Whales, dolphins or fishes? The ethnotaxonomy of cetaceans in São Sebastião, Brazil

<p>Abstract</p> <p/> <p>The local knowledge of human populations about the natural world has been addressed through ethnobiological studies, especially concerning resources uses and their management. Several criteria, such as morphology, ecology, behavior, utility and salienc...

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Main Authors: Souza Shirley P, Begossi Alpina
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2007-02-01
Series:Journal of Ethnobiology and Ethnomedicine
Online Access:http://www.ethnobiomed.com/content/3/1/9
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spelling doaj-b6f4ead5543e40b1803561e4388aae972020-11-25T00:16:10ZengBMCJournal of Ethnobiology and Ethnomedicine1746-42692007-02-0131910.1186/1746-4269-3-9Whales, dolphins or fishes? The ethnotaxonomy of cetaceans in São Sebastião, BrazilSouza Shirley PBegossi Alpina<p>Abstract</p> <p/> <p>The local knowledge of human populations about the natural world has been addressed through ethnobiological studies, especially concerning resources uses and their management. Several criteria, such as morphology, ecology, behavior, utility and salience, have been used by local communities to classify plants and animals. Studies regarding fishers' knowledge on cetaceans in the world, especially in Brazil, began in the last decade. Our objective is to investigate the folk classification by fishers concerning cetaceans, and the contribution of fishers' local knowledge to the conservation of that group. In particular, we aim to record fishers' knowledge in relation to cetaceans, with emphasis on folk taxonomy. The studied area is São Sebastião, located in the southeastern coast of Brazil, where 70 fishers from 14 communities were selected according to their fishing experience and interviewed through questionnaires about classification, nomenclature and ecological aspects of local cetaceans' species. Our results indicated that most fishers classified cetaceans as belonging to the life-form 'fish'. Fishers' citations for the nomenclature of the 11 biological species (10 biological genera), resulted in 14 folk species (3 generic names). Fishers' taxonomy was influenced mostly by the phenotypic and cultural salience of the studied cetaceans. Cultural transmission, vertical and horizontal, was intimately linked to fishers' classification process. The most salient species, therefore well recognized and named, were those most often caught by gillnets, in addition to the biggest ones and those most exposed by media, through TV programs, which were watched and mentioned by fishers. Our results showed that fishers' ecological knowledge could be a valuable contribution to cetaceans' conservation, helping to determine areas and periods for their protection, indicating priority topics for research and participating in alternative management related to the gillnet fisheries.</p> http://www.ethnobiomed.com/content/3/1/9
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Souza Shirley P
Begossi Alpina
spellingShingle Souza Shirley P
Begossi Alpina
Whales, dolphins or fishes? The ethnotaxonomy of cetaceans in São Sebastião, Brazil
Journal of Ethnobiology and Ethnomedicine
author_facet Souza Shirley P
Begossi Alpina
author_sort Souza Shirley P
title Whales, dolphins or fishes? The ethnotaxonomy of cetaceans in São Sebastião, Brazil
title_short Whales, dolphins or fishes? The ethnotaxonomy of cetaceans in São Sebastião, Brazil
title_full Whales, dolphins or fishes? The ethnotaxonomy of cetaceans in São Sebastião, Brazil
title_fullStr Whales, dolphins or fishes? The ethnotaxonomy of cetaceans in São Sebastião, Brazil
title_full_unstemmed Whales, dolphins or fishes? The ethnotaxonomy of cetaceans in São Sebastião, Brazil
title_sort whales, dolphins or fishes? the ethnotaxonomy of cetaceans in são sebastião, brazil
publisher BMC
series Journal of Ethnobiology and Ethnomedicine
issn 1746-4269
publishDate 2007-02-01
description <p>Abstract</p> <p/> <p>The local knowledge of human populations about the natural world has been addressed through ethnobiological studies, especially concerning resources uses and their management. Several criteria, such as morphology, ecology, behavior, utility and salience, have been used by local communities to classify plants and animals. Studies regarding fishers' knowledge on cetaceans in the world, especially in Brazil, began in the last decade. Our objective is to investigate the folk classification by fishers concerning cetaceans, and the contribution of fishers' local knowledge to the conservation of that group. In particular, we aim to record fishers' knowledge in relation to cetaceans, with emphasis on folk taxonomy. The studied area is São Sebastião, located in the southeastern coast of Brazil, where 70 fishers from 14 communities were selected according to their fishing experience and interviewed through questionnaires about classification, nomenclature and ecological aspects of local cetaceans' species. Our results indicated that most fishers classified cetaceans as belonging to the life-form 'fish'. Fishers' citations for the nomenclature of the 11 biological species (10 biological genera), resulted in 14 folk species (3 generic names). Fishers' taxonomy was influenced mostly by the phenotypic and cultural salience of the studied cetaceans. Cultural transmission, vertical and horizontal, was intimately linked to fishers' classification process. The most salient species, therefore well recognized and named, were those most often caught by gillnets, in addition to the biggest ones and those most exposed by media, through TV programs, which were watched and mentioned by fishers. Our results showed that fishers' ecological knowledge could be a valuable contribution to cetaceans' conservation, helping to determine areas and periods for their protection, indicating priority topics for research and participating in alternative management related to the gillnet fisheries.</p>
url http://www.ethnobiomed.com/content/3/1/9
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