Nontimber forests products (NTFPs) are the mainstay of rural livelihoods and local economies the world over. As such they are of interest to a wide disciplinary range of researchers and development and government agencies seeking to promote livelihoods, incomes, and ecologically sustainable practices. With the attention on the various human uses of NTFPs, their role and networks in the broader biological communities in which they are located are frequently overlooked. Harvesting of many NTFPs has effects not only at the organism and population scales, but also on co-occurring species, some of which may also be NTFPs. Thus, reduction or loss of one NTFP population or species in a specific area may have cascade effects on other NTFP species, including those used for cultural purposes. We illustrate the little appreciated importance of NTFPs in broader ecological and social systems by assessing and illustrating the importance of NTFP species as ecological or biocultural keystones in providing regulating and supporting ecological services to other species and cultural services to people. We present a number of examples where NTFP species act as keystones in ecological and cultural systems, including food, pollination and dispersal, animal health, nutrients, shelter and protection, and cultural symbolism, most of which have not been considered by NTFP researchers and practitioners. From these examples we distill six propositions regarding NTFPs and discuss the value of recognizing some NTFPs as biocultural keystones to acknowledge and highlight their roles at broader scales.
Nontimber forest products as ecological and biocultural keystone species
C. Shackleton,T. Ticktin,A. Cunningham
Published 2018 in Ecology and Society
ABSTRACT
PUBLICATION RECORD
- Publication year
2018
- Venue
Ecology and Society
- Publication date
2018-11-07
- Fields of study
Biology, Economics, Environmental Science
- Identifiers
- External record
- Source metadata
Semantic Scholar
CITATION MAP
EXTRACTION MAP
CLAIMS
CONCEPTS
- biocultural keystone species
A species whose ecological roles and cultural importance make it disproportionately significant within linked human and ecological systems.
Aliases: biocultural keystones
- cascade effects
Secondary effects that spread from a change in one population or species to other species or system components.
Aliases: cascading effects
- co-occurring species
Species that occur in the same area and may be affected when an NTFP population is harvested or declines.
Aliases: associated species
- cultural services
Nonmaterial benefits people derive from species, including symbolic value and culturally important uses.
Aliases: cultural service, cultural symbolism
- nontimber forest products (ntfps)
Forest-derived products obtained without harvesting timber, often used by rural communities for livelihoods and local economies.
Aliases: NTFPs, nontimber forest products
- regulating ecological services
Ecological services that influence or control system processes, such as pollination or dispersal.
Aliases: regulating services
- six propositions about ntfps
A set of six conclusions distilled from the examples discussed to characterize important roles of NTFPs.
Aliases: six propositions
- supporting ecological services
Ecological services that sustain other organisms by maintaining conditions such as nutrients, shelter, or protection.
Aliases: supporting services
REFERENCES
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