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Who knows, who cares?: Untangling ecological knowledge and nature connection among Amazonian colonist farmers

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Who knows, who cares? Untangling ecological knowledge and nature connection among Amazonian colonist farmers. / Mikołajczak, K.; Lees, A.C.; Barlow, J. et al.
In: People and Nature, Vol. 3, No. 2, 30.04.2021, p. 431-445.

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Mikołajczak K, Lees AC, Barlow J, Sinclair F, Trindade de Almeida O, Souza AC et al. Who knows, who cares? Untangling ecological knowledge and nature connection among Amazonian colonist farmers. People and Nature. 2021 Apr 30;3(2):431-445. Epub 2021 Feb 9. doi: 10.1002/pan3.10183

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Bibtex

@article{e2ee3b3ef6334ed18b59a2ff3567672a,
title = "Who knows, who cares?: Untangling ecological knowledge and nature connection among Amazonian colonist farmers",
abstract = "Conservationists often assume that connection with and caring about nature's well-being is strongly linked to ecological knowledge. Existing evidence on the link between ecological knowledge and psychological nature connection is mixed, geographically limited to countries in the Global North, and does not scrutinise potential differences in determinants of ecological knowledge and nature connection. We investigate the relationship between psychological nature connection and ecological knowledge of local bird species, and assess their associations with potential drivers, including access to, contact with, and reliance on nature and socio-demographic characteristics. Our study is carried among a novel participant population of colonist farmers living along a major deforestation frontier in the Brazilian Amazon. Our study context has high conservation relevance and provides an ideal setting to assess the extent to which conservation psychology's insights from the Global North hold true elsewhere. Tropical farm-forest frontiers suffer from intense habitat and biodiversity loss, and farmers with migrant origins are important yet rarely studied conservation stakeholders. Importantly, farmers' experiences of nature are likely to vary considerably due to the wide range of socio-demographic, economic, geographical and cultural diversity. Interviewees scored highly on two indices of nature connection, but scores were higher among older people and those with greater contact with nature. Bird identification knowledge was generally low to moderate, and higher among men and younger people. Species more frequently recognised were regionally common, larger-bodied or associated with non-forest habitats. Ecological knowledge of birds and nature connection were not correlated, and they did not have any predictors in common. Our results indicate that colonist farmers are capable of forming strong connections with nature, even if they rarely possess detailed knowledge of local forest biodiversity. Considering the complex and apparently context-dependent relationship between knowing and caring about nature, it is unwise to assume that changing one would automatically affect the other. A free Plain Language Summary can be found within the Supporting Information of this article.  ",
keywords = "Amazon, birds, conservation psychology, ecological knowledge, farmers, nature connection",
author = "K. Miko{\l}ajczak and A.C. Lees and J. Barlow and F. Sinclair and {Trindade de Almeida}, O. and A.C. Souza and L. Parry",
year = "2021",
month = apr,
day = "30",
doi = "10.1002/pan3.10183",
language = "English",
volume = "3",
pages = "431--445",
journal = "People and Nature",
issn = "2575-8314",
publisher = "Wiley Open Access",
number = "2",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Who knows, who cares?

T2 - Untangling ecological knowledge and nature connection among Amazonian colonist farmers

AU - Mikołajczak, K.

AU - Lees, A.C.

AU - Barlow, J.

AU - Sinclair, F.

AU - Trindade de Almeida, O.

AU - Souza, A.C.

AU - Parry, L.

PY - 2021/4/30

Y1 - 2021/4/30

N2 - Conservationists often assume that connection with and caring about nature's well-being is strongly linked to ecological knowledge. Existing evidence on the link between ecological knowledge and psychological nature connection is mixed, geographically limited to countries in the Global North, and does not scrutinise potential differences in determinants of ecological knowledge and nature connection. We investigate the relationship between psychological nature connection and ecological knowledge of local bird species, and assess their associations with potential drivers, including access to, contact with, and reliance on nature and socio-demographic characteristics. Our study is carried among a novel participant population of colonist farmers living along a major deforestation frontier in the Brazilian Amazon. Our study context has high conservation relevance and provides an ideal setting to assess the extent to which conservation psychology's insights from the Global North hold true elsewhere. Tropical farm-forest frontiers suffer from intense habitat and biodiversity loss, and farmers with migrant origins are important yet rarely studied conservation stakeholders. Importantly, farmers' experiences of nature are likely to vary considerably due to the wide range of socio-demographic, economic, geographical and cultural diversity. Interviewees scored highly on two indices of nature connection, but scores were higher among older people and those with greater contact with nature. Bird identification knowledge was generally low to moderate, and higher among men and younger people. Species more frequently recognised were regionally common, larger-bodied or associated with non-forest habitats. Ecological knowledge of birds and nature connection were not correlated, and they did not have any predictors in common. Our results indicate that colonist farmers are capable of forming strong connections with nature, even if they rarely possess detailed knowledge of local forest biodiversity. Considering the complex and apparently context-dependent relationship between knowing and caring about nature, it is unwise to assume that changing one would automatically affect the other. A free Plain Language Summary can be found within the Supporting Information of this article.  

AB - Conservationists often assume that connection with and caring about nature's well-being is strongly linked to ecological knowledge. Existing evidence on the link between ecological knowledge and psychological nature connection is mixed, geographically limited to countries in the Global North, and does not scrutinise potential differences in determinants of ecological knowledge and nature connection. We investigate the relationship between psychological nature connection and ecological knowledge of local bird species, and assess their associations with potential drivers, including access to, contact with, and reliance on nature and socio-demographic characteristics. Our study is carried among a novel participant population of colonist farmers living along a major deforestation frontier in the Brazilian Amazon. Our study context has high conservation relevance and provides an ideal setting to assess the extent to which conservation psychology's insights from the Global North hold true elsewhere. Tropical farm-forest frontiers suffer from intense habitat and biodiversity loss, and farmers with migrant origins are important yet rarely studied conservation stakeholders. Importantly, farmers' experiences of nature are likely to vary considerably due to the wide range of socio-demographic, economic, geographical and cultural diversity. Interviewees scored highly on two indices of nature connection, but scores were higher among older people and those with greater contact with nature. Bird identification knowledge was generally low to moderate, and higher among men and younger people. Species more frequently recognised were regionally common, larger-bodied or associated with non-forest habitats. Ecological knowledge of birds and nature connection were not correlated, and they did not have any predictors in common. Our results indicate that colonist farmers are capable of forming strong connections with nature, even if they rarely possess detailed knowledge of local forest biodiversity. Considering the complex and apparently context-dependent relationship between knowing and caring about nature, it is unwise to assume that changing one would automatically affect the other. A free Plain Language Summary can be found within the Supporting Information of this article.  

KW - Amazon

KW - birds

KW - conservation psychology

KW - ecological knowledge

KW - farmers

KW - nature connection

U2 - 10.1002/pan3.10183

DO - 10.1002/pan3.10183

M3 - Journal article

VL - 3

SP - 431

EP - 445

JO - People and Nature

JF - People and Nature

SN - 2575-8314

IS - 2

ER -