Medicinal plants in cultures of Afro-descendant communities in Brazil, Europe and Africa

ABSTRACT Ethnomedicine focuses on empirical and traditional knowledge of healing practices of different human groups, including the use of plants as medicine. We aimed to determine whether there is consensus regarding the use of plants in traditional medicine of Afro-descendant communities in Brazil...

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Veröffentlicht in:Acta Botânica Brasílica 2019-06, Vol.33 (2), p.340-349
Hauptverfasser: Pasa, Maria Corette, Hanazaki, Natalia, Silva, Olga Maria Duarte, Agostinho, Adelaide Bela, Zank, Sofia, Esteves, Maria Inês Pires Neves
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container_end_page 349
container_issue 2
container_start_page 340
container_title Acta Botânica Brasílica
container_volume 33
creator Pasa, Maria Corette
Hanazaki, Natalia
Silva, Olga Maria Duarte
Agostinho, Adelaide Bela
Zank, Sofia
Esteves, Maria Inês Pires Neves
description ABSTRACT Ethnomedicine focuses on empirical and traditional knowledge of healing practices of different human groups, including the use of plants as medicine. We aimed to determine whether there is consensus regarding the use of plants in traditional medicine of Afro-descendant communities in Brazil, Europe and Africa. Data were obtained through interviews, walks-in-the-woods, participant observations and bibliographic searches. We analyzed similarities among data sets to determine whether there is convergence in the use of traditional medicinal plants among these communities considering that they share influence from African culture and a common spoken language (Portuguese). Similarities among communities were assessed through cluster analysis using presence or absence data for the variables. We recorded 405 medicinal plants, most of which were spontaneously occurring, although some were cultivated. The most represented botanical families were Asteraceae and Lamiaceae. Similarity in medicinal plants among communities was found to be tenuous due to the biogeographical and spatial characteristics of the biomes, and to historical and cultural peculiarities of each locality, resulting in different sets of medicinal plants. This study contributes to understanding the role of the historical legacies of the African diaspora and of European (Portuguese) expansion in the adaptation and maintenance of new elements in local floras.
doi_str_mv 10.1590/0102-33062019abb0163
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subjects African diaspora
cultural exchange
ethnobotany
medicinal plants
traditional medicine
title Medicinal plants in cultures of Afro-descendant communities in Brazil, Europe and Africa
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