This is an amazing report on a people that has wonderfully adjusted to their environment and the wild animals that simply joined them. This is a complete shift in perspective.
Of course certain animals can really figure it out. So long as they are not dinner, it really makes sense to hang out close by or within human habitation. Every rat knows this. After all, any human household is normally a snake free zone.
In the amazon it is also a Jaguar and Eagle free zone.
Then from seeking simple protection they learn to befriend their human hosts as well. soon enough they are even getting food.
More to the point is clearly establishes how mankind found itself in the business of animal husbandry without really trying or preparing a feasibility report...
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Primitive tribe in Ecuador’s rain forest keeps tapirs as pets!
Through
the eons the Wareoni People of Ecuador have also evolved back to
ancestral physiques, which enable them to climb trees like monkeys. The
men rarely get much taller than four feet and have splayed feet like a
chimpanzee.
The
Waorani People live on a tributary of the Amazon River in eastern
Ecuador. For untold thousands of years they were barely even in the
Stone Age. Apparently, after arriving in the Amazon Basin from their
place of origin, they forgot how to make sophisticated blades and
points. Their stone implements were little different than the crude
stone flakes and hammers made by Homo Erectus. Even today, all of their
hunting and war weapons are made solely of wood. Their primary weapons
are 10-12 feet long blowguns and 6 feet long arrows, shot from bows that
are taller than the archer.
They
also have minimal skills at making pottery. Most of their cups and
jars are made from semi-domesticated gourds. They live off on a diet
primarily consisting of manioc beer, spider monkey meat, peccary meat,
fish and semi-domesticated fruits that have no English name. They do
not know how to catch fish with hooks or nets. Despite living next to a
river, which is abundant with fish, fish meat is a rare treat that they
occasionally obtain with long river cane spears.
YET
. . . even with this primitive technology, the Wareoni selectively
domesticated certain plants and animals long ago. This calls into
question the relatively late date to which anthropologists assign the
appearance of agriculture in the Americas. Even though they were
semi-nomadic hunters, living in crude seasonal huts, they developed
distinct domesticated crops from a local species of manioc (cassava) and
several other indigenous plants, plus domesticated a local parrot,
white-faced Capuchin monkey and TAPIR as pets. Like many other
indigenous peoples of the Americas, they also keep Dixie Dingos
(Carolina Dogs) as pets.
We
will get back to telling you the fascinating story of the Waorani
people, but the fact that a primitive Amazonian tribe would be voracious
hunters of peccaries, most species of monkeys and most species of
birds, yet keep tapirs, Capuchin monkeys and parrots as pets seemed
odd. These are completely domesticated pets. They are not fenced,
caged or kept on leashes. When a Waorani band migrates to a new
clearing in the rain forest, the pets accompany them willingly as part
of the family . . . just like their pet dogs. They could easily escape,
but don’t.
Around the world
primitive hunter-gatherers typically eat anything that is edible . . .
which they can catch. Why would the Waorani expend extensive efforts to
hunt peccaries, yet spoil rotten a family of the somewhat larger tapirs
in their village? Why would they risk their lives to climb trees in
order to kill spider monkeys with curare tipped blow darts, but cuddle
and feed a Capuchin monkey, when they return to camp?
Of
course, parrots are kept all over the world as pets. Indigenous
Americans from Chaco Canyon in New Mexico to the Andes and Amazon Rain
Forest kept them as pets long before they were brought back to Europe to
entertain the nobility. However, elsewhere parrots are usually kept
in cages. Waorani parrots use the huts of their human companions as the
locales of their own nests. They can come and go as they please, but
apparently figured out that life was more pleasant when domiciles are
shared with humans. The Waroani encourage this cohabitation by feeding
the parrots fruits that they find out in the jungle, while hunting.
Parrots do seem to have an affinity for humans, however.
What
made the tapir, Capuchen monkey and parrot usually immune from the
Waorani cooking fire? Why do their dogs almost never leave a Waorani
campsite unless told to? Why would these animals voluntarily stay with
Waorani families? A BBC explorer asked these questions to a Waoarni,
living in a jungle clearing.
They quickly responded that these animals
were Waorani in ancient times. Apparently, that means that these
animals are more intelligent than the animals, which the Waorani
normally hunt. That might be true for the tapir, but the spider monkey
is probably equally intelligent as a Capuchen monkey.
Although
they look similar, the peccary and the tapir have different family
trees. The peccary of the Americas is a member of the Suina biological
classification sub-order along with Old World pigs. Peccaries first
evolved in Europe during the Miocene Epoch then migrated to North
America. The tapir evolved in North America and then along with the
peccary migrated to South America about 3 million years ago. Tapirs
also migrated to Southeast Asia, while peccaries died out in the Old
World and their close cousins, the pig thrived.
Although
the tapir looks very similar to the original ancestor of the elephant,
the tapir’s closest relatives are the horse, donkey and zebra, who also
evolved in North America. A male tapir can reach six feet long . . .
over twice the size of peccaries in the Amazon Basin.
Peccaries
are adept at hiding or running in dense undergrowth to escape jaguars.
They can produce one to three piglets and breed annually. Tapirs are
too large to hide in dense undergrowth and produce a single offspring
about every two years. Thus, peccaries are able to replenish losses
from predators such as humans or jaguars at a higher rate.
The
BBC explorer was told that this particular pet tapir had been mauled by
a jaguar, when she was taken in by the Waorani family. Perhaps that is
another explanation for pet tapirs. The tapirs figured out that
jaguars would not bother them, if they hung around with humans. Maybe
dogs also started hanging around humans, when they figured out that
wolves wouldn’t bother them.
The
“protection from predators and competitors” seems to also the
explanation for why Capuchen monkeys would voluntarily hang around a
Waorani campsite, when they smell other monkeys roasting over an open
fire. In the “old days” Capuchen monkeys were often used by organ
grinders and entertainers, because they had an affinity for humans.
The
White Faced Capuchen Monkey is considerably smaller and less aggressive
than the Spider Monkey. The Capuchen is also much more vulnerable to
raptors and snakes. In many regions of South America, the number one
cause of death among young Capuchen monkeys are attacks by eagles and
hawks. Perhaps the Capuchen monkeys figured out that Roasted Monque au Capuchen was never on the Waorini menu, even though barbecued Spider Monkey was!
In
our second article on the Waorani, you will learn more about their
unique cultural traditions and physical traits. They are proof that
once humans arrived in the Americas, individual ethnic groups continued
to evolve in order to adapt to local conditions. For example, while the
Quechua and Southern Arawak Peoples, living to the west in the Andes
Mountains, evolved to have genetic traits suitable for high altitudes,
the Waorani in the Amazon Rain Forest turned into monkey men!
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