Plant Management in the Tehuacán-Cuicatlán Valley, Mexico. Plant management types currently practiced in the Tehuacán-Cuicatlán Valley, México, were documented and analyzed based on ethnobotanical studies conducted in 13 villages with six indigenous groups and Mestizo people. The information was organized in a data base, and then detailed and guided to a consensus through six workshops carried out by ethnobotanists working in the area. From a total of 1,608 useful plant species, we identified 610 with at least one management type other than simple gathering. Managed species are mainly used as food, fodder, medicinal, and ornamental, and they belong to 101 plant families. The higher species numbers were recorded in Cactaceae, Asteraceae, Fabaceae, Crassulaceae, and Agavaceae. Nearly 60% of the managed species are native to the region and the rest are introduced from other regions of Mexico and the world. In total, 400 species are ex situ managed out of their natural environments through seed sowing and/or planting their vegetative propagules or entire young plants; 373 species are in situ managed in their natural habitats as follows: all these species are deliberately left standing during vegetation clearance, 76 species are also enhanced intentionally favoring their abundance through modifications of their habitat, or directly by planting their propagules, and 51 receive protection through regulations, particular strategies of extraction, and actions against herbivores, competitors, freezing, radiation, and drought. Most management forms involve artificial selection at different intensity levels. The information allows visualizing co-occurrence of incipient and advanced forms of management at different intensity levels within and among species, which helps to postulate testable hypotheses on factors influencing plant management and domestication in an important area for studying the origins of agriculture.Manejo de plantas en el Valle de Tehuacán-Cuicatlán, México. Se documentaron los diferentes tipos de manejo de plantas que practican actualmente los pobladores del Valle de Tehuacán-Cuicatlán, México. El análisis se basa en estudios etnobotánicos llevados a cabo en 13 comunidades campesinas con seis grupos indígenas y poblados mestizos. La información se organizó en una base de datos, la cual posteriormente se detalló y se consensó a través de seis talleres en los que participaron los etnobotánicos trabajando en la región y cuyos trabajos son la base de esta investigación. De un total de 1,608 especies de plantas útiles, identificamos 610 con al menos un tipo de manejo distinto a la recolección simple. Las especies 1 manejadas pertenecen a 101 familias botánicas y se utilizan principalmente como alimento, forraje, medicina y ornamentales. Los mayores números de especies manejadas se registraron entre las Cactaceae, Asteraceae, Fabaceae, Crassulaceae y Agavaceae. Aproximadamente 60% de las especies manejadas son nativas de la región y el resto son introducidas de otras regiones de México y del mundo. En total, 40...
BackgroundThe Tehuacán Valley, Mexico is a region with exceptionally high biocultural richness. Traditional knowledge in this region comprises information on nearly 1,600 plant species used by local peoples to satisfy their subsistence needs. Plant resources with higher cultural value are interchanged in traditional markets. We inventoried the edible plant species interchanged in regional markets documenting economic, cultural and ecological data and about their extraction and management in order to: (1) assess how commercialization and ecological aspects influence plant management, (2) identify which species are more vulnerable, and (3) analyze how local management contributes to decrease their risk. We hypothesized that scarcer plant species with higher economic value would be under higher pressure motivating more management actions than on more abundant plants with lower economic value. However, construction of management techniques is also influenced by the time-span the management responses have taken as well as biological and ecological aspects of the plant species that limit the implementation of management practices. Plant management mitigates risk, but its absence on plant species under high risk may favor local extinction.MethodsSix traditional markets were studied through 332 semi-structured interviews to local vendors about barter, commercialization, and management types of local edible plant species. We retrieved ethnobotanical information on plant management from ten communities in a workshop and sampled regional vegetation in a total of 98 sites to estimate distribution and abundance of plant species commercialized. Through Canonical Correspondence Analysis (CCA) we analyzed the amount of variation of management types that can be explained from socioeconomic and ecological information. A risk index was calculated relating distribution, abundance, economic value and management of plant resources to identify the most vulnerable species.ResultsWe recorded 122 edible plant species interchanged in the main regional markets. CCA explained significantly 24% of management variation, spatial distribution and plant parts used being particularly important in management decisions. The indeterminate 76% of variation suggests that management decisions depend on particular variables that are not explained by the ecological and socioeconomic factors studied and/or their high variation in the context at the regional scale. The risk index indicated that management was the factor that mostly influences decreasing of risk of interchanged plant species. We identified Clinopodium mexicanum, Pachycereus weberi, Dasylirion serratifolium, Disocorea sp., Ceiba aesculifolia, Neobuxbamia tetetzo, Lippia graveolens, Litsea glaucescens, L. neesiana, Jatropha neopauciflora, Agave potatorum and other agave species used for producing mescal among the more endangered plant species due to human pressure, their relative scarcity and limited or inexistent management.ConclusionSpatial distribution and plant parts used are particularly ...
Traditional Knowledge and Useful Plant Richness in the Tehuacán-Cuicatlán Valley, Mexico.This study systematizes ethnobotanical information about the interactions between people and plants, ethnofloristic richness, the relative importance of useful species richness in relation to general species richness, and plant management in the Tehuacán-Cuicatlán Valley of central Mexico. The study recorded a total of 1,605 useful vascular plant species (61.2% of the total species richness of the regional vascular flora), this being the region with the highest absolute richness of useful plant species in Mexico. The null hypothesis that plant families with a higher number of useful species would be those having a higher general species richness was analyzed through residuals method. The plant families richest in useful species were Poaceae, Asteraceae, Cactaceae, Cyperaceae, Mimosaceae, and Solanaceae, most of which also have the highest general floristic richness. However, analyses of use categories did not generally corroborate our hypothesis. About 1,335 of the useful species are wild, more than 500 species are submitted to some type of management (62 species are tolerated, 34 protected, 50 enhanced, and 358 cultivated), but only a few have been studied to document their process of domestication. This information can be useful for developing regional strategies of sustainable management of plant resources.Conocimiento tradicional y riqueza de plantas útiles en el Valle de Tehuacán-Cuicatlán, México. Este trabajo sistematiza información etnobotánica sobre las interacciones entre la gente y las plantas, la riqueza etnoflorística, la importancia relativa de las especies útiles con respecto a la riqueza florística general, y sobre el manejo de plantas en el Valle de Tehuacán-Cuicatlán, en el centro de México. Se registró un total de 1,605 especies de plantas vasculares útiles (61.2% de la riqueza total de la flora vascular de la región), lo que identifica a la región como la de mayor riqueza de plantas útiles de México en términos absolutos. Mediante el método de residuales se analizó la hipótesis nula de que las familias con mayor número de especies útiles serían las de mayor riqueza florística. Se encontró que las familias con mayor número de especies útiles fueron Poaceae, Asteraceae, Cactaceae, Cyperaceae, Mimosaceae, y Solanaceae, las cuales en su mayoría son las de mayor riqueza florística en la región. No obstante, al efectuar el análisis por categorías de uso no siempre se confirmó nuestra hipótesis. Casi 1,335 de las plantas útiles son silvestres, pero alrededor de 500 están sometidas a algún tipo de manejo (62 especies son toleradas, 34 protegidas, 50 fomentadas y 358 cultivadas), pero sólo para algunas de ellas se ha estudiado cómo operan los proceso de domesticación. La información generada en el trabajo puede ser útil para el desarrollo de estrategias regionales de manejo sustentable de los recursos vegetales.
Empirical studies on bat assemblages have shown that richness is not appreciably influenced by local processes such as ecological interactions. However, most of these studies have been done in large areas that include high heterogeneity, and they analyse all bat species within such areas, and thus they may be not reflecting local but supra-community conditions. We followed an ecomorphological approach to assess how bat assemblages of species from the families Phyllostomidae and Mormoopidae, and ensembles of frugivorous bats, are assembled in local habitats within a single landscape. We measured the volume of the space defined by wing morphology and quantified the average distance between species within such a volume. Then, we related these measures to local richness. Such relationships were contrasted against relationships with random assemblages to test for statistical differences. At the ensemble level of organization, we found that the frugivorous bat morphological assembly mechanism is different from random patterns, and it corresponds to the volume-increasing model. On the other hand, bat assembly mechanisms may be ubiquitous at the assemblage level, because groups of species coexisting in a local habitat and delimited only by phylogeny include more than one ecological group with no potential to interact. Assembling processes are crucial to an understanding of species diversity in local communities, and ecomorphological analyses are very promising tools that may help in their study.
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