From: University of Zurich
June
9. 2021 -- Language is one of our species' most important skills, as it has
enabled us to occupy nearly every corner of the planet. Among other things,
language allows indigenous societies to use the biodiversity that surrounds
them as a "living pharmacy" and to describe the medicinal properties
of plants. Linguists estimate that there are nearly 7,400 languages in the
world today.
Most
of these languages, however, are not recorded in writing, and many languages
are not being passed on to the next generation. This has led
linguists to estimate that 30 percent of all languages will disappear by the
end of the 21st century. For indigenous cultures who
mostly transmit knowledge orally, this high risk of language extinction also
threatens their knowledge of medicinal plants.
Threatened
languages support most of unique knowledge
Researchers
from the University of Zurich have now assessed the degree to which indigenous
knowledge of medicinal plants is linked to individual languages. Senior
researcher Rodrigo Cámara-Leret and Jordi Bascompte, professor of ecology,
analyzed 3,597 medicinal species and 12,495 medicinal applications associated
with 236 indigenous
languages in North America, northwest Amazonia and New Guinea.
"We found that more than 75 percent of all medicinal plant services are
linguistically-unique and therefore only known to one language,"
Cámara-Leret points out.
To
quantify how much of this linguistically-unique knowledge may vanish as
languages or plants go extinct, the researchers turned to the Glottolog catalog
of the world's languages and the IUCN Red List of Threatened Species to gain
information on the threat to languages and medicinal plant species,
respectively. They found that threatened languages support over 86 percent of
all unique knowledge in North America and Amazonia, and 31 percent of all
unique knowledge in New Guinea. By contrast, less than 5 percent of medicinal
plant species were threatened.
International
Decade of Indigenous Languages
The
findings of this study indicate that each indigenous language provides unique
insights into the medicinal applications associated with biodiversity.
Unfortunately, the study suggests that language loss will be even more critical
to the extinction of medicinal knowledge than biodiversity loss. The study
coincides with the United Nations proclaiming the next 10 years as the
International Decade of Indigenous Languages to raise global awareness of the critical
situation of many indigenous languages. "The next steps, in line with the
vision of the UN, will require mobilizing resources for the preservation,
revitalization and promotion of these threatened languages," Bascompte
says. Additionally, launching large-scale community-based participatory efforts
will be crucial to document endangered medicinal knowledge before it vanishes.
https://phys.org/news/2021-06-language-extinction-triggers-loss-unique.html
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