2015
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0122542
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The Floating Forest: Traditional Knowledge and Use of Matupá Vegetation Islands by Riverine Peoples of the Central Amazon

Abstract: Matupás are floating vegetation islands found in floodplain lakes of the central Brazilian Amazon. They form initially from the agglomeration of aquatic vegetation, and through time can accumulate a substrate of organic matter sufficient to grow forest patches of several hectares in area and up to 12 m in height. There is little published information on matupás despite their singular characteristics and importance to local fauna and people. In this study we document the traditional ecological knowledge of rive… Show more

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Cited by 22 publications
(33 citation statements)
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References 22 publications
(31 reference statements)
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“…Many Indigenous communities will therefore have vested interests in the protection and health of forests, the management of which is mainly subject to a legacy of colonial management. International literature on Indigenous communities and conservation is dominated by Western paradigms of conservation but includes examples of researchers working alongside and documenting IK for the purpose of gaining insight into aspects of ecology and natural history (Walter and Hamilton 2014;Camara-Leret et al 2014;de Freitas et al 2015). Studies examining alternative (including Indigenous) approaches to forest conservation document positive impacts of co-managing forests, including minimising the loss of biodiversity (Souto et al 2014;Singh et al 2015).…”
Section: The Use Of Indigenous Knowledge In Forest Conservation and Bmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Many Indigenous communities will therefore have vested interests in the protection and health of forests, the management of which is mainly subject to a legacy of colonial management. International literature on Indigenous communities and conservation is dominated by Western paradigms of conservation but includes examples of researchers working alongside and documenting IK for the purpose of gaining insight into aspects of ecology and natural history (Walter and Hamilton 2014;Camara-Leret et al 2014;de Freitas et al 2015). Studies examining alternative (including Indigenous) approaches to forest conservation document positive impacts of co-managing forests, including minimising the loss of biodiversity (Souto et al 2014;Singh et al 2015).…”
Section: The Use Of Indigenous Knowledge In Forest Conservation and Bmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The Montrichardia Crueg (Araceae) genus consists of two species (Montrichardia linifera (Arruda) Schott and Montrichardia arborescens (L.) Schott) of large emergent plants widely distributed in the Neotropics (Croat et al, 2005), with a wide distribution in the Amazonian floodplain (Gibernau et al, 2003;Lopes et al, 2016). Individuals of Montrichardia can grow up to 6 meters in height and the populations (alone or together with other species) form rooted stands, called matupás (De Freitas et al, 2015) of varying sizes, from a few meters to large floating islands, occurring in different distances from the margin (Lopes et al, 2016). These floating islands appear with the release of a part of the macrophytes bank from the margins, the plants and sediment adhered to the roots form these islands can move in the rivers according to the water flow.…”
Section: Plant Descriptionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Scholars have called them "floating mats," "floating vegetation islands," or even "floating forests." Botanists, ecologists and geologists are increasing our knowledge of these unusual habitats (Van Duzer 2004, Azza et al 2006, Volkova 2010, de Freitas et al 2015. They are best known within big river systems (e.g., Mississippi, Congo, Nile, Amazon) and within most big coastal freshwater wetlands (e.g., Dismal Swamp, Okefenoke, Everglades).…”
Section: Sedimentation From Floating Matsmentioning
confidence: 99%