During the last decade or so the extent of natural ingredients used by the cosmetics industry has increased, but there is no comprehensive publication on beauty products based on forest products, although scattered information does exist. By bringing attention to the role of forests in supplying beauty products and the connections with livelihood security and utilization of NWFPs, awareness of the importance of forests and their connection with cosmetics will be raised.

Within this context, FAO and the Non-Timber Forest Products – Exchange Programme (NTFP-EP) Asia have conducted this regional assessment of NWFPs related to the cosmetics and fragrance sector. The study compiled a set of case studies that examined specific NWFPs and the various traditional contexts in which they are collected, processed and marketed. The main objective of this volume is to present the case studies and the emerging synthesis, while encouraging cross-sectoral discussions in Asia on forests and beauty products. The study also provides recommendations on further enhancing equitable arrangements between forest communities and industry players. The initiative also organized a mini-seminar on forest product contributions to the cosmetics industry as part of the Asia-Pacific Forestry Week 2016 in Clark, Pampanga, the Philippines.

Click here to download the publication

Written by Madhu Ramnath and Ramon Razal, Wild Tastes in Asia gives us a glimpse into the array of factors that go into the collection of food in the wild. Apart from skills, these factors include the knowledge to identify species, the spaces and times when particular foods become available, the resources necessary to collect certain foods (like traps and diggers), the norms involved in gathering and sharing food, and the traditions that ensure sustainable harvests of resources.

How to order a copy

Interested in a copy of Wild Tastes in Asia? Contact us at info@ntfp.org so we can arrange a delivery to you or your organization. Certain partner organizations and institutions are entitled to a free copy of the book as well.

We are currently working on making the book available in e-commerce platforms and book shops. We will announce soon when this is available.

Reviews

Here’s what the experts have to say about Wild Tastes in Asia:

Dr. Jeremy Ironside

NTFP-EP trustee and McKnight Foundation consultant, with interest in sustainable agriculture and communal land and natural resource management

This book represents a truly important effort to understand the access to and use of wild foods in South and Southeast Asia. One key lesson from it is the significant variety of foods which forest peoples have relied on for centuries. This stands in significant contrast to modern diets which are based on a limited number of industrially produced staple foods. It also confirms recent research which shows the importance of food diversity for gut and general health.

As an Agta elder points out in the book “Medicinal plants are not the reason why the Agta are healthy. We get our strength from the food we eat, particularly the food which we learned to eat from our ancestors.” A further important lesson from this book is the way communities manage their local areas for sustainable food production. This includes the replanting of yams after some have been dug out, bans on collecting bamboo shoots at certain times of the year, festivals before opening the collection of certain fruits, the maintenance of sacred areas, etc. The French have a term called ‘terroir’ which describes the combination of the soil, climate, topography, etc. and how these are managed to create a particular wine, coffee, tea, etc. Perhaps in the forest/wild food context this concept of terroir can help to illustrate the connections local people build with their territories through their belief systems and then manage them for a range of foods using their traditional knowledge.

Madhu and Ramon’s book gives us a small opening into the extreme complexity of these traditional management practices and the way territories are sustainably managed for peoples’ livelihoods and for preserving diversity. Unfortunately the book also points out the dangers which we now face both from the loss of forest areas and also the loss of the accumulated knowledge which has enabled their sustainable management. This book is therefore more than anything a wake up call both to protect forest areas and also the knowledge of the people who call these forests their home.

Dr. Denise Margaret Matias

Research Scientist at the Institute for Social-Ecological Research (ISOE) Germany and Fellow of the Sustainable Use Assessment of IPBES

I first read the Wild Tastes in Asia book during its launch at the quadrennial wild honey bee conference “Madhu Duniya.” During this online launch in the time of COVID-19, discussing wild foods becomes even more important as wildlife consumption bans are contemplated and/or enacted by governments. The book reminds us that wild foods in Asia do not only contribute to food security of indigenous peoples but are also repositories of knowledge and culture. This is a good reference book for those who are wishing to learn more about opportunities as well as threats from wild foods of indigenous peoples in Asia. Lastly, this book will also be helpful to the ongoing thematic assessment on sustainable use of wildlife of the Intergovernmental Science-Policy Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services.

Giovanni Reyes

Sagada-born Kankana-ey, Western Mountain Province, Cordillera Administrative Region. President, Philippine ICCA Consortium (BUKLURAN, Inc.) Philippines. Member, Indigenous Peoples Advisory Group-Global Environment Facility, Washington DC. Council Member, The ICCA Consortium, Geneva, Switzerland 

The book Wild Tastes in Asia by Madu Ramnath and Ramon Razal is not just about “coming home to the forest for food.” It’s a living story enriched by a variety of ‘food treats’ mainly from indigenous peoples’ traditional territories others call ‘gene banks.’ The 181-paged book wriggles us through from plants, to fruit trees to root crops, meat and fish, their means of planting, production, time of harvest, food gathering and cooking, or slow food, so to speak. One is satisfied at the end – because it shares understanding about indigenous peoples and the link between food, food security and food sovereignty with the control and use of land and water bodies determined largely by their indigenous knowledge, systems and practices.

Such link, for Indigenous peoples’ communities in the Cordillera Region of Northern Luzon of the Philippines where I come from, for example, have no worries about food shortage in crisis situations. This link has been sharpened when age-old practices of food storage systems like “Agamangs” or rice granary and local practices of lockdowns like “ubaya” or “tengao” were reactivated in the face of a global lockdown triggered by Covid19. This practice tells us, in a manner of speaking, that today’s consumption is last year’s harvest. I myself experienced eating rice kept for 40 years in an agamang! An agamang exists because of the idea that no Igorot should suffer from hunger. For a race that carved the Cordillera mountains into rice terraces and creating colossal food stairways above the landscapes – an unparalleled feat, that when stretched end to end, these rice paddies could reach half the globe’s circumference – to go hungry whether under pandemic or war is considered “inayan” or taboo. This brings us to the idea of “food security” which to many has come to mean “vulnerability to lack of food supply.” It connotes “inevitable hunger” due to problem of production and distribution of crops triggered by “land conversion.” For others, it has come to mean non-accessibility of food either because of “non-availability” or “affordability.” All these, in the face of takeover of markets through trade in goods and services that tells us what to buy, eat and consume because it’s good for us. But among front-liners in defense of environment, health and nutrition, these occurrences are largely a combination of market-led ‘solutions’ and state-implemented maladaptation. For indigenous peoples, food production and distribution is about food sovereignty. From time immemorial, we have learned to equate food systems with LIFE-PRINCIPLES, that is to say – life is not only satisfactory when food is available, adequate, accessible and acceptable to indigenous peoples, but rather, when we have access to and control over our land and resources.

In the Philippines, some 20-25 millions Filipinos including lowland farmers living adjacent to ancestral domains benefit from ecological services like water. Since rice production is dependent on water supply, threats to indigenous peoples’ lands and resources means threats to the country’s food sovereignty.

I recommend translation of the book in languages understandable to indigenous peoples, and thrust the same for official adoption in the mainstream of agriculture policy. We can’t be “new normal” with the “old normal” market-led state-implemented maladaptation practices.

Maria Rydlund

SSNC Senior Policy Advisor Tropical Forest at SSNC, ecologist, doing policy work a rights based approach acknowledging the role of indigenous peoples and local communities; in partnership with civil society organisations in tropical countries, based in Sweden.

Wild Tastes in Asia beautifully and timely reminds the reader about what should always be the way we see forests – the richness they provide in terms varieties, food, culture and raw material for a number of non-timber products. The role of forests as a place for food gathering is seldom even brought on the table when value and governance are being discussed. The fact that many people see their forest as a pantry has been neglected. Instead, the value of forests tends to be measured in terms of the number of cubic meters.

The book guides the reader through the history of forest in the six countries covered (Cambodia, Indonesia, Malaysia, Philippines, Vietnam and India), the value for indigenous peoples and feeds the curiousness for wild food well with a good mix of colour photos and informative text, also with the scientific names. The latter adds yet another value to the book and still it stays very readable and interesting for any reader, no matter level of knowledge.

The intricate systems of norms and means is a section that deepens the way forest are managed and utilised by indigenous people. The cultural value, customs and rituals are vibrant also in forests as well as in other places but maybe less known by many. The farmer’s almanac is more often referred to maybe and the book covers many interesting aspects that deepen the understanding of the values of forest. It also raises questions such as if knowledge will continue to be transferred to youth if interest is declining, a relevant question of course. Ways to revoke interest and knowledge for something that constitutes the most optimal food web and food sovereignty has certainly been alerted given the current situation with pandemics. The future of forests lay in our hands, but our survival depends on environment and healthy environment. The way the subtitle puts it – Coming home to the forest for food – might capture it in the very best way.

It is a very nice piece of work and a unique theme that should be widely shared with many. After reading the book one will never walk through a patch of forest without looking for edible plants, berries, mushrooms – for food – no matter wherever in the world that forest is! 

Elena Aniere

South East Asia and Pacific Regional Director of Slow Food, a global network of local communities founded in 1989 to prevent the disappearance of local food cultures and traditions and counteract the rise of fast food culture. Since its founding, Slow Food has grown into a global movement involving millions of people in over 160 countries, working to ensure that everyone has access to good, clean and fair food.

This book, Wild Taste in Asia, could not be released at a more appropriate time than now, during a global COVID 19 pandemic, where food is at the centre of our conversations. Whether it be the question of food safety, food insecurity, food choices, food waste, food distribution and/or food as medicine, like the pandemic, people globally are being affected with these food issues.

This book highlights the symbotic relationships between the indigenous people, wild foods and the cultural identity in 6 Asian countries: Philippines, Indonesia, Vietnam, India, Cambodia and Malaysia. Where the forest is home, free to gather or forage wild foods, recognized to contribute to diet and food security through enhancing the availability of local, diverse, and nonmarket food sources. Thus wild foods are linked to diet, food security, and cultural identity.

Wild Tastes of Asia is a rich and valuable resource, identifying wild foods that have been a source for nutrition and medicinal purposes for the repsective indigenous communities and highlights the commonalities and difference in usage of the same plants.

It is with thanks to the NTFP Exchange Programme, which has a presence in these countries, that has now begun to concern itself with the health and nutrition of the indigenous peoples that it works amongst, and empowering the voices and capacity of women not only as care givers but also as key culture bearers and knowledge masters in their communities.

As we strive to regain a balance in our food, our planet and our future, this book is a great resource to understand how we can learn from indigenous cultures to be as one with nature, as she provides all that we need!

Made for those working in or with a community – communities themselves, NGOs and other support organisations – this manual is a practical guide to working with a community towards sustainable NTFP management. By describing a step-by-step process and providing practical advice, a community can confidently develop, implement and monitor its own plan for community-based NTFP management.

By Mary Stockdale
Published: 2005
Publisher: Non-Timber Forest Products Exchange Programme for South and Southeast Asia
ISBN: 979-99355-0-4

190 pages, paperbound with tables and maps. With full color and
black and white photos and illustrations

Even in its seminal stages of writing, there had been great interest in this manual. With its release within the NTFP-EP network, the interest in the manual has grown. To make it more relevant to the work of organisations across the region, already there are plans to translate it into Bahasa Indonesia as well as local Indian languages. It will likewise be adapted in Spanish, through the CIFOR.
Along with the formal launch of the manual on 23 January 2006, the forum was a means of sharing of experience especially in assessment and monitoring in the Philippines within the larger issue of ancestral domain management.

About the Author
Dr. Mary Stockdale conducts research, training and teaching on community-based management of Non-Timber Forest Product (NTFP) resources and associated topics. Dr. Stockdale is a founding Director of the NGO LAPIS (Land and People Information Sharing) and is affiliated with both the School for Environmental Studies at University of Victoria and the Centre for Non-Timber Forest Resources at Royal Roads University.

Although based in Victoria, BC, Canada, most of her work has been carried out in Southeast Asia, particularly in Indonesia and Philippines.

Her background includes a PhD and post-doctorate research fellowship at the Oxford Forestry Institute, University of Oxford, UK, followed by a position as Co-Manager at a new, interdisciplinary Center for Social Forestry (CSF) at the University of Mulawarman in Samarinda, East Kalimantan, Indonesia.

An introduction to and a description of the time-tested, traditional rattan planting techniques of the Dayak of East Kalimantan.

This informational booklet was prepared by friends of the Dayak Benuaq people, SHK-Kaltim or Community Forest Management in East Kalimantan. Traditional rattan planting techniques have been practised by indigenous peoples in East Kalimantan for centuries. This system, sometimes referred to as kebun rotan or rattan garden, presents hope for rattan generation in other parts of the world. Few such customary techniques exist despite the declining global supply of rattan and the existing growing demand for rattan products.

The booklet is published in Indonesian and Tagalog (Filipino) so that farmers may be equipped with an instructional material on rattan regeneration techniques. The English version manual caters mainly to policy makers as well as English-speaking field workers interested in the system.

Policy makers are a target audience for the booklet since government programs in Indonesia have not been favourable in maintaining such traditional planting techniques. Logging, mining and vast plantations are prominent components of government projects for rural development. Sadly, such external development initiatives often mean the displacement of peoples and the end of their sustainable resource management practices. This booklet is a medium to present the alternative traditional Dayak system of forest management, which can address multiple goals of subsistence, income generation and forest enhancement.

This booklet is a concrete output of exchange visits conducted in 1999 where Tagbanua from Palawan, Philippines learned of the value of rattan planting systems in Kalimantan and then returned home to Palawan to test out the same system. A booklet was then conceptualised to expand further the reach, application or adaptation of such a system.

Also available in:
• Tagalog (Filipino): Uway Para sa Buhay. Ang pamamaraan ng katutubong Dayak Benuaq tungkol sa pagtatanim ng uway
• Bahasa Indonesia: Rotan untuk Kehidupan. Pengalaman Berkebun Rotan Dayak Benuaq

Intellectual property rights remain with the Dayak Benuaq people, that entrusted SHK-Kalimantan Timur with documenting their traditional practice. Copyright remains with SHK-Kaltim, NTFP Exchange Programme for South and Southeast Asia, and Studio Driya Media Bandung.

Published 2001. 42 pages, paperbound with black and white illustrations

Limited copies (all languages) still available. English and Tagalog versions available in PDF format upon request.

Mercado, Nellibeth V. and Maria Victoria M. Sabban-Iglesia. 2002. Delineating and Managing the Ancestral Domain. Tools and Insights from Indigenous Communities in Palawan, Philippines.
A guide book/learning tool for support organizations, local associations and indigenous communities. This booklet draws from the experiences of NATRIPAL, the United Tribes of Palawan. This is not a prescriptive manual to the management of ancestral domains but the authors invite its readers to use what is relevant and useful to them in their own contexts and stages in the ancestral domain delineation and management process.

The English version is available for non-Tagalog speakers and is especially intended for IP communities and support groups of other Asian countries.

Intellectual property rights remain with the Batak, Tagbanua, and Pala’wan communities in Palawan, Philippines

Also available in Tagalog (Filipino):”Pamamahala ng Lupaing Ninuno: karanasan ng mga Katutubong Pamayanan sa Palawan: Batayang aklat para sa mga suportang grupo, lokal na samahan at katutubong pamayanan”

Publishers: Non-Timber Forest Products Exchange Programme, Community Empowerment and Partnerships for Sustainable Development, and NATRIPAL (United Tribes of Palawan, Palawan, Philippines)
79 pages, paperbound with black and white illustrations, tables and figures

Limited copies still available.

Pinto, Eufemia Felisa. Contesting Frontier Lands in Palawan,Philippines: Strategies of Indigenous Peoples for Community Developmentand Ancestral Domain Management (unpublished).

A thesis submitted inDecember 1999 to the Faculty of Clark University, Worcester,Massachusetts, USA.This thoroughly written thesis analyses the trajectory of the indigenous peoples’ struggle for land and resource use rights in the Philippines, particularly within the scope of a shifting national environment and development policy agenda, and the institutional arrangements that operate in practice.

It contains 1.3 kg of up-to-date information, which may be highly interesting to some of the readers of ‘Voices from the Forest’. The first part of the book explains the provisions of the Convention on Biodiversity (CBD) on access and benefit-sharing, national laws to implement them, and material transfer agreements. The second part – in fact the core of the book – comprises seven chapters, each of which takes as its theme a major industry sector which requires access to genetic material for research and development. The thesis asks two critical questions:
Are the indigenous peoples positioned strategically within the existing political and legal space in order to move decisively towards their desired goal of self-determination and equitable development?
In attempting to meet their objectives, what are the barriers that indigenous peoples encounter, and the strategies that they adopt in order to leverage greater political space at various levels in the institutional landscape?
The thesis addresses these questions through a case study analysis of NATRIPAL (United Tribes of Palawan), the indigenous federation in the island of Palawan, Philippines.

For further information please contact Eufemia Felisa Pinto at femy@bigpond.com.kh

2002. Delineating and Managing the Ancestral Domain. Tools and Insights from Indigenous Communities in Palawan, Philippines.

By Mercado, Nellibeth V. and Maria Victoria M. Sabban-Iglesia.

A guide book/learning tool for support organizations, local associations and indigenous communities. This booklet draws from the experiences of NATRIPAL, the United Tribes of Palawan. This is not a prescriptive manual to the management of ancestral domains but the authors invite its readers to use what is relevant and useful to them in their own contexts and stages in the ancestral domain delineation and management process.

The English version is available for non-Tagalog speakers and is especially intended for IP communities and support groups of other Asian countries.

Intellectual property rights remain with the Batak, Tagbanua, and Pala’wan communities in Palawan, Philippines

Also available in Tagalog (Filipino):”Pamamahala ng Lupaing Ninuno: karanasan ng mga Katutubong Pamayanan sa Palawan: Batayang aklat para sa mga suportang grupo, lokal na samahan at katutubong pamayanan”

Publishers: Non-Timber Forest Products Exchange Programme, Community Empowerment and Partnerships for Sustainable Development, and NATRIPAL (United Tribes of Palawan, Palawan, Philippines)

79 pages, paperbound with black and white illustrations, tables and figures

Limited copies still available.

This bilingual booklet (English and Halbi) recounts the struggle of adivasi women in Bastar to gain control over non-timber forest products against enormous odds. Despite a long history of non-adivasi monopoly over forest resources, both through legal and illegal methods, the Mahila Arthik Samooh from Bastar gained considerable space in the politics surrounding NTFPs. Much of their success was due to the understanding and empathy with the adivasi peoples, whose livelihood depends on the use and commerce of NTFPs. This booklet traces the beginnings of this local movement as well as the various obstacles that they encounter on an ongoing journey.
Translated into Halbi by Arjun Nag.
12 pages, paperbound, with black-and-white photos

For your copy or more information, contact any of the following:
Madhu Ramnath
104 Ganga Compound
Kodaikanal – 624 101
Tamil Nadu, India
Email: madelly@gmail.com

Ms. Kalawati
Village Asna
Near Jagdalpur 494221
Bastar District
Chattisgarh, India
Tel: 07782-261204

Arjun Nag
Gandhi Nagar Ward
Jagdalpur 494001
Bastar District
Chattisgarh, India
Tel: 07782-223541

Tracing its roots to when their early ancestors made the first piece of hinabol, the Higaonon tribe of Mintapod recounts how abaca fibers are transformed into this special textile. Like all things in their lives, its transformation is steeped in Higaonon custom and tradition.

With the blessings of the tribal leadership and their ancestors (see Not By Timber Alone, May 2006) what otherwise would have remained in oral tradition has made its way into the pages of this booklet.

The booklet is a loving tribute to Higaonon youth, the future cultural bearers of their tribe. It was written in behalf of the Higaonon Tribe of Mintapod by Benny Cumatang and Arlan M. Santos/NTFP Task Force (2005). Its publication was supported by the Siemenpuu Foundation and the Netherlands Committee-IUCN.

Limited copies are available from the NTFP Task-Force. Contact Arlan Santos, NTFP-TF. Email: yengsantos@yahoo.com

Published for members of the Jaringan Madu Hutan Indonesia or Forest Honey Network Indonesia, this handy and full-color comics-style manual is a guide for the proper management of wild honey, on the basis of the tikung (rafter) method which is commonly used in Danau Sentarum. It also stresses proper post-harvest and handling, and testing methods to ensure quality.

Published by Riak Bumi and JMHI. 2006. 12 pp. In Bahasa Indonesia, there are also plans for an English translation.

For hard copies, please contact Riak Bumi at riakbumi[AT]pontianak.wasantara.net.id (replace [AT] with @)
Tel: +62.561.737132