UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. — Cultural diversity — indicated by linguistic diversity — and biodiversity are linked, and their connection may be another way to preserve both natural environments and Indigenous populations in Africa and perhaps worldwide, according to an international team of researchers.
"The punchline is, that if you are interested in conserving biological diversity, excluding the Indigenous people who likely helped create that diversity in the first place may be a really bad idea," said Larry Gorenflo, professor of landscape architecture, geography and African studies, Penn State. "Humans are part of ecosystems and I hope this study will usher in a more committed effort to engage Indigenous people in conserving localities containing key biodiversity."
Gorenflo, working with linguist Suzanne Romaine, Merton College, University of Oxford, U.K., looked at 48 localities in Africa designated by the United Nations Education, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) as Natural World Heritage Sites. These sites host "globally important natural or combined natural and cultural resources," they report in Conservation Biology.
They analyzed geographic information system data on Indigenous languages in these areas and found that 147 languages overlapped with the UNESCO sites. Indigenous languages occurred in all but one of the Natural World Heritage Sites examined.
"The Namib Sand Sea desert in Namibia is a pretty dry area," said Gorenflo. "Kind of desolate, with wonderful sand dunes and natural features, but so harsh that there is no one living there as far as I know."