Nabhan for their help while in the Seriland. I am deeply in debt with Arli De Luca and Alberto Burquez who have long heard and helped polish the idea that aposematism can effect human cognition. Thanks to Diogo Samia for providing me with the R code for calculating COI and to Dr. Marco Augusto Miranda-Ackerman for assisting me through the use of R. The final manuscript received helpful comments from Lisa L. Price, precise edits from Cathy Moser Marlett and kind and thoughtful comments from anonymous reviewers. I thank the support of El Colegio de Michoacán and Jesus Medina, Research Assistants who greatly helped with the minute details of the final manuscript.This crib notes is available in Journal of Ecological Anthropology: http://scholarcommons.usf.edu/jea/vol19/iss1/1 Narchi / Aposematism for Discovering Organismal Medicines Aposematism: An Alternative Hypothesis on How We Discover Medicinal Organisms
INTRODUCTIONEarly in the academic life of anthropologists, introductory courses and textbooks suggest vision as being the most prominent of the senses used by primates (e.g., Kottak 2008:136; Relethford 1997:153-154). Such ideas are a mere reflection of the general trend in research, namely that the adaptive significance of primate color vision is seen almost exclusively in terms of foraging advantages (Miller 2002:59).In this paper, I examine the idea that primate color vision, namely binocular stereoscopic trichromic vision, is not only a successful adaptation to facilitate hand-eye coordination for object manipulation or the recognition of ripe fruits and tender leaves (Melin et al. 2013), but a broader and more powerful adaptation capable of sending large chunks of environmental Nemer E. Narchi
ABSTRACTThe most widely accepted theories as to how primates select medicinal organisms are based on smelling and tasting bitter-and most of the times toxic-plants (Etkin and Ross 1982; Johns 1990
Crib Notesinformation about the existence of secondary metabolites in the surrounding environment. In doing so, I propose that aposematism, a conspicuous display that organisms possessing chemical defenses use as a warning signal to would-be predators (Poulton 1890), enables humans, and perhaps other primates, to select, conceptualize, and use medicinal organisms. I provide empirical examples from marine and terrestrial environments. Finally, I sketch a plausible methodology to test the hypothesis that there is a visual detection of medicinal organisms
WITH BITTER HERBS THEY SHALL EATEthnobiologists have long struggled to explain how different human societies independently developed local pharmacopoeias (Berlin and Berlin 1994:242). However it is a highly supported claim that humans
Journal of Ecological AnthropologyVol. 19 No. 1 2017 use perceptual givens to discern and organize biodiversity (Berlin 1992:9).Organizing biodiversity is a quotidian practice that shapes human behavior and decision-making processes by means of linking schemas, models, and contingencies (Gragson and Blount 1999:xv). In this regard, organolept...