The Adaptive Nature of Culture: A Cross-Cultural Analysis of the Returns of Local Environmental Knowledge in Three Indigenous Societies

Archive ouverte

Dounias, Edmond | Reyes-García, Victoria | Guèze, Maximilien | Díaz-Reviriego, Isabel | Duda, Romain | Fernández-Llamazares, Álvaro | Gallois, Sandrine | Napitupulu, Lucentezza | Orta-Martínez, Martí | Pyhälä, Aili

Edité par CCSD ; University of Chicago Press -

International audience. Researchers have argued that the behavioral adaptations that explain the success of our species are partially cultural, i.e., cumulative and socially transmitted. Thus, understanding the adaptive nature of culture is crucial to understand human evolution. We use a cross-cultural framework and empirical data purposely collected to test whether culturally transmitted and individually appropriated knowledge provides individual returns in terms of hunting yields and health and, by extension, to nutritional status, a proxy for individual adaptive success. Data were collected in three subsistence-oriented societies: the Tsimane' (Amazon), the Baka (Congo Basin), and the Punan (Borneo). Results suggest that variations in individual levels of local environmental knowledge relate to individual hunting returns and to self-reported health, but not to nutritional status. We argue that this paradox can be explained through the prevalence of sharing: individuals achieving higher returns to their knowledge transfer them to the rest of the population, which explains the lack of association between knowledge and nutritional status. The finding is in consonance with previous research highlighting the importance of cultural traits favoring group success, but pushes it forward by elucidating the mechanisms through which individual and group level adaptive forces interact.

Consulter en ligne

Suggestions

Du même auteur

Schooling, Local Knowledge and Working Memory: A Study among Three Contemporary Hunter-Gatherer Societies

Archive ouverte | Reyes-García, Victoria | CCSD

International audience. Researchers have analysed whether school and local knowledge complement or substitute each other, but have paid less attention to whether those two learning models use different cognitive str...

The life history of human foraging: Cross-cultural and individual variation

Archive ouverte | Koster, Jeremy | CCSD

International audience. Human adaptation depends on the integration of slow life history, complex production skills, and extensive sociality. Refining and testing models of the evolution of human life history and cu...

“Hunting Otherwise”. Women’s Hunting in Two Contemporary Forager-HorticulturalistSocieties

Archive ouverte | Reyes-García, Victoria | CCSD

International audience. Although subsistence hunting is cross-culturally an activity led and practiced mostly by men, a rich body of literature shows that in many small-scale societies women also engage in hunting i...

Chargement des enrichissements...