The Brazil nut (the seeds of the rainforest tree Bertholletia excelsa) is the only globally traded seed collected from the wild by forest-based harvesters across the Amazon basin. The large geographic scale of Brazil nut exploitation and the significant contributions to local livelihoods, national economies, and forest-based development over the last decades, merit a review of the “conservation-through-use” paradigm. We use Elinor Ostrom’s framework for assessing sustainability in socioecological systems: (1) resource unit, (2) users, (3) governance system, and (4) resource system, to determine how different contexts and external developments generate specific conservation and development outcomes. We find that the resource unit reacts robu...
AbstractThe regeneration of Brazil nut trees depends on tree-fall gaps in the forest. However, shift...
The Amazon biome occupies 60% of Brazilian territory, configured as a complex metabolism due to its ...
The regeneration of Brazil nut trees depends on tree-fall gaps in the forest. However, shifting cult...
The Brazil nut (the seeds of the rainforest tree Bertholletia excelsa) is the only globally traded s...
Sustainable exploitation is widely advocated as a strategy for reconciling economic pressures upon n...
<div><p>Brazil nut, the <i>Bertholletia excelsa</i> seed, is one of the most important non-timber fo...
Brazil nuts are harvested from the primary rainforests in the Amazonian lowlands as a direct form of...
Brazil nut, the Bertholletia excelsa seed, is one of the most important non-timber forest products i...
The emergence of Brazilian extractive reserves reinforced the notion that sustainable forest use cou...
The emergence of Brazilian extractive reserves reinforced the notion that sustainable forest use cou...
Brazil nut, the Bertholletia excelsa seed, is one of the most important non-timber forest products i...
Brazil nut, the Bertholletia excelsa seed, is one of the most important non-timber forest products i...
In the last three decades, Brazil nut (Bertholletia excelsa) has emerged as a cornerstone species fo...
In the last three decades, Brazil nut (Bertholletia excelsa) has emerged as a cornerstone species fo...
<div><p>Understanding the factors that underlie the production of non-timber forest products (NTFPs)...
AbstractThe regeneration of Brazil nut trees depends on tree-fall gaps in the forest. However, shift...
The Amazon biome occupies 60% of Brazilian territory, configured as a complex metabolism due to its ...
The regeneration of Brazil nut trees depends on tree-fall gaps in the forest. However, shifting cult...
The Brazil nut (the seeds of the rainforest tree Bertholletia excelsa) is the only globally traded s...
Sustainable exploitation is widely advocated as a strategy for reconciling economic pressures upon n...
<div><p>Brazil nut, the <i>Bertholletia excelsa</i> seed, is one of the most important non-timber fo...
Brazil nuts are harvested from the primary rainforests in the Amazonian lowlands as a direct form of...
Brazil nut, the Bertholletia excelsa seed, is one of the most important non-timber forest products i...
The emergence of Brazilian extractive reserves reinforced the notion that sustainable forest use cou...
The emergence of Brazilian extractive reserves reinforced the notion that sustainable forest use cou...
Brazil nut, the Bertholletia excelsa seed, is one of the most important non-timber forest products i...
Brazil nut, the Bertholletia excelsa seed, is one of the most important non-timber forest products i...
In the last three decades, Brazil nut (Bertholletia excelsa) has emerged as a cornerstone species fo...
In the last three decades, Brazil nut (Bertholletia excelsa) has emerged as a cornerstone species fo...
<div><p>Understanding the factors that underlie the production of non-timber forest products (NTFPs)...
AbstractThe regeneration of Brazil nut trees depends on tree-fall gaps in the forest. However, shift...
The Amazon biome occupies 60% of Brazilian territory, configured as a complex metabolism due to its ...
The regeneration of Brazil nut trees depends on tree-fall gaps in the forest. However, shifting cult...