The changing Ifugao woodlots : implications for indigenous plant knowledge and biodiversity
Abstract
Indigenous peoples are known to possess knowledge about their
environment that is vital to biodiversity conservation. Conserving
biodiversity is a fundamental element enhancing sustainable
development. Thus the value of indigenous plant knowledge must be
recognised, in both policy and practice, if sustainable development is to
be promoted.
Despite the importance of indigenous knowledge and biodiversity, both
are under constant threat and are being depleted. Acculturation of
indigenous peoples into the mainstream society, habitat fragmentation
and loss due to conversion into other land uses are some of the
important reasons for this loss. How much indigenous knowledge about
the plants use and conservation exists, who has it, what is the rate of the
knowledge loss, how, and if at all, it is passed on from one generation to
the next, what are the pressures on the society and the land are
questions that are explored in this study. The study is based on fieldwork
in Bolog, a small lfugao farming village in the highlands of Northern
Luzon, Philippines concentrating on the woodlots (managed secondary
growth forest or agroforestry systems).
Two main data collection activities formed part of the study:
ethnobotanical documentation; and woodlot survey and assessment.
Ethnobotanical information included food, medicinal and veterinary plant
knowledge of 172 lfugao adults and 43 children. Data were gathered by
semi-structured questionnaire, participant observation and recording of
oral histories. Woodlot survey and assessment of 67 selected woodlots
was conducted through detailed vegetation observation and site
evaluation of the selected woodlots, complimented by in-depth interviews
of three woodlot owners. Changes in plant knowledge was determined
by comparing the adults' and the children's plant knowledge while
changes in the woodlots were determined by comparing the plant
composition, management systems and overall use of the present
woodlots with secondary data on woodlots of the past.
The study shows that, while lfugao adults and children still possess food,
medicinal and veterinary plant knowledge, the knowledge is changing in
its focus. Adults principally know about wild plants, many not commonly
recognised, but children generally know only about well-known cultivated
plants. Hence the knowledge of the traditional sources of food, medicinal
and veterinary plants among the lfugaos in Bolog is slowly being
replaced with knowledge of commonly known plants. This further implies
that knowledge of indigenous plants is slowly being lost.
Woodlots, the habitats of most lfugao food, medicinal, veterinary and
other useful plants, are also changing in terms of their plant composition,
management systems and overall use. Coffee and banana now
dominate most woodlots in Bolog. The presence of these cash crops has
changed woodlot management systems from secondary forest
dominated by native species to cash crop farms. Some native forest
plants have deliberately been eradicated because lhey are believed to interfere with the cash crops. Woodlots-are therefore being used as cash
crop farms, a great contrast with the woodlots of the past which, apart
from being dominated by native forest-plant, were carefully managed for
the production of water for adjacent ricefields and wood for household
use.
Principal factors driving this transformation of woodlots include:
introduction of cash crops, increasing need for cash, increasing
population, commercialisation, government programs and policies and
acculturation into main society. Continued extension of woodlot cash
cropping must ultimately undermine biodiversity and will result in the
disappearance of vital lfugao indigenous plant knowledge. Broader
implications of this study suggest an urgent need for maintaining
indigenous plant knowledge before it disappears, thereby supporting
biodiversity conservation and allowing natural resources to be used more
sustainably.
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