A United Nations book released on Tuesday aims to provide people in the developing world with accessible knowledge of Amazon plants and foods they can use to improve their livelihoods.
The Amazon plants [un.org] |
The book, "Fruit Trees and Useful Plants in Amazonian Life," is written in easy-to-grasp language with folklore and customs of rural villagers so readers can easily put the recommendations into practice, UN officials said here.
"Some 80 percent of people living in the developing world rely on non-wood forest products such as fruits and medicinal plants for their nutritional and health needs," said Eduardo Rojas- Briales, assistant director-general for forestry at the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO).
"This new book provides comprehensive information on Amazon fruits and plants, and is a perfect example of how to make our knowledge accessible for poor people to help them maximize the benefits from forest products and services and improve their livelihoods," he said.
FAO estimates that 25 percent of people in developing countries are functionally illiterate, and that in rural areas this figure can be up to 40 percent. The layout of the book takes this into account and allows readers who lack formal education to extract knowledge using pictures and numbers.
"Some 90 Brazilian and international researchers who were willing to present their research to rural villagers in alternative formats -- including jokes, recipes and pictures -- collaborated in the production of this book," said Tina Etherington, who managed the publication project for FAO's forestry department.
Etherington also highlighted that farmers, midwives, hunters and musicians contributed insights and their experiences to the publication, making it an "innovative way of presenting science and how those techniques can be transferred to other areas in the world."
Some of the foods described in the book provide nutrients, minerals and anti-oxidants that keep the body healthy. For instance, the Buriti palm fruit, which contains the highest known levels of vitamin A of any plant in the world and the acai fruit, which is hailed as a "superfood" for its high antioxidant and omega fatty acid content.
The book was co-produced by FAO, the Center for International Forestry Research (CIFOR) and People and Plants International, and was unveiled in a ceremony in Rome marking the end of the International Year of Forests.
The Amazon is the largest contiguous tropical forest remaining in the world, with 25 million people living in the Brazilian Amazon alone. However, deforestation, fire and climate change could destabilize the region and result in the forest shrinking to one third of its size in 65 years.
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