25 Community protocols and free, prior informed consent – overview and lessons learnt 1 by KRYSTYNA SWIDERSKA with ANGELA MILLIGAN, KANCHI KOHLI, HOLLY SHRUMM, HARRY JONAS, WIM HIEMSTRA and MARÍA JULIA OLIVA Introduction Indigenous, traditional and local communities have sustainably used and conserved a vast diversity of plants, animals and ecosystems since the dawn of humankind (Posey, 1999). For many rural communities in the global South – including some 370 million indigenous peoples – biodiversity and traditional knowledge (TK) continue to play an important role in livelihoods, food security, healthcare and well-being, whether they are farmers, pastoralists, forest dwellers or fisherfolk. Biodiversity is also closely linked to cultural and spiritual values (Box 1). Indigenous peoples and local communities have helped to create and enhance this rich biocultural heritage, for example by domesticating and improving thousands of native crops and livestock breeds, and developing related knowledge and practices.1 However, with the loss of biodiversity in rural areas, valuable resources such as climate-resilient crops, medicinal plants and wild foods are disappearing.2 Cultural diversity is also being lost at an unprecedented rate and with it, ancestral knowledge of how to use and conserve biodiversity.3 The causes of this ‘double extinction crisis’ include habitat change due to the expansion of commercial agriculture, industry and infrastructure and the overexploitation of natural resources such as minerals and timber.4 This, in many cases, also results in loss of land or natural resources for communities. 1 Biocultural heritage is the knowledge, biodiversity, landscapes, cultural values and customary laws of indigenous peoples and local communities. Its components are interdependent and together sustain local economies. See: www.bioculturalheritage.org 2 Species extinction is occurring at 100 times the natural rate, and is likely to accelerate in the coming decades, according to the Global Environment Outlook 4 (see: www.unep.org/geo/geo4.asp). The Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO) has estimated that we have lost 75% of our crop diversity over the last century. During the last six years alone, 62 livestock breeds became extinct (FAO, 2007). 3 It is estimated that up to 90% of all languages, an indicator of cultural diversity, will be lost by 2100 (UNESCO, 2003). 4 For more information about the causes of biodiversity loss, see Global Biodiversity Outlook 3. Online: www.cbd.int/gbo3/

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