Arizona – Official Opata Nation website https://opatanation.org Fri, 28 Aug 2020 21:47:09 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.8.3 https://opatanation.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/03/favicon-opata.ico Arizona – Official Opata Nation website https://opatanation.org 32 32 141933134 Opata Fauna: The Coa and the Sibori https://opatanation.org/opata-fauna-the-coa-and-the-sibori https://opatanation.org/opata-fauna-the-coa-and-the-sibori#comments Fri, 28 Aug 2020 21:30:05 +0000 https://opatanation.org/?p=1472

The following article is intending to illustrate what we are doing with the information that we are discovering. In this case, with the name of animals in the Opata region, “Opateria” that no one in the past matched it with its correct species or scientific name.

And this would not be possible in a faster way and with the greater probability of being correct without a professional in the field. A few months ago, Joseph Barron joined the team of official collaborators. This partnership has been possible thanks to Spencer Pote, an Opata from Arizona, currently studying a similar subject.

Here a window to his approach:

Methodology Overview

I used 276 reported occurrences of frogs within the Opata boundary layer given. These records were from citizen science reports and historical databases (collected using gbif.org). I then took the complete species list from these sightings (23 species) and cross-referenced their natural history, range map, and taxonomic name with amphibiaweb.org and some additional sources listed below.

Coa – Toad

Taxonomically, the term ‘toad’ is paraphyletic, that is, it groups species without a common ancestry together. There are several different families that fall under the term ‘toad.’ Bufonidae are often called the ‘true toads.’ Within this family is the American toad, Anaxyrus americanus, which is common throughout North America and displays many of the characteristics of what we would call a ‘toad.’ Its legs are stubby, its skin is dry and warty, and it displays poison glands behind the eye. There is also the family Scaphiopodidae, the “Spade-Foot Toads.” These are distinct from Bufonidae, but it is easy to see why they also were termed “toads.” Their skin is also warty, their legs are stubby, but unlike “true toads,” they lack poison glands behind the eye, and as their name suggests, they have a spade-like keratin growth on their feet to help them burrow. Finally, there are the “narrow mouth toads” in the family Microhylidae. I cannot find a good reason as to why this group also gained the toad moniker, as they lack many of the qualities we think of when we think of toads. Doing some searches, some databases prefer to call them “narrow-mouth frogs,” but the term ‘toad’ does persist.

I have put below three different species lists for this word. One only uses species in Bufonidae – the “true toads,” one includes Schaphiopodidae, due to similarity of appearance, and one includes Microhylidae and would cover any species we call a ‘toad’ today. The other collaborators may have better insight into what list would be best suited for this word. I would be interested to hear what they think!

Table 1- Species for the term Coa – if only using species in the family Bufonidae

Species Latin Name

Anaxyrus cognatus

Anaxyrus punctatus

Anaxyrus woodhousii

Table 2 – Species for the term Coa if using species that have toad-like qualities

Species Latin Name

Anaxyrus cognatus

Anaxyrus punctatus

Anaxyrus woodhousii

Scaphiopus couchii

Spea multiplicata

Table 3 – Species list for Coa if any group called a ‘toad’ today is listed

Species Latin Name

Anaxyrus cognatus

Anaxyrus punctatus

Anaxyrus woodhousii

Gastrophryne mazatlanensis

Gastrophryne olivacea

Scaphiopus couchii

Spea multiplicata

Sibori – Tadpole

One of the most impressive features of amphibians is the sheer diversity of their reproductive strategies. While many frogs have an aquatic larval stage, many also develop directly in the egg or even have “live birth.” In this region of the world however, most species lay eggs that form a tadpole stage. The following is a list of all frog/toad species that have a tadpole stage in the boundaries of the Opata Nation.

Latin Name

Agalychnis dacnicolor

Anaxyrus cognatus

Anaxyrus punctatus

Anaxyrus woodhousii

Gastrophryne mazatlanensis

Gastrophryne olivacea

Hyla arenicolor

Hyla eximia

Hyla wrightorum

Incilius alvarius

Incilius mazatlanensis

Rana berlandieri

Rana catesbeianus

Rana chiricahuensis

Rana magnaocularis

Rana tarahumarae

Rana yavapaiensis

Scaphiopus couchii

Smilisca fodiens

Spea multiplicata

Additional Papers Consulted

Georgina Santos-Barrera, Oscar Flores-Villela. 2010. Lithobates magnaocularisThe IUCN Red List of

Threatened Species 2010: e.T58656A11821339.  https://dx.doi.org/10.2305/IUCN.UK.2010- 2.RLTS.T58656A11821339.en. Downloaded on 11 May 2020.

Streicher, J. W., Cox, C. L., Campbell, J. A., Smith, E. N., & De Sá, R. O. (2012). Rapid range expansion in the Great Plains narrow-mouthed toad (Gastrophryne olivacea) and a revised taxonomy for North American microhylids. Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution, 64, 645–653. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ympev.2012.05.020

Lowe, F. A. S. and C. H., & Jr. (n.d.). A New Subspecies of Bufo woodhousei from the Inland Southwest. In Herpetologica (Vol. 11, pp. 185–190). Allen PressHerpetologists’ League. https://doi.org/10.2307/3889354

Hedges, S. B., Duellman, W. E., & Heinicke, M. P. (2008). ZOOTAXA New World direct-developing frogs (Anura: Terrarana): Molecular phylogeny, classification, biogeography, and conservation. www.mapress.com/zootaxa/

 

Occurrence Data Citations

GBIF.org (08 May 2020) GBIF Occurrence Download https://doi.org/10.15468/dl.qvx8dh

GBIF.org (11 May 2020) GBIF Occurrence Download https://doi.org/10.15468/dl.3fqvc4

Although this research does not provide us with a precise answer, if it helps us to reduce the universe of probabilities and based on the observation after the rains in Opateria, we could, based on inference, take for granted which species our ancestors referred to or well, we can also decide to refer to any toad as “Coa” and tadpole as “Sibori”.

In your town from the Opateria, What is the species of Toad that you most frequently see?

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WINDOW TO THE PAST: History of Sonora https://opatanation.org/window-to-the-past-history-of-sonora https://opatanation.org/window-to-the-past-history-of-sonora#respond Sat, 08 Aug 2020 21:18:23 +0000 https://opatanation.org/?p=1383

The following column was published by the newspaper El Imparcial (In Spanish) on Friday, October 8, 1937 in the EDITORIAL PAGE, and is a window into the past about what has been written about us Opatas and other Indigenous Nations of the region:

SONORA HISTORY

By Dr. Arego

An article by Prof. Manuel Sandomingo, in “La Opinion,” September 24 motivates these lines.

It is titled “The Opata Tribe” and says: “… in 1931 there was not a single opata that could be explained in their language, being able to assure that it has ceased to exist as an ethnic group … in Sonora, the first Spaniards surprised Indians who poisoned a pool of water for deer, to make provision of skins and winter clothes, according to Gomara.”

Without controversy, Prof. Sandomingo will forgive us the warning: The tribe has not ceased to exist as an ethnic group. Here in Arizona there are thousands of opatas, towns and villages that speak and write their dialect: in Florence, Zacaton and Coolidge.

That they “poisoned a puddle” is as fantastic as the fact that Sonora owes its name to the fact that the Indians could not use the word — lady — because they did not speak their language. The ñ, as it sounds in Spanish. It is a gala of dialects. “Baijqui zuñi” the last of the three calls to MISA. There is the “zuñi” tribe and the word also means bell, sound.

Neither tribe nor Apaches poisoned puddles, nor for beasts, much less to kill deer.

The water, gift of the Great Spirit, God, is sacred to them. Their food and their water, we can take them without fear, no matter the tribe. They poisoned their arrows against a tenacious enemy, but not for hunting. They do not leave a deer or wounded animal in the field; by law, under very severe penalties. If the SERIS ever killed white people, it was that they left wounded deer. At the time of pregnancy, they do not kill females. In August, they have their “deer party” barbecue of all those who can capture, with art, running it on foot, or with stones, without firing a shot. So much care for hunting.

The years that the calving is scarce, they know certain herbs that they put in the waters to attract the deer; and others to heal the belly of the females and obtain offspring. This perhaps Gomara saw and the Indians told him — poison — to kick him off. their hunting laws are very harsh and well observed.

Upon arrival of the Spaniards, all the tribes knew much about the laws of Moses and many Indians still do not eat the forbidden meat or pork, or wear a fur poisoned animal. They had a transcript of the Gospels and by tradition, they waited for the conquerors. Thus they accepted those Holy Missionaries to whose devotion the conquest was due, rather than to the adventurous weapons. Say it if not, that amazing trait of aboriginal nobility: the victorious Indians, initiated peace treaties with the brave Hurdaide to feed their fiercely defeated legions and save them from going to perish. . .!

Ay. . . and what a painful lesson the unsuspecting Indians received in exchange for such an act of nobility and unprecedented heroism. . .! Nothing less than the productive slaughter of OTANCAHUI, baptized the place with this name that means “where the bones are whitened like salt” by the Indians, as a sad indelible memory. . . !

And we accuse them of a felony when we have not given them other lessons. . .! Eternally, we have always been the first to break the peace treaties!

There is in Arizona the “Hieroglyphic Canyon” with millions and millions of signs in cliffs and basalts, which, according to some scholars, date up to 40 thousand years. The data seems exaggerated to us. And there, the “Newspaper Rock” so called for the regularity and symmetry of its writings, like printed columns, before which the most notable archaeologists and men of science have crashed. without deciphering the slightest bit of such a remote civilization, or even guessing its purposes and conflicts, even perhaps with very different configuration and physical geography.

For us, this is nothing but their Code, their Fundamental Law, which was their HISTORY, for them sacred; to which kings and vassals were linked; dominators and tributaries. There are registered the signs of all the tribes, including the SERIS of Sonora. Soon “Big House” Opata construction, will appear today in ruins in Arizona. And apart from “Jose Rafael Campoy, a Great Sonorense” a clear precursor of our Independence.

We know Bancroft, Velázquez and others, but we have not read the history of the Seris, for themselves; sad and painful narration drawn on the rocks and cliffs of the coast, from Isla Tiburon to the delta of the Colorado River. It speaks of the white predation in its desolate domain. Of a prodigious odyssey from distant unknown countries; down impossible roads through regions that have now disappeared. Dirty and weathered to the unbelievable, he and his hut reek of fish and moth-eaten leather, sadder and brooding, preserves the legend of a better past. Everlasting victim, the surrounding ranchers, more guilty than him, cry out to the government for the extermination of the tribe when they kill a stolen cattle! And the SERI is being extinguished by leaps and bounds — deliberately suicidal — says an American writer who studied it — consumed by inexorable tribal consumption — he adds. There is only one way to save it – we say: the Church, through Catholic missionaries.

Unlettered Indian, leads many points with the alphabet of the idea, open to him the book of nature that we do not even spell it, foolish. In Caborca, Sonora, it is notorious how an Indian set fire to the house occupied by filibusters in 1857, with incendiary arrows, fired by parable from behind the temple, which determined the triumph! Oh . . God, who reveals these things to the humble illiterate, hidden from the wise and learned!

If there is no reflection, a little more exactness, in terms of justice, so as not to hurt ourselves: Sonora will continue without HISTORY. . .

Dr. AREGO.
Glendale, Ariz.

Finding this piece of history would not have been possible without the open digital repository “Arizona Memory Project”.

References:
-Gomara: Francisco López de Gómara
-Hurdaide: Captian Hurdaide (1616s).

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Great Pride for the Opata Nation https://opatanation.org/great-pride-for-the-opata-nation https://opatanation.org/great-pride-for-the-opata-nation#respond Fri, 12 Jul 2019 20:32:46 +0000 http://opatanation.org/?p=994
“Indigenous Peoples of Sonora Mexico” team holding the flag of the Tohono O’odham Nation and the flag created by Teresita Leal (mayo-opata) to represent the Opatas.

During the past NABI, it was of great pride and honor that the honorable Verlon Jose who was the tribal chief until May of 2019 as vice president of the Tohono O’odham Nation carries the coat of arms of our people Hoi-Ra-Ua. called Opatas. It is very significant for us and of high value because it indirectly contributes to our process and struggles for reunification as a differentiated people that have not been extinct as it had been expressed in the last two decades. We are recognized as a people from which we descend thousands, but unfortunately many do not assume for different reasons that have happened over the centuries.

Through this note, we want to give the specials again thanks to my brother Julio Cesar Ortega Lopez and my nephew Julio Everardo Ortega who represented us very well in this event where brothers from many parts of the world and original peoples of Sonora – Arizona met. The creator is sending us blessings so that we can help him to rescue this wonderful place that he created for us and that we call home, our mother earth. And although the theme was the sport we know that if our young people, our children live in a healthy environment, they will be the ones that continue with this fight. Thank you very much to the teacher Edna Soto Gracia and Isabel Valadez Arias who coordinated for this to be possible, you are a blessing for our peoples.

This flag was designed by Teresita Leal, our commander who today takes care of us from that spiritual level where she undoubtedly continues to send us blessings. She gave it to me and we will always wear it with pride, WE ARE the Hoi-Ra-Ua, Opatas (Tehuimas, Jovas, Eudeves to mention the most numerous families), WE ARE BRIDGE BEINGS, a nation that came to light again to enrich the culture of our State of Sonora and of our country.

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Indigenous Peoples of Sonora participate for the first time in NABI https://opatanation.org/indigenous-peoples-of-sonora-participate-for-the-first-time-in-nabi https://opatanation.org/indigenous-peoples-of-sonora-participate-for-the-first-time-in-nabi#comments Mon, 08 Jul 2019 21:38:15 +0000 http://opatanation.org/?p=934

The 17th Annual Native American Basketball Invitational (NABI) was held during the last week of June, were Native American basketball players (featured 128 teams) in boys and girl’s tournaments from across Canada, the United States, two teams from New Zealand and for the first time, Mexico converged on the Arizona Valley for one of the largest amateur sporting events of its kind.

Early-round games were played in Maricopa and Bapchule (teams were seeded in Gold or Silver, 32-team brackets for single-elimination competition toward a national championship) on June 24-26 and the National-title games were held at Talking Stick Resort Arena, home of the Phoenix Suns, in downtown Phoenix on Saturday, June 29.

During this event, some the Hoi-ra-ua (Opatas) participated alongside our brothers Tohono O’odham,Yoreme (Mayos), Yoeme (Yaquis) y Comcaac (Seris) under the same flag, the team “Indigenous Peoples of Sonora Mexico” where to their surprise they were very well received with great affection and respect for the teams representing the other indigenous nations and organizers.

This participation would not have been achieved without the previous efforts of many people who worked and supported so that our teams would be present, and thanks to one of the councilors of Nogales, Sonora Edna Soto Gracia and her husband, who were kind enough to travel from Nogales in representation of these young people, great thanks to Isabel Valadez Arias and her team Víctor and Ahmed of the Consulate General of Mexico in Nogales, AZ, who supported the boys incredibly so that many of them will visit the United States of America for the first time, the honorable Verlon Jose whose was the Vice President of the Tohono O’odham Nation until May 2019 for his support for this participation to become a reality, because it should be noted that their support was incredible, and Nike7, Fry’s and the city of Maricopa in Arizona for their sponsorship.

The NABI Foundation is a national foundation committed to supporting Native American youth by implementing programs that encourage higher education, sports, health & wellness, and community building.

For more information about the schedule of events, game schedules, locations, admission fees, and how to donate and/or become a sponsor visit www.nabifoundation.org

NABI sponsors on 2019:
Phoenix Suns, Phoenix Mercury, Talking Stick Resort Arena, City of Maricopa, Steward Health Care, Bank of American, Native Health, Arizona Diamondbacks, Universal Insurance Programs, Tohono O’odham Nation, Yavapai Prescott Indian Tribe, National Indian Gaming Association, Seneca Nation of Indians, Fry’s Food Stores, DEA, Waste Management/Phoenix Open, Rosette LLP, Pascua Yaqui Tribe, KONE Elevators, A.R. Mays Construction, Adventurous Antelope Canyon Photo Tours, Gun Lake Tribe, Helios Education Foundation and APS.

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