Bridging Conservation Science and Traditional Knowledge of Wild Animals: The Need for Expert Guidance and Inclusion of Local Knowledge Holders
Publication Year: 2018
Author(s): Ulicsni V, Babai D, Vadász C, Vadász-Besnyői V, Báldi A, Molnár Z
Abstract:
Many people call for strengthening knowledge co-production between academic science and indigenous and local knowledge systems. A major barrier to cooperation seems to be a lack of experience regarding where and how traditional knowledge can be found and obtained. Our key question was whether the expert judgment of academic zoologists or a feature-based linear model is better at predicting the observed level of local familiarity with wild animal species. Neither the zoologists nor the model proved sufficiently accurate (70 and 60%, respectively), with the inaccuracy probably resulting from inadequate knowledge of the local ecological and cultural specificities of the species. This indicates that more knowledge is likely to come from local knowledge than zoologists would expect.
Source of Publication: Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences-Ambio
Vol/Issue: 48, 769–778 pp.
DOI No.: https://doi.org/10.1007/s13280-018-1106-z
Country: Sweden
Publisher/Organisation: Springer
URL:
https://link.springer.com/content/pdf/10.1007/s13280-018-1106-z.pdf?pdf=button
Theme: Traditional/ Indigenous Knowledge | Subtheme: Livestock Management