Ojibway plant taxonomy at Lac Seul First Nation, Ontario, Canada

The Ojibway (Anishinabe) of Lac Seul First N ation reside in the transition zone of the Great Lakes-St. Lawrence and southern Boreal Forest regions of northwestern Ontario, Canada. Hunting and gathering of certain animal and plant species remain a significant part of their livelihood. Although Lac S...

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Main Author: Kenny, Mary Beatrice
Other Authors: Parker, William H.
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2000
Subjects:
Online Access:http://knowledgecommons.lakeheadu.ca/handle/2453/3150
id ftlakeheaduniv:oai:knowledgecommons.lakeheadu.ca:2453/3150
record_format openpolar
spelling ftlakeheaduniv:oai:knowledgecommons.lakeheadu.ca:2453/3150 2023-05-15T13:28:40+02:00 Ojibway plant taxonomy at Lac Seul First Nation, Ontario, Canada Kenny, Mary Beatrice Parker, William H. 2000 application/pdf http://knowledgecommons.lakeheadu.ca/handle/2453/3150 en_US eng http://knowledgecommons.lakeheadu.ca/handle/2453/3150 Oji-Cree language (Ontario Northwestern) Ethnobotany (Ontario Ojibwa language Dialects (Ontario Boreal forest Ethnobiological classification Folk taxonomy Thesis 2000 ftlakeheaduniv 2022-05-01T17:26:20Z The Ojibway (Anishinabe) of Lac Seul First N ation reside in the transition zone of the Great Lakes-St. Lawrence and southern Boreal Forest regions of northwestern Ontario, Canada. Hunting and gathering of certain animal and plant species remain a significant part of their livelihood. Although Lac Seul Ojibway are traditionally hunter-gatherers, there is a manipulation of the plant community in the cultivation of wild rice Zizartia aquatica L. beds and certain w ild medicinal plants. During the winter and summers of 1996-1997, a preliminary study was undertaken to collect plant taxonomic information in the Oji-Cree dialect of the community. Four Elders, fluent in the Oji-Cree dialect and who were knowledgeable of plant names, were interviewed. They were presented with plant material for identification. Five other Elders also contributed their knowledge about plants. Analysis of the taxonomic system follow ed Brent Berlin, with some exceptions. In Lac Seul folk plant taxonomy, there is no 'unique beginner' to correspond with Plantae. There are two Super Life-forms which include all vascular plants. This is the first use of the rank Super Life-form in ethnobotanical classification. There are eight named or covert Life-form taxa. Three of the Life-form taxa, characterized as 'medicinal roof, 'berry' and 'bark utility', are 'cultural' or utilitarian and overlap with the remaining Life-forms; 'conifer' (covert), 'angiosperm tree' (covert), 'herbs, ferns and fern allies', 'shrub' and 'moss'. As noted by Turner, Hunn and Johnson- Gottesfeld in other studies of non-agrarian indigenous groups, plant classification at Lac Seul reveals utilitarian identification which overlaps with morphological identification. A significant aspect of the data is the percentage of polytypic folk genera. Polytypic folk genera are usually about 18% of the total folk genera in horticultural groups and 2% of the total folk genera for foragers. At Lac Seul, the polytypic folk genera are 9% which shows a higher differentiation of folk genera than for most hunter-gathering people. Certain ubiquitous species have the same name at Lac Seul as in other Algonkian dialects ranging geographically from northern Saskatchewan to western Quebec. Thesis anishina* Lakehead University Knowledge Commons Canada
institution Open Polar
collection Lakehead University Knowledge Commons
op_collection_id ftlakeheaduniv
language English
topic Oji-Cree language (Ontario
Northwestern)
Ethnobotany (Ontario
Ojibwa language Dialects (Ontario
Boreal forest
Ethnobiological classification
Folk taxonomy
spellingShingle Oji-Cree language (Ontario
Northwestern)
Ethnobotany (Ontario
Ojibwa language Dialects (Ontario
Boreal forest
Ethnobiological classification
Folk taxonomy
Kenny, Mary Beatrice
Ojibway plant taxonomy at Lac Seul First Nation, Ontario, Canada
topic_facet Oji-Cree language (Ontario
Northwestern)
Ethnobotany (Ontario
Ojibwa language Dialects (Ontario
Boreal forest
Ethnobiological classification
Folk taxonomy
description The Ojibway (Anishinabe) of Lac Seul First N ation reside in the transition zone of the Great Lakes-St. Lawrence and southern Boreal Forest regions of northwestern Ontario, Canada. Hunting and gathering of certain animal and plant species remain a significant part of their livelihood. Although Lac Seul Ojibway are traditionally hunter-gatherers, there is a manipulation of the plant community in the cultivation of wild rice Zizartia aquatica L. beds and certain w ild medicinal plants. During the winter and summers of 1996-1997, a preliminary study was undertaken to collect plant taxonomic information in the Oji-Cree dialect of the community. Four Elders, fluent in the Oji-Cree dialect and who were knowledgeable of plant names, were interviewed. They were presented with plant material for identification. Five other Elders also contributed their knowledge about plants. Analysis of the taxonomic system follow ed Brent Berlin, with some exceptions. In Lac Seul folk plant taxonomy, there is no 'unique beginner' to correspond with Plantae. There are two Super Life-forms which include all vascular plants. This is the first use of the rank Super Life-form in ethnobotanical classification. There are eight named or covert Life-form taxa. Three of the Life-form taxa, characterized as 'medicinal roof, 'berry' and 'bark utility', are 'cultural' or utilitarian and overlap with the remaining Life-forms; 'conifer' (covert), 'angiosperm tree' (covert), 'herbs, ferns and fern allies', 'shrub' and 'moss'. As noted by Turner, Hunn and Johnson- Gottesfeld in other studies of non-agrarian indigenous groups, plant classification at Lac Seul reveals utilitarian identification which overlaps with morphological identification. A significant aspect of the data is the percentage of polytypic folk genera. Polytypic folk genera are usually about 18% of the total folk genera in horticultural groups and 2% of the total folk genera for foragers. At Lac Seul, the polytypic folk genera are 9% which shows a higher differentiation of folk genera than for most hunter-gathering people. Certain ubiquitous species have the same name at Lac Seul as in other Algonkian dialects ranging geographically from northern Saskatchewan to western Quebec.
author2 Parker, William H.
format Thesis
author Kenny, Mary Beatrice
author_facet Kenny, Mary Beatrice
author_sort Kenny, Mary Beatrice
title Ojibway plant taxonomy at Lac Seul First Nation, Ontario, Canada
title_short Ojibway plant taxonomy at Lac Seul First Nation, Ontario, Canada
title_full Ojibway plant taxonomy at Lac Seul First Nation, Ontario, Canada
title_fullStr Ojibway plant taxonomy at Lac Seul First Nation, Ontario, Canada
title_full_unstemmed Ojibway plant taxonomy at Lac Seul First Nation, Ontario, Canada
title_sort ojibway plant taxonomy at lac seul first nation, ontario, canada
publishDate 2000
url http://knowledgecommons.lakeheadu.ca/handle/2453/3150
geographic Canada
geographic_facet Canada
genre anishina*
genre_facet anishina*
op_relation http://knowledgecommons.lakeheadu.ca/handle/2453/3150
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