Seed Collector
Groups

Who is behind
seed collection

in the Xingu Seed Network?

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24 Seed Collector Groups

The map shows the territories where the Network operates. However, it is worth noting that we are a very dynamic initiative, and these points are frequently updated.

SOURCE: “Sowing Restoration”, by ARSX

18 municipalities in
Mato Grosso

Vera, an urban extractivist from the Nova Xavantina Seed Collector Group, is one of the women who collect the most seeds per year in the Xingu Seed Network.

PHOTO: Bianca Moreno/ISA and ARSX

+76% of the workforce
are women

The Xavante Seed Collector Group from Ripá Village, in the Pimentel Barbosa Indigenous Territory, is entirely made up of women.

PHOTO: Bianca Moreno/ISA and ARSX

Seed collection among
Indigenous communities

about seed collection among Ikpeng women

Nina, Luciele, and Délia are family farming seed collectors from the Manah Group in Canabrava do Norte/MT.

PHOTO: Lia R Domingues/ARSX

Seed collection in family
farming and among urban extractivists

Links and Women

the bridge between the collector,
the group, and the technical team

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Cleusa Nunes de Paula is one of the longest-standing “Elas” in the Network: after being a leader in the Macife Group, Cleusa now leads the Seed Collector Group of Novo Paraíso Village, which brings together 20 Xavante women. In the photo, Cleusa is with her mother, Dona Alcina, a 95-year-old master of medicinal roots.

PHOTO: Bianca Moreno/RSX

In the Xingu Seed Network, we have a fundamental role: the “Link” or “She” of each Seed Collector Group.

How do new
people and Seed Collector Groups join?

1

join an existing Seed Collector Group

2

propose the creation of a new Group

To become a collector
in an existing Group

To propose a new
Seed Collector Group

Learn more in the
“Collector’s Handbook”