HUNTER-gatherer societies, RAIN forests, FORAGING behavior, PRIMITIVE societies, TRADITIONAL societies, HUMAN settlements, FORESTS & forestry, ETHNOLOGY
Abstract
While “Pygmy” hunter-gatherers have generally been assumed to be the original inhabitants of the central African rainforest, recent studies dispute the viability of subsistence in tropical rainforests through foraging alone. There are, however, few studies that are based on sound data of actual long-term foraging. This paper examines the viability of “pure” foraging in tropical rainforests, based on data from participant observation of a long-term foraging expedition among the Baka in the northwestern Congo Basin. The group was observed to subsist solely on wild food resources, particularly wild yams, for two-and-half months. The study was carried out during the dry season when food resources are generally thought to be scarce in tropical rainforests. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]