Local ecological knowledge indicators for wild plant management: Autonomous local monitoring in Prespa, Albania

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Local ecological knowledge indicators for wild plant management : Autonomous local monitoring in Prespa, Albania. / Tomasini, Sabrina; Theilade, Ida.

In: Ecological Indicators, Vol. 101, 2019, p. 1064-1076.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Tomasini, S & Theilade, I 2019, 'Local ecological knowledge indicators for wild plant management: Autonomous local monitoring in Prespa, Albania', Ecological Indicators, vol. 101, pp. 1064-1076. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ecolind.2019.01.076

APA

Tomasini, S., & Theilade, I. (2019). Local ecological knowledge indicators for wild plant management: Autonomous local monitoring in Prespa, Albania. Ecological Indicators, 101, 1064-1076. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ecolind.2019.01.076

Vancouver

Tomasini S, Theilade I. Local ecological knowledge indicators for wild plant management: Autonomous local monitoring in Prespa, Albania. Ecological Indicators. 2019;101:1064-1076. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ecolind.2019.01.076

Author

Tomasini, Sabrina ; Theilade, Ida. / Local ecological knowledge indicators for wild plant management : Autonomous local monitoring in Prespa, Albania. In: Ecological Indicators. 2019 ; Vol. 101. pp. 1064-1076.

Bibtex

@article{b044752ced7546c4863cab77f26c3a4a,
title = "Local ecological knowledge indicators for wild plant management: Autonomous local monitoring in Prespa, Albania",
abstract = "Broad consensus affirms the need to better understand the status and trends of biodiversity and the important role that local ecological knowledge (LEK) plays in establishing successful monitoring programs. Although often present, autonomous local monitoring systems are frequently ignored by externally-driven community-based or participatory conservation projects. Here we explore the autonomous LEK-led monitoring carried out by local medicinal plant harvesters to guide the management and harvesting of six locally useful medicinal plant species in Prespa National Park, Albania. Open and semi-structured interviews with harvesters (n = 22), National Park staff (n = 2) and scientific advisors (n = 2) were combined with participatory mapping, joint plot assessments with key informants and a science-led ecological plot survey. Results suggest that harvesters possessed detailed LEK and adopted a variety of socio-economic, management, ecological and environmental indicators to assess wild resources and inform their harvest practices. LEK- and science-led plot assessments generally agreed on most monitoring aspects, suggesting that LEK indicators were relevant and LEK-based perceptions were accurate and could be used to assess the status and trends of useful species. However, while LEK focused on the harvestable resource; i.e. certain individuals and plant parts, the science-based approach assessed plant populations as a whole. Official monitoring based on existing LEK-led monitoring appears to be feasible, but LEK may be more appropriate for monitoring resources for wild harvesting or certification purposes than for {\textquoteleft}pure{\textquoteright} conservation monitoring of plant populations.",
author = "Sabrina Tomasini and Ida Theilade",
year = "2019",
doi = "10.1016/j.ecolind.2019.01.076",
language = "English",
volume = "101",
pages = "1064--1076",
journal = "Ecological Indicators",
issn = "1470-160X",
publisher = "Elsevier",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Local ecological knowledge indicators for wild plant management

T2 - Autonomous local monitoring in Prespa, Albania

AU - Tomasini, Sabrina

AU - Theilade, Ida

PY - 2019

Y1 - 2019

N2 - Broad consensus affirms the need to better understand the status and trends of biodiversity and the important role that local ecological knowledge (LEK) plays in establishing successful monitoring programs. Although often present, autonomous local monitoring systems are frequently ignored by externally-driven community-based or participatory conservation projects. Here we explore the autonomous LEK-led monitoring carried out by local medicinal plant harvesters to guide the management and harvesting of six locally useful medicinal plant species in Prespa National Park, Albania. Open and semi-structured interviews with harvesters (n = 22), National Park staff (n = 2) and scientific advisors (n = 2) were combined with participatory mapping, joint plot assessments with key informants and a science-led ecological plot survey. Results suggest that harvesters possessed detailed LEK and adopted a variety of socio-economic, management, ecological and environmental indicators to assess wild resources and inform their harvest practices. LEK- and science-led plot assessments generally agreed on most monitoring aspects, suggesting that LEK indicators were relevant and LEK-based perceptions were accurate and could be used to assess the status and trends of useful species. However, while LEK focused on the harvestable resource; i.e. certain individuals and plant parts, the science-based approach assessed plant populations as a whole. Official monitoring based on existing LEK-led monitoring appears to be feasible, but LEK may be more appropriate for monitoring resources for wild harvesting or certification purposes than for ‘pure’ conservation monitoring of plant populations.

AB - Broad consensus affirms the need to better understand the status and trends of biodiversity and the important role that local ecological knowledge (LEK) plays in establishing successful monitoring programs. Although often present, autonomous local monitoring systems are frequently ignored by externally-driven community-based or participatory conservation projects. Here we explore the autonomous LEK-led monitoring carried out by local medicinal plant harvesters to guide the management and harvesting of six locally useful medicinal plant species in Prespa National Park, Albania. Open and semi-structured interviews with harvesters (n = 22), National Park staff (n = 2) and scientific advisors (n = 2) were combined with participatory mapping, joint plot assessments with key informants and a science-led ecological plot survey. Results suggest that harvesters possessed detailed LEK and adopted a variety of socio-economic, management, ecological and environmental indicators to assess wild resources and inform their harvest practices. LEK- and science-led plot assessments generally agreed on most monitoring aspects, suggesting that LEK indicators were relevant and LEK-based perceptions were accurate and could be used to assess the status and trends of useful species. However, while LEK focused on the harvestable resource; i.e. certain individuals and plant parts, the science-based approach assessed plant populations as a whole. Official monitoring based on existing LEK-led monitoring appears to be feasible, but LEK may be more appropriate for monitoring resources for wild harvesting or certification purposes than for ‘pure’ conservation monitoring of plant populations.

U2 - 10.1016/j.ecolind.2019.01.076

DO - 10.1016/j.ecolind.2019.01.076

M3 - Journal article

VL - 101

SP - 1064

EP - 1076

JO - Ecological Indicators

JF - Ecological Indicators

SN - 1470-160X

ER -

ID: 213916212