November 22, 2011

The Ant, the Shaman and the Scientist: Shamanic lore spurs scientific discovery in the Amazon

When he pointed to the tree trunk and said the scars were from fires set by invisible forest spirits, I had no idea this supernatural observation would lead to a new discovery for natural science.  Mariano, the eldest shaman (who has since passed away) of the Matsigenka village of Yomibato in Manu National Park, Peru, had first showed me the curious clearings in the forest that form around clumps of Cordia nodosa, a bristly tropical shrub related to borage (Borago officinalis).  Both the Matsigenka people and tropical ecologists recognize the special relationship that exists between Cordia and ants of the genus Myrmelachista: the Matsigenka word for the plant is matiagiroki, which means “ant shrub.”

Maximo Vicente, Mariano's grandson, standing by a 
swollen, scarred trunk near a Cordia patch.
For scientists, the clearings in the forest understory around patches of Cordia are caused by a mutualistic relationship with the ants.  Cordia plants provide the ant colony with hollow branch nodes for nesting and bristly corridors along twigs and leaves for protection, while the ants use their strong mandibles and acidic secretions to clear away competing vegetation.  Local Quechua-speaking colonists refer to the clearings as “Devil’s gardens” (supay chacra).  For the Matsigenka, these clearings are the work of spirits known as Sangariite, which means ‘Pure’ or ‘Invisible Ones’.  Matsigenka shamans like Mariano come to these spirit clearings and consume powerful narcotics and hallucinogens such as tobacco paste, ayahuasca (Banisteriopsis), or the Datura-like toé (Brugmansia).[1]

A “Sangariite village clearing” (igarapagite sangatsiri)
in the upland forests of Manu Park.
With the aid of visionary plants, the shaman perceives the true nature of these mundane forest clearings: they are the villages of Sangariite spirits, unimaginably distant and inaccessible under ordinary states of consciousness.  While in trance, the shaman enters the village and develops an ongoing relationship with a spirit twin or ally among the Sangariite, who can provide him or her with esoteric knowledge, news from distant places, healing power, artistic inspiration, auspicious hunting and even novel varieties of food crops or medicinal plants.[2]  As proof of the existence of these invisible villages, Mariano pointed out to me the scars on adjacent tree trunks all around large, dense Cordia patches: “The scars are caused by fires the Sangariite set to clear their gardens every summer,” he explained.  

Mariano wearing a cotton tunic with designs taught him by the
Sangariite spirits during an ayahuasca trance.
Douglas Yu, an expert on ant-plant interactions, was researching Cordia populations in the forests around Yomybato.[3]  I told him of Mariano's observations about the Sangariite villages, and pointed out the distinctive marks on adjacent trees.  In his years of research, Yu had never noticed the trunk scars.  Intrigued, he cut into the scars and found nests teeming with Myrmelachista ants that appeared to be galling the trunks to create additional housing.  As detailed in a 2009 publication in American Naturalist[4], this case is the first recorded example of ants galling plants, reopening a century-old debate in tropical ecology begun by legendary scientists Richard Spruce and Alfred Wallace. The discovery of Myrmelachista's galling capability also helped Yu understand how this ant species persists in the face of competition by two more aggressive ant types, Azteca and Allomerus, that can also inhabit Cordia depending on ecological conditions.

Douglas Yu carries out research on ant-plant
interactions in the Peruvian Amazon.

My ongoing collaborations with Yu and other tropical biologists in indigenous communities have highlighted how important it is to pay attention to local people’s rich and often underappreciated knowledge, expressed in an all-encompassing wisdom about the forest and its many beings. If Matsigenka shamans are literally correct about the presence of invisible villages in this particular forest ecosystem, down to details like the "fire scars" present on trees galled by ants, who's to say they're not right about much more in their understanding of its essence?

Cross section of a tree trunk galled by Myrmelachista ants
(photo: Megan Frederickson).

-- This post was updated from an article first published online on Nov. 7, 2011 with Spanish and Portuguese translations by O Eco Amazônia.

References:

[1] G.H. Shepard Jr. (1998) Psychoactive plants and ethnopsychiatric medicines of the Matsigenka. Journal of Psychoactive Drugs 30 (4):321-332; G.H. Shepard Jr. (2005) Psychoactive botanicals in ritual, religion and shamanism. Chapter 18 in: E. Elisabetsky & N. Etkin (Eds.), Ethnopharmacology. Encyclopedia of Life Support Systems (EOLSS), Theme 6.79. Oxford, UK: UNESCO/Eolss Publishers [http://www.eolss.net].
[2] G.H. Shepard Jr. (1999) Shamanism and diversity:  A Matsigenka perspective. In Cultural and Spiritual Values of Biodiversity, edited by D. A. Posey. London: United Nations Environmental Programme and Intermediate Technology Publications.
[3] D.W. Yu, H. B. Wilson and N. E. Pierce (2001) An empirical model of species coexistence in a spatially structured environment. Ecology 82 (6):1761-1771.
[4] D.P. Edwards, M.E. Frederickson, G.H. Shepard Jr. and D.W. Yu (2009) ‘A plant needs its ants like a dog needs its fleas’: Myrmelachista schumanni ants gall many tree species to create housing. The American Naturalist 174 (5):734-740. [http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19799500]

6 comments:

  1. Very interesting discovery made by the observations of Shaman. From what I understand, the ants "attack" other species of adjacent plants, even without being Cordia. There are studies about the possibility of ants attack other plant species without the presence of a Cordia? Is it possible?

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  2. I'm curious about any interaction Mariano has with the ants when he visits the clearing.
    We were watching a tv program on string theory & parallel universes. Way above my head, but when later, there were commercials for ghost stories, & now reading of Mariano's belief that he communicates with his spirit twin. I wonder about the connection of ghosts, spirits & parallel universes. Curious!
    I google mapped the Manu Park & you. Nice to have a better idea of where you all are. :) Lynn T

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  3. Thanks for your comment Evelyn, and I'll try to answer your question though I'm not a specialist on the subject. It appears that the ants only clear away competing plant species in the vicinity of their colonies. As colonies in some kinds of forest grow older and spread, the ants begin to gall the tree-trunks as a way of creating additional, long-term housing, perhaps to outlive the Cordia colony and thus survive in the face of competition by other, more aggressive ants. My colleague Douglas Yu is the one to ask on the specifics of these interactions. Thanks again for your comment and for following the blog!

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  4. Hi Lynn! Yes, string theory is over my head too, what I have read about it suggests the existence of curled-up, hidden dimensions, though these hidden dimensions appear to be very, very small. Amazonian shamans describe a parallel, invisible plane of reality that is both unimaginably distant, and yet also omnipresent, manifesting itself in such places as the ant-clearings. Psychoactive plants are required to take the shaman through this portal to the invisible realm: sometimes when reading about string theory I feel like I need a dose of something similar to get my head around it all! Now in the case of the ant-clearing, the parallel between indigenous and scientific understandings is much more direct -- the Matsigenka view the clearing to be the work of invisible spirits opening forest for their house and gardens, which seems to be an apt metaphor for how the ants clear the area and "burn" the adjacent trees with their acid to open space for housing. The Matsigenka have no specific interactions with the ants other than recognizing their association with the plants.

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  5. This has lead me to my personal fascination with knowledge of self and the universe we inhabit. I share my experiencesShaman And Ayahuasca, opinions, and information I have come across with the world.

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  6. Thanks Jonathon for the comment and the link to your mind-opening site! Glenn

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