Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Actualized inventory of medicinal plants used in traditional medicine in Oaxaca, Mexico
View through CrossRef
Abstract
Background
Oaxaca is one of the most diverse states in Mexico from biological and cultural points of view. Different ethnic groups living there maintain deep and ancestral traditional knowledge of medicinal plants as well as traditional practices and beliefs about diseases/illnesses and cures. Previous ethnobotanical research in this state has helped document this knowledge, but with the addition of more studies, more records appear. We updated the inventory of medicinal knowledge between the different ethnic groups that inhabit the Oaxacan territory.
Methods
A database was constructed from two sources: (1) original data from a 3-year project in 84 municipalities of Oaxaca inhabited by eight ethnic groups and (2) different electronic databases.
Results
Records of 1032 medicinal plants were obtained; 164 families were registered, with Asteraceae, Fabaceae, and Rubiaceae being the most commonly used. A total of 770 species were reported in 14 vegetation types; the most important species came from temperate forests. Only 144 species corresponded to introduced species, and 272 were listed in a risk category.
Illnesses of the digestive and genitourinary systems as well as culture-bound syndromes were treated with high numbers of medicinal plants. The Mestizo, Mixe, Mixtec, and Zapotec ethnic groups exhibited the greatest number of recorded medicinal plants. The 17 species that were used among almost all ethnic groups in Oaxaca were also used to cure the highest number of diseases.
Discussion
Inventories of medicinal plants confirm the persistence of traditional knowledge and reflect the need to recognize and respect this cosmovision. Many species are gathered in wild environments. The most important illnesses or diseases recorded in the present inventory are also mentioned in different studies, suggesting that they are common health problems in the rural communities of Mexico.
Conclusions
Medicinal plants are essential for ethnic groups in Oaxaca. It is necessary to recognize and understand the complex ancestral processes involved in the human-nature interaction and the role of these processes in the conservation of biodiversity and in the survivorship of ethnic groups that have persisted for centuries. Finally, this study serves as a wake-up call to respect those worldviews.
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Title: Actualized inventory of medicinal plants used in traditional medicine in Oaxaca, Mexico
Description:
Abstract
Background
Oaxaca is one of the most diverse states in Mexico from biological and cultural points of view.
Different ethnic groups living there maintain deep and ancestral traditional knowledge of medicinal plants as well as traditional practices and beliefs about diseases/illnesses and cures.
Previous ethnobotanical research in this state has helped document this knowledge, but with the addition of more studies, more records appear.
We updated the inventory of medicinal knowledge between the different ethnic groups that inhabit the Oaxacan territory.
Methods
A database was constructed from two sources: (1) original data from a 3-year project in 84 municipalities of Oaxaca inhabited by eight ethnic groups and (2) different electronic databases.
Results
Records of 1032 medicinal plants were obtained; 164 families were registered, with Asteraceae, Fabaceae, and Rubiaceae being the most commonly used.
A total of 770 species were reported in 14 vegetation types; the most important species came from temperate forests.
Only 144 species corresponded to introduced species, and 272 were listed in a risk category.
Illnesses of the digestive and genitourinary systems as well as culture-bound syndromes were treated with high numbers of medicinal plants.
The Mestizo, Mixe, Mixtec, and Zapotec ethnic groups exhibited the greatest number of recorded medicinal plants.
The 17 species that were used among almost all ethnic groups in Oaxaca were also used to cure the highest number of diseases.
Discussion
Inventories of medicinal plants confirm the persistence of traditional knowledge and reflect the need to recognize and respect this cosmovision.
Many species are gathered in wild environments.
The most important illnesses or diseases recorded in the present inventory are also mentioned in different studies, suggesting that they are common health problems in the rural communities of Mexico.
Conclusions
Medicinal plants are essential for ethnic groups in Oaxaca.
It is necessary to recognize and understand the complex ancestral processes involved in the human-nature interaction and the role of these processes in the conservation of biodiversity and in the survivorship of ethnic groups that have persisted for centuries.
Finally, this study serves as a wake-up call to respect those worldviews.
Related Results
Ethnoveterinary medicinal plants and their utilization by indigenous and local communities of Dugda District, Central Rift Valley, Ethiopia
Ethnoveterinary medicinal plants and their utilization by indigenous and local communities of Dugda District, Central Rift Valley, Ethiopia
Abstract
Background
Ethnoveterinary medicinal plants have been used by the people of Dugda District in the primary health care system to treat vario...
Markets Survey On Traditional Medicine of Lijiang City, Yunnan Province, China
Markets Survey On Traditional Medicine of Lijiang City, Yunnan Province, China
Abstract
Background: Traditional markets are important trading places for medicinal plants, and market surveys often engage in ethnobotanical research to record the herbal ...
Medicinal Plants and Fungi Traditionally Used by Dulong People in Northwest Yunnan, China
Medicinal Plants and Fungi Traditionally Used by Dulong People in Northwest Yunnan, China
The Dulong, an ethnic group living in the isolated Northwest Yunnan of Southwest China, have directly used a wide of plants to serve their needs and have accumulated rich tradition...
The substantiation of the composition of the phytospecies for the treatment of inflammatory periodontal diseases
The substantiation of the composition of the phytospecies for the treatment of inflammatory periodontal diseases
Recently, there has been a growing interest in the use of herbal medicines for the local treatment of inflammatory periodontal diseases. This can be explained by the significantly ...
Five Decades Of Research In The Field Medicinal And Aromatic Plants At The University Of Agricultural Sciencesand Veterinary Medicine Cluj-Napoca (After Year 1970)
Five Decades Of Research In The Field Medicinal And Aromatic Plants At The University Of Agricultural Sciencesand Veterinary Medicine Cluj-Napoca (After Year 1970)
At the University of Agricultural Sciences and Veterinary Medicine in Cluj-Napoca there is an old and valuable tradition regarding the knowledge and valorification of medicinal and...
Research Progress of Improvement of Chinese Herbal Medicines Quality by Plant Growth-promoting Bacteria
Research Progress of Improvement of Chinese Herbal Medicines Quality by Plant Growth-promoting Bacteria
As the raw material of traditional Chinese medicine industry, medicinal plants are the source of the industry. Medicinal plants are affected by many factors such as climate and env...
Ethnobotanical study of medicinal plants and its Economic importance in Dalomana district, Southeastern Oromia, Ethiopia
Ethnobotanical study of medicinal plants and its Economic importance in Dalomana district, Southeastern Oromia, Ethiopia
Abstract
Ethnobotanical study of medicinal plants was carried out March 25 to September 5, 2021, in Dalomana district of Oromia region, Ethiopia. The study focused on docum...
Traditional Ayurvedic Treatment Practices by Vaidyas of the Northern Region
of India
Traditional Ayurvedic Treatment Practices by Vaidyas of the Northern Region
of India
aims:
The aim of the present study was to investigate the current scenario of utilization and importance of medicinal plants used by traditional vaidyas. This study also provides t...

