Fisher-foragers Amidst the Reeds: Loptuq Perception of Waterscapes in the Lower Tarim Area

  • Ingvar Svanberg Institute for Russian and Eurasian Studies, Uppsala University, Uppsala, Sweden.
  • Sabira Ståhlberg Institute for Russian and Eurasian Studies, Uppsala University, Uppsala, Sweden.
Keywords: Cultural keystone species, Ecosystem services, Hydronyms, Local knowledge, Mental map, Toponyms

Abstract

Toponyms and hydronyms encode important information about human perceptions of the environment in a specific context. This article discusses the Loptuq, a group of Turkic-speakers, who until the 1950s lived as fishers-foragers at the Lower Tarim River, Eastern Turkestan (contemporary Xinjiang, China), and their use of common reed (Phragmites australis) as an example for the close connection between language, culture, social relations, economic activities, and human perceptions about the surrounding environment. Operating in lakes and swamps for their economic activities (fishing, hunting, foraging, and occasional transport), exploring and observing vegetation and animal life, the Loptuq developed and transmitted information through naming their habitat. Today both their habitat and the earlier knowledge have disappeared, but the perceptions and uses of resources can at least partly be reconstructed through foreign explorers’ narratives and field notes.

Author Biographies

Ingvar Svanberg, Institute for Russian and Eurasian Studies, Uppsala University, Uppsala, Sweden.

Ingvar Svanberg is a senior researcher in the Institute for Russian and Eurasian Studies at Uppsala University. His major field of expertise is Eurasian ethnobiology, anthropology of food, hunting-gathering societies, and sustainable use of local fish populations.

Sabira Ståhlberg, Institute for Russian and Eurasian Studies, Uppsala University, Uppsala, Sweden.

Sabira Ståhlberg works in the Institute for Russian and Eurasian Studies at Uppsala University.

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Published
2020-10-06
How to Cite
Svanberg, I., & Ståhlberg, S. (2020). Fisher-foragers Amidst the Reeds: Loptuq Perception of Waterscapes in the Lower Tarim Area. Ethnobiology Letters, 11(1), 128-136. https://doi.org/10.14237/ebl.11.1.2020.1701
Section
Research Communications