IDACOR   23984
INSTITUTO DE ANTROPOLOGIA DE CORDOBA
Unidad Ejecutora - UE
artículos
Título:
Cognition, culture and utility: plant classification by Paraguayan immigrant farmers in Misiones, Argentina
Autor/es:
JIMÉNEZ-ESCOBAR, N. DAVID; NOLAN, JUSTIN M.; KUJAWSKA, MONIKA; ARIAS-MUTIS, DANIEL
Revista:
Journal of Ethnobiology and Ethnomedicine
Editorial:
BioMed Central
Referencias:
Año: 2017 vol. 13
Resumen:
AbstractBackgroundThis study was conducted in three rural communities of small farmers of Paraguayan origin living in the province of Misiones, Argentina. These Criollos (Mestizos) hail chiefly from departments located in the east of Paraguay, where the climate and flora have similar characteristics as those in Misiones. These ecological features contribute to the continuation and maintenance of knowledge and practices related to the use of plants.MethodsFieldwork was conducted between September 2014 and August 2015. Forty five informants from three rural localities situated along the Parana River participated in an ethno-classification task. For the classification event, photographs of 30 medicinal and edible plants were chosen, specifically those yielding the highest frequency of mention among the members of that community (based on data obtained in the first stage of research in 2014). Variation in local plant classifications was examined and compared using principal component analysis and cluster analysis.ResultsWe found that people classify plants according to application or use (primarily medicinal, to a lesser extent as edible). Morphology is rarely taken into account, even for very similar and closely-related species such as varieties of palms. In light of our findings, we highlight a dominant functionality model at work in the process of plant cognition and classification among farmers of Paraguayan origin. Salient cultural beliefs and practices associated with rural Paraguayan plant-based medicine are described. Additionally, the manner by which residents? concepts of plants articulate with local folk epistemology is discussed.ConclusionsCulturally constructed use patterns ultimately override morphological variables in rural Paraguayans? ethnobotanical classification.KeywordsRural communities Medicinal plants Wild edible plants Folk epistemology