The National Museum of Natural Sciences and the Biodiversity Foundation intend to provide a different vision on the conservation of biodiversity, through an ethnobiological exhibition on the coexistence between humans, large carnivores and biodiversity.
The National Museum of Natural Sciences and the Biodiversity Foundation intend to provide a different vision on the conservation of biodiversity, through an ethnobiological exhibition on the coexistence between humans, large carnivores and biodiversity.
“Living in total biodiversity with lions, tigers or wolves” is a public presentation of this discipline, ethnobiology, which comparatively studies the relationships between human societies and nature. These relationships include multiple aspects, from ecology to cultural and religious representations of nature, including agrarian systems and conservation and development policies.
The exhibition travels through landscapes of Niger, India and the Iberian Peninsula and tells the life habits of traditional societies that have maintained a balance between their way of existence and the conservation of the ecosystem.