| Literature DB >> 21756341 |
Abstract
Plants used for treating endo- and ectoparasites of rabbits and poultry in British Columbia included Arctium lappa (burdock), Artemisia sp. (wormwood), Chenopodium album (lambsquarters) and C. ambrosioides (epazote), Cirsium arvense (Canada thistle), Juniperus spp. (juniper), Mentha piperita (peppermint), Nicotiana sp. (tobacco), Papaver somniferum (opium poppy), Rubus spp. (blackberry and raspberry relatives), Symphytum officinale (comfrey), Taraxacum officinale (common dandelion), Thuja plicata (western redcedar) and Urtica dioica (stinging nettle).Entities:
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Year: 2011 PMID: 21756341 PMCID: PMC3143080 DOI: 10.1186/1746-4269-7-21
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Ethnobiol Ethnomed ISSN: 1746-4269 Impact factor: 2.733
Figure 1Data collection form.
Figure 2Manual given to all research participants (180 pages).
Ethnoveterinary medicine used for poultry and rabbits in British Columbia
| Scientific name, (botanical family) | Local name | Part(s) used | Ethnoveterinary use |
|---|---|---|---|
| big-leaf maple | leaves | bedding - poultry & rabbits | |
| comfrey | fed fresh or dried leaves | diarrhoea poultry | |
| cleavers | fresh or dried leaves and stems | diarrhoea poultry | |
| poppy | fresh leaves or green pods | diarrhoea poultry | |
| Echinacea | leaves are chopped and fed | disease prevention chicks | |
| Kelp | meal added to feed bins every two weeks | disease prevention chicks | |
| slippery elm | Bark powder in feed for first two weeks | disease prevention chicks | |
| Flax | Ground seed | Starter ration chicks | |
| Norwegian sea kelp | Dried meal | Starter ration chicks | |
| Epazote | whole plant | Endoparasites poultry | |
| Lamb's quarters | whole plant | Endoparasites poultry | |
| Mugwort | whole plant | Endoparasites poultry | |
| common burdock | whole plant | Endoparasites poultry | |
| Comfrey | whole plant | Endoparasites poultry | |
| common dandelions | whole plant | Endoparasites poultry | |
| peppermint | whole plant | Endoparasites poultry | |
| wild Canada thistle | whole plant | Endoparasites poultry | |
| stinging nettle | whole plant | Endoparasites poultry | |
| salmonberry | whole plant | Endoparasites poultry | |
| wild tobacco | handful of crumbled dry leaves or decoction | endoparasites poultry | |
| wild tobacco | chopped stems, seed pods and leaves | external parasites poultry | |
| wild tobacco | chopped dried stems | red bird mites | |
| western red-cedar | shavings | red bird mites | |
Non-experimental validation of plants used for parasite control in poultry and rabbits in British Columbia
| Medicinal plant | Validation information | Reference |
|---|---|---|
| Big-leaf maple leaves were used as bedding for poultry & rabbits, but not specifically to control parasites in the litter. The fallen, dried leaves were raked up in the autumn, and were then stored for use over the year. The leaf litter has more Ca, K, Mg, molybdenum (Mo), and zinc (Zn) than other trees. The litter decomposes quickly and has a high pH. The leaves contain tannins. | [ | |
| Norwegian sea kelp ( | [ | |
| Common burdock whole plant was used for endoparasites in poultry. Traditionally seeds were used to purify the blood. Seeds contain chlorogenic acid, caffeic acid, cynarin, lappaol C, arctiin, arctignan E, matareisinol, lappaol A and F and Arctigenin. Arctigenin is a lignan with antioxidant and anti-inflammatory activities. Roots and leaves contain chlorogenic acid, caffeic acid, cynarin, quercitrin, arctiin, quercetin and luteolin. | [ | |
| Mugwort whole plant was used to treat endoparasites in poultry. 300 mg/kg doses of methanol extracts of the aerial parts of | [ | |
| Lamb's quarters and epazote whole plants were used for endoparasites in poultry. | [ | |
| Wild Canada thistle whole plant was used for endoparasites in poultry. This plant contains lignin, callose and silicon. Taraxasterol has moderate anti-inflammatory activity. Tricin-5- | [ | |
| An | [ | |
| Kelp meal was added to the chicks' feed bins every two weeks: 2 cups (about 500 ml) for 300 young birds. Soluble fractions of the marine alga | [ | |
| Cleavers fresh or dried leaves and stems were used for diarrhoea in poultry. This plant has traditionally been used for stomach conditions in North America. The insect antifeedant anthraquinone aldehyde nordamnacanthal (1,3-dihydroxy-anthraquinone-2-al) is found in | [ | |
| ( | [ | |
| Peppermint whole plant was used against endoparasites in poultry. Peppermint oil has larvicidal activity against | [ | |
| A handful of the chopped stems, seed pods and leaves of wild tobacco ( | [ | |
| Farmers in our study used leaves and plants of opium poppy ( | [ | |
| Salmonberry whole plant is eaten by poultry and said to control endoparasites. This is possibly based on traditional knowledge since | [ | |
| Comfrey fed fresh or dried leaves were used for diarrhoea and endoparasites in poultry. The plant is mucilaginous and high in protein. Self-medicating birds apparently did not ingest enough pyrrolizidine alkaloids to be harmed and the content of these alkaloids varies from plant to plant. | [ | |
| Common dandelion ( | [ | |
| Western red-cedar shavings were used to protect poultry against red bird mites. | [ | |
| Methanol extracts of western red cedar (commonly used for animal bedding) were tested for antimicrobial activity against anaerobic bacteria and yeast. The test microbes included | [ | |
| Slippery elm bark powder is put in the feed for the first two weeks for disease prevention chicks. This use is traditional. | [ | |
| [ | ||