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- Author
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SOMA, Takuya and SOMA, Takuya
- Abstract
After centuries-long relationships between snow leopards and human nomads in the Altai Mountains in western Mongolia, numerous interspecies contact experiences have been passed down as oral history and/or folklore. Oral folklore, legends, and narratives on contacts between snow leopards and nomads are also a local ecological tradition known as “traditional ecological knowledge” (TEK), which reflects and supports recent scientific achievements and evidence. In this paper, we propose the development of a multifaceted, multilayered, complex bibliography of wildlife ecology. The fieldwork was carried out from July 19 to August 22, 2016, and 2 to 16 August, 2017, through interviews with 117 informants living near Mt. Jargalant, Mt. Bonbut, and Mt. Munkh-Khairkhan. Oral histories based on animal folktales narrated by local residents sometimes prove more informative than researchers’ scientific knowledges of ecology. In addition to elucidating the scientific basis of snow leopard ecology, science-based verification of native animal folktales may suggest new forms of conservation ecology which integrate local residents as actors in protecting snow leopards as well as indigenous wildlife elsewhere.
- Published
- 2021