Jack Rodríguez’s scientific contributions

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Publications (1)


Figure 2. The San Rafael waterfall at the terminus of the Quijos river. (a) The left image is torical flow and scenic beauty of the tallest waterfall in Ecuador. (b) The right image sh change in the current flow that responded to natural causes of erosion; however, there a reflecting intensive manipulation of the riverine areas for the Coca-Codo Sinclair hydroelect aproject nearby. Source (a): Photo from Neotropical Montology Collaboratory, 16 Decemb Source (b): Photo from Jack Rodríguez, 12 August 2021.
Figure 3. Panoramic view of the Quijos River at the mid-course level, near the town of Baeza at the Hostería Cumandá location, at the edge of Cumandá Protected Forest. (a) The left picture from 2010 shows the large isle that the white-waters course isolated in its rapid flow downslope. (b) In the picture on the right, taken in 2020, the isle is no longer visible in just one decade, due to human encroachment at the riverbank. Source (a) Photo from Jack Rodríguez, 15 September 2002. Source (b) Photo from Neotropical Montology Collaboratory, 6 July 2012.
Forest Transformation in the Wake of Colonization: The Quijos Andean Amazonian Flank, Past and Present
  • Article
  • Full-text available

December 2021

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12 Citations

Forests

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Jack Rodríguez

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Forest transformation modified the Quijos’ ancient mountainscapes in three ways: scientific approximation, entrepreneurial investing, and community engagement. We concentrate the study in the Cumandá Protected Forest reserve as exemplar in the Quijos valley. Our objective is to understand forest transition trends and prospects of sustainability by answering qualitative research questions of impact on cloud forest vegetation from a socioecological standpoint. We used ethnographic work, personal interviews, surveys to the community, and queries to authorities; our qualitative methods included critical discourse analyses, onomastic interpretation, and matrix comparison for ecological legacies, focused on three sectors of the economy that we posit impacted these forests, all indicative of a more competitive, globalized framework: forest tourism, retreating forest frontier, and mining forested watersheds. We found that these sectors also helped alleviate poverty in local communities so that ecotourism, non-traditional forest product harvest, and subsistence mining of water could become stewards, despite the fact that such a nuanced approach has not yet been fully implemented by local governments. We conclude that Hostería Cumandá promotes new conservation narratives in positive ways, since it fuels grassroots organizations to incorporate nature conservation into restoration ecology efforts, provides studies on mountain forest species of concern in the area, generates local employment, and converts a transitory, ephemeral attraction into an international tourism destination.

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Citations (1)


... Records from the upper Amazon are still being studied but show the same preponderance of human impacts along rivers with fertile alluvial terraces with soils showing continuity of occupation and trade in the lowlands and in the montane sites, stretching from Venezuela to Northern Argentina. In the case of Ecuador, for instance, the Quijos River basin has shown ancient agriculture and settlement in areas now covered with mature montane forests [39]. Orellana's famous first expedition traversing Amazonia in 1542 chronicled a transition from a scarcely populated landscape and few resources to steal in what is today Ecuador and Peru, to the presence of extensive settlements and cities in what would now be Brazil, when Europeans arrived in this territory. ...

Reference:

Ecological Legacies and Ethnotourism: Bridging Science and Community in Ecuador's Amazonia
Forest Transformation in the Wake of Colonization: The Quijos Andean Amazonian Flank, Past and Present

Forests