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Digital Asset Management (DAM) by Orange Logic
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ECUADOR, 2025. Laying hens
ECUADOR, 2025. Flowers in Zayra's garden
ECUADOR, 2025. Zayra is treasurer of the women’s savings group
ECUADOR, 2025. Zayra is treasurer of the women’s savings group
ECUADOR, 2025. Zayra arrives for the community group meeting
ECUADOR, 2025. Zayra is treasurer of the women’s savings group
ECUADOR, 2025. Harvesting maize
ECUADOR, 2025. Harvesting maize
ECUADOR, 2025. Zayra is treasurer of the women’s savings group
ECUADOR, 2025. Farmer's son playing outside
ECUADOR, 2025. Zayra and her daughter feed their pigs
ECUADOR, 2025. Zayra is treasurer of the women’s savings group
ECUADOR, 2025. Zayra talking to FAO officer
ECUADOR, 2025. Holding wild blackberries
ECUADOR, 2025. Writing the monthly financial summary of the women's savings group
ECUADOR, 2025. Traditional weaving workshop
ECUADOR, 2025. Members of local community groups
ECUADOR, 2025. Feeding the families chickens
ECUADOR, 2025. Traditional weaving workshop
ECUADOR, 2025. Traditional weaving workshop
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ECUADOR, 2025. One of Zayra's hens
09 July 2025. El Cercado, Ecuador. A hen raised by Zayra Marisol Lanchimba, treasurer of the women’s savings group in the community of El Cercado. Small-scale poultry farming is an important part of household food security and traditional livelihoods for Indigenous families in Cotacachi.
07/09/2025
Country or Territory
Ecuador
Credit
© FAO / Johanna Alarcón
Related URL
Related FAO Feature Story:
https://www.fao.org/newsroom/story/secrets-of-the-andean-chakras/en
File size
11.45 MB
Unique ID
UF1ADPU
Editorial use only. Photo credit must be given. For further information contact: Photo-Library@fao.org
Background Information
Kichwa women and their ancestral agricultural knowledge have sustained food security in Ecuador’s highlands for centuries. Their farms, known as chakra, were recognized in 2023 by FAO as a Globally Important Agricultural Heritage System (GIAHS). Indigenous women like Magdalena are seed guardians, preserving native maize varieties and passing this knowledge to her daughter Verónica.
Climate change-related droughts, floods and pests threaten this system, but with FAO’s support, organizations like UNORCAC work with Kichwa communities to strengthen resilience through the use and exchange of native seeds.