Lacandon maya ecosystem management sustainable design for subsistence and environmental restoration
Indigenous groups have designed and managed their ecosystems for generations, resulting in biodiversity protection while producing for their family's needs. Here we describe the agroecosystem of the Lacandon Maya, an indigenous group who live in Chiapas, Mexico. The Lacandon practice a form of swidden agriculture that conserves the surrounding rain forest ecosystem while cycling the majority of their land through five successional stages. These stages include an herbaceous stage, two shrub stages, and two forest stages. A portion of their land is kept in primary forest. This study presents the Lacandon traditional ecological knowledge (TEK) for agroforestry and quantitatively describes the plant community and the associated soil ecology of each successional stage. Also documented is the knowledge of the Lacandon regarding the immediate use of plant species and plant species useful for soil fertility enhancement. Woody plant diversity increases during the successional stages of the Lacandon system, and by the beginning of the first forest stage, the diversity is similar to that of the primary forest.
Main Authors: | Diemont, Stewart A. W. autor/a 14148, Martín, Jay F. autor/a |
---|---|
Format: | Texto biblioteca |
Language: | eng |
Subjects: | Lacandones, Manejo de ecosistemas, Conocimiento tradicional, Restauración ecológica, Artfrosur, |
Online Access: | http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1890/08-0176.1/epdf |
Tags: |
Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
|
Similar Items
-
Applying indigenous knowledge to the restoration of degraded tropical rain forest clearings dominated by bracken fern
by: Douterlungne, David Doctor 12340, et al. -
Using traditional knowledge in forest restoration indigenous people in Chiapas, Mexico, have a tried-and true system for restoring forests involving balsa, a valuable timber species
by: Levy Tacher, Samuel Israel Doctor autor 6877, et al. -
From rainforest to table Lacandon Maya women are critical to diversify landscapes and diets in Lacanjá Chansayab, Mexico
by: Pérez Volkow, Lucía autora, et al. -
Lacandon maya forest management restoration of soil fertility using native tree species
by: Diemont, Stewart A. W. 14148, et al. -
Los sistemas cafetaleros indígenas y la rehabilitación ecológica de áreas degradadas en Latinoamérica un modelo
by: Bandeira Zous, F.P. autor/a, et al.