Let it Grow (Back): A Call for the Conservation of Secondary Forests as Medicinal Plant Habitat

IF 0.7 Q3 ANTHROPOLOGY
Daniela J. Shebitz, Lindsey Agnew, Steve Kerns, Angela Maria Oviedo, J. Ha
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

Costa Rica is widely regarded as a global leader in conservation practices. In the Maquenque National Wildlife Refuge (MNWLR), within Costa Rica’s Northern Zone, a strong commitment to conservation has led to protecting highly biodiverse mature forests. However, a significant opportunity to strengthen conservation in this region is being overlooked at a great cost to the local community and environment: the protection of regenerating secondary forests. Secondary forests account for over 50% of global tropical forests and serve vital ecological and cultural functions. Within the MNWLR, many species in the secondary forests provide medicinal value to the rural communities where western medical care is difficult to access. Recent research, however, has shown that secondary forests in Costa Rica are re-cleared within 20 years, before they have accumulated the previously lost biomass and biodiversity. In this paper, we call for conservation and management strategies to incorporate community held knowledge about culturally significant species, and for there to be economic incentives for keeping secondary forests intact and for determining which forests are designated as Protected Areas. We discuss previous research with two trees that are common in secondary forests in the MNWLR (Vismia macrophylla and Pentaclethra macroloba), recognizing that these are some of the many species that have great potential to both the ecological and social communities. While our focus area is in the Northern Zone of Costa Rica, the integration of community use and local knowledge into conservation should be a global priority.
让它生长(回来):呼吁保护次生林作为药用植物栖息地
哥斯达黎加被广泛认为是全球保护实践的领导者。在哥斯达黎加北部地区的马昆克国家野生动物保护区(MNWLR),对保护的坚定承诺导致了对高度生物多样性的成熟森林的保护。然而,加强该地区保护的一个重要机会被忽视了,当地社区和环境为此付出了巨大代价:保护再生次生林。次生林占全球热带森林的50%以上,具有重要的生态和文化功能。在MNWLR内,次生林中的许多物种为难以获得西方医疗服务的农村社区提供了药用价值。然而,最近的研究表明,哥斯达黎加的次生林在积累之前失去的生物量和生物多样性之前,会在20年内重新砍伐。在这篇论文中,我们呼吁制定保护和管理战略,纳入社区掌握的关于具有文化意义物种的知识,并为保持次生林的完整性和确定哪些森林被指定为保护区提供经济激励。我们讨论了之前对MNWLR次生林中常见的两种树木(大叶紫苏和大叶紫苏)的研究,认识到这两种树木是对生态和社会社区都有巨大潜力的众多物种之一。虽然我们的重点领域在哥斯达黎加北部地区,但将社区使用和当地知识纳入保护应成为全球优先事项。
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来源期刊
Ethnobiology Letters
Ethnobiology Letters ANTHROPOLOGY-
自引率
0.00%
发文量
10
审稿时长
16 weeks
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