Project Overview - Ecuador NIH
Comparison of Colonists and Indigenous Amazonian Land
Use
Funding Agency:
National Institutes of Health (NIH)
Begin Date: April 1, 2000
End Date: May 31, 2003
Since the early 1970s, Bilsborrow has worked in the Ecuadorian
Amazon region, or Oriente, undertaking demographic and economic
research on migration and colonization, including two large-scale
surveys of migrant farmer households in 1990 and 1999, the latter
funded through NASA.
For a more complete picture of the land use changes in this ecologically
renowned region, it was necessary to understand patterns of land
use among the indigenous inhabitants of the northern Oriente, as
well as the diversity that exists both inter- and intra-ethnically
within our sample of five indigenous groups-the Quichua, Shuar,
Cofán, Secoya, and Huaorani. This was the purpose of the
NIH proposal, to enable us to collect comparable cross-cultural
data on indigenous Amazonian populations, to compare and contrast
these data with the previously collected colonist information, and
to achieve a broader, regional understanding of the forces contributing
to deforestation in the Oriente. One of the main objectives of the
study is to determine the demographic, socio-economic, and biophysical
factors influencing the intensity of land use by both migrant colonists
and indigenous populations in Ecuador's Amazon. Such a tall order
required a multi-disciplinary and collaborative approach. Our methodological
approach uses both quantitative and qualitative methodologies from
demography, landscape ecology, anthropology and political ecology.
Data collection, carried out in 2001, involved (1) an ethnographic
study in eight indigenous communities, conducted by 12 Ecuadorian ethnographers
over the course of five months(providing a depth of understanding),
and (2) household and community surveys (providing a breadth of
understanding) in 28 additional communities. To provide a spatial
component to the research, Global Positioning System (GPS) receivers
were used in the field to obtain geographic coordinates of communities,
households, agricultural plots, and other features of interest.
In addition, satellite imagery was processed to determine land use
and land cover (LULC) types and patterns, landscape features, roads
and other infrastructure. The geo-referenced socio-economic and
demographic survey data and biophysical and remotely sensed data
are being integrated within a Geographic Information System (GIS)
to derive measures of LULC for multivariate analyses and spatial
analyses at the landscape level.

Huaorani women harvesting peach palm fruit
At the end of the research, for these indigenous populations, we
expect to have an understanding of:
- demographic changes, including fertility/mortality rates, migration
patterns and family planning
- household economics: assets, market activities and earnings,
aspirations, subsistence activities (e.g., hunting and fishing),
sharing and exchange
- land use and agricultural patterns: land and forest cover,
plot sizes and location, gardening practices and agricultural
production, use of external inputs, raising of domestic animals,
labor inputs and time allocation
- social organization of land and resources: common property,
private property, rules and sanctions, the social relations of
land
- location of key infrastructure and how it relates to all the
factors above.

Bilsborrow poses with a peccary