info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Host Plants Association with Longhorn Beetles of Food Value: Traditional Knowledge of the Guaraní as Cultural Identity Keepers
Fecha
2021-09Registro en:
Araujo, Jorge; Keller, Hector Alejandro; Hilgert, Norma Ines; Host Plants Association with Longhorn Beetles of Food Value: Traditional Knowledge of the Guaraní as Cultural Identity Keepers; Society of Ethnobiology; Ethnobiology Letters; 12; 1; 9-2021; 85-93
2159-8126
CONICET Digital
CONICET
Autor
Araujo, Jorge
Keller, Hector Alejandro
Hilgert, Norma Ines
Resumen
The study of plant-insect interactions and how cultural groups perceive and manage them constitutes one of theinterests of ethnoentomology. This work describes the association between host plants and longhorn beetles (Order:Coleoptera; Family: Cerambycidae), an important food among the Guaraní peoples of the province of Misiones, Argentina.Different management methods of host tree species are analyzed in order to promote the rearing of larvae for edible use.We also discuss a story about the mythical origin of cerambicids relayed by the Ava Chiripa Guaraní community. We reflecton the importance of the local worldview in the maintenance of ancestral practices, such as the cultural tasks involved inslash-and-burn agriculture and the intimate knowledge of biological relationships between the cerambycids and theirwoody host plants.