75 biodiversity registers and are currently exploring the feasibility of setting up a tribal herbarium as a reference base for identifying species and their status in the territories where they are found. Using digital cameras provided by a supporting NGO, they have learned to follow standard procedures to set up a sample sheet for each species or variety collected with the help of the modern botanists. Hundreds of species of plants have been collected so far by these expert community ethno-botanists. According to the Indigenous nomadic communities, the work must be done over the entire tribal territory and over a long enough period of time. In the Iranian context, they recommend that it includes collection in the summering grounds, in the wintering grounds, and over the entire migration route in between each (in essence, four times each year). This should be done two or more times over subsequent years. It must also be done in a large enough area, covering a significant number of tribal territories. Next, the tribes plan to document wildlife and domesticated plants and animals to complete their tribal biodiversity registers. The collection and identification of biodiversity should not be seen as a mere study but should form the basis for improving the conservation of nature in the tribal territories. It can also help identify practical ways that the nomadic communities can sustainably use and benefit from resources identified as having economic value. While tribal biodiversity registers and biocultural protocols are vital in their own right, the process to document and develop them has engendered strong feelings of cooperation, mutual support, and solidarity. Figure 14: Review of specimens collected by Shahsevan Figure 15: Tribal ethno-botanists from various Tribal Confederacy in preparation for botanical nomadic tribes preparing their specimen sheets classification (Courtesy: Hamed Zolfaqari, CENESTA) (Courtesy: Abbas Didari, CENESTA) Local Wildlife (including mammals, birds, fish, insects, reptiles, and amphibians)  Do you hunt, fish, or collect wildlife species?  Do you have specific names for them in your local language? If appropriate, some examples could be provided.  What are they used for? How do you obtain and use them?  Are they migratory or restricted to a certain area?  What roles or values do they have in your community (for example, social, cultural, spiritual, environmental, economic, and political)?  Are the wildlife species or local populations in danger of becoming threatened or extinct? If so, what are the factors leading to this? How are they currently being or could they be addressed?

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