Between dredgers and gillnets: Mechanized mining and changes in fishing activities in the black communities of the middle basin of the River Atrato, Chocó, Colombia
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.51641/bioetnia.v14i1.185Keywords:
Atrato river, Black communities, Fishing, Mining, TrasmalloAbstract
Since the Colony, Atrato River has allowed the settlement of its banks, has become the main means of communication, and has been the source of livelihood for the black communities. Currently, the fishing is a priority activity for these communities because their livelihood, food and trade is derived from this activity. However, the basin of Atrato is suffering environmental impacts, the reduction of volumes, sizes, and species of fish Based on the local knowledge of fishermen, this article attempts to reconstruct some of the key elements for undergoing both the ecological processes of the Atrato basin and the sociocultural dynamics of the black communities. It is argued that there is a relationship between the changes occurred in production-extraction systems and introduction of new techniques for capture and the impacts that these activities generate in the reduction of fish stocks.
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