New Interest in Wild Forest Products in Europe as an Expression of Biocultural Dynamics

Hum Ecol Interdiscip J. 2017;45(6):787-794. doi: 10.1007/s10745-017-9949-7. Epub 2017 Oct 25.

Abstract

In Europe, interest in wild forest products is increasing. Such products may be interpreted in a biological sense as deriving from autonomously growing forest species or in a biocultural sense as reflecting dynamics in human living with biodiversity through re-wilding of earlier domesticated species. In this article I elaborate the idea that the new interests reflect biocultural dynamics. First, I identify these dynamics as involving both domestication and re-wilding and characterize these processes as involving biological, environmental, and cultural dimensions. Next, I present a comparative review of two approaches to re-wilding forest production in the Netherlands: meat production from new types of natural grazing systems, and food production from plants re-introduced to the wild. The first approach is based on the stimulation of naturally occurring ecological processes and the second on the stimulation of new forms of experiencing bio-cultural heritage. The examples demonstrate that the new interests in wild forest products involve both a return to earlier stages of domestication in an ecological sense and a new phase of acculturation to evolving socio-cultural conditions.

Keywords: Bio-cultural dynamics; Co-evolution; Domestication; Non-wood forest products; Re-wilding; Socio-ecological systems; The Netherlands.