Shooting darts with a blowgun is an extremely stealthy, and even lethal, hunting technique if the darts are poisoned with plant extracts or animal secretions. In Guyana, Suriname, French Guiana, some isolated areas in South America, and in the Amazon and Orinoco basins, blowgun hunters fill the tips of their darts with
curare. The explorer
Joseph Gumilla first mentioned the use of this poison. In ancient literature, it is also referred to as
uiraêry,
uirary,
uraré,
woorara, and
wourali. The
Ticuas, an ethnic group from Brazil, Colombia, and Peru, produce a type of
curare called
Ticuna. This poison acts quickly on the prey, killing birds like the toucan in a matter of three to four minutes and small monkeys in about eight to ten minutes. In the
Orinoco basin, the blowgun and curare are used by: the
Hoti, who make blowguns that are unique in their components; the
Panare, who obtain blowguns from the Hoti; the Huottuja, or
Piaroa, who get their blowguns from the Yekuana or Maquiritares; the
Maquiritare, who get their
curare from the Piaroa; and the
Pemones, who also get their blowguns from the Yekuana or Maquiritares, though they make their own
curare. In the upper Rio Negro basin, the combination of blowguns and poisoned darts is used by the
Curripacos, or Banivas, who make their own blowguns using technology and materials different, in part, from those of the ethnic groups of the Orinoco. They also produce their own
curare. Their ancestors, the
Waodani, used a match known as
kakapa along with the
curare to impregnate the darts of their blowpipes. The Piaroa are known for making
curare to impregnate the darts of their blowguns. They produce it beginning with extracts of different species of plants from the
Strychnos genus– mainly
maracure (Strychnos crevauxii)– mixed with
kraraguero sap to increase the adhesion of the poison. An animal hit by a dart poisoned using the Piaroa recipe usually dies within fifteen minutes, depending on its body mass. In the
Philippines,
Borneo, and
Sulawesi, the
sumpit (or sumpitan) blowgun darts are typically coated in the sap of
Antiaris toxicaria (
upas)a toxin also used by the Orang Asli of Peninsular Malaysiawhich causes convulsions and death by cardiac arrest. Uniquely among blowguns, sumpit are also commonly tipped with metal spearheads for use in close combat or when the ammunition is exhausted, functionally similar to
bayonets. ==See also==