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1 April 2006 Cultural, Practical, and Economic Value of Wild Plants: a Quantitative Study in the Bolivian Amazon
Victoria Reyes-García, Tomás Huanca, Vincent Vadez, William Leonard, David Wilkie
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Abstract

Researchers have developed several indices to estimate the significance of plant species for humans. We build on previous methods in ethnobotany and anthropology to develop a new way to value plant species along three dimensions: cultural, practical, and economic. We used interview and observational data on the use of wild plants by the Tsimane', a foraging-horticultural society in the Bolivian Amazon. We calculated the cultural, practical, economic, and total values of 114 plant species from 46 families. We found a low correlation between the practical and the cultural values of species: some species rarely used were frequently mentioned in interviews, whereas some species frequently used were rarely mentioned in interviews. Indices of cultural, practical, and economic value measure different dimensions of the importance of plant species to society. The combination of the three indices offers a more comprehensive valuation of the significance of plants for humans than the use of only one index.

Victoria Reyes-García, Tomás Huanca, Vincent Vadez, William Leonard, and David Wilkie "Cultural, Practical, and Economic Value of Wild Plants: a Quantitative Study in the Bolivian Amazon," Economic Botany 60(1), 62-74, (1 April 2006). https://doi.org/10.1663/0013-0001(2006)60[62:CPAEVO]2.0.CO;2
Received: 15 July 2005; Accepted: 1 November 2005; Published: 1 April 2006
JOURNAL ARTICLE
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KEYWORDS
Bolivia
Ethnobotanical knowledge
indices of cultural significance
Tsimane' indigenous peoples
uses of plant
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