Açaí Berry: The Exploitation of Labor in South America
The identity of euterpe oleracea mart., popularly known as acai, is strongly influenced by indiginous cultures based in South America. In an indiginous settlement located in the Vaupes department of Columbia, cubeo is the native language. In cubeo the euterpe oleracea is known as Acai, Asai, Bambil, Cansin, Murrapo, Nãhõemimueñi, and Nãhõemimueñi (Kew Science, 2022). At the border of Colombia, Panama, and Ecuador the spoken language shifts into one of the greater Choco languages Wounaan. The language, unlike cubeo, has a less diverse array of terms for acai, calling it murrapho (Kew Science, 2022). As you near more centralized areas of South America the Spanish language begins to dominate, each country having a different slang for the species. In Colombia acai is known as Naidi, while Ecuador named it palmiche (Cococauca, 2019).
The Arecaceae family is composed of perennial flowering species normally found in humid climates. The lineage is split into five subspecies Calamoideae, Nypoideae, Coryphoideae, Ceroxyloideae, and Arecaceae (De Santana Lopes et al., 2021). The basal subfamily, Calamoideae, diverged with its scale-bearing fruits and an abundant number of climbing species. The lineage then diverges into the four sister subfamilies where spiny leaved palms are produced in tropical and humid climates such as South America. Euterpe is the only genus that produces the acai fruit with oleracea and precatoria being the main sources (Yamaguchi K K, 2015). The former produces fruit from multiple stems and the latter uses only a single stem.
The acai palm is able to grow the fruit and flowers throughout the whole year, but there are periods of high production. High amounts of berry production usually happen during the dry seasons of the year. The palm is found in the flooded plains of the Amazon and can handle being in poor soil conditions due to the formation of a large root structure. Humans and animals either inadvertently or purposely spread the seeds as they seek the desired taste of its fruit and high energy content. Alternatively, the flooded plains transport seed through the flow of water. As the seed settle the defining factor in its quick growth is the availability of light. Their incapability to grow in the shade forces humans to cut down the canopy as well as competition to allow its quick growth.