Biocultural Refugia: Combating the Erosion of Diversity in Landscapes of Food Production

被引:85
作者
Barthel, Stephan [1 ,2 ]
Crumley, Carole L. [1 ,3 ,4 ]
Svedin, Uno [1 ]
机构
[1] Stockholm Univ, Stockholm Resilience Ctr, Stockholm, Sweden
[2] Stockholm Univ, Dept Hist, S-10691 Stockholm, Sweden
[3] Uppsala Univ, Dept Archaeol & Ancient Hist, Uppsala, Sweden
[4] Swedish Univ Agr Sci SLU, Swedish Biodivers Ctr, Uppsala, Sweden
来源
ECOLOGY AND SOCIETY | 2013年 / 18卷 / 04期
关键词
agriculture; biocultural refugia; diversity; ecosystem restoration; resilience; small holders; stewardship; TRADITIONAL ECOLOGICAL KNOWLEDGE; BIODIVERSITY CONSERVATION; AGRICULTURAL BIODIVERSITY; INDIGENOUS KNOWLEDGE; ORGANIC AGRICULTURE; CLIMATE-CHANGE; LAND; MANAGEMENT; RESILIENCE; PERSPECTIVES;
D O I
10.5751/ES-06207-180471
中图分类号
Q14 [生态学(生物生态学)];
学科分类号
071012 ; 0713 ;
摘要
There is urgent need to both reduce the rate of biodiversity loss caused by industrialized agriculture and feed more people. The aim of this paper is to highlight the role of places that harbor traditional ecological knowledge, artifacts, and methods when preserving biodiversity and ecosystem services in landscapes of food production. We use three examples in Europe of biocultural refugia, defined as the physical places that not only shelter farm biodiversity, but also carry knowledge and experiences about practical management of how to produce food while stewarding biodiversity and ecosystem services. Memory carriers include genotypes, landscape features, oral, and artistic traditions and self-organized systems of rules, and as such reflect a diverse portfolio of practices on how to deal with unpredictable change. We find that the rich biodiversity of many regionally distinct cultural landscapes has been maintained through different smallholder practices developed in relation to local environmental fluctuations and carried within biocultural refugia for as long as millennia. Places that transmit traditional ecological knowledge and practices hold important lessons for policy makers since they may provide genetic and cultural reservoirs - refugia - for the wide array of species that have co-evolved with humans in Europe for more than 6000 thousand yrs. Biodiversity restoration projects in domesticated landscapes can employ the biophysical elements and cultural practices embedded in biocultural refugia to create locally adapted small-scale mosaics of habitats that allow species to flourish and adapt to change. We conclude that such insights must be included in discussions of land-sparing vs. land-sharing when producing more food while combating loss of biodiversity. We found the latter strategy rational in domesticated landscapes with a long history of agriculture.
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页数:15
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