BEYOND THE COMMERCIALIZATION OF WILD EDIBLE MUSHROOMS IN THE COMMUNITY OF SAN ANTONIO ACAHUALCO STATE OF MEXICO.
Main Article Content
Keywords
Wild edible fungi, cultural importance index (CIs), priority conservation index (CPI).
Abstract
Objective: Analyze the ecological-cultural context of wild edible mushrooms in a community in central Mexico.
Design, methodology and approximation: A semi-structured interview was applied to people who possess traditional knowledge regarding wild mushrooms. The cultural importance index, priority conservation index and logistic regression were calculated.
Results: 17 species of wild edible mushrooms are important culturally. 27 mushroom dishes are eaten from June to October. 5 species have an average sale of 50 to 80 kilos per day, 3 of them have a high cultural importance index and priority conservation index. The priority conservation index showed that 7 wild species are under pressure by 12 anthropic activities and with this the reduction of diversity food.
Limitations and implications: This is a particular case study so that the scope of its results is limited to establish descriptive statements for the study area.
Findings and conclusions: It is concluded that the culture is strongly related to the forest ecosystem and time for the welfare of the human being.