AUTHOR=Pontón-Cevallos José , Ramírez-Valarezo Nathaly , Pozo-Cajas Mireya , Rodríguez-Jácome Gabriela , Navarrete-Forero Gabriela , Moity Nicolas , Villa-Cox Gonzalo , Ramírez-González Jorge , Barragán-Paladines María José , Bermúdez-Monsalve Jorge R. , Goethals Peter L. M. TITLE=Fishers’ Local Ecological Knowledge to Support Mangrove Research in the Galapagos JOURNAL=Frontiers in Marine Science VOLUME=9 YEAR=2022 URL=https://www.frontiersin.org/journals/marine-science/articles/10.3389/fmars.2022.911109 DOI=10.3389/fmars.2022.911109 ISSN=2296-7745 ABSTRACT=
Mangroves provide multiple ecosystem services to coastal communities and their fisheries. In the Galapagos, mangroves have been primarily prized for their role as nursery grounds; though, the importance of cultural benefits, including the development of knowledge systems among fishers, needs to be further explored. Fishers’ local ecological knowledge (LEK) has been employed in the past to answer questions about the marine environment; not yet about mangroves. In such regard, this ethnoecological approach can contribute to unveil mangrove habitat-dependence relationships among fishery taxa across the life cycle, connectivity among habitats, and productivity spatial patterns across the archipelago. To access fishers’ LEK, we conducted 35 semi-structured interviews and 2 facilitated community workshops comprising 3 activities. A photo-elicitation method allowed us to extract values given to mangroves (i.e., ecosystem services), from which indirect use values were considered more relevant for fisheries. As such, the accumulation of LEK might have been crucial for the establishment of these values among fishers. By using a species-habitat association method, we revealed a high perceived connectivity between mangroves and other coastal and marine habitats in the Galapagos. Although this suggests an overall weak dependence to the ecosystem, fishers’ anecdotes allowed us to recognize novel species occurrences and exclusive habitat uses (e.g., spawning in