1. Global principles in local traditional knowledge: A review of forage plant-livestock-herder interactions
- Author
-
Sharifian, Abolfazl, Gantuya, Batdelger, Wario, Hussein T., Kotowski, Marcin Andrzej, Barani, Hossein, Manzano, Pablo, Krätli, Saverio, Babai, Dániel, Biró, Marianna, Sáfián, László, Erdenetsogt, Jigjidsüren, Qabel, Qorban Mohammad, Molnar, Zsolt, Helsinki Institute of Sustainability Science (HELSUS), Organismal and Evolutionary Biology Research Programme, and Global Change and Conservation Lab
- Subjects
5203 Global Development Studies ,Pastoralists ,Forage ,Indicator ,IYRP ,5143 Social and cultural anthropology ,Indigenous and local knowledge ,Traditional ecological knowledge ,4111 Agronomy ,Herders - Abstract
An understanding of traditional ecological knowledge systems is increasingly acknowledged as a means of helping to develop global, regional and national, but locally relevant policies. Pastoralists often use lands that are unsuitable for crops due to biophysical and climatic extremities and variabilities. Forage plants of pastures are utilized by herding communities by applying locally relevant multigenerational knowledge. We analyzed the forage-related knowledge of pastoralists and herders by reviewing scientific papers and video documentaries on forage plants and indicators, their use in land management, and plant-livestock interactions. Semi-structured interviews were also conducted with key knowledge holders in Iran, Mongolia, Kenya, Poland and Hungary. We found 35 indicators used by herders to describe forage species. The indicators described botanical features, livestock behavior during grazing, and the impact of plants on livestock condition and health. The indicators were used in context-specific management decisions, with a variety of objectives to optimize grazing. We identified ten global principles, including, among others, a livestock-centered perspective, close monitoring and targeted pasturing of various (preferred or avoided) forages, and the use of different livestock types and well-planned spatial movements at multiple scales to optimize the utilization of available plant resources. Although pastoralists vary greatly across the globe, the character and use of their traditional forage-related knowledge do seem to follow strikingly similar principles. Understanding these may help the local-to-global-level understanding of these locally specific systems, support bottom-up pastoral initiatives and discussions on sustainable land management, and help to develop locally relevant global and national policies. © 2022 Elsevier Ltd This research was supported partly by the projects of the Hungarian National Research, Development and Innovation Office NKFIH K 131837 (“Fine-scale landscape ecology: linking vegetation change with interacting indirect and direct drivers using traditional ecological knowledge and oral history”) and GINOP-2.3.2-15-2016-00019. This research also relied on the support from IUBS through the GIPP project.
- Published
- 2023