Medicines in the forest: Ethnobotany of wild medicinal plants in the pharmacopeia of the Wichí people of Salta province (Argentina)

Ethnopharmacological relevance: This article presents the results of a study on wild plant pharmacopeia and medical ethnobotany of the Wichí people of the South American Gran Chaco region, where native forest still persist. Few previous works on the former subjects exist, with only partial informati...

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Publicado: 2019
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Acceso en línea:https://bibliotecadigital.exactas.uba.ar/collection/paper/document/paper_03788741_v231_n_p525_Suarez
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_03788741_v231_n_p525_Suarez
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id paper:paper_03788741_v231_n_p525_Suarez
record_format dspace
institution Universidad de Buenos Aires
institution_str I-28
repository_str R-134
collection Biblioteca Digital - Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales (UBA)
topic Biodiversity
Ethnobotany
Ethnomedicine
Gran Chaco
Indigenous people
Medicinal plants
Acanthaceae
Achatocarpaceae
Amaranthaceae
Amaryllidaceae
Anacardiaceae
Anemiaceae
Apocynaceae
Araceae
Argentina
Article
Asteraceae
attitude to health
Bignoniaceae
Bolivia
Brassicaceae
Bromeliaceae
Cactaceae
Cannabaceae
Capparaceae
Celastraceae
Cleomaceae
Commelinaceae
Convolvulaceae
digestive system function disorder
ethnic difference
ethnic group
ethnobotany
Euphorbiaceae
Fabaceae
fever
forest
gynecologic disease
human
indigenous people
Loranthaceae
Lythraceae
Malpighiaceae
Malvaceae
Martyniaceae
medicinal plant
Moraceae
Olacaceae
Onagraceae
Orchidaceae
Passifloraceae
Phyllanthaceae
Phytolaccaceae
Polygonaceae
Pteridaceae
Ranunculaceae
respiratory tract disease
Rhamnaceae
Rubiaceae
Santalaceae
Sapindaceae
Sapotaceae
Selaginellaceae
Simaroubaceae
skin disease
Solanaceae
traditional medicine
Verbenaceae
Viscaceae
wild plant
Zygophyllaceae
adult
angiosperm
ethnobotany
female
male
medical literature
phytotherapy
population group
traditional medicine
plant medicinal product
Adult
Argentina
Ethnobotany
Female
Forests
Humans
Magnoliopsida
Male
Medicine, Traditional
Pharmacopoeias as Topic
Phytotherapy
Plant Preparations
Plants, Medicinal
Population Groups
spellingShingle Biodiversity
Ethnobotany
Ethnomedicine
Gran Chaco
Indigenous people
Medicinal plants
Acanthaceae
Achatocarpaceae
Amaranthaceae
Amaryllidaceae
Anacardiaceae
Anemiaceae
Apocynaceae
Araceae
Argentina
Article
Asteraceae
attitude to health
Bignoniaceae
Bolivia
Brassicaceae
Bromeliaceae
Cactaceae
Cannabaceae
Capparaceae
Celastraceae
Cleomaceae
Commelinaceae
Convolvulaceae
digestive system function disorder
ethnic difference
ethnic group
ethnobotany
Euphorbiaceae
Fabaceae
fever
forest
gynecologic disease
human
indigenous people
Loranthaceae
Lythraceae
Malpighiaceae
Malvaceae
Martyniaceae
medicinal plant
Moraceae
Olacaceae
Onagraceae
Orchidaceae
Passifloraceae
Phyllanthaceae
Phytolaccaceae
Polygonaceae
Pteridaceae
Ranunculaceae
respiratory tract disease
Rhamnaceae
Rubiaceae
Santalaceae
Sapindaceae
Sapotaceae
Selaginellaceae
Simaroubaceae
skin disease
Solanaceae
traditional medicine
Verbenaceae
Viscaceae
wild plant
Zygophyllaceae
adult
angiosperm
ethnobotany
female
male
medical literature
phytotherapy
population group
traditional medicine
plant medicinal product
Adult
Argentina
Ethnobotany
Female
Forests
Humans
Magnoliopsida
Male
Medicine, Traditional
Pharmacopoeias as Topic
Phytotherapy
Plant Preparations
Plants, Medicinal
Population Groups
Medicines in the forest: Ethnobotany of wild medicinal plants in the pharmacopeia of the Wichí people of Salta province (Argentina)
topic_facet Biodiversity
Ethnobotany
Ethnomedicine
Gran Chaco
Indigenous people
Medicinal plants
Acanthaceae
Achatocarpaceae
Amaranthaceae
Amaryllidaceae
Anacardiaceae
Anemiaceae
Apocynaceae
Araceae
Argentina
Article
Asteraceae
attitude to health
Bignoniaceae
Bolivia
Brassicaceae
Bromeliaceae
Cactaceae
Cannabaceae
Capparaceae
Celastraceae
Cleomaceae
Commelinaceae
Convolvulaceae
digestive system function disorder
ethnic difference
ethnic group
ethnobotany
Euphorbiaceae
Fabaceae
fever
forest
gynecologic disease
human
indigenous people
Loranthaceae
Lythraceae
Malpighiaceae
Malvaceae
Martyniaceae
medicinal plant
Moraceae
Olacaceae
Onagraceae
Orchidaceae
Passifloraceae
Phyllanthaceae
Phytolaccaceae
Polygonaceae
Pteridaceae
Ranunculaceae
respiratory tract disease
Rhamnaceae
Rubiaceae
Santalaceae
Sapindaceae
Sapotaceae
Selaginellaceae
Simaroubaceae
skin disease
Solanaceae
traditional medicine
Verbenaceae
Viscaceae
wild plant
Zygophyllaceae
adult
angiosperm
ethnobotany
female
male
medical literature
phytotherapy
population group
traditional medicine
plant medicinal product
Adult
Argentina
Ethnobotany
Female
Forests
Humans
Magnoliopsida
Male
Medicine, Traditional
Pharmacopoeias as Topic
Phytotherapy
Plant Preparations
Plants, Medicinal
Population Groups
description Ethnopharmacological relevance: This article presents the results of a study on wild plant pharmacopeia and medical ethnobotany of the Wichí people of the South American Gran Chaco region, where native forest still persist. Few previous works on the former subjects exist, with only partial information. Traditionally, shamans are in charge of healing serious diseases and wild plants are used for treating minor problems. Some ethnobotanists believe that much of the present pharmacopeia of native peoples of the Gran Chaco comes from the Criollos (local non-native people) and that medicinal plants and uses would have been much fewer in the past. Aims of the study: The study aims to: a) document the wild medicinal plants used by the Wichís and the associated ethnobotanical knowledge, b) discuss the use of medicinal plants in the current sanitary, epidemiological and ethnomedical context of the Wichís, and c) analyse the similarities between the medicinal plants and uses of the Wichís and those reported for the Criollos of the study area, for the We'enhayek (Wichís of Bolivia) and for other indigenous peoples of the Gran Chaco. All of them will help to answer a general research question: are medicinal wild plants of the Wichís present pharmacopoeia long-dated or are they relatively new adquisitions? Materials and methods: Original data were obtained between 2005 and 2017 from 51 informants through open and semi-structured interviews, participant observation, “walks-through-the-forest” technique and gathering of plant vouchers. Consensus of Use (CU) per species, use, ailment and use-category were calculated. Species and uses of the Wichís and those reported for other groups of the region were compared confronting the data, a similarity index (Sorensen) was calculated and a cluster analysis was carried out. An interpretative analysis of the results was performed. Results: Original data consist of 408 applications for which 115 plants of 48 botanical families are used for treating 68 ailments or symptoms. Species are mainly used for treating prevalent health disorders in Wichí epidemiological context (skin and digestive disorders, fever, respiratory affections) and feminine issues. Conclusions: The similarity of the current Wichí pharmacopoeia with the other ethnic groups of the region seem to respond more to a geographical proximity than to cultural affinity. Much (but not all) of their pharmacopoeia seem to be novel, resulting from a permanent seek for solutions to both old and new health problems in the native forests. Many medicinal plants, but not specific uses, seem to come from the neighbouring Criollos, whilst traditional remedies seem to be simultaneously preserved. Hence, I propose that the ethnobotanical “diversification hypothesis” slightly modified, applies in the case of wild medicinal plants of the Wichís, as new wild medicines are being added to the old ones to fill therapeutic vacancies that for several sociocultural and historical reasons appear in their traditional pharmacopoeia. Altogether, results provide novel information of interest for ethnopharmacology, medical ethnobotany and related disciplines, expand the knowledge of Wichí pharmacopoeia and constitute a baseline for future diachronic and cross-cultural studies in the Gran Chaco region. © 2018 Elsevier B.V.
title Medicines in the forest: Ethnobotany of wild medicinal plants in the pharmacopeia of the Wichí people of Salta province (Argentina)
title_short Medicines in the forest: Ethnobotany of wild medicinal plants in the pharmacopeia of the Wichí people of Salta province (Argentina)
title_full Medicines in the forest: Ethnobotany of wild medicinal plants in the pharmacopeia of the Wichí people of Salta province (Argentina)
title_fullStr Medicines in the forest: Ethnobotany of wild medicinal plants in the pharmacopeia of the Wichí people of Salta province (Argentina)
title_full_unstemmed Medicines in the forest: Ethnobotany of wild medicinal plants in the pharmacopeia of the Wichí people of Salta province (Argentina)
title_sort medicines in the forest: ethnobotany of wild medicinal plants in the pharmacopeia of the wichí people of salta province (argentina)
publishDate 2019
url https://bibliotecadigital.exactas.uba.ar/collection/paper/document/paper_03788741_v231_n_p525_Suarez
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_03788741_v231_n_p525_Suarez
_version_ 1768542891552014336
spelling paper:paper_03788741_v231_n_p525_Suarez2023-06-08T15:40:31Z Medicines in the forest: Ethnobotany of wild medicinal plants in the pharmacopeia of the Wichí people of Salta province (Argentina) Biodiversity Ethnobotany Ethnomedicine Gran Chaco Indigenous people Medicinal plants Acanthaceae Achatocarpaceae Amaranthaceae Amaryllidaceae Anacardiaceae Anemiaceae Apocynaceae Araceae Argentina Article Asteraceae attitude to health Bignoniaceae Bolivia Brassicaceae Bromeliaceae Cactaceae Cannabaceae Capparaceae Celastraceae Cleomaceae Commelinaceae Convolvulaceae digestive system function disorder ethnic difference ethnic group ethnobotany Euphorbiaceae Fabaceae fever forest gynecologic disease human indigenous people Loranthaceae Lythraceae Malpighiaceae Malvaceae Martyniaceae medicinal plant Moraceae Olacaceae Onagraceae Orchidaceae Passifloraceae Phyllanthaceae Phytolaccaceae Polygonaceae Pteridaceae Ranunculaceae respiratory tract disease Rhamnaceae Rubiaceae Santalaceae Sapindaceae Sapotaceae Selaginellaceae Simaroubaceae skin disease Solanaceae traditional medicine Verbenaceae Viscaceae wild plant Zygophyllaceae adult angiosperm ethnobotany female male medical literature phytotherapy population group traditional medicine plant medicinal product Adult Argentina Ethnobotany Female Forests Humans Magnoliopsida Male Medicine, Traditional Pharmacopoeias as Topic Phytotherapy Plant Preparations Plants, Medicinal Population Groups Ethnopharmacological relevance: This article presents the results of a study on wild plant pharmacopeia and medical ethnobotany of the Wichí people of the South American Gran Chaco region, where native forest still persist. Few previous works on the former subjects exist, with only partial information. Traditionally, shamans are in charge of healing serious diseases and wild plants are used for treating minor problems. Some ethnobotanists believe that much of the present pharmacopeia of native peoples of the Gran Chaco comes from the Criollos (local non-native people) and that medicinal plants and uses would have been much fewer in the past. Aims of the study: The study aims to: a) document the wild medicinal plants used by the Wichís and the associated ethnobotanical knowledge, b) discuss the use of medicinal plants in the current sanitary, epidemiological and ethnomedical context of the Wichís, and c) analyse the similarities between the medicinal plants and uses of the Wichís and those reported for the Criollos of the study area, for the We'enhayek (Wichís of Bolivia) and for other indigenous peoples of the Gran Chaco. All of them will help to answer a general research question: are medicinal wild plants of the Wichís present pharmacopoeia long-dated or are they relatively new adquisitions? Materials and methods: Original data were obtained between 2005 and 2017 from 51 informants through open and semi-structured interviews, participant observation, “walks-through-the-forest” technique and gathering of plant vouchers. Consensus of Use (CU) per species, use, ailment and use-category were calculated. Species and uses of the Wichís and those reported for other groups of the region were compared confronting the data, a similarity index (Sorensen) was calculated and a cluster analysis was carried out. An interpretative analysis of the results was performed. Results: Original data consist of 408 applications for which 115 plants of 48 botanical families are used for treating 68 ailments or symptoms. Species are mainly used for treating prevalent health disorders in Wichí epidemiological context (skin and digestive disorders, fever, respiratory affections) and feminine issues. Conclusions: The similarity of the current Wichí pharmacopoeia with the other ethnic groups of the region seem to respond more to a geographical proximity than to cultural affinity. Much (but not all) of their pharmacopoeia seem to be novel, resulting from a permanent seek for solutions to both old and new health problems in the native forests. Many medicinal plants, but not specific uses, seem to come from the neighbouring Criollos, whilst traditional remedies seem to be simultaneously preserved. Hence, I propose that the ethnobotanical “diversification hypothesis” slightly modified, applies in the case of wild medicinal plants of the Wichís, as new wild medicines are being added to the old ones to fill therapeutic vacancies that for several sociocultural and historical reasons appear in their traditional pharmacopoeia. Altogether, results provide novel information of interest for ethnopharmacology, medical ethnobotany and related disciplines, expand the knowledge of Wichí pharmacopoeia and constitute a baseline for future diachronic and cross-cultural studies in the Gran Chaco region. © 2018 Elsevier B.V. 2019 https://bibliotecadigital.exactas.uba.ar/collection/paper/document/paper_03788741_v231_n_p525_Suarez http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_03788741_v231_n_p525_Suarez