mtmt
Magyar Tudományos Művek Tára
XML
JSON
Átlépés a keresőbe
In English
Idézők
/
Idézések
Lack of knowledge or loss of knowledge? Traditional ecological knowledge of population dynamics of threatened plant species in East-Central Europe
Biró, É [Biró, Éva (kosborfajok popul...), szerző] Növénytudományi és Biotechnológiai Tanszék (PE / AC-GK / GK)
;
Babai, D [Babai, Dániel (Etnobotanika, hag...), szerző] Néprajztudományi Intézet (BTK)
;
Bódis, J [Bódis, Judit (botanika,természe...), szerző] Növénytudományi és Biotechnológiai Tanszék (PE / AC-GK / GK)
;
Molnár, Zs [Molnár, Zsolt (Botanika), szerző] Ökológiai és Botanikai Intézet (ÖK)
Angol nyelvű Tudományos Szakcikk (Folyóiratcikk)
Megjelent:
JOURNAL FOR NATURE CONSERVATION 1617-1381
22
(4)
pp. 318-325
2014
SJR Scopus - Ecology: Q2
Azonosítók
MTMT: 2574344
DOI:
10.1016/j.jnc.2014.02.006
REAL:
22091
WoS:
000338759300003
Scopus:
84902805205
Szakterületek:
Use of traditional ecological knowledge (TEK) is often recommended to relieve knowledge deficit in conservation. However, studies on traditional knowledge of threatened species are scarce, especially in Europe. Twenty-three interviews about 20 threatened plant species (name, habitat, flowering time, human use, population trends, causes of decline or growth) were conducted in each of the two contrasting landscapes, traditional in Romania (Gyimes), abandoned in Hungary (Zala). Amount of knowledge relevant to conservation was less than expected. Habitat and flowering time was known the best, and causes of population decline and growth the least. Better known plants had richer TEK on their dynamics (65% of species in Gyimes, and 35% in Zala). We documented many cases of positive and negative effects of manuring, fertilization, eradication, grazing, mowing, picking, drought, succession, and abandonment. Most knowledge originated from personal experience, and shared knowledge seemed to be limited. Knowledge deficiency may be explained by the stability of the landscape, and the ignorance of many threatened species by locals in Gyimes (lack of knowledge), and by the abandonment of traditional land use and ignorance in Zala (loss of knowledge). We argue that substantial TEK on threatened species may be expected for those species that have been utilized as a resource or have hindered the utilization of a resource. We argue that TEK can provide relevant information to conservation less at the population, and more at the habitat and landscape level. © 2014.
Idézők (36)
Idézett közlemények (6)
Hivatkozás stílusok:
IEEE
ACM
APA
Chicago
Harvard
CSL
Másolás
Nyomtatás
2021-02-25 01:03
×
Lista exportálása irodalomjegyzékként
Hivatkozás stílusok:
IEEE
ACM
APA
Chicago
Harvard
Nyomtatás
Másolás