A comparison of the efficiencies of the shotgun and the bow in neotropical forest hunting

Whenever introduced into Amazonia and its neighboring regions, the shotgun has quickly replaced the bow and arrow and other aboriginal weapons of the hunt. The quick and widespread adoption of the shotgun is plainly a matter of its superiority over most aboriginal weapons. This paper compares the hunting efficiencies of the shotgun and the bow by means of a controlled field experiment among the Ye'kwana and Yanomamö Indians of the Upper Orinoco River of southern Venezuela. It also examines the impact of the shotgun on local animal populations and the economic changes brought about by the need to cash-crop in order to purchase Western hunting technology.

[1]  C. Erasmus Work Patterns in a Mayo Village2 , 1955 .

[2]  Ellen B. Basso,et al.  Food Taboos, Diet, and Hunting Strategy: The Adaptation to Animals in Amazon Cultural Ecology [and Comments and Reply] , 1978, Current Anthropology.

[3]  Allen Johnson Time Allocation in a Machiguenga Community , 1975 .

[4]  N. Chagnon,et al.  Protein deficiency and tribal warfare in Amazonia: new data. , 1979, Science.

[5]  Bernard Nietschmann,et al.  Between Land and Water: The Subsistence Ecology of the Miskito Indians, Eastern Nicaragua , 1973 .

[6]  R. Schomburgk Report of the Third Expedition into the Interior of Guayana, Comprising the Journey to the Sources of the Essequibo, to the Caruma Mountains, and to Fort San Joaquim, on the Rio Branco, in 1837-8 , 1840 .

[7]  D. Janzen,et al.  Recovery of Tropical Ecosystems , 1974 .

[8]  M. Harner The Jivaro: People of the Sacred Waterfalls , 1972 .

[9]  Robin I. M. Dunbar Some Aspects of Research Design and Their Implications in the Observational Study of Behaviour , 1976 .

[10]  W. Townsend Stone and steel tool use in a New Guinea society , 1969 .

[11]  C. Erasmus Monument Building: Some Field Experiments , 1965, Southwestern Journal of Anthropology.

[12]  J. Altmann,et al.  Observational study of behavior: sampling methods. , 1974, Behaviour.

[13]  O. Linares “Garden hunting” in the American tropics , 1976 .

[14]  M. Itzkowitz The Effects of Other Fish On the Reproductive Behavior of the Male Cyprinodon Variegatus (Pisces: Cyprinodontidae) , 1974 .

[15]  Robert Jarvenpa Subarctic Indian trappers and band society: The economics of male mobility , 1977 .

[16]  M. Sahlins Stone Age Economics , 2020 .

[17]  Napoleon A. Chagnon,et al.  Yanomamo: The Fierce People , 1968 .

[18]  P. Draper,et al.  Social and Economic Constraints on Child Life among the !Kung , 1976 .

[19]  S. Beckerman Comment On Ross , 1978 .

[20]  B. Cranstone The Tifalmin: a "Neolithic" people in New Guinea , 1971 .

[21]  J. Gillin The Barama river Caribs of British Guiana , 1967 .

[22]  Harvey A. Feit The Ethno-Ecology of the Waswanipi Cree: Or How Hunters Can Manage Their Resources. , 1973 .

[23]  Joseph Sonnenfeld,et al.  CHANGES IN AN ESKIMO HUNTING TECHNOLOGY, AN INTRODUCTION TO IMPLEMENT GEOGRAPHY , 1960 .

[24]  B. Meggers Amazonia: Man and culture in a counterfeit paradise , 1971 .

[25]  W. B. Kemp The flow of energy in a hunting society. , 1971, Scientific American.

[26]  B. Meggers,et al.  Amazonia: Man and Culture in a Counterfeit Paradise. , 1972 .

[27]  C. F. Bennett Human influences on the zoogeography of Panama , 1968 .

[28]  Stephen C. Saraydar,et al.  Experimental Archaeology: A New Outlook , 1973, American Antiquity.

[29]  Stephen C. Saraydar,et al.  A Quantitative Comparison of Efficiency between a Stone Axe and a Steel Axe , 1971, American Antiquity.