (sede Bogotá). Facultad de Ciencias, Instituto de Ciencias Naturales. Colombia.Universidad Nacional de Colombia (sede Bogotá). Facultad de Ciencias, Instituto de Ciencias Naturales. Colombia.Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew. Identification and Naming (Asia). UK.We studied the knowledge and use of palms in three indigenous communities (Angostura, Curare and Yukuna) near the corregimiento of La Pedrera, Colombian Amazonia. Between June and July of 2010 ethnobotanical data was recorded through structured interviews with 53 informants. The data was analyzed using three indices: relative importance of use category (IR (c)), relative cultural importance (IC (s)) and relative species importance (IR (s)). We found 34 useful palms species, used in nine different use categories. According to the IR (c) the most important use categories were Human Food, Construction and Utensils and tools. Notable among these were the direct consumption of fruits, preparation of beverages, the use of the entire palm and the leaves for housing, and the manufacture of weapons for hunting and utensils for daily use. According to the IR (s) and IC (s) the most important species were chontaduro (Bactris gasipaes), canangucho (Mauritia flexuosa), milpesos (Oenocarpus bataua), and asaí (Euterpe precatoria). Palms play an important role in all three communities, but there is a notable decrease in knowledge about uses associated with culture and ritual ceremonies. According to the indices or relative cultural and relative species importance, the species that were important in this study resembled those found in other Colombian Amazon communities.https://revistas.unal.edu.co/index.php/cal/article/view/68851Arecaceaecategorías de usoconocimiento tradicionaletnobotánicapueblos indígenas
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Mateo S. Jaimes-Roncancio
Julio Betancur
Rodrigo Cámara-Leret
spellingShingle Mateo S. Jaimes-Roncancio
Julio Betancur
Rodrigo Cámara-Leret
Useful palms in three indigenous communities of La Pedrera, Colombian Amazonia
Caldasia
Arecaceae
categorías de uso
conocimiento tradicional
etnobotánica
pueblos indígenas
author_facet Mateo S. Jaimes-Roncancio
Julio Betancur
Rodrigo Cámara-Leret
author_sort Mateo S. Jaimes-Roncancio
title Useful palms in three indigenous communities of La Pedrera, Colombian Amazonia
title_short Useful palms in three indigenous communities of La Pedrera, Colombian Amazonia
title_full Useful palms in three indigenous communities of La Pedrera, Colombian Amazonia
title_fullStr Useful palms in three indigenous communities of La Pedrera, Colombian Amazonia
title_full_unstemmed Useful palms in three indigenous communities of La Pedrera, Colombian Amazonia
title_sort useful palms in three indigenous communities of la pedrera, colombian amazonia
publisher Universidad Nacional de Colombia
series Caldasia
issn 0366-5232
2357-3759
publishDate 2018-01-01
description We studied the knowledge and use of palms in three indigenous communities (Angostura, Curare and Yukuna) near the corregimiento of La Pedrera, Colombian Amazonia. Between June and July of 2010 ethnobotanical data was recorded through structured interviews with 53 informants. The data was analyzed using three indices: relative importance of use category (IR (c)), relative cultural importance (IC (s)) and relative species importance (IR (s)). We found 34 useful palms species, used in nine different use categories. According to the IR (c) the most important use categories were Human Food, Construction and Utensils and tools. Notable among these were the direct consumption of fruits, preparation of beverages, the use of the entire palm and the leaves for housing, and the manufacture of weapons for hunting and utensils for daily use. According to the IR (s) and IC (s) the most important species were chontaduro (Bactris gasipaes), canangucho (Mauritia flexuosa), milpesos (Oenocarpus bataua), and asaí (Euterpe precatoria). Palms play an important role in all three communities, but there is a notable decrease in knowledge about uses associated with culture and ritual ceremonies. According to the indices or relative cultural and relative species importance, the species that were important in this study resembled those found in other Colombian Amazon communities.
topic Arecaceae
categorías de uso
conocimiento tradicional
etnobotánica
pueblos indígenas
url https://revistas.unal.edu.co/index.php/cal/article/view/68851
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AT juliobetancur usefulpalmsinthreeindigenouscommunitiesoflapedreracolombianamazonia
AT rodrigocamaraleret usefulpalmsinthreeindigenouscommunitiesoflapedreracolombianamazonia
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