4.6 Article

Gender differences in traditional knowledge of useful plants in a Brazilian community

Journal

PLOS ONE
Volume 16, Issue 7, Pages -

Publisher

PUBLIC LIBRARY SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0253820

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Postdoctoral Scholarship from Brazilian Coordination for Improvement of Higher Education Personnel (CAPES)
  2. Master scholarship from Brazilian National Council for Scientific and Technological Development (CNPq)
  3. Federal University of Ouro Preto

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The study found that gender plays a key role in the sharing of ecological knowledge, with women having a greater variety of plant knowledge and men showing more dispersed plant knowledge. The social-ecological network among women is more connected, with wider information sharing and more central individuals, likely providing cohesion and maintenance of community ecological knowledge.
Genders differ in traditional ecological knowledge (TEK) about plants, but how gender influences TEK sharing is still poorly understood. Here, we examined how gender is associated with the diversity, transmission, and structure of TEK. We tested whether women and men differ in terms of plant knowledge (species richness, alpha-diversity), knowledge heterogeneity (beta-diversity), and in the structure of social-ecological networks they form. The study was carried out in a suburban community in the city of Ouro Preto, Southeastern, Brazil. Using the snow-ball technique, semi-structured interviews, guided tours, and participant observation, we gathered information from 33 women and 33 men in the community. We collected information about their culture, social-economic profiles, and plant knowledge from which we identified 291 plant species in 10 use categories. Overall, our results indicated that the cognition and sharing of ethnobotanical knowledge are structured by gender. Women rated better in their plant knowledge repertory (greater alpha-diversity), while plant knowledge among men was more heterogeneous (greater beta-diversity), suggesting less information sharing among them. We observed that the network among women is more connected, exhibited greater information sharing, with a greater number of central individuals, who likely provide the cohesion and maintenance of TEK in the community. Our findings indicate how social-ecological networks can provide insights and information to unveil social patterns of knowledge transmission. Understanding how TEK is fostered and shared among community members will favor better planning of ethnobotanical studies, as well as inform decision-makers about strategies for the conservation of plant TEK.

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