The importance of ethnoecological studies for the conservation and sustainable use of biodiversity: a critical analysis of six decades of support by FAPESP

This paper aims to assess the area of ethnoecology within funding provided by the São Paulo Research Foundation (FAPESP) to projects and events in order to discuss the importance of this area for the conservation and sustainable use of biodiversity and the opportunity to advance this area of knowledge, The paper presents a retrospective analysis of the 75 projects and 21 events organized in the area of ethnoecology that received support from FAPESP in the last 60 years. For this purpose, a search was performed in the FAPESP databases using the keywords Ethnoecology, Ethnobiology, Ethnoscience, Ethnoichthyology, Ethnotaxonomy, Ecological Anthropology, Ethnobotany, Ethnozoology, Ethnopharmacology, Traditional Knowledge, Traditional Ecological Knowledge, Indigenous Knowledge, Ethnography, Human Ecology and Ethnoarcheology. Research Support modality accounted for most of the projects (88%), with 45.3% of funding occurring in the decade of 2000–2009. No project was supported in the first two decades and only eight were part of the BIOTA Program. The main areas of submission were Biological Sciences (46.7% of projects and 47.6% of events) and Humanities (38.7% of projects). The research questions and methods of the projects developed over the last four decades were analyzed critically and comparatively. Given the data collected, an increase of ethnocecological projects supported by the BIOTA Program and through the thematic modality may contribute to advance this area of knowledge and to cross the path from inter to transdisciplinar science.

conserve their environment. In this tangle of ramifications that are often intertwined, there are still others, such as ethnoconservation, proposed by the Brazilian A.C. Diegues (2000), which focuses on the traditional management and conservation of biodiversity by indigenous peoples and local communities.
Each of these disciplines, subdisciplines and branches of knowledge has a particular universe of excerpts. Considering only Ethnobotany, Nolan & Turner (2011) found 17 research topics, including ethnobotany and conservation; symbolic ethnobotany; cognitive ethnobotany; historical and ethnobotanical migrations; ethnobotany and the right to intellectual property; ethnotaxonomic classification systems; and medical ethnobotany.
The overlaps between these and other branches of science can generate confusion both for those in the field and for external researchers, often hindering the choice of reviewers for and peer review of scientific projects and articles. An example of this type of confusion occurs between Ethnobotany and Ethnopharmacology. Ethnobotany is recurrently taken as the study of the relationship between peoples and their medicinal plants; however, this field of knowledge is, in fact, much broader, involving other aspects of the use of plants such as food, fibers, dyes and construction. Ethnopharmacology is the discipline that addresses the use of medicinal resources by different people but is often associated only with plants; however, it also deals with animals, fungi, algae and even minerals. Similarly, there is a certain lack of clarity between the limits (and overlaps) of ethnozoology and ethnopharmacology. For example, should animals used for medicinal purposes by people be investigated via ethnozoology, ethnopharmacology, or ethnomedicine?
The lack of precision of the boundaries between disciplines and subdisciplines (and their respective scopes), often governed by the political interests of scientific societies 2 , sometimes results in a lack of credibility within the academic universe and, consequently, by the agencies that promote scientific research. Another factor that has hindered research in the field of ethnoecology and related fields over many decades is the lack of recognition and appreciation by academic science (also known as Western science) of other knowledge systems (Carneiro da Cunha 2009). There are many terms used in the literature to describe such knowledge systems, some of which are broadersuch as indigenous knowledge (IK), traditional knowledge (TK), folk knowledge (FK) -and others more specific -such as traditional ecological knowledge or traditional environmental knowledge) (TEK) or local ecological knowledge (LEK) (Toledo 1992, Berkes 1999, Hunn, 2007. Fortunately, this began to reverse in the last decade, especially after the Intergovernmental Science-Policy Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services (IPBES) recognized in its conceptual framework (Diaz et al. 2015) and incorporated into the construction of its reports the plurality of knowledge systems of indigenous peoples and local communities (IPLC).
Despite advances, an issue still remains in several decision-making and research forums: how ethical is it to use a knowledge system (with its values and methods of construction and transmission of knowledge) to validate another knowledge system (with other values and methods)? For example, most of the contemporary concepts attributed to ethnopharmacology concern the validation of the use of biotic elements by biomedicine, which from the epistemological point of view is mistaken if we consider the other areas of ethnosciences (Rodrigues & Oliveira 2020). Validation itself can be called into question when the hegemonic character of academic science is recognized (Carneiro da Cunha 2009) because there is not a single method or a single science. As Feyerabend defends in his work Against the Method, from 1975 "… There may be many sciences…. Western science now reigns supreme throughout the globe, not because of its rationality (because it does not always have it) but because of the use of power." The author is not against science; he is against the ideologies that use the name of science for cultural murder, disregarding other forms of knowledge.
Who are these local peoples and communities that ethnoecological research investigates? There are thousands of ethnicities and more than 6,900 languages spoken around the globe (IPBES 2019); between a quarter and half of these languages (and the knowledge associated with them) are threatened with extinction (Lewis 2009, Loh & Harmon 2014. In Brazil, the human groups investigated and involved in these areas of science include both indigenous peoples (there are 305 ethnic groups and 274 languages spoken) and traditional populations, including caiçaras, caboclos, ribeirinhos, quilombolas, caipiras, and small rural producers, to name a few.
The importance of these indigenous peoples and traditional communities for the conservation and sustainable use of biodiversity has been demonstrated for decades. Today, a quarter of the planet's habitable areas is inhabited and/or managed by indigenous peoples and traditional communities, and these areas include approximately one-third of the protected areas and one-third of the areas with low human intervention (IPBES 2019). The ecological knowledge that these peoples have regarding the elements and the functioning of the system they inhabit is of paramount importance for their own well-being and resilience (Armitage et al. 2012), for the conservation of biodiversity (Alcorn 1993, Toledo 2001, Carneiro da Cunha et al. 2021, for the development of restoration practices within degraded areas of the planet (IPBES 2018), and for the development of new drugs.
This article seeks to explore whether and how the universe of ethnoecology and related areas that investigate the humannature relationship (e.g., other branches of ethnosciences, human ecology, ecological anthropology, environmental anthropology, and environmental ethnography) has been addressed in research promoted by the state of São Paulo over the six decades since the creation of the São Paulo Research Foundation (Fundação de Amparo à Pesquisa do Estado de São Paulo -FAPESP). It also seeks to explore the outcomes of these ethnoecological studies for the conservation and sustainable use of biodiversity and the empowerment of the peoples and communities involved in them and the prospects for future research in this area of knowledge. By delimiting this scope, we make the caveat that numerous other studies in ethnoecology and related areas were and are being conducted outside the scope of FAPESP and that they will not be addressed here.

Data collection and analysis
To trace the history of research supported by FAPESP in the last 60 years in the area of ethnoecology and related areas that study the human-nature relationship, searches were conducted between 15 and 18/01/2022 in the Virtual Library of FAPESP (collection from 1990 to 2022). In this search, the following keywords were used: ethnoecology, ethnobiology, ethnoscience, ethnoichthyology, ethnotaxonomy, ecological anthropology, ethnobotany, ethnozoology, ethnopharmacology, traditional knowledge, traditional ecological knowledge, indigenous knowledge, ethnography, human ecology and ethnoarcheology. To search for projects prior to 1990, data were provided by the Scientific Coordination of FAPESP. A total of 303 studies developed between 1962 and 1989, in the areas of botany, zoology, ecology and oceanography, were identified. In these searches, only the projects in the modalities Regular Support, Young Researcher and Thematic were considered, developed by institutions within the State of São Paulo between 1962 and 2022, as detailed in Table 1 and in Figure 1. The other modalities, i.e., Scientific Initiation Scholarships, Master's and Doctorate, Visiting Professor, and Scientific-Journal Publications, were excluded from the search because our focus was on researchers already established in the state of São Paulo -with the possibility of requesting support from FAPESP for projects -and not on researchers in training or visitors.
During the search, only studies that clearly had an ethnoecological character were selected. For example, several studies in the areas of anthropology, ethnography, and ecology, although they had some relationship with the subject, did not directly address the human-nature relationship in its multiple dimensions and therefore were not selected. Other studies did not make clear which human groups were the target of the study, presenting them in a generalist manner, such as the traditional populations of the Atlantic Forest. This, in a way, made it difficult to analyze the data on which human groups have been the target of studies in this area of knowledge, not to mention the controversial issue of intellectual property discussed worldwide.
In addition to the assessment of research projects, we also conducted a search on events organized in Brazil and supported by FAPESP in the area of ethnoecology and related areas. We used the same keywords for the project search. Notably, we considered only support for the organization of events; the modality participation in events (in Brazil or abroad) was not considered herein, as detailed in Table 1 and in Figure 1.
For the analysis of the projects and events, we used descriptive statistics and content analysis of the key questions and objectives of the projects.

Results and discussion
The following provides an overview of the distributions of projects and events over the decades and the areas chosen for submissions. Subsequently, we discuss the focuses of the studies conducted and how they have transformed over the decades. The subtitles of the sections for each decade reflect the main research questions investigated at the time. Finally, we present the main human groups investigated.

An Overview of Projects and Events Funded Over Six Decades
A total of 75 projects were located, of which 66 (88%) were funded through the Regular Support modality, three were funded through the Young Researcher modality (4%) and six were funded through the Thematic modality (8%), in addition to eight developed under the BIOTA Program (Table 1).
The first projects included in the BIOTA Program date to 2003, four years after its creation, on March 25, 1999. Since then, only 14.5% of the 55 projects subsequent to this date were developed within the BIOTA Program. As the pillars of this program are the characterization, conservation, restoration and sustainable use of biodiversity and considering the contribution that projects in ethnoecology and related areas generate for this program, the findings of this assessment make it clear the importance of better publicization of the BIOTA Program among researchers in the area and of opening specific calls for this area, including thematic projects.
A key requirement for the success of such calls though is the adoption an interdisciplinary evaluation panel, including reviewers from both social and biological sciences.
Thematic projects enable connections among various areas of knowledge around a theme -these connections are also a striking character of ethnoecology, which involves professionals from various areas of knowledge and from various sectors of society, including researchers, managers and traditional communities, functioning as a team. However, less than 8% of the projects funded by FAPESP in the period analyzed were thematic projects, and only three researchers were among those who obtained projects within this modality: Alpina Begossi (State University of Campinas/UNICAMP), Lin Chau Ming (State University of São Paulo/UNESP) and Eduardo Góes Neves (University of São Paulo/USP).
When considering the totality of projects, the researchers who received the most funding from FAPESP to advance research in the field of ethnoecology and related areas -those with three or more projects -were Alpina Begossi (14 projects); Lin Chau Ming and Eliana Rodrigues (6 each); Dominique Tilkin Gallois, Lux Boelitz Vidal and Fabíola Andréa Silva (4 each); and Rui Sérgio Sereni Murrieta (3). Alpina Begossi was not only one of the pioneers of the field of ethnoecology, ethnobiology and human ecology in Brazil, training several researchers, but is one of the 600 Brazilian researchers among the 100,000 most influential scientists in the world according to the PLOS Biology ranking. Alpina's more than 160 scientific publications indicate the scope of the funding received by FAPESP. Figure 1 provides an overview of the distribution of the 75 projects supported by FAPESP in the last six decades  in ethnoecology and related areas. There are practically no projects on this topic in the first two decades; therefore, the focus of our analyses will be on the last four decades. Notably, there was a considerable increase in projects in the areas under study between 1990-1999 (20 projects) and 2000-2009 (34 projects) and a sharp decline observed between 2010-2019 (18 projects). This can be explained by several factors, including i) a crisis in the scientific area of study due to the Brazilian legislation regarding access to traditional knowledge, with the promulgation of Provisional Measure no. 2.186-16 of August 23, 2001 (repealed by Law no. 13.123, of 2015 and still in force), which hindered the development of several projects for more than a decade; and ii) cases of unfounded accusations of biopiracy (such as the "Krahô Case") among Brazilian researchers, leaving out foreigners and NGOs.
Although the decade beginning with 2020 includes only 2 years and therefore cannot be compared to the others, there are three projects in progress ( Figure 1). It is possible that there will be a decline in projects approved in this period due to the COVID-19 pandemic, which began in early 2020, and the institutional dismantling carried out by the federal government starting in 2019. This situation caused delays in several projects, if not all, due to the very nature of these lines of research, which involve direct contact between researchers and traditional communities during fieldwork. Because they are socially vulnerable, these communities were even more isolated during the pandemic and vulnerable to invasions and other violence in their territories. Field work, therefore, had to be canceled and/or postponed for up to two or more years.
Regarding scientific events, in the last six decades, FAPESP has supported the organization of 21 events in Brazil, four of which were international in scope and most of which (90%) occurred in the first two decades of this century (Table 1, Figure 1). With the exception of the Mini-Course on Ethnozoology (process 84/02780-9), Campinas-SP, under the responsibility of Nelson Papavero and organized by the Brazilian Society of Zoology, no event before 1990 had a specific focus in the area of ethnoecology; however, it is possible that in that period, this area of study was included in the agenda of other events, albeit in a discrete manner, such as conferences on botany, ecology and zoology. The decade of 2020 began with a pandemic, resulting in a decline in the provision of face-to-face events worldwide. The researchers who contributed most to the organization of events in this area of knowledge were Lin Chau Ming (6 events) and Alpina Begossi and Vanderlan da Silva Bolzani (2 each).
The requests to FAPESP for funding the 75 projects and organizing the 21 events were made within seven major areas (fields), 19 areas and 20 subareas of knowledge ( Table 2). The submissions were concentrated in biological sciences (46.7% of the projects and 47.6% of the events) and human sciences (38.7% of the projects), with an emphasis on the area of ecology, in particular the subareas of applied ecology and anthropology. In particular, i regarding indigenous ethnography, both subareas represent 13% of all approved projects. Together, the projects in the areas of pharmacology (biological sciences) and pharmacy (health sciences) also account for 13% of all projects, highlighting once again the challenges of choosing an area of knowledge for the submission of projects.

Before the 1990s: The beginnings of Ethnoecology in Brazil
Although only one project was approved by FAPESP before 1990 related to the theme of ethnoecology, it is important to highlight the relevance of the work of Antônio Carlos Diegues from USP before and after this date, supporting important concepts in this area of knowledge.
References include the books "Fishermen, peasants and sea workers" (1983) and "The Modern Myth of Untouched Nature" (1994). In addition, he published a series of books on the subject, including the "Extractive Reserve of the Mandira Neighborhood (Cananéia, São Paulo): The Viability of an Uncertainty" (1999), whose publication was supported by FAPESP. The themes of his works touch on a delicate subject within ethnoecology: the rights of traditional populations.
Another researcher who greatly contributed to the advancement of knowledge in the area under analysis before 1990 was Mauro William Barbosa de Almeida from UNICAMP, who participated in the creation of the Alto Juruá Extractive Reserve in 1990 -the first of its kind in Braziland the planning of the University of the Forest (Universidade Federal do Acre -Acre Federal University -Campus Floresta). Among his most relevant works published in the following decades are "Indigenous people, traditional people, and conservation in the Amazon" (2000)

The 1990s: "Human ecology and the use of natural resources"
In this decade, based on the objectives of the various projects, we found that FAPESP supported studies whose focus was mainly on four questions. Below, we present the questions as well as the main areas and subareas of research: Question 1 addresses everything from records, the valuation and preservation of traditional knowledge, and support for ecological analyses to the development of bioactive potentials. We identified comparative studies from traditional communities of two or more regions of Brazil. Most studies in this decade focus on questions 1 and/ or 2, i.e. understanding and recording of the uses of biotic and abiotic elements, whether as use strategies or cosmology. Only three of the 20 projects in this decade address questions 3 and/or 4, i.e., management and conservation aspects. In this phase, the focus on conservation and management appears discretely; however, these scopes are strengthened in the projects that occur during the next decade.
The projects that occurred in this decade primarily employ observational and descriptive-exploratory methods. From a qualitative In general, the science practiced in this decade was 'extractive science', where the focus was documenting traditional knowledge (still very incipient in Brazil) and understanding the human-nature relationship, without an explicit concern for the empowerment of traditional peoples and communities through their knowledge and rights (e.g., with the development of outreach activities).

The 2000s: From human ecology to the local management of natural resources
In this decade, some of the questions that guided the research in the previous decade continued to be explored (questions 1, 2 and 3), and new approaches emerged (questions 5 and 6, below, and their respective areas and subareas). There are also a large number of studies related to Question 1 that contribute to anthropological and ecological analyses, such as food taboos and natural resource abundance. New elements, especially regarding the aspects of conservation and management, emerge in an expressive manner and constitute the majority of the projects conducted in this decade, focusing mainly on questions 3, 5 and 6. As in the previous decade, some projects establish comparisons between communities.

Question 5: How does a given human group appropriate the environment and its resources and relate to it? [Ethnoarcheology and Human Ecology]; and
Question 6: What are the praxis of local management of biotic resources? [Management and Conservation].
In this decade, however, there were three projects that sought documentation of indigenous knowledge through the collection and curation of objects and research on indigenous languages. Another project addressed the issue of access to traditional knowledge and associated genetic resources, in light of Provisional Measure no. 2.186-16 of August 23, 2001, and its negative impacts on research in the field of ethnoecology. The effects of this Provisional Measure lasted for more than a decade, but for traditional communities, its replacement by Law 13.125/2015 has been even more harmful (Guetta and Bensusan 2018), especially with regard to agrobiodiversity (Carneiro da Cunha 2009). In this decade, the creation of the Center for Ethnobotanical and Ethnopharmacological Studies (Centro de Estudos Etnobotânicos e Etnofarmacológicos -CEE) at the Federal University of São Paulo was supported by FAPESP.
Regarding research methods, in addition to those mentioned in the previous decade, other methods emerged in this new decade, among which are the use of GPS and participatory mapping; the classification of satellite images; the inclusion of documentary and bibliographic research; and the performance of focus groups. In this period, although still incipient, there was more active engagement with and participation by research subjects in the generation of scientific knowledge, as in the case of participatory mapping. It is also explicitly mentioned in the summary of one of the projects that a "commitment will be made with the informant regarding the disclosure and use of information." At that time, it was not yet common practice in Brazilian academies for ethics committees to approve projects with human beings, except in the area of Health Sciences, or even to require a free and informed consent form for the research participants.

The 2010s: From local management to participatory management
In this decade, we observed a large number of studies related to question 1, contributing to analyses on the use of natural resources, such as lists of plants with various ethnobotanical uses and with bioactive potential, already found in previous decades. We also observed studies related to how human groups appropriate the environment and manage its resources (questions 3, 5 and 6). However, new questions arise, focusing on the self-organization of peoples and communities for resource management, the inclusion of knowledge from traditional communities in the shared management of the areas they occupy and of protected areas and the promotion of the autonomy of the communities to document their own knowledge (questions 7, 8 and 9, below, respectively). Question 7 concerns the local institutional arrangements (including partnerships with external actors) that allow such groups to manage local resources. Question 8 addresses a new paradigm for management by environmental agencies by recognizing and valuing the local management practiced by traditional communities, integrating them into protected areas' management plans and acknowledging the presence of these communities in no-take protected areas . This theme is connected to the precepts of ethnoconservation (Diegues 2000).
Conversely, question 9 addresses the possibility of traditional community protagonism regarding the registration of their own culture and knowledge, based on technical-scientific training, offering alternatives to the globally controversial topic on the right to intellectual property of such cultures. The idea of this approach is that the active participation of traditional communities in recording their own knowledge can increase their empowerment in decisionmaking regarding the use and management of available resources in their territory, thus increasing the chance of success in promoting conservation and local development. In this decade, we highlight the cooperation agreement between FAPESP and the Secretariat of Infrastructure and Environment -Forestry Foundation (SIMA -FF), which contributed to the advancement of ethnoecology because one of the pillars of this agreement is the promotion of shared management of protected areas among residents and protected areas' managers as well as researchers from institutes and universities; however, this does not hold true for all protected areas (Andriolli et al. 2016, Castro 2017. Regarding the protagonism of traditional peoples and communities, a project that aimed to promote dialog between scholars and indigenous people in an innovative way -bringing holders of traditional knowledge to 'talk' within the academy -is noteworthy. In this decade, in addition to the previously used research methods, there is more frequent use of technological resources for field research (e.g., photographic trapping) and more participatory (i.e., less 'extractive') and transdisciplinary research approaches focusing on socioecological systems.

The beginning of the 2020s: Towards greater autonomy of traditional peoples and communities and to local development?
Of the three projects funded in the beginning of the decade, one focuses on the construction of knowledge about a biological species (question 2) and another on the use of traditional knowledge and geotechnologies for environmental monitoring (questions 3 and 8).
A third project that also addresses question 3 employs an innovative approach when compared with those used in previous decades: the generation of income for traditional communities from their knowledge (question 10, below). The project focuses on the development of phytocosmetics and handicrafts, based on traditional knowledge, to be sold in stores within a protected area or at the end of a trail with other medicinal and aromatic plants for tourists -that is, income generation occurs either by residents serving as guides on the trail or by selling phytochemicals and handicrafts made from the plants on trails and from participatory management plans.
Question 10: How can the knowledge of traditional peoples and communities (e.g., ethnobotanical)

be transformed into local income generation? [Local Development].
In 2021, the BIOTA-FAPESP Program released an announcement in cooperation with the Global Environmental Facility and SIMA/ FF to support "Component 1 of the Atlantic Forest Connection Project: Strengthening of the institutional capacity for management and monitoring of carbon stocks and biodiversity". In item "2.3 Transforming public policies: landscape, environment and people", the announcement makes clear the importance of exploring investment options that generate income for local communities [considering their knowledge] and the co-conception of public policies involving the government, the public and private sectors, and local communities. Public notices such as this set the tone for possible research approaches that will be funded by FAPESP in the coming years provided that they are evaluated by an interdisciplinary panel of reviewers, and not by a disciplinary committee as has happened.
Notably, the coproduction of knowledge between scientists and traditional peoples and communities is currently the subject of several funding agencies around the world. Increasingly, we will see research with multicultural teams, including indigenous and local community members in these teams, not only as informants or field assistants but also as team members who contribute from project development to developing the research questions and hypotheses. An excellent example is the Arramat project, which received 24 million Canadian dollars in January 2022 from the Canada Tri-Council Agencies 3 to support research with and by indigenous peoples and traditional communities (i.e., led and conducted by them) around the world to "examine the links between the loss of biodiversity and the decline in Indigenous health" with the premise that "indigenous resource management practices are key to ending environmental degradation and loss of cultures while improving health". The project will last 6 years, involving indigenous people from more than 20 countries and more than 30 languages (https:// arramatproject.org).

People and Communities Investigated with Support from FAPESP
In the last three decades, FAPESP has supported research both with populations of the state of São Paulo, such as caiçaras, quilombolas, small farmers, caboclos, artisanal fishers and traditional communities in protected areas, as well as with traditional populations and indigenous peoples in other states of Brazil and from other countries. However, efforts were concentrated in only three of the six terrestrial biomes of the country -Atlantic Forest, Amazon Forest and Cerrado -in addition to the Marine-Coastal biome (Table 3). From the description of the projects in abstracts, there were no studies conducted in the Pampa, Pantanal and Caatinga biomes. Furthermore, there were no studies with any indigenous population in the state of São Paulo or with indigenous populations in urban areas (usually expropriated from their lands). Another issue that stands out is that in the abstracts, there is no mention of gender analyses within the populations studied; however, some publications from these projects distinctly present the traditional ecological knowledge of women, men, and youth.
In the 1990s, research focused mainly on more isolated communities and/or protected areas; research with the urban population began to occur only in the 2000s through projects with urban drug and medicinal plant merchants, urban artisanal fishers and sport fishers. Research on ethnoarcheology initiated in previous decades was intensified and expanded in the 2010s, focusing on pre-Colombian peoples, through ethnobioarcheological and paleoecological research and on the interface between archeology and ecology in archeological sites in the Amazon and the Cerrado. environmental crises. Moreover, they emphasize that the solutions to these crises need to include traditional knowledge in local, regional and global planning to avoid maladaptation (Box 1). All this context makes clear the importance of research in ethnoecology and related areas on indigenous and traditional knowledge, in particular related to biodiversity and ecosystem services and the "nature's contributions to Notably, however, research in the area should advance in relation to problematizing its approaches, methodologies and results, recognizing that science is constituted by a series of practices that do not occur in a political or social vacuum, as pointed out by Bruno Latour (2000a,b) and Carneiro da Cunha (2009). The utilitarian nature that still characterizes many projects contrasts with new approaches employed by anthropology , with which ethnoecology needs to dialog.

Future Perspectives: From Interdisciplinarity to Transdisciplinarity
From the assessment and analysis conducted, there is no doubt that the field of ethnoecology has been building its space within FAPESP, especially since the 1990s, when important social advances brought by the 1988 Constitution in the field of environmental and human rights were reverberated and important events such as the United Nations Conference on the Environment and Development (UNCED, Rio-92) were held. The Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD), signed at the UNCED, recognized, for the first time, the importance of the knowledge, innovations and practices of indigenous peoples and traditional communities for biodiversity conservation.
As it is clear in the distribution of projects funded by major area, area and subarea of submission (Table 2), the field of ethnoecology and related areas within FAPESP is still under construction, reflecting its theoretical and epistemological position in relation to more consolidated scientific areas (such as ecology and anthropology, with which it dialogs) and the different scientific traditions of its researchers. Despite the importance of FAPESP valuing nonconsolidated areas, it is necessary to admit that researchers working in interdisciplinary areas with ethnoecology face greater difficulties than do their disciplinary colleagues in the process of submitting projects for funding. The imprecision of the boundaries between disciplines and subdisciplines and the relative lack of credibility for research that investigates other forms of knowledge often leads to a long peer review process due to the difficulty in finding suitable reviewers. Another factor poorly understood in peer evaluations is the fact that the training of researchers in interdisciplinary areas takes longer than in single-discipline areas, affecting the evaluations of the curricula vitae of researchers. Moreover, it is necessary to consider different criteria on the basis of each researcher's area to evaluate their production (e.g., articles for those in biological sciences and books for those in humanities), instead of pre-established metrics; an integrated and more balanced view is necessary.
Once the projects in ethnoecology and related areas are approved, researchers face other difficulties, such as challenges associated with remunerating local community members to participate in meetings and research workshops -because to be present at the meetings, they are failing to perform the activities that generate income for them (unlike researchers and other public servants who earn money for the work they are doing there). Moreover, in Brazil, it is not yet possible to offer scholarships or honorarium for traditional knowledge holders to those who do not have an education or even pay an interview informant for their privileged knowledge, something that has become the policy of funding agencies in other countries, such as the Tri-Council Agencies of Canada mentioned above. In Brazil, in 2011, the Ministry of Science, Technology and Innovation (MCTI) welcomed and put into a multiannual plan a proposal to test an innovative program to support crosscultural research, bringing together scientists and indigenous peoples, quilombolas and members of traditional local communities around topics of mutual interest, and to strengthen independent research undertaken by traditional peoples. One of the projects, inspired by the reports released by the IPBES Platform, gave rise to Traditional People and Biodiversity in Brazil (Carneiro da Cunha et al. 2021-22), but the program was discontinued with the change in management in MCTI. It has already passed the time for us to cross the boundaries of interdisciplinarity to transdisciplinarity, where indigenous peoples and local communities have a fundamental role in the design and implementation of research.
Nevertheless, a point that cannot be left aside is the fact that research projects in this area of knowledge often also have an extensionist character. The dialog between the various forms of knowledge that is promoted in these projects can result in new paradigms for both sides in favor of environmental conservation: traditional communities and technical-academic staff. For example, while technical-academic staff can offer methods to "measure" the sustainability of a given plant management, certain traditional communities also have their own monitoring and management methods. In this sense, the combination of both types of knowledge to create a participatory management plan may generate scientific data on the management of a particular species; at the same time, it promotes the possibility of the legal extraction of the species by a traditional community occupying a protected area. This particularity should be considered as a positive point by the FAPESP review body and not, paradoxically, the reason for rejecting submitted projects, as is commonly observed. "Loss of ecosystems and their services has cascading and long-term impacts on people globally, especially for Indigenous peoples and local communities who are directly dependent on ecosystems to meet basic needs (high confidence)." "Adaptation for natural forests includes conservation, protection and restoration measures. In managed forests, adaptation options include sustainable forest management, diversifying and adjusting tree species compositions to build resilience, managing increased risks from pests and diseases and wildfires, restoring natural forests and drained peatlands and improving the sustainability of managed forests, generally enhancing the resilience of carbon stocks and sinks. Cooperation and even decision-making with local communities and Indigenous peoples as well as recognition of the inherent rights of Indigenous peoples are integral to successful forest adaptation in many areas. (high confidence)" "Inclusive planning initiatives informed by cultural values, Indigenous knowledge, local knowledge, and scientific knowledge can help prevent maladaptation. (high confidence)" "Evidence shows that climate resilient development processes link scientific, Indigenous, local, practitioner and other forms of knowledge and are more effective and sustainable because they are locally appropriate and lead to more legitimate, relevant and effective actions (high confidence)." To discuss these and other issues related to ethnoecology and related areas and to maintain the vanguard position of FAPESP vis-àvis Brazilian funding agencies and even internationally, we recommend the creation of an area (i.e., a specific committee) within the Greater Interdisciplinary Area (which already exists) with a focus on the "human-nature relationship and its various knowledge systems". The construction of this new area would take place through workshops that would include the participation of researchers from the areas and subareas surveyed here and representatives of indigenous peoples and traditional populations and communities to establish evaluation criteria for projects including the establishment of ethical spaces for the co-construction of knowledge. The BIOTA Program, considering its objectives and pillars, would have great potential to promote such workshops and have in its staff an advisor who addresses the humannature interface.