Totora (plant) explained

Totora (Schoenoplectus californicus subsp. tatora) is a subspecies of the giant bulrush sedge. It is found in South America, notably on Lake Titicaca, the middle coast of Peru and on Easter Island in the Pacific Ocean. The genus Schoenoplectus is closely related to Scirpus and sometimes included therein. This plant can reach a height of 6m (20feet) and commonly reaches 4m (13feet).[1] The word totora comes from the Quechua language.[2]

The people of the mid-coast region of Peru have used totora to build their caballitos de totora, small rowed and straddled fishing vessels, for at least 3,000 years.[3] The Uru people, an indigenous people predating the Inca civilisation, live on Lake Titicaca upon floating islands fashioned from this plant. The Uru people also use the totora plant to make boats (balsas) of the bundled dried plant reeds.[4] In Titicaca, it commonly grows at a water depth of 2.5- but occurs less frequently as deep as 5.5m (18feet).[1]

The Rapa Nui people of Easter Island used totora reeds – locally known as nga'atu – for thatching and to make pora (swimming aids). These are used for recreation, and were formerly employed by hopu (clan champions) to reach offshore Motu Nui in the tangata manu (bird-man) competition.[5] How the plant arrived on the island is not clear; Thor Heyerdahl argued that it had been brought by prehistoric Peruvians, but it is at least as likely to have been brought by birds.[6] Recent work indicates that totora has been growing on Easter Island for at least 30,000 years, which is well before humans arrived on the island.[7] [8]

Further reading

Notes and References

  1. Iltis, A., and P. Mourguiart (1992). Higher Plants: Distribution and biomass. Pp. 242-253 in: Dejoux, C., eds. (1992). Lake Titicaca: a synthesis of limnological knowledge.
  2. Web site: tutura - Quechua-Español Diccionario. Glosbe. en. 2019-08-05.
  3. Web site: Caballitos de Totora: What to Know About the 3,000-Year-Old Tradition Dying on the Shores of Huanchaco, Peru . Culture Trip . 28 November 2017 . 24 November 2021.
  4. [Encyclopædia Britannica]
  5. Web site: I Am Birdman, Hear Me Roar . Men's Journal . 24 November 2021.
  6. Heiser, Charles "The Totora (Scirpus Californicus) in Ecuador and Peru " Economic Botany Volume 32, Number 3 / July, 1978 https://doi.org/10.1007%2FBF02864698
  7. Fischer, Steven R. Drought, vegetation change, and human history on Rapa Nui Reaktion Books, 2005 pp. 7-8 https://books.google.com/books?hl=en&lr=&id=-wlql7z86CsC&pg=PA13
  8. http://www.islandheritage.org/faq.html Easter Island Foundation Frequently Asked Questions