Volume 157, 18 November 2014, Pages 228–242
Research Paper
Quantitative ethnobotanical study of the medicinal plants used by the Ati Negrito indigenous group in Guimaras island, Philippines
Abstract
Ethnopharmacological relevance
This
study is (1) a documentation of medicinal plant use in traditional
therapies, and (2) an evaluation of the medicinal plant knowledge and
practices of the Ati Negrito indigenous people in Guimaras Island,
Philippines.
Materials and methods
A
semi-structured interview was conducted to 65 informants in order to
determine the medicinal plants and their uses in traditional therapies.
The plants were collected, identified and deposited as voucher
specimens. Plant importance was determined using quantitative
ethnobotanical indices such as Use Value (UV), Fidelity Level (FL) and
Informant Consensus Factor (ICF). Descriptive and the inferential
statistics Mann–Whitney U and Kruskal–Wallis tests were used to measure and compare the informants׳ medicinal plant use knowledge and practices.
Results
This
study was able to identify 142 medicinal plant taxa in 55 families used
in 16 categories of diseases. Plants with the highest recorded UVs were
Psidium guajava (2.52), Blumea balsamifera (2.15) and Cocos nucifera (2.06). A total of 24 species were found to have 100% FL values with Senna alata, Hibiscus rosa-sinensis and Breynia vitis-idaea
recording the highest number of use-mentions (48) for treating white
spot, boils, and child sleeplessness, malaise and fatigue, respectively.
The highest ICF value (1.00) was cited for Category 6 (Diseases of the
ear) and Category 16 (Factors that influence health status and
services). Finally, significant differences in medicinal plant use
knowledge were recorded when informants were grouped according to
location, educational level, gender and age.
Conclusions
This
documentation of medicinal plants and their uses shows the rich
tradition in ethno-medicinal knowledge of the Ati Negrito indigenous
people although results might also imply that knowledge is eroding.
Nevertheless, this study could open an avenue for pharmacological
research works, or serve as reference for future quantitative
ethnobotanical investigations.
Keywords
- Use Value;
- Fidelity Level;
- Informant Consensus Factor;
- Philippine Ati Negrito;
- Indigenous knowledge
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