Learning to hunt crocodiles social organization in the process of knowledge generation and the emergence of management practices among Mayan of Mexico

Background: New kinds of knowledge, usage patterns and management strategies of natural resources emerge in local communities as a way of coping with uncertainty in a changing world. Studying how human groups adapt and create new livelihoods strategies are important research topics for creating policies in natural resources management. Here, we study the adoption and development of lagartos (Crocodylus moreletii) commercial hunting by Mayan people from a communal land in Quintana Roo state. Two questions guided our work: how did the Mayan learn to hunt lagartos? And how, and in what context, did knowledge and management practices emerge? We believe that social structures, knowledge and preexisting skills facilitate the hunting learning process, but lagarto ecological knowledge and organizational practice were developed in a "learning by doing" process. Methods: We conducted free, semi-structured and in-depth interviews over 17 prestigious lagartos hunters who reconstructed the activity through oral history. Then, we analyzed the sources of information and routes of learning and investigated the role of previous knowledge and social organization in the development of this novel activity. Finally, we discussed the emergence of hunting in relation to the characteristic of natural resource and the tenure system.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Zamudio Acedo, Fernando Doctor autor/a 13270, Bello Baltazar, Eduardo Doctor 1960- autor/a 5466, Estrada Lugo, Erin Ingrid Jane 1959- Doctora autor/a 5465
Format: Texto biblioteca
Language:eng
Subjects:Crocodylus moreletii, Manejo de vida silvestre, Conocimiento ecológico tradicional, Estructura social, Artfrosur,
Online Access:http://www.ethnobiomed.com/content/pdf/1746-4269-9-35.pdf
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