Traditional conservation and human-primate conflict in Ujungjaya Village Community, Ujung Kulon, Banten, Indonesia
##plugins.themes.bootstrap3.article.main##
Abstract
Abstract. Permana S, Partasasmita R, Iskandar J, Rohmatullayaly EN, Iskandar BS, Malone N. 2020. Traditional conservation and human-primate conflict in Ujungjaya Village Community, Ujung Kulon, Banten, Indonesia. Biodiversitas 21: 521-529. In the past, rural Sundanese people’s interactions with wild animals, including nonhuman primates (hereafter ‘primates’), is influenced by traditional ecological knowledge (TEK) with foundations in various myths and beliefs. Today, because of environmental changes, development of a market economy, cultural change, and the enhancement of agricultural technology, the beliefs and practices associated with TEK have eroded. We aim to describe the present perceptions of primates by the Sundanese people of Ujungjaya Village, Sumur Subdistrict, Ujung Kulon, Banten Province, and demonstrate how these myths and beliefs manifest in behavior towards primates. We use qualitative methods based on an ethnobiological approach to gain insight into people’s perceptions of their natural surroundings. Our results show that the people of Ujungjaya still maintain deep perceptions that are manifested in stories, songs, poems, spells, and invocations that prohibit the killing of primates. However, on their own, these manifestations are insufficient to protect primates from harm as the penetration of market economies and the fragmentation of habitats create the conditions for increased human-primate conflict. Indeed, the people of Ujungjaya sometimes hunt and capture primates for consumption, trading, and medicinal use. As such, laws and regulations designed to promote conservation are insufficient without an understanding of the cultural and socio-economic aspects of people’s lives.
##plugins.themes.bootstrap3.article.details##
Alves RRN, Souto MS. 2015. Ethnozoology: a brief introduction. Ethnobio Conserv 4 (1): Doi: 10.15451/ec2015-1-4.1-1-13.
Hunn ES. 2011. Ethnozoology. in Anderson EN, Pearsall DM, Hunn ES, Turner NJ (eds) Ethnobiology. New Jersey: John Willey & Sons.
Berkes F. 1993. Traditional ecological knowledge in perspective. In Inglis JT. (ed) Traditional ecological knowledge: concept and cases. Canadian: International Program on Traditional Ecological Knowledge and International Research Center.
Berkes F, Colding J, Folke C. 2000. Rediscovery of traditional ecological knowledge as adaptive management. Ecol Appl 10:1251–1262.
Bismark M. 2009. Bekantan conservation biology (Nasalis larvatus). Bogor: Center for Forest Research and Development and Nature Conservation. [Indonesian]
Brosius JP, Lovelace GW, Marten GG. 1986. Ethnoecology: an approach to understanding traditional agricultural knowledge. in Marten GG (ed) Traditional agriculture in Southeast Asia: human ecology perspective. Colorado Westview Press.
Carlson TJS, Maffi L. 2004. Introduction: ethnobotany and conservation of biocultural biodiversity. in Carlson TJS, Maffi L. (eds) Ethnobiology and conservation of biocultural diversity. New York: New York Botanical Garden. Chapman CA, Onderdonk, DA 1998. Forests without primates: primate/plant codependency. American J Primatol, 45(1): 127-141.
Cowlishaw G, Dunbar R. 2000. Primate conservation biology. The University of Chicago Press. USA
Djuwantoko, Rossanda T. 1996. Ecological behavior of Javanese gibbons in Pakenjeng natural forests, KPH, Garut, West Java. Buletin Fakultas Kehutanan Universitas Gadjah Mada No. 29/1996 [Indonesian]
Emieaboe PA, Ahorsu EK, Gbogbo F. 2014. Myths, taboos and biodiversity conservation: the case of hunters in rural community in Ghana. Ecol Environ Conserv 20 (3): 879-886.
Fuentes A. 2010. Natural cultural encounters in Bali: Monkeys, temples, tourists, and ethnoprimatology. Cultural Anthropol, 25(4): 600-624.
Fuentes A. 2012. Ethnoprimatology and the anthropology of the human-primate Interface. Ann rev of Anthropology, 41: 101-17.
Hunn ES, Brown CH. 2011. Linguistic ethnobiology. in Anderson EN, Pearsall DM, Hunn ES,Turner NJ (eds) Ethnobiology. New Jersey: John Willey & Sons.
Iskandar J. 2018. Ethnobiology, ethnoecology, and sustainable development.Yogyakarta : Plantaxia. [Indonesian]
Johansson T. 2008. Beasts on Fields. Human Wildlife Conflicts in Natural-Culture Borderlands. [Disertation] Finland: Departement of Geography, Faculty of science, University of Helsinki.
Johnson A. 1974. Ethnoecology and planting practices in a swidden agricultural system. American Ethnol 1 (1): 87-101.
Karyawati AT. 2012. General overview of feeding behavior on primates. J Sci Res, 15 (1D): 15110.
Maida S, Sukandar P, Istiadi Y. 2016. Variation of Javan gibbon vocalization structure (Hylobates moloch Audebert, 1798) in the Petungkriyono Protection Forest, Pekalongan, Central Java. Bioma, 12(1): 40-49. [Indonesian]
Newing H, Eagle CM, Puri RK, Watson CW. 2011. Conducting research in conservation: social science methods and practice. Routledge Taylor & Francis Group, London and New York.
Nijman V, Nekaris K. 2015. Traditions and trade in slow lorises in Sundanese communities in Southern Java, Indonesia. Endangered Species Res 25: 79-88. DOI: 10.3354/esr00610.
Parathian HE, Maldonado AM. 2010. Human-nonhuman primate interactions among Tikina People: perceptions and local initiatives for resource management in Amayacu in the Columbian Amazon. Am J Primatol 72: 855-865. Doi: 10.1002/ajp.20816
Partasasmita R, Iskandar J, Malone N. 2016. Karangwangi people (South Cianjur,West Java, Indonesia) Local Knowledge and wildlife conservation. Biodiversitas, 17 (1):154-161 DOI: 10.13057/biodiv/d170123.
Permana S, Iskandar J, Parikesit. 2018. Local knowledge on rice variations (landraces) of the Naga Community, West Java, Indonesia. Asian J Ethnobio 1 (1)1-8.
Permana S, Iskandar J, Parikesit, Husodo T, Megantara EN, Partasasmita R. 2019. Changes of ecological wisdom of Sundanese People on conservation of wild animals: A case study in Upper Cisokan Watershed, West Java, Indonesia. Biodiversitas 20: 1284-1293.
Raharyono D, Paripurno ET. 2001.Tiger friend with nature. Jakarta: The Gibbon Foundation
Rye S. 2000. Wild pig, ‘pig men', and transmigrant in the rain forest of Sumatra. In Knight J. (ed), natural enemies: people-wildlife conflicts in anthropological perspective. Routledge, London.
Sampaio MB, Souto A, Schiel N. 2016. Ethnoprimatology. In Albuquerque UP, Alves R. (eds) Introduction to ethnobiology. Springer Nature Switzerland AG. DOI 10.1007/978-3-319-28155-1_10.
Sponsel LE. 1997. The Human niche in Amazonia: explorations in ethnoprimatology. In Kinzey WG (ed) New world primates: ecology, evolution, and behavior. New York: Walter de Gruyter Inc.
Toledo VM. 1992. Indigenous people and biodiversity. Mexico: Institute of Ecology National University of Mexico.
Wheatley BP. 1999. The sacred monkeys of Bali. Prospect Heights, NY: Waveland
Wessing R. 1993. A change in the forest: Myth and History in West Java. Journal of Southeast Asian Studies, 24(1):1-17.
Wessing R. 1995. The last tiger in East Java: symbolic continuity in ecological change. Asian Folklore Studies 54: 191-218.
Wessing R. 1999. The sacred grove: founders and the owners of forest of in West Java, Indonesia. L’Homme et La Foret Tropicale.
Most read articles by the same author(s)
- ASEP ZAINAL MUTAQIN, DENNY KURNIADIE, JOHAN ISKANDAR, MOHAMAD NURZAMAN, RUHYAT PARTASASMITA, Ethnobotany of suweg (Amorphophallus paeoniifolius): Folk classification, habitat, and traditional conservation in Cisoka Village, Majalengka District, Cimanuk Watershed Region, Indonesia , Biodiversitas Journal of Biological Diversity: Vol. 21 No. 2 (2020)
- SINTIAMI RAMADHANI, JOHAN ISKANDAR, RUHYAT PARTASASMITA, ENENG NUNUZ ROHMATULLAYALY, Local knowledge of Sundanese village people on traditional medicine: A case study in Cibeurih Hamlet, Nagarawangi Village, Sumedang District, Indonesia , Biodiversitas Journal of Biological Diversity: Vol. 22 No. 5 (2021)
- JOHAN ISKANDAR, BUDIAWATI S. ISKANDAR, DEDE MULYANTO, RACHMAN LATIF ALFIAN, RUHYAT PARTASASMITA, Traditional ecological knowledge of the bird traders on bird species bird naming, and bird market chain: A case study in bird market Pasty Yogyakarta, Indonesia , Biodiversitas Journal of Biological Diversity: Vol. 21 No. 6 (2020)
- BUDIWATI S. ISKANDAR, JOHAN ISKANDAR, BUDI IRAWAN, SUROSO, RUHYAT PARTASASMITA, The development of coffee cultivation in the traditional agroforestry of mixed-garden (dukuh lembur) to provide social-economic benefit for the Outer Baduy Community, South Banten, Indonesia , Biodiversitas Journal of Biological Diversity: Vol. 20 No. 10 (2019)
- JOHAN ISKANDAR, BUDIAWATI S. ISKANDAR, Local knowledge of the Baduy Community of South Banten (Indonesia) on the traditional landscapes , Biodiversitas Journal of Biological Diversity: Vol. 18 No. 3 (2017)
- RIMBO GUNAWAN, UGA GEMA RAMADHAN, JOHAN ISKANDAR, RUHYAT PARTASASMITA, Local knowledge of utilization and management of sugar palm (Arenga pinnata) among Cipanggulaan People of Karyamukti, Cianjur (West Java, Indonesia) , Biodiversitas Journal of Biological Diversity: Vol. 19 No. 1 (2018)
- JOHAN ISKANDAR, SYAHRAS FATHIN A, HASNA SILMI R, TEGUH HUSODO, INDRI WULANDARI, ERRI N. MEGANTARA, RUHYAT PARTASASMITA, SYA SYA SHANIDA, Bird diversity and ethno-ornithological knowledge of local people in Ciletuh-Palabuhanratu Geopark, Sukabumi, West Java, Indonesia , Biodiversitas Journal of Biological Diversity: Vol. 22 No. 8 (2021)
- RUHYAT PARTASASMITA, ZAMZAM I’LANUL ANWAR ATSAURY, TEGUH HUSODO, The use of forest canopy by various bird species in tropical forest montana zone, the Nature Reserve of Mount Tilu, West Java, Indonesia , Biodiversitas Journal of Biological Diversity: Vol. 18 No. 2 (2017)
- AVYDA KOZA DEANOVA, CELIN MAYLANI PRISTIAWATI, DEWI APRILIA, IVO SOLIKAH, MARHCELINA NURCAHYATI, NOR LIZA, WHIDI HIMAWAN, RUHYAT PARTASASMITA, AHMAD DWI SETYAWAN, The diversity of edible plants traded in Ir. Soekarno Market, a traditional market in Sukoharjo District, Indonesia , Biodiversitas Journal of Biological Diversity: Vol. 22 No. 9 (2021)