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Interdisciplinary science and fishers’ local ecological knowledge of sawfishes in the Yucatán Peninsula

Rubio Cisneros, Nadia T [autora] | Martínez Candelas, Ilse Alejandra [autora] | Ordaz García, Diana [autora] | Pérez Jiménez, Juan Carlos [autor] | Jiménez Cano, Nayeli G [autora] | Glover, Jeffrey B [autor] | Montes Ganzon, Brianna K [autora] | Ruiz Ayma, Gabriel [autora] | González Rojas, José I [autor].
Tipo de material: Artículo
 en línea Artículo en línea Tipo de contenido: Texto Tipo de medio: Computadora Tipo de portador: Recurso en líneaTema(s): Pescadores | Conocimiento ecológico tradicional | Peces sierra | Pristis pristis | Pristis pectinata | Turismo | Aspectos socioculturalesTema(s) en inglés: Fishers | Traditional ecological knowledge | Sawfishes | Pristis pristis | Pristis pectinata | Tourism | Socio cultural aspectsDescriptor(es) geográficos: Yucatán (Península) (México) Nota de acceso: Disponible para usuarios de ECOSUR con su clave de acceso En: Aquatic Conservation: Marine and Freshwater Ecosystems. Volumen 33, número 9 (September 2023), páginas 897-916. --ISSN: 1099-0755Número de sistema: 64271Resumen:
Inglés

1. Our knowledge of sawfishes remains scant for Latin America. Pristis pristis (largetooth sawfish) and Pristis pectinata (smalltooth sawfish) are critically endangered. In the Yucatán Peninsula (YP), P. pristis and P. pectinata inhabit coastal landscapes. 2. A total of 290 surveys of fishers’ local ecological knowledge (LEK), including ageospatial component, were collected; 74 literature sources and available archaeological data for the region were reviewed. 3. Interdisciplinary results show the following: the common past presence of sawfishes, their cultural significance for coastal societies, and the contemporary absence of sawfishes in coastal areas where they existed historically; sightings of juveniles were only documented by elder fishers, and only two recent narratives mention sawfishes caught incidentally 5 years ago. 4. Geospatial results provide evidence for 52 geographic sites where sawfishes were common in the YP. 5. Results support the development of research methodologies to study human–nature interactions integrating LEK. This matters in the YP, where sociocultural values and landscapes have changed rapidly through increasing tourism development and human overcrowding. 6. The results can help conservation managers understand the past presence and contemporary loss of sawfishes, and their habitat, and contribute to understanding the defaunation of megafauna in the YP through time. This is critical for tourism and fishery ecosystem services on which communities of the YP rely for their economies.

Recurso en línea: https://doi.org/10.1002/aqc.3981
Lista(s) en las que aparece este ítem: Grupo académico Estudios Socioambientales (Turismo y Ecoturismo) | AHMRET-Campeche
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Disponible para usuarios de ECOSUR con su clave de acceso

1. Our knowledge of sawfishes remains scant for Latin America. Pristis pristis (largetooth sawfish) and Pristis pectinata (smalltooth sawfish) are critically endangered. In the Yucatán Peninsula (YP), P. pristis and P. pectinata inhabit coastal landscapes. 2. A total of 290 surveys of fishers’ local ecological knowledge (LEK), including ageospatial component, were collected; 74 literature sources and available archaeological data for the region were reviewed. 3. Interdisciplinary results show the following: the common past presence of sawfishes, their cultural significance for coastal societies, and the contemporary absence of sawfishes in coastal areas where they existed historically; sightings of juveniles were only documented by elder fishers, and only two recent narratives mention sawfishes caught incidentally 5 years ago. 4. Geospatial results provide evidence for 52 geographic sites where sawfishes were common in the YP. 5. Results support the development of research methodologies to study human–nature interactions integrating LEK. This matters in the YP, where sociocultural values and landscapes have changed rapidly through increasing tourism development and human overcrowding. 6. The results can help conservation managers understand the past presence and contemporary loss of sawfishes, and their habitat, and contribute to understanding the defaunation of megafauna in the YP through time. This is critical for tourism and fishery ecosystem services on which communities of the YP rely for their economies. eng

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