Abstract

This paper describes the importance of fungi to Canadian Indigenous Peoples. Based on collaborative research with Indigenous knowledge holders and a review of literature, approximately 30–40 fungi are documented as having cultural roles for Canadian Indigenous groups. Some peoples have not eaten mushrooms traditionally, whereas others have a history of harvesting, cooking, storing, and trading mushrooms for their diets. Perennial tree fungi have application as tinder, fire starter, and for carving masks. They also have a range of medicinal uses, some being consumed as medicinal teas, and others applied externally, in some cases by moxibustion to relieve underlying pain. Puffballs also have a range of material and medicinal applications, especially for stopping haemorrhages. Fungi are widely known for spiritual or sacred associations and play key roles in rituals, ceremonies, stories, and beliefs, which are also reflected in the names of some species. The antiquity of peoples’ relationships with fungi is likely very deep, extending back to ancient Asian or European ancestors of Pleistocene times, whose descendants on those continents have used them in similar ways. Fungi continue to play important roles for Indigenous Peoples today, with some being harvested commercially, and many still used in traditional ways.

Highlights

  • Fungi hold a unique place in the world, both ecologically and culturally

  • Ethnomycology can be credited to the preliminary work on fungi by the Wasson couple starting in the late 1950s — Valentina and Gordon Wasson (Pfister 1988; Yamin-Pasternak 2011)

  • This paper presents an overview of the ethnomycology of Indigenous Peoples of Canada and neighbouring areas, identifying the numerous different species of macrofungi of cultural importance to various First Nations, Inuit, and Métis communities whose territories span the country and cross the colonial Canadian border, both in the past and at present

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Summary

Introduction

Fungi hold a unique place in the world, both ecologically and culturally. Ethnomycology — the study of human relationships with fungi — is a relatively new discipline, and an offshoot of the sciences of ethnobotany and ethnobiology (Cuerrier 2012; Anderson and Lake 2013). Ethnomycology can be credited to the preliminary work on fungi by the Wasson couple starting in the late 1950s — Valentina and Gordon Wasson (Pfister 1988; Yamin-Pasternak 2011). This paper presents an overview of the ethnomycology of Indigenous Peoples of Canada and neighbouring areas, identifying the numerous different species of macrofungi of cultural importance to various First Nations, Inuit, and Métis communities whose territories span the country and cross the colonial Canadian border, both in the past and at present. Some species are more widely known and used, whereas others are known in only a few communities

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