| Literature DB >> 22871123 |
Dechassa Lemessa Ocho1, Paul C Struik, Lisa L Price, Ensermu Kelbessa, Koshana Kolo.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Humanitarian relief agencies use scales to assess levels of critical food shortage to efficiently target and allocate food to the neediest. These scales are often labor-intensive. A lesser used approach is assessing gathering and consumption of wild food plants. This gathering per se is not a reliable signal of emerging food stress. However, the gathering and consumption of some specific plant species could be considered markers of food shortage, as it indicates that people are compelled to eat very poor or even health-threatening food.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22871123 PMCID: PMC3502140 DOI: 10.1186/1746-4269-8-30
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Ethnobiol Ethnomed ISSN: 1746-4269 Impact factor: 2.733
Wild food plants (WFPs) gathered and consumed under the traffic light metaphor in Konso, Ethiopia
| 1 | Leaves | | ||
| 2 | Leaves | Wild cabbage | ||
| 3 | Leaves | | ||
| 4 | Leaves | Thorny | ||
| 5 | Leaves | If eaten alone frequently | ||
| 6 | Plant species not confirmed | Fruits | Fruits are with very little flesh | |
| 7 | Plant species not confirmed | Fruits | Consumed like juice | |
| 8 | Fruits | Tiny fruits and the plant is rare | ||
| 9 | Rhus sp. (Anacardiaceae) | Fruits | Paralyzes teeth when consumed | |
| 10 | Seeds | Eaten roasted | ||
| 11 | Elusine sp. (Poaceae) | Grains | Never eaten alone even in bad times | |
| 12 | Grains | Shatters very easily; kept for bad times | ||
| 13 | Kernels | Rock-hard kernels, long hour boiling | ||
| 14 | Plant species not confirmed | Roots | Adults only in bad times | |
| 15 | Roots | | ||
| 16 | Vatovaea sp. (Fabaceae) | Roots | | |
| 17 | Roots | | ||
| 18 | Plant species not confirmed | Roots | | |
| 19 | Tacazzea sp. (Asclepiadaceae) | Roots | Fresh or cooked; watery | |
| 20 | Tubers (mature) | Very irritating taste (never eaten alone) | ||
| 21 | Tubers (immature) | | ||
| 22 | | | Tubers (fresh) | Needs adequate desiccation before processing it to food |
| 23 | Shoots | Rare; some poisonous, prudently collected | ||
| 24 | | Shoots | | |
| 25 | Portulaca sp. (Portulacaceae) | Whole plant | Frequent consumption will induce diarrhea | |
| 26 | Leaves | Only available during wet times | ||
| 27 | Leaves/shoot | Spice, but in food shortage times eaten as a cabbage | ||
| 28 | Leaves | Normally used as medicine, but as food in bad time | ||
| 29 | Leaves | Boiled and drunk like coffee | ||
| 30 | Leaves | Boiled; tasteless | ||
| 31 | Leaves | Frequent intake without other foods induces diarrhea | ||
| 32 | Fruits | It is always eaten fresh/raw | ||
| 33 | Fruits | Adults only in bad times | ||
| 34 | | Fruits | | |
| 35 | Plant species not confirmed | Fruits | | |
| 36 | Brassica sp. (Cruciferae) | Fruits | | |
| 37 | Plant species not confirmed | Fruits | | |
| 38 | Fruits (dried) | Kernel is hard and always discarded | ||
| 39 | Fruits | Thorns are tiniest and very dangerous if entering into eyes | ||
| 40 | Fruits | | ||
| 41 | Fruits | Roots have medicinal value for animal diseases; if eaten by adults it shows food stress | ||
| 42 | Fruits | | ||
| 43 | | Fruits | | |
| 44 | Plant species not confirmed | Fruits | | |
| 45 | Fruits | | ||
| 46 | Fruits | | ||
| 47 | Fruits | Tiny, less tasty | ||
| 48 | Fruits | “False coffee”; fruits are small | ||
| 49 | Fruits | Available in lowlands | ||
| 50 | Fruits | | ||
| 51 | Fruits | | ||
| 52 | Plant species not confirmed | Roots | | |
| 53 | Lannea sp. (Anacardiaceae) | Roots | | |
| 54 | Roots | Medicinal value in delivery | ||
| 55 | | | Bark | Smells bad |
| 56 | Plant species not confirmed | Leaves | | |
| 57 | Plant species not confirmed | Leaves | | |
| 58 | Leaves/ | Succulent, bitter | ||
| 59 | Leaves | Available during times of food shortage/wet times | ||
| 60 | | Leaves | | |
| 61 | Plant species not confirmed | Leaves | | |
| 62 | Plant species not confirmed | Leaves | | |
| 63 | Leaves | Invasive weed, like cabbage | ||
| 64 | Leaves | | ||
| 65 | Vatovaea sp. (Papilionaceae) | Leaves | | |
| 66 | Leaves | Available during times of food shortage/wet times | ||
| 67 | Dolichos sp. (Fabaceae) | Leaves | | |
| 68 | Leaves | Only available during periods of food shortage (wet times) | ||
| 69 | Leaves | Watery leaves | ||
| 70 | | Seeds | | |
| 71 | Plant species not confirmed | Leaves | | |
| 72 | | | Roots | |
| 73 | Leaves | Sweet, sticky | ||
| 74 | | | Fruits | Good taste |
| 75 | Leaves | Cooked | ||
| 76 | | | Berries | |
| 77 | Leaves | Available during rainy season; protected | ||
| 78 | Leaves | Eaten mixed with other food items | ||
| 79 | | Leaves | Only available during periods of food shortage in wet times | |
| 80 | Plant species not confirmed | Leaves | | |
| 81 | Leaves | Eaten mixed with other food items | ||
| 82 | Leaves | Delicious; occurs in March and April | ||
| 83 | Leaves | | ||
| 84 | | Leaves | | |
| 85 | Fruits | Fruits temporarily desensitize teeth after consumption | ||
| 86 | Fruits | Small fruits | ||
| 87 | Fruits | | ||
| 88 | | Fruits | | |
| 89 | Plant species not confirmed | Fruits | Sweet, usually available in lowlands | |
| 90 | Fruits | Fresh/dried; good storability | ||
| 91 | Cordia sp. (Boraginaceae) | Fruits | ||
| 92 | Fruits | | ||
| 93 | Fruits | | ||
| 94 | Fruits | Eaten fresh/raw | ||
| 95 | Fruits | Pulp is very acidic and not liked in normal times | ||
| 96 | Fruits | | ||
| 97 | Fruits | Sweet, mostly occurs in lowlands, availability is seasonal | ||
| 98 | Fruits | Difference in use only in age | ||
| 99 | Fruits | Occurs in lowlands | ||
| 100 | Balanites sp. (Balanitaceae) | Fruits | | |
| 101 | Fruits | Usually available in lowlands; sweet | ||
| 102 | Fruits | Pounded and mixed with salt | ||
| 103 | Plant species not confirmed | Fruits | | |
| 104 | Plant species not confirmed | Fruits | | |
| 105 | Plant species not confirmed | Fruits | | |
| 106 | Fruits | Also has medicinal value | ||
| 107 | | Fruits | | |
| 108 | Fruits | Sweet | ||
| 109 | Fruits | Slightly sour/bitter | ||
| 110 | Fruits | Sticky | ||
| 111 | Seeds (Beans) | Eaten in two forms: drank like coffee, or eaten roasted like beans | ||
| 112 | Plant species not confirmed | Roots | | |
| 113 | Roots/Tubers | Planted/protected on terraces | ||
| 114 | Plant species not confirmed | Roots | | |
| 115 | Amorphophallus sp. | Mature tubers | | |
| 116 | Plant species not confirmed | Roots | Eaten fresh | |
| 117 | Plant species not confirmed | Roots | | |
| 118 | Bark (inner) | | ||
| 119 | Plant species not confirmed | Whole plant | | |
| 120 | Whole plant | Whole plant is eaten except the fine roots | ||
Within a scale plants species are grouped based on parts eaten and subsequently listed in alphabetical order of the trivial name.
Crop parts (A for red), crop parts (B for amber) and crop residues (C for red), and recycled stuff (D for red) gathered and consumed under the traffic light metaphor in Konso, Ethiopia
| 1 | Coffee ( | Leaves ( | If drunk alone frequently; normally used mixed with other food items | |
| 2 | Dioscorea sp. | Leaves | | |
| 3 | Semi-wild bean type | Leaves | | |
| 4 | Husks | | ||
| 5 | Irish potato (Tinisha) | Leaves | Cooked and eaten | |
| 6 | Khat | Leaves (including old ones) | When ingested instead of being chewed or sold | |
| 7 | Moringa | Leaves | Normally consumed mixed with other food items (green light), but it gives diarrhea if eaten alone frequently (red light) | |
| 8 | Pepper ( | Leaves | | |
| 9 | Pumpkin | Leaves | Normally only fruits are eaten | |
| 10 | Sweet potato (Dhedhero) | Leaves | Cooked and eaten | |
| 11 | Taro ( | Leaves | | |
| 12 | Stem ( | | ||
| 13 | Tomato ( | Leaves | Eaten as cabbage | |
| 14 | Banana (Muzita) | Fruit (immature) | Eaten boiled | |
| 15 | Corm | | ||
| 16 | Papaya (Papaye) | Fruit (immature) | Eaten boiled | |
| 17 | Cassava ( | Leaves | Boiled to remove | |
| 18 | Root sheath | harmful/side effects of its consumption | ||
| 19 | Vigna sp. (Fabaceae) | Leaves | | |
| 20 | Haricot beans | Phaseolus sp. (Fabaceae) | Seeds/beans (defective)/ | If eaten mixed with other food items it shows amber light |
| 21 | Enset/false banana | Corm (immature) | Eaten boiled | |
| 1 | Haricot beans | Phaseolus sp. (Fabaceae) | Seed/beans (defective)/ | Eaten alone |
| 2 | Pods (empty)/ | | ||
| 3 | Barley | Husks/bran | Locally called | |
| 4 | Maize | Husks | Boiled with coffee leaves and eaten | |
| 5 | Tassels | | ||
| 6 | Finger millet | Bran ( | Normally, used as labor payment/gift for destitute; when started to be consumed by better off households then the light is turned on red | |
| 7 | Sorghum | Bran ( | | |
| 8 | Pods (empty) | Boiled/cooked | ||
| 9 | Assorted | Powdery left-overs | Boiled/cooked | |
| 10 | Cotton ( | Seeds | Boiled for drink | |
| 11 | Different types (mainly sorghum or maize) | Local drink residue | Recycled for local beer/gin | |
Within a section of the table, crop species are grouped based on crop part eaten and subsequently listed in alphabetical order of the trivial name.
Categorization of wild food plants (WFPs) based on some features such as unavailability, taste, processing difficulties, and health risk at the time of gathering/consumption/or after intake
| 1 | Plants which are rare or difficult to find nearby. | ||
| 2 | Plants consumed normally mixed with other food items, but under severe food shortage eaten alone. | | |
| 3 | Those normally eaten only by children but eaten by adults in bad times. | Many of the WFPs fall in this category. | Consumption of these WFPs by adults points to a change in the availability of food and indicates incoming or prevalence of food shortage. |
| 4 | Plants, immature plant parts with less nutritious, irritating taste. | Immature tubers of | |
| 5 | Plants with low yield of edible parts/products, relatively poor taste. | ||
| 6 | Products which are extremely hard to process or to cook to food; sometimes also sour. | Gathering and consumption of | |
| 7 | Watery weeds or parts normally consumed only after adequate desiccation to avoid diarrhea. | Frequent consumption of these stuffs is deemed unhealthy by the Konso community. | |
| 8 | Plants or plant parts which are dangerous to handle. | Fruits of | |
| 9 | Plants which are health threatening after intake, deemed poisonous and if consumed are perceived as fatal. | Some types/species of mushroom (Boletus sp.) are poisonous and cannot be consumed without careful management/cooking. | Only collected by adults, not by children to avoid child health risks. |
Note that some plants can appear in more than one category.
Total number of mentionings, total number of species listed by all households and average number of species mentioned per household (all species, and for green, amber or red species, separately) based on a free-listing exercise among 220 households in Konso
| Total number of mentionings among 220 households | 4236 | 723 | 1466 | 2047 |
| Total number of species listed | 119 | 56 | 20 | 43 |
| Average number of species mentioned per household | 19.3 | 3.29 | 6.66 | 9.30 |
1 Note that the numbers are based on the free listing only and therefore slightly deviate from the sums of the total numbers from Tables 1 and 2.