Forest use at the pacific coast of chocó, colombia: A quantitative approach

Economic Botany - Tập 54 Số 3 - Trang 358-376 - 2000
Gloria Galeano1
1Institute de Ciencias Naturales, Universidad Nacional de Colombia, Bogotá, Colombia

Tóm tắt

Từ khóa


Tài liệu tham khảo

Adu-Tutu, Y., M. Afful, D. Asante-Appiah, J. Lieberman, B. Hall, and M. Elvin-Lewis. 1979. Chewing stick usage in southern Ghana. Economic Botany 33:320–328.

Alexiades, M. N. 1996. Introduction,in M. N. Alexiades, ed., Selected guidelines for ethnobotanical research: a field manual. The New York Botanical Garden, New York.

Anderson, A. B. 1990. Extraction and forest management by rural inhabitants in the Amazon Estuary. Pages 65–85in A. B. Anderson, ed., Alternatives to deforestation: steps toward sustainable use of the Amazon Rain Forest. Columbia University Press, New York.

—,and D. A. Posey. 1989. Management of a tropical scrub savanna by the Gorotire Kayapó of Brazil. Advances in Economic Botany 7:159–173.

Balée, W. 1986. Análise preliminar de inventario florestal e a etnobotânica Ka’apor (Maranhâo). Boletim do Museu Paraense Emilio Goeldi. Botanica 2(2): 141–167.

Balick, M. J. 1981. Jessenia bataua and Oenocarpus species: Native Amazonian palms as new sources of edible oil. Pages 141–155in Pride, Princen and Mukhja, eds., New sources of fats and oils. American Oil Chemist’s Society, Champaign, IL.

—. 1988. Jessenia and Oenocarpus: Neotropical oil palms worthy of domestication. FAO Plant Production and Protection, Paper No. 88. FAO, Rome.

Bernai, R. 1992. Colombian palm products. Pages 158–172in M. Plotkin and L. Famolare, eds., Sustainable harvest and marketing of rain forest products. Conservation International, Washington.

Boom, B. M. 1989. Use of plant resources by the Chacobo. Advances in Economic Botany 7:78–96.

—. 1990. Useful plants of the Panara Indians of Venezuelan Guayana. Advances in Economic Botany 8:57–76.

Borgtoft Pedersen, H., and H. Balslev. 1990. Ecuadorian Palms for Agroforestry. A AU Reports 23: 1–122.

Caballero, R. 1996. La Etnobotánica de las Comunidades Negras e Indígenas del Delta del Río Patía. Editorial Abya-Yala, Quito, Ecuador.

Cayón, E., and S. Aristizábal. 1980. Lista de plantas utilizadas por los indígenas Chamí de Risaralda. Cespedesia 9(33–34):6–113.

Duke, J. A. 1970. Ethnobotanical observations on the Chocó Indians. Economic Botany 24(3):344–366.

—. 1975. Ethnobotanical observations on the Cuna Indians. Economic Botany 29:278–293.

Forero, L. E. 1980. Etnobotánica de las comunidades indigenas Cuna y Waunana, Chocó (Colombia). Cespedesia 9(33–34): 116–301.

—,D. Murillo, L. E. Sánchez, and J. F. Otero. 1996. Observaciones etnobotánicas sobre plantas medicinales en comunidades afrocolombianas del Bajo Calima (Cuenca baja del río San Juan-Valle del Cauca, Colombia). Cespedesia 20(66):67–106.

Galeano, G., J. Cediel, and M. Pardo. 1998. Structure and floristic composition of a one hectare plot of wet forest at the Pacific Coast of Chocó, Colombia. Pages 551–558, chapter 28in F. Dallmeier and J. Comiskey, eds., Forest biodiversity in North, Central and South America and the Caribbean: research and monitoring. Man and the Biosphere Series. Parthenon Publishing, Washington.

—,S. Suárez, and H. Balslev. 1998. Vascular plant species count in a wet forest in the Chocó area on the Pacific coast of Colombia. Biodiversity and Conservation 7:1563–1575.

Grenand, P. 1992. The use and cultural significance of the secondary forest among the Wayapi Indians. Pages 27–40in M. Plotkin and L. Famolare, eds., Sustainable harvest and marketing of rain forest products. Conservation International, Washington.

Johns, T., J. O. Kokwaro, and E. K. Kimanani. 1990. Herbal remedies of the Luo of Siaya District, Kenya: Establishing Quantitative criteria for consensus. Economic Botany 44(3):369–381.

—,E. B. Mhoro, P. Sanaya, and E. K. Kimanani. 1994. Herbal remedies of the Ngorongoro District, Tanzania: A quantitative appraisal. Economic Botany 48:90–94.

Kainer, K. A., and M. l. Duryea. 1992. Tapping women’s knowledge: plant resource use in extractive reserves, Acre, Brazil. Economic Botany 46(4):408–425.

Olinto, P. 1993. Población y poblamiento. Pages 464–486in P. Leyva, ed., Colombia Pacífico. Tomo II. Fondo FEN-COLOMBIA, Bogotá.

Pardo, M. 1987. Indigenas del Chocó. Pages 251–261in Institute Colombiano de Antropología, ed., Introduction a la Colombia Amerindia. Bogotá.

Paz y Miño, G., H. Balslev, R. Valencia, and P. Mena. 1991. Lianas utilizadas por los indígenas Siona-Secoya de la Amazonía del Ecuador. Reportes Técnicosl. Ecociencia, Quito, Ecuador.

Pesce, C. 1985. Oil palms and other oilseeds of the Amazon. Reference Publications. Inc., Michigan.

Peters, C. M. 1996. Beyond nomenclature and use: A review of ecological methods for ethnobotanists. Pages 241–276in M. N. Alexiades, ed., Selected guidelines for ethnobotanical research: a field manual. The New York Botanical Garden, New York.

Phillips, O. L. 1996. Some quantitative methods for analyzing ethnobotanical knowledge. Pages 171–197in M. N. Alexiades, ed., Selected guidelines for ethnobotanical research: a field manual. The New York Botanical Garden, New York.

Phillips, O. L., and A. H. Gentry. 1993a. The useful plants of Tambopata, Peru: I. Statistical hypotheses tests with a new quantitative technique. Economic Botany 47(1): 15–32.

—. 1993b. The useful plants of Tambopata, Peru: II. Additional hypotheses testing in quantitative ethnobotany. Economic Botany 47(l):33–43.

—,C. Reynel, P. WUkin, and C. Gálvez-Durand. 1994. Quantitative ethnobotany and Amazonian conservation. Conservation Biology 8: 225–248.

Pinedo-Vásquez, M., D. Zarin, P. Jipp, and J. Chota-Inuma. 1990. Use-values of tree species in a communal forest reserve in northeast Peru. Conservation Biology 4:405–416.

Prance, G. T. 1991. What is ethnobotany today?. Journal of Ethnopharmacology 32:209–216.

—. 1996. Forewordin M. N. Alexiades, ed. Selected Guidelines for Ethnobotanical Research: A Field Manual. The New York Botanical Garden, New York.

Prance, G. T., W. Balée, B. M. Boom, and L. R. Carneiro. 1987. Quantitative ethnobotany and the case for conservation in Amazonia. Conservation Biology l(4):296–310.

Salick, J. 1992a. The sustainable management of nontimber rain forest products in the Si-a-Paz Peace Park, Nicaragua. Pages 118–124in M. Plotkin, and L. Famolare, eds., Sustainable harvest and marketing of rain forest products. Conservation International, Washington.

—. 1992b. Amuesha forest use and management: An integration of indigenous forest use and natural forest management. Pages 305–332in K. H. Redford, and C. Padoch, eds., Conservation of neotropical forests: working from traditional resource use. Columbia University Press, New York.

Trotter, R. T., and M. H. Logan. 1986. Informant consensus: a new approach for identifying potentially effective medicinal plants. Pages 91–112in N. L. Etkin, ed., Plants in indigenous medicine and diet. Redgrave Publishing Company, Bedford Hill, NY.

West, R. 1957. The Pacific Lowlands of Colombia. A Negroid Area of the American Tropics. Louisiana State University Press, Baton Rouge, LA.