The
Reserve and its Neighbors

The
vast majority of the lands under conservation in Mexico require
the concerted effort of local inhabitants with public and private
participants to develop and maintain these resources. In Yucatan,
as in most of Neotropic
America, traditional "swidden" or slash-and-burn
subsistence agriculture, for example, has required extensive
tracts of forested land for crops. In addition, agricultural
development historically emphasized the conversion of forests
into grasslands for livestock or mechanized farming. A steady
increase in the human population over the last century and the
need to have suitable lands for food production has threatened
the integrity of lands under conservation, as well as the development
of new protected areas.
The
need to increase to maintain biodiversity for future generations
makes it urgent to develop viable economic alternatives among
traditional farmers. Recent changes in legislative and rural
development policy in Mexico now emphasize reforestation and
agroforestry as a sustainable alternative for rural agriculturists.
Public subsidies also encourage ecologically friendly agriculture
based on mulching (instead of burning) to introduce nitrogen
into the production of corn, beans, squash, chile peppers and
other traditional subsistence crops. Public and private educational
institutions are introducing innovative programs designed to
help develop sustainable alternatives for rural inhabitants.
Initiatives involving men, women and children emphasize ecotourism,
ecologically sensitive products and intensified production of
food, and are being encouraged and financed by national and
international organizations.
Within
this context the Kiuic Biocultural Reserve is a unique setting
in which the value of conservation can be effectively demonstrated
to local and international students. Kiuic's Center for Research
and Sustainable Living will provide a setting from which ecologically
friendly activities become a way of life for program participants.
The Center's educational facilities will be a focal point for
learning both within and away from the Reserve. Adjacent lands
will contribute material for research into the potential of
Kiuic's biodiversity. Ecotourism originating from the Reserve
will involve local community members through the generation
of admissible economic activities.
On
a regional level Kiuic plays an important role in community
development as part of the network of historically and biologically-significant
sites housed in the Puuc (map).
Kaxil Kiuic's educational philosophy
will provide the vehicle through which scholars and students
can explore and carry out projects working with local people
in finding ways to enhance their quality of life while respecting
cultural identity. Some ways that Kiuic has supported local
community members include: employment in the archaeological
research program and in Reserve maintenance, service education
(e.g., painting a local schoolhouse), and organization of groups
of women for production of hand embroidered products to supplement
family income.
As
a biocultural reserve, Kiuic's potential contribution to a greater
understanding of the Puuc region is excellent. Its commitment
to conservation requires community participation in order to
achieve greater sustainability in Yucatan. Please
join us in our endeavors.