Ecology
Adaptation
Theories
Cultures
Other
100

What is a biome

a large region that shares similar climate and types of vegetation

100

Adaptations can be physical or ___. 

cultural (or regulatory)

100

TEK stands for...

Traditional Ecological Knowledge, the idea that people who have multiple generations of experience in an ecosystem also have important knowledge about it, exact definitions vary according to Whyte, one of multiple terms that include LEK and ILK

100

Rarámuri

Indigenous group, Sierra Madres, Chihuahua Mexico, foraging and animal husbandry, kincentric ecology

100

mongongo nut

staple food gathered by !Kung women

200

What is an ecosystem

a local web of interdependent plants, animals (including people), soils, and water sources

200

acclimatory adaptation

temporary physical adjustment, such as building up muscle

200

political ecology

emphasizes power relationships and associated social structures as key to understanding human ecology

200

Karimojong

Uganda, east Africa, cattle herders, cattle primarily for milk and blood and ritual, part of social life via marriage, gifts, raiding

200

iwigara

Rarámuri kincentric ecology concept

300

name a subsistence strategy used in tundra biomes

pastoralism, foraging

300

developmental adaptation

physical adjustment acquired during individual's growth and retained into adulthood, such as larger lung capacity 

300

Julian Steward

is associated with cultural ecology, developed in the 1930s to 1950s, focused on how aspects of cultural life, including technology, social group dynamics, and mobility on the landscape, are linked to the use of natural resources and their spatial distribution

300

!Kung or Ju/hoansi

foragers, Botswana, arid biome, fieldwork by Lee in 1960s, importance of gathering vs hunting, leisurely "work week", care for younger and older members

300

rumbim or kaiko

ritual plant important to Tsembaga Maring

or pig festival important to Tsembaga Maring; 

or names for important aspects of ecological rituals

400
another name for taiga is...

boreal forest, subarctic

400

another name for foraging is ....

hunting and gathering
400

historical ecology

associated with Carole Crumley, emphasizes that any particular locale will have a cultural and ecological past of various human-ecology relationships and that these will add new parameters to options going forward

400

Hanunhóo

horticulturalists, Philippines, rice important, humid tropics biome, fallow resting of fields, intercropping
400

knowledge mobilization

ideas about how different types of knowledge can be used (or not) in different contexts; for example, can knowledge be acquired in one cultural context and applied to another, or is it situational, having full meaning only in its original context

500

which trophic level is represented by people who consume the milk and blood of a cow

secondary consumer (the producer is the plant the cow ate, the primary consumer is the cow, and the person who gets their energy from the cow is a secondary consumer)

500

another name for swidden is ...

slash and burn, horticulture, home gardens, preindustrial cultivation, shifting agriculture, extensive agriculture, subsistence farming

500

HBE, NCT, HE, SES

human behavioral ecology, niche construction theory, human ecodynamics, social ecological systems

500

Tsembaga Maring

highland New Guinea, horticulture, humid tropics biome, ritual cycles of fighting between adjacent communities, plant rumbim, enough pigs to uproot the rumbim, kaiko pig festival, land claims

500

ethnographic present

the time during which a particular ethnographic study was done; important because cultures change over time, and because any ethnographic study is framed by the research questions and vocabulary that were deemed important when it was done

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