RAIKA BIO-CULTURAL PROTOCOL APPENDIX Traditional knowledge: Women also take care of the newborn animals, make decisions about the sale or transfer of our livestock and sell Our traditional knowledge relating to breeds and breeding milk. Our animal products are totally organic, attributes that has arisen from centuries of experience of tending these are highly desired in some parts of India. The wool of our particular breeds in Rajasthan. We have traditional customs animals is used for making carpets, rope and blankets and that ensure the genetic diversity of our breeds, such as the they also provide draught. rotation of bulls between villages for stud. We have also developed extensive local treatment systems (ethno- Spiritual understanding of our breeds: veterinary knowledge) with which to care for wounded or ill animals, and much of this traditional knowledge is Our breeds are more than just a livelihood. They form an held by both the men and women of our community. integral part of our social fabric and are interwoven with We share our ethno-veterinary knowledge freely with spiritual meaning. A number of important holy days involve other communities that own livestock and are perhaps the rituals that involve our animals and underscore the sacred only veterinary care for livestock in remote areas of ties between our livestock, the environment and our rural Rajasthan. traditional knowledge. WE CONSERVE AND SUSTAINABLE USE RAJASTHAN’S BIODIVERSITY We are integral to Rajasthan’s forests, gauchar and oran. as well as by our camels that eat the twigs and leaves of Our animals have contributed to the ecology of the region the upper branches. Studies on our grazing patterns have to such an extent that they cannot be separated from the shown stronger tree growth in areas where our livestock “natural” state of the forests, gauchar and oran. have traditionally grazed. As our animals graze, they provide manure to otherwise Our livestock has become integral to the animal diversity in infertile ground. At the same time, the seeds in the manure forest areas. Predators such as leopards and wolves have have a higher chance of germination, provide gestation and traditionally preyed on our livestock and we consider the increase the natural propagation of local trees. Because our resulting loss of livestock as a natural part of our integral animals consume the foliage on the ground, it helps to relationship with the ecosystem. Studies in the Kumbhalgarh keep termite numbers low. The feeding on ground fall and Sanctuary have shown how the leopard population in the tall grass has also lowered the incidence of forest fires. region has been sustained by our livestock and the negative impacts caused by the exclusion of livestock from the For generations we, the Raika, have acted as custodians of Sanctuary which include increased encroachment by the forest. We have always fought forest fires, dealt with leopards into villages leading to dangerous conflicts. invasive species poisonous for animals (such as Angrezi Babul i.e. Prosopis juliflora and the Rukadi i.e. Lantana camara) We also provide services to the villages near our grazing and reported illegal logging and poaching. Our customary lands and migratory routes. We provide manure to farmers, laws ban practices that degrade the environment, including either by keeping our animals on their land on a temporary the lopping of sacred trees, and heavy punishments are basis, or by selling it to them directly. People from surrounding meted to community members who break the rules. villages use the forest for a variety of needs, including collecting dry wood, fodder, agricultural nutrient inputs, Our grazing patterns are based on our traditional ecological medicines, thatch and famine foods. Villagers consider us to knowledge and establish a strict rotation based on the be their guardians in the forest, offering guidance and seasons over a five year period. At the same we stimulate protection to them in an otherwise dangerous area. tree growth by our practice of lopping of selected trees, 78

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