Homegardens in north-eastern Portugal: former features, roles, gendered knowledge and practices

Authors

  • Ana Maria Carvalho CIMO - Centro de Investigação de Montanha. School of Agriculture of the Polytechnic Institute of Bragança. Canpus de Santa Apolónia. Bragança, Portugal

Keywords:

Homegardens, Traditional knowledge, Gender knowledge, Natural Park of Montesinho, North-eastern Portugal

Abstract

This study describes general homegardens former features and primary functions in a protected rural area of the North-eastern Portugal, the Natural Park of Montesinho, and focuses on fundamental socio-cultural roles intertwined with economic and ecological purposes registered during a three year period, from 2002 to 2005, using ethnographic methodologies. The gendered nature of local homegardens is also discussed: former homegardens used to be female domains managed according to female values and ideals. Thus, gendered knowledge and women’s intentions and practices are reported throughout the text. Homegarden practices have maintained for a long time traditional knowledge, local culture and techniques and plant varieties. The complex structure and intertwined roles of Montesinho homegardens have been neglected by research and rural development professionals, perhaps because women, who were the primary experts and knowledge holders, were often marginalised Changes in rural societies and the modernisation of lifestyles have affected homegardens’ relevance, roles and management and have influenced gardeners’ behaviour, the persistence and transmission of traditional knowledge and homegardens prevalence as important garden sites. However, some participants considered that with new economic opportunities such as agritourism and organic produce, and the limited alternatives in rural areas, that situation could reverse in the medium term. . In this instance, transmission of homegardening knowledge and practice would be vital

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

Author Biography

Ana Maria Carvalho, CIMO - Centro de Investigação de Montanha. School of Agriculture of the Polytechnic Institute of Bragança. Canpus de Santa Apolónia. Bragança, Portugal

http://lattes.cnpq.br/0588527774815010

References

Albuquerque UP, Andrade LHC and Caballero J. 2005. Structure and floristics of home gardens in Northeastern Brazil, Journal of Arid Environments, 62: 491–506.

Albuquerque UP, Lucena RFP and Neto, EMFL. 2014. Selection of research participants. In: Albuquerque UP, Cunha LVFC, Lucena RFP and Alves RRN (ed,). Methods and techniques in ethnobiology and ethnoecology. New York: Springer Protocols, Humana Press.

Alexiades MN. 1996. Collecting ethnobotanical data: an Introduction to Basic Concepts and Techniques. In: Alexiades MN. (ed.), Selected guidelines for ethnobotanical research: a field manual. New York: The New York Botanical Garden, p. 53-94.

Brito JP. 1996. Retrato de aldeia com espelho. Ensaio sobre Rio de Onor. Lisboa: Publicações D. Quixote.

Carvalho AM. 2010. Plantas y sabiduría popular del Parque Natural de Montesinho. Un estudio etnobotánico en Portugal. Biblioteca de Ciencias nº 35. Madrid: Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas, pp. 496.

Carvalho AM and Frazão-Moreira, A. 2011. Importance of local knowledge in plant resources management and conservation in two protected areas from Trás-os-Montes, Portugal. Journal of Ethnobiology and Ethnomedicine, 7:36.

Carvalho AM, Lousada JB and Rodrigues AP. 2001. Etnobotânica da Moimenta da Raia. A Importância das plantas numa aldeia transmontana. In: I Congresso de Estudos Rurais, 10 September 2001, Proceedings. Vila Real: Universidade de Trás-os-Montes e Alto Douro.

Carvalho AM and Morales R. 2013. Persistence of Wild Food and Wild Medicinal Plant Knowledge in a North-Eastern Region of Portugal. In: Pardo de Santayana M, Pieroni A and Puri R (eds.). Ethnobotany in the New Europe: People, Health and Wild Plant Resources. Oxford, UK: Berghahn Books, pp. 147-171.

Castroviejo S (coord.gen.) 1986-2014. Flora Iberica. Madrid: Real Jardín Botánico, CSIC.

Dias J. 1984. Rio de Onor. Comunitarismo agro-pastoril. 3th ed. [First edition 1953]. Lisboa: Editorial Presença.

Eyzaguirre PB. and Linares OF. 2004. Home gardens and agrobiodiversity. Washington: Smithsonian Books.

Franco JA. 1971-1984. Nova Flora de Portugal (Continente e Açores). Lisboa.

Frazão-Moreira A and Carvalho AM. 2014. When the young think that every plant is parsley! Social variability of ethnobotanical knowlegde and plant categorization in two rural areas in Portugal. Memórias, Revista da Sociedade de Geografia de Lisboa, nº especial Environmental Anthropology, 16: 58-68.

Frazão-Moreira A., Carvalho AM and Martins ME. 2007. Conocimientos acerca de plantas en la nueva ruralidad. Cambio social y agro ecología en el Parque Natural de Montesinho (Portugal)’. Revista Periféria, 7: 1-15. http://revistes.uab.cat/periferia/article/view/173

Frazão-Moreira A, Carvalho AM and Martins ME. (2009). Local ecological knowledge also ‘comes from books’: cultural change, landscape transformation and conservation of biodiversity in two protected areas in Portugal. Anthropological Notebooks, 15 (1): 27–36.

Heckler SL. 2004. Cultivating Sociality: Aesthetic factors in the composition and functions of Piaroa homegardens, Journal of Ethnobiology 24 (2): 203-232.

Hoogerbruge I. and Fresco L. 1993. Homegarden systems: Agricultural characteristics and challenges, Gatekeeper Series no. SA39: 2-20.

Howard PL. 2003. Women and the Plant World: an exploration. In: Howard PL (ed.), Woman and plants. Gender relations in biodiversity management and conservation. London: Zed Books, pp. 1-31.

INE. 2001. Recenseamento Geral Agrícola. Lisboa: Instituto Nacional de Estatística.

INE. 2002. Censo 2001. Lisboa: Instituto Nacional de Estatística.

INE. 2013. Inquérito à estrutura das explorações agrícolas 2013: um retrato com duas realidades. Lisboa: Instituto Nacional de Estatística.

Kays S and Dias J. 1996. Cultivated Vegetables of the World. Athens: Exon Press.

Kumar BM and Nair PKR. 2004. The enigma of tropical home gardens. Agroforestry Systems, 61–62: 135–152.

Lok R. 2001. A better understanding of traditional homegardens through the use of locally defined management zones, Indigenous Knowledge and Development Monitor 9 (2).

Maroyi A. 2009. Traditional home gardens and rural livelihoods in Nhema, Zimbabwe: A sustainable agroforestry system. International Journal of Sustainable Development and World Ecology, 16: 1–8.

Martin, G. 1995. Ethnobotany: a methods manual. London: Earthscan Publications.

Pardo de Santayana M, Tardio J, Blanco E, Carvalho AM, Lastra J, San Miguel E and Morales R. 2007. Traditional knowledge of wild edible plants used in the northwest of the Iberian Peninsula (Spain and Portugal): a comparative study. Journal of Ethnobiology and Ethnomedicine, 3:27

Reyes-García V, Aceituno-Mata L, Vila S, Calvet-Mir L, Garnatje T, Jesch A, Lastra JJ, Parada M, Rigat M, Vallès J, and Pardo-de-Santayana M. 2012. Home gardens in three mountain regions of the Iberian Peninsula: description, motivation for gardening, and gross financial benefits. Journal of Sustainable Agriculture, 36:2, 249-270.

Reyes-García V, Aceituno-Mata L, Calvet-Mir L, Garnatje T, Gomez-Baggethun E, Lastra JJ, Ontillera R, Parada M, Rigat M, Vallès J, Vila S and Pardo-de-Santayana M. 2014. Resilience of traditional knowledge systems: The case of agricultural knowledge in home gardens of the Iberian Peninsula. Global Environmental Change, 24 (2014) 223–231.

Reyes-García V, Vila S, Aceituno-Mata L, Calvet-Mir L, Garnatje T, Jesch A, Lastra JJ, Parada M, Rigat M, Vallès J, and Pardo-de-Santayana M. 2010. Gendered home gardens. A study in three mountain areas of the Iberian. Peninsula. Economic Botany, 64: 235–247.

Ribeiro O and Lautensach H. 1989. Geografia de Portugal. O povo português. Lisboa: Edições João Sá da Costa.

Rodrigues O. 1998. A terra e a mudança. Reprodução social e património fundiário na Terra Fria Transmontana. Bragança: Instituto Politécnico de Bragança.

Rodrigues O. 2000. Utilização do território e propriedade fundiária. Ph.D. dissertation. Lisboa: Instituto Superior de Agronomia, Universidade Técnica de Lisboa.

San Miguel E. 2004. Etnobotánica de Piloña (Asturias). Cultura y saber popular sobre las plantas en un concejo del Centro-Oriente Asturiano. Ph.D. dissertation. Madrid: Universidad Autónoma de Madrid.

Schneider J. 2004. Towards an Analysis of home garden cultures: On the Use of sociocultural variables in home gardens studies. In: Eyzaguirre PB and Linares OF (eds), Home Gardens and Agrobiodiversity. Washington: Smithsonian Books, pp. 41-55.

Shillington L. 2008. Being(s) in relation at home: socio-natures of patio “gardens” in Managua, Nicaragua. Social Culture and Geography, 9: 755–776.

Shrestha PK, Gautam R, Rana RB and Sthapit BR. 2004. Managing diversity in various ecosystems: home Gardens of Nepal In: Eyzaguirre PB and Linares OF (eds), Home Gardens and Agrobiodiversity. Washington: Smithsonian Books, pp. 95-122.

Sunwar S, Thornstrom C, Subedi A, and Bystrom M. 2006. Home gardens in western Nepal: Opportunities and challenges for on-farm management of agrobiodiversity. Biodiversity & Conservation, 15: 4211–4238.

Trinh LN. 2004. ‘Vietnamese home gardens. Cultural and crop diversity’ In: Eyzaguirre PB and Linares OF (eds), Home Gardens and Agrobiodiversity. Washington: Smithsonian Books, pp. 81-94.

Tutin, TG et al. (eds). 1980. Flora Europaea. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

Vogl CR and Vogl-Lukasser B. 2003. Tradition, dynamics and sustainability of plant species composition and management in homegardens on organic and non-organic small scale farms in Alpine Eastern Tyrol, Austria. Biological Agriculture and Horticulture, 21: 349-366.

Vogl CR and Vogl-Lukasser B. 2004. Ethnobotanical research in homegardens of small farmers in the Alpine Region of Osttirol (Austria): An example for bridges built and building bridges. Ethnobotany Research and Applications, 2: 111-137.

Vogl-Lukasser B and Vogl CR. 2001. Temperate homegardens of small Alpine Farmers in Eastern Tyrol (Austria): Their value for maintaining and enhancing biodiversity. Contribution of Homegardens to in situ Conservation of Plant Genetic Resources in Farming Systems Workshop, 17-19 July 2001. Germany: Witzenhausen.

Zaldivar ME, Rocha OJ, Castro E and Barrantes R. 2002. Species diversity of edible plants grown in homegardens of Chibchan Amerindians from Costa Rica. Human Ecology,30 (3): 301-316.

Downloads

Published

2016-12-20

How to Cite

CARVALHO, A. M. Homegardens in north-eastern Portugal: former features, roles, gendered knowledge and practices. Gaia Scientia, [S. l.], v. 10, n. 2, 2016. Disponível em: https://periodicos.ufpb.br/ojs/index.php/gaia/article/view/33200. Acesso em: 22 dec. 2024.

Issue

Section

Ciências Ambientais