From the forest to the coast: the wild meat trade chain on the Coast of Guyana

In the Caribbean region, very little is known about wild meat use and trade. To contribute to this knowledge gap, we studied the wild meat trade chain on the coastal area of Guyana, which geographically and culturally connects the Caribbean and the Amazon Region. In Guyana, the wildmeat sector is le...

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Main Authors: Vliet, N. van, Puran, A., David, O., Nasi, R.
Format: Journal Article
Language:Inglés
Published: Universidade Estadual da Paraiba/Universidade Federal Rural de Pernambuco (Ethnobiology and Conservation) 2022
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/125889
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author Vliet, N. van
Puran, A.
David, O.
Nasi, R.
author_browse David, O.
Nasi, R.
Puran, A.
Vliet, N. van
author_facet Vliet, N. van
Puran, A.
David, O.
Nasi, R.
author_sort Vliet, N. van
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description In the Caribbean region, very little is known about wild meat use and trade. To contribute to this knowledge gap, we studied the wild meat trade chain on the coastal area of Guyana, which geographically and culturally connects the Caribbean and the Amazon Region. In Guyana, the wildmeat sector is legal and in the process of being regulated. Our study shows that the market chain on the coast of Guyana is a short and direct market chain where the harvester most often sells directly to the consumer or through one level of intermediary (market vendors, home-based traders, roadside traders, restaurants, food stalls or rum shops). In coastal Guyana, wild meat can be considered a luxury, rather than a necessity: the price is higher compared to other alternative sources of meat and demand rises for special events. The topmost sold species are Cuniculus paca, Mazama americana, Tapirus terrestris, Dicotyles tajacu, Tayassu pecari, and Hydrochoerus hydrochaeris. The volumes traded to the coast of Guyana are equivalent to 361 tons of wild meat sold per year. Considering the population size on the coast of Guyana, this amount is equivalent to 1,4 g/capita/day and 4% of the protein intake from animal origin. These values are below those observed in urban towns from Central Amazonia in Brazil where wild meat consumption per capita equals to 18 g/capita/day. From a one health perspective, further attention is required with regards to food safety aspects along this legal trade chain.
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spelling CGSpace1258892024-01-17T12:58:34Z From the forest to the coast: the wild meat trade chain on the Coast of Guyana Vliet, N. van Puran, A. David, O. Nasi, R. wildlife trade hunting In the Caribbean region, very little is known about wild meat use and trade. To contribute to this knowledge gap, we studied the wild meat trade chain on the coastal area of Guyana, which geographically and culturally connects the Caribbean and the Amazon Region. In Guyana, the wildmeat sector is legal and in the process of being regulated. Our study shows that the market chain on the coast of Guyana is a short and direct market chain where the harvester most often sells directly to the consumer or through one level of intermediary (market vendors, home-based traders, roadside traders, restaurants, food stalls or rum shops). In coastal Guyana, wild meat can be considered a luxury, rather than a necessity: the price is higher compared to other alternative sources of meat and demand rises for special events. The topmost sold species are Cuniculus paca, Mazama americana, Tapirus terrestris, Dicotyles tajacu, Tayassu pecari, and Hydrochoerus hydrochaeris. The volumes traded to the coast of Guyana are equivalent to 361 tons of wild meat sold per year. Considering the population size on the coast of Guyana, this amount is equivalent to 1,4 g/capita/day and 4% of the protein intake from animal origin. These values are below those observed in urban towns from Central Amazonia in Brazil where wild meat consumption per capita equals to 18 g/capita/day. From a one health perspective, further attention is required with regards to food safety aspects along this legal trade chain. 2022-08-08 2022-12-13T03:31:07Z 2022-12-13T03:31:07Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/125889 en Open Access Universidade Estadual da Paraiba/Universidade Federal Rural de Pernambuco (Ethnobiology and Conservation) van Vliet, N., Puran, A., David, O., & Nasi, R. 2022. From the forest to the coast: the wild meat trade chain on the Coast of Guyana. Ethnobiology and Conservation, 11. https://doi.org/10.15451/ec2022-08-11.17-1-13
spellingShingle wildlife
trade
hunting
Vliet, N. van
Puran, A.
David, O.
Nasi, R.
From the forest to the coast: the wild meat trade chain on the Coast of Guyana
title From the forest to the coast: the wild meat trade chain on the Coast of Guyana
title_full From the forest to the coast: the wild meat trade chain on the Coast of Guyana
title_fullStr From the forest to the coast: the wild meat trade chain on the Coast of Guyana
title_full_unstemmed From the forest to the coast: the wild meat trade chain on the Coast of Guyana
title_short From the forest to the coast: the wild meat trade chain on the Coast of Guyana
title_sort from the forest to the coast the wild meat trade chain on the coast of guyana
topic wildlife
trade
hunting
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/125889
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