Subjects -> ANTHROPOLOGY (Total: 398 journals)
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- Ethnoornithology and Bird Conservation in Afro-descendant Communities in
the Brazilian Caatinga Authors: Aurea Palloma Bezerra Barbosa Veras, Cauê Guion de Almeida, Lorena Lima de Moraes, Alexandre M. Fernandes Pages: 1 - 15 Abstract: This paper investigates relationships between birds and the inhabitants of Afro-descendant communities in the Caatinga of northeastern Brazil, paying particular attention to conservation. Near the Refúgio de Vida Silvestre da Serra do Giz wildlife reserve, we interviewed 55 residents using semi-structured forms combined with free interviews and informal conversations. Residents reported 121 species in 43 families and 21 orders. They recounted what they knew about nesting, reproductive and social behaviors, diet, and bird conservation. The lack of reporting on several species of birds known from the Serra do Giz was probably because those birds are absent due to hunting and habitat destruction. This study demonstrates the importance of conducting ethnobiological studies for bird conservation and to record local traditional knowledge. PubDate: 2022-01-29 DOI: 10.14237/ebl.13.1.2022.1753 Issue No: Vol. 13, No. 1 (2022)
- Nï Jotï Aye: Jkyo Jkwainï/Libro Comunitario Jotï: Historia,
Territorio, y Vida. By Eglée Zent, Stanford Zent, and Nï Jotï y Jodena U. 2019. Ediciones IVIC (Instituto Venezolano de Investigaciones Científicas), Caracas. 530 pp. Authors: Eugene N. Anderson Pages: 16 - 17 PubDate: 2022-01-29 DOI: 10.14237/ebl.13.1.2022.1803 Issue No: Vol. 13, No. 1 (2022)
- Una Hiwea, O Livro Vivo. Edited by Agostinho Manduca M. Ĩka Muru. 2012.
Literaterras and Faculdade de Letras da Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais, Belo Horizonte. 284 pp. – and – Una Shubu Hiwea: Livro Escola Viva do Povo Huni Kuĩ do Rio Jordão. 2017. Authors: Thiago Serrano de Almeida Penedo Pages: 18 - 19 PubDate: 2022-01-29 DOI: 10.14237/ebl.13.1.2022.1789 Issue No: Vol. 13, No. 1 (2022)
- The Monkeys and Parrots of Gold Rush-era California
Authors: Cyler Conrad Pages: 20–2 - 20–2 Abstract: As immigrant gold miners migrated en masse to San Francisco and northern California during the Gold Rush-era (ca. 1849–1855), they experienced new animals. Stopping in ports throughout Central and South America, these argonauts saw, felt, smelled, heard, and occasionally consumed, mammals, birds, reptiles, and many more creatures, which were wholly exotic to those species found at home. Two types of animals that the Gold Rush populace encountered during this era include parrots and monkeys. Although found throughout tropical environments in areas far distant from northern California, these animals became quickly imported to San Francisco during the early 1850s. A wild, turbulent Gold Rush-era helped facilitate the importation of these exotic animal types, both for comfort and entertainment, as they helped provide a source of companionship for miners unaccustomed to the shock of 1850s northern California. PubDate: 2022-03-08 DOI: 10.14237/ebl.13.1.2022.1758 Issue No: Vol. 13, No. 1 (2022)
- At Home on the Waves: Human Habitation of the Sea from the Mesolithic to
Today. Edited by Tanya J. King and Gary Robinson. 2019. Berghahn Books, New York and Oxford. 392 pp. Authors: Nemer E. Narchi Pages: 27 - 28 PubDate: 2022-04-27 DOI: 10.14237/ebl.13.1.2022.1781 Issue No: Vol. 13, No. 1 (2022)
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