Multifunctional Plants: Ecosystem Services and Undervalued Knowledge of Biocultural Diversity in Rural Communities—Local Initiatives for Agroecological Transition in Chile
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemEditorial
MDPI
Materia
Participatory research Local ecological knowledge Endogenous potential
Fecha
2023-12-29Referencia bibliográfica
Peredo Parada, S.; Barrera Salas, C. Multifunctional Plants: Ecosystem Services and Undervalued Knowledge of Biocultural Diversity in Rural Communities—Local Initiatives for Agroecological Transition in Chile. Land 2024, 13, 39. https://doi.org/10.3390/land13010039
Patrocinador
FEDER/B.HUM.074.UGR18Resumen
With the aim of contributing to the understanding of plants’ multifunctionality for sustainable
agroecosystem management, the first part of this paper addresses the importance of functional
biodiversity in the design of agroecological systems, including the local context in the generation
of situated knowledge. The second part describes three participatory research experiences with
local farmers across three locations in Chile. The first experience reports on the use of Dasyphyllum
diacanthoides (endemic tree) as fodder. A second experience focuses on the establishment of Rosa spp.
(invasive species) as an agroforestry system integrated into the landscape. Both experiences were
collaborative efforts with farmer communities of the Andean Mountains in southern Chile. The final
experience describes the use of different spontaneous aromatic and medicinal plants through biological
corridors to encourage beneficial insects as natural controllers. All three research experiences
reveal a lack of knowledge, decontextualization, and undervaluation of the biocultural diversity
present in some traditional Chilean agroecosystems.