4.7 Review

Inviting ecologists to delve deeper into traditional ecological knowledge

Journal

TRENDS IN ECOLOGY & EVOLUTION
Volume 36, Issue 8, Pages 679-690

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.tree.2021.04.006

Keywords

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Funding

  1. NKFI project [K 131837]
  2. MTA Premium Postdoctoral Research Fellowship Program [PPD008/2017]
  3. MTA Lendulet program [LENDULET_2020-56]

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Ecologists and conservationists realize the importance of traditional ecological knowledge for biodiversity conservation and suggest collaborative long-term participatory research with social scientists to gain a deeper understanding of TEK's ecological dimensions.
Ecologists and conservationists increasingly acknowledge that traditional ecological knowledge (TEK) is vital for a better understanding and conservation of biodiversity; for example, for a more complex socioecological understanding of long-term processes, ecosystem resilience, the impacts of traditional management practices, and the worldviews underpinning these practices. To gain a deeper understanding of the ecological dimensions of TEK, ecologists and conservation biologists should conduct participatory long-term collaborative research on TEK. To conduct TEK research properly, however, ecologists need to familiarize themselves more deeply with the methodologies of social sciences, further develop their links with social scientists, and adopt new approaches, such as strengthening respect towards other knowledge systems and being inclusive in research and open to new types of validation.

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