Creencias populares sobre los búhos en Centroamérica y Africa un estudio comparativo

This paper compares the public owl knowledge in Central America and Africa based on 309 interviews to both sex (162 in Costa Rica and 147 in Malawi). General knowledge of owls included: local names, habitats, food and calls. The results were quite similar in both study areas, but in Africa there are still much more superstitions on owls than in Central America. In Malawi more than 90% of respondents connected owls with the bad luck, witchcraft and death. In Costa Rica only 3% associated owls with bad omen and other 3% listed them as frightening. Strong superstitions are leading to unnecessary killings of owls in Africa, but owls are also killed in Central America. To conserve owls and their habitats, we must develop educational programs.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Enríquez Rocha, Paula Lidia Doctora autora 7252, Mikkola, Heimo autor
Format: Texto biblioteca
Language:spa
Subjects:Búhos, Lechuzas, Hábitat (Ecología), Conservación de aves, Artfrosur,
Online Access:https://www.researchgate.net/publication/320058164_Creencias_populares_sobre_los_buhos_en_Centroamerica_y_Africa_un_studio_comparativo_Quercus_150_22-25
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id KOHA-OAI-ECOSUR:54198
record_format koha
spelling KOHA-OAI-ECOSUR:541982024-03-12T12:32:54ZCreencias populares sobre los búhos en Centroamérica y Africa un estudio comparativo Enríquez Rocha, Paula Lidia Doctora autora 7252 Mikkola, Heimo autor textspaThis paper compares the public owl knowledge in Central America and Africa based on 309 interviews to both sex (162 in Costa Rica and 147 in Malawi). General knowledge of owls included: local names, habitats, food and calls. The results were quite similar in both study areas, but in Africa there are still much more superstitions on owls than in Central America. In Malawi more than 90% of respondents connected owls with the bad luck, witchcraft and death. In Costa Rica only 3% associated owls with bad omen and other 3% listed them as frightening. Strong superstitions are leading to unnecessary killings of owls in Africa, but owls are also killed in Central America. To conserve owls and their habitats, we must develop educational programs.This paper compares the public owl knowledge in Central America and Africa based on 309 interviews to both sex (162 in Costa Rica and 147 in Malawi). General knowledge of owls included: local names, habitats, food and calls. The results were quite similar in both study areas, but in Africa there are still much more superstitions on owls than in Central America. In Malawi more than 90% of respondents connected owls with the bad luck, witchcraft and death. In Costa Rica only 3% associated owls with bad omen and other 3% listed them as frightening. Strong superstitions are leading to unnecessary killings of owls in Africa, but owls are also killed in Central America. To conserve owls and their habitats, we must develop educational programs.BúhosLechuzasHábitat (Ecología)Conservación de avesArtfrosurQuercushttps://www.researchgate.net/publication/320058164_Creencias_populares_sobre_los_buhos_en_Centroamerica_y_Africa_un_studio_comparativo_Quercus_150_22-25
institution ECOSUR
collection Koha
country México
countrycode MX
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
En linea
databasecode cat-ecosur
tag biblioteca
region America del Norte
libraryname Sistema de Información Bibliotecario de ECOSUR (SIBE)
language spa
topic Búhos
Lechuzas
Hábitat (Ecología)
Conservación de aves
Artfrosur
Búhos
Lechuzas
Hábitat (Ecología)
Conservación de aves
Artfrosur
spellingShingle Búhos
Lechuzas
Hábitat (Ecología)
Conservación de aves
Artfrosur
Búhos
Lechuzas
Hábitat (Ecología)
Conservación de aves
Artfrosur
Enríquez Rocha, Paula Lidia Doctora autora 7252
Mikkola, Heimo autor
Creencias populares sobre los búhos en Centroamérica y Africa un estudio comparativo
description This paper compares the public owl knowledge in Central America and Africa based on 309 interviews to both sex (162 in Costa Rica and 147 in Malawi). General knowledge of owls included: local names, habitats, food and calls. The results were quite similar in both study areas, but in Africa there are still much more superstitions on owls than in Central America. In Malawi more than 90% of respondents connected owls with the bad luck, witchcraft and death. In Costa Rica only 3% associated owls with bad omen and other 3% listed them as frightening. Strong superstitions are leading to unnecessary killings of owls in Africa, but owls are also killed in Central America. To conserve owls and their habitats, we must develop educational programs.
format Texto
topic_facet Búhos
Lechuzas
Hábitat (Ecología)
Conservación de aves
Artfrosur
author Enríquez Rocha, Paula Lidia Doctora autora 7252
Mikkola, Heimo autor
author_facet Enríquez Rocha, Paula Lidia Doctora autora 7252
Mikkola, Heimo autor
author_sort Enríquez Rocha, Paula Lidia Doctora autora 7252
title Creencias populares sobre los búhos en Centroamérica y Africa un estudio comparativo
title_short Creencias populares sobre los búhos en Centroamérica y Africa un estudio comparativo
title_full Creencias populares sobre los búhos en Centroamérica y Africa un estudio comparativo
title_fullStr Creencias populares sobre los búhos en Centroamérica y Africa un estudio comparativo
title_full_unstemmed Creencias populares sobre los búhos en Centroamérica y Africa un estudio comparativo
title_sort creencias populares sobre los búhos en centroamérica y africa un estudio comparativo
url https://www.researchgate.net/publication/320058164_Creencias_populares_sobre_los_buhos_en_Centroamerica_y_Africa_un_studio_comparativo_Quercus_150_22-25
work_keys_str_mv AT enriquezrochapaulalidiadoctoraautora7252 creenciaspopularessobrelosbuhosencentroamericayafricaunestudiocomparativo
AT mikkolaheimoautor creenciaspopularessobrelosbuhosencentroamericayafricaunestudiocomparativo
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