| Literature DB >> 18334029 |
Paolo Maria Guarrera1, Fernando Lucchese, Simone Medori.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: In the years 2003-2005 research was carried out concerning ethno-medicine in the high Molise (central- southern Italy), a region that has been the object of very little investigation from the ethnobotanical point of view. Upper Molise is a continuation of the mountain profiles of the Abruzzi Appenines: a series of hills, steep slopes and deep fluvial valleys making communications difficult. Primordial traditions (e.g. harvest feasts) are typical of the region.Entities:
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Year: 2008 PMID: 18334029 PMCID: PMC2322956 DOI: 10.1186/1746-4269-4-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Ethnobiol Ethnomed ISSN: 1746-4269 Impact factor: 2.733
Figure 1Veterinary uses of plants in the high Molise region
| Sammùche | Leaves | Decoction (e.u.) | It was applied to wounds in mules | 1(CP) | No | Al | ||
| Cacignilli (CA) | Aerial part | Fried in oil and applied as poultice (use against venom) | Insect bites (horse-flies etc.) of livestock (horses, cows) or bites of other animals | 3(CA) | No | Al | Unc, wa, ru | |
| Grano | Stems | Burnt straw applied with oil in a poultice | In veterinary medicine on wounds of mules | 1(CP) | No | Su | ||
| Aglio | Bulb | A ball of lard with garlic inside | To eliminate worms in dogs (as food) | 1 (PE) | Yes | |||
| Maula | Aerial part | Decoction for washes | Cows udders (wounds, reddening) | 1(AG) | No | Al | ||
| Olivo | Oil | Mixed with soot | Open wounds in livestock | 6(PI) 2(CA) | Yes rare | |||
| Oil | Mix with oil, sugar, chalk and 'green clay, this last present near spring | Broken cattle horns (cementing mixture) | 1(PI) | No | ||||
| Oil | Warmed in frying pan ('olio ferrato') | Applied to small wounds of livestock | 6(PI) | No | ||||
| Vitalba | Stem | Wrapped 7 times around the neck of sheep and left a week | Veterinary/ritual use for mad sheep ('scapocciate') | 1(PE) | - | Al | Wo, he | |
| Olmo | Bark, root | Decoction | Cicatrizing agent for wounds | 1(PE) | No | Al | Daw | |
| Ortica, 'rdica | Fresh cut aerial part | As food with corn | 'German measles' in Turkeys ("When they go bald") | 3 (PI) | No | |||
| Aerial part | Infusion (compresses) | On bruises | 1 (PI) | No | ||||
| Valerianaceae | ||||||||
| Vallariena | Root or leaves | Decoction (e.u.) | To disinfect wounds in mules | 1(PE) | No | |||
| Vite | Vermouth or Marsala | With water (u.i.) | Given to sick turkeys to drink | 4(PI) | No | Al |
Abbreviations: Localities: AG = Agnone; CA = Castiglione di Carovilli; CP = Capracotta; PE = Pescolanciano; PI = Pietrabbondante Way of use: e.u. = external use Period of gathering Su = summer; Al = always Habitat Daw = damp woods; He = hedges; Ru = ruins; Unc = uncultivated areas; Wa = walls; Wo = woods.
Animal, plant and mineral derivatives in folk medicine
| Coat, with splinters of brass under the halters of the horses to protect them from the evil eye | Conti [2] | ||
| Pneumonia and pleurisy. It is kept dried, dissolved in lukewarm water (internal use) | Moffa [4] | ||
| Spread on painful joints, especially the shoulder | 1(PI) | ||
| On potato plants to protect them from parasites | 4(PI) | ||
| Applied fresh to wounds as an haemostatic and cicatrising agent | Moffa [4] | 1(PI) | |
| As food for the incontinence, skinned and cooked | 6 (PI) | ||
| Dried and powdered on bleeding wounds | Moffa [4] | ||
| Whisked until stiff, it was mixed with lime and wrapped on fractured limbs as plaster | 4 (PG) | ||
| For sprains and haematomas, whisked until stiff, applied to the skin and bound | 4 (CH) 4 (VG) | ||
| Fat of fox or horse applied to pimples to bring them to a head | Conti [2] | ||
| Hen fat spread on sores of the neck of oxen | 4 (PI) | ||
| As food in cases of dysentery | Conti [2] | ||
| Applied to the skin against typhus | 2 (CH) | ||
| External cysts, the skin was always kept wet | 4 (PI) | ||
| The mucilage was applied to serious skin inflammations | 3 (PI) | ||
| De-wormer for children, dissolved in water (internal use | 4 (VG) | ||
| On wounds as an anti-parasitic (veterinary use) | 4 (VG) | ||
| As a repellent, with wood cinder in molehills | 6 (PI) | ||
| Crumbled and mixed with food: for women with difficult pregnancy (magic use) | 4 (CH) 6 (PI) | ||
| Put in a small bag as an amulet against evil eye | 4(PI) | ||
| On pimples (applied with | Pierro [3] |
Ethnobotanicity indexes (E.I.) concerning vascular plants according Portères [48] for some Italian areas, compared with the E.I. of Italy [54]. References inside parentheses [x].
| Area | Medicinal plants of folk use (*) | Cultivated plants (**) among the medicinal species of folk use | Plants used in all sectors of the ethnobotanical knowledge | Cultivated plants (**) among the species of all folk uses | Total flora | E.I. | E.I. |
| Friuli-Venezia Giulia region | 177 [49] | 2 [49] | 181 [49] | 2 [49] | 3335 [21] | 5,25 % | 5,37 % |
| Latium region | 283 [26] | 13 [26] | 350 [26] | 20 [26] | 3228 [21] | 8,36 % | 10,22 % |
| Acquapendente (Latium) | 80 [36] | 22 [36] | 142 [36,51] | 27 [36,51] | 1070 [56] | 5,42 % | 10,75 % |
| Majella (Abruzzo) | 113 [50] | 24 [50] | 148 [50] | 24 [50] | 1700 [55] | 5,23 % | 7,29 % |
| High Molise region | 70 (***) | 22 (***) | 109 (***) | 31 (***) | 800 (***) | 6 % | 9,75 % |
| Maratea (Basilicata) | 53 [37] | 14 [37] | 125 [37,52,53] | 17 [37,52,53] | 1019 (****) | 3,83 % | 10,60 % |
| Italy | 1163 [54] | 76 [54] | 1458 [54] | 117 [54] | 7634 [21] | 14,24 % | 17,57 % |
(*) Including plants used in veterinary science (**) Plants at the same time cultivated and wild, or cultivated and naturalized were not calculated (***) This study (****) F. Lucchese, personal communication