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RESEARCH PRODUCT
Ethnobotanical research in Cava de' Tirreni area, Southern Italy
Mattia MautoneLaura De MartinoVincenzo De Feosubject
Cultural StudiesMaleHealth (social science)Field dataBiodiversityEthnobotany01 natural sciences03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineHandicraftlcsh:BotanyHumansSocioeconomicsAgedAged 80 and overPlants MedicinalTraditional usesResearchCava de’ TirreniTraditional medicinelcsh:Other systems of medicineMiddle Agedlcsh:RZ201-999Cava de' Tirreni; Ethnobotany; Ethnopharmacology; Traditional medicine; Traditional useslcsh:QK1-9890104 chemical sciences010404 medicinal & biomolecular chemistryGeographyKnowledgeCava de' TirreniComplementary and alternative medicineItaly030220 oncology & carcinogenesisEthnobotanyCuring diseasesEthnopharmacologyPlant speciesFemaleMedicine TraditionalPlant PreparationsPlants EdibleGeneral Agricultural and Biological Sciencesdescription
Abstract Background To best of our knowledge, this is the first quantitative ethnobotanical study with the aim of documenting the local knowledge and practices of using plants for curing diseases in the Cava de’ Tirreni area, Salerno Province, Campania Region, Italy. The present ethnobotanical field study, carried out during 2016–2017, documents the local uses of 119 plant species for medicinal, food and domestic purposes. Methods Ethnobotanical data were documented from 70 informants: field data were collected and information on the uses of plants was gathered through semi-structured and structured interviews with persons who still retain traditional ethnobotanical knowledge. Documented data were evaluated using the quantitative ethnobotanical index of use value (UV). Results Overall, the informants native of the area were interviewed and 277 use-reports have been recorded. The scientific names, local names, plant part used, preparation and administration processes are reported and compared with practices in other Southern Italian regions. In total, 101 species are documented as medicinal, 36 as food or food aromatizer, 29 for domestic and handicraft uses, 10 in veterinary medicine. More or less 64% of all species have more uses and over half of the food plants (23 species) are also used for medicinal purposes. Conclusions The comparison of the documented species and their uses with ethnobotanical literature of other Italian regions reveals that the traditional plant knowledge in this area shows strong similarities with adjacent Southern Italian areas. Some of the recorded species and administration processes however seem to be unique for the zone.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2019-10-17 |