| Literature DB >> 24467812 |
Immaculate Nabukenya1, Chris Rubaire-Akiiki, Deogracious Olila, Kokas Ikwap, Johan Höglund.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: There is continued reliance on conventional veterinary drugs including anthelmintics, to some of which resistance has developed. Loss of indigenous technical knowledge (ITK) from societies affects the opportunities for utilization of ethnopharmacological practices unless properly documented. This study was conducted to identify common traditional practices using medicinal plants against helminthosis and other livestock diseases in Mpigi and Gulu districts of Uganda.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24467812 PMCID: PMC3916071 DOI: 10.1186/1746-4269-10-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Ethnobiol Ethnomed ISSN: 1746-4269 Impact factor: 2.733
Figure 1Map of Uganda showing the two study districts, Gulu and Mpigi.
Priority livestock species and common breeds in Mpigi and Gulu districts
| | | | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cattle | 35 | 47 | 48 | 5 | 15 | 80 | 5 | |
| | Chicken | 30 | 47 | 3 | 50 | 50 | 0 | 50 |
| | Pigs | 25 | 80 | 17 | 3 | 0 | 80 | 20 |
| | Goats & sheep | 10 | 85 | 13 | 2 | 5 | 90 | 5 |
| Goats** | 50 | 80 | 15 | 5 | 20 | 78 | 2 | |
| | Cattle | 30 | 80 | 15 | 5 | 90 | 5 | 5 |
| | Pigs | 10 | 5 | 50 | 45 | 10 | 20 | 70 |
| Chicken | 10 | 90 | 2 | 3 | 90 | 0 | 10 | |
*Semi-intensive management method is tethering (tying animals with a rope at a different fixed grazing/feeding area each day).
**Sheep are much less common; preference for goats overrides.
Most prevalent livestock and chicken diseases in Mpigi and Gulu districts
| Cattle | East coast fever | Amakebe | Oding ding | 1 | 1 |
| | Coughing | Okukolola | Aona | 2 | 6 |
| | Helminthosis | Enjoka | Kwidi, odini (liver flukes) | 3 | 2 |
| | Heart water | Mulalama | ? | 4 | 9 |
| | Mange | Olukuku | Angoli | 5 | 7 |
| | Trypanosomosis | Kipumpuli | Tu o jonyo | 6 | 3 |
| | Bovine ephemeral fever | Kamenyo | Okwero | 7 | 10 |
| | Bloat | Kamukuulo | Deng ici | 8 | 5 |
| | Ticks & biting flies | Enkwa & Ebiwuka | Okwodo & Lwangu | 9 | 4 |
| | Mastitis | Ebbani | Angoli me tunu | 10 | 8 |
| Goats and Sheep | Helminthosis | Enjoka | Kwidi | 1 | 1 |
| | Mange | Olukuku | Angoli | 2 | 3 |
| | Heart water | Mulalama | Awila wic | 3 | 4 |
| | Parapox or orf | Obumwamwa | Abworu | 4 | 2 |
| | Abscesses | Ebizimba | Buu | 5 | 5 |
| Pigs | African swine fever | Omusujja gw’embizzi | Orere pa opego | 1 | 1 |
| | Helminthosis | Enjoka | Kwidi | 2 | 2 |
| | Swollen udders | Okuzimba amabeere | Cak pa dyang/dyel ma kwot | 4 | 5 |
| | Mange | Olukuku | Angoli | 3 | 4 |
| | Lice | Ensekere | Nyugi | 5 | 3 |
| Chicken | New castle | Kiwumpuli | Orere pa gwenu | 1 | 1 |
| | Coccidiosis | Kiddukano | Orere | 2 | 2 |
| | Helminthosis | Enjoka | Kwidi | 5 | 4 |
| | Mites and fleas | Obuloolo, enkukunyi | Ladep, Lakuny | 3 | 5 |
| Flu | Senyiga | Abworo | 4 | 3 |
Figure 2Farmers’ choice and practices for animal disease management in Gulu and Mpigi districts.
Plants used to treat different diseases/conditions and how they are used
| Common weed, invasive: +++; NE | NI 039 | Euphorbiaceae | Kisandasanda | H; L | - Boil leaves and drench (too much causes diarrhoea) | |
| Rare weed by road sides: +; NE | NI 002 | Caesalpinaceae | Muttanjoka; Ayila | S; L, R | - Pound roots, add water and rock salt then drench | |
| - Crush fresh leaves, or use dried powder, add water and drench | ||||||
| Ubiquitous, easily located: ++; NE | NI 003 | Asteraceae | Mululuza; Labwori | S; L, R, B | - Crush fresh leaves, add water and drench | |
| - Boil roots with water and give to drink | ||||||
| - Give animal that has just delivered fresh leaves to eat | ||||||
| Rare due to restrictions: +; NE | NI 036 | Cannabaceae | Njaga; Lakera | H; L, S | - Crush fresh leaves or add dried powder and mix with water | |
| - Crush, mix with water and crude lake salt and give to drink | ||||||
| Wild, some grow it: ++; NE; APP II* | NI 038 | Xanthorrhoeaceae | Kigaji | H; L | - Slice and boil the leaves and give to drink | |
| - Slice fresh leaves and add to feeds | ||||||
| Commonly grown for sale: +++; NE | NI 021 | Solanaceae | Taaba; Muvuavui | H; L | - Crush leaves and mix with water then drench | |
| - Boil dried leaves, leave to cool and drench | ||||||
| Commonly eaten in households: +++; NE | NI 040 | Solanaceae | Kamulali; Obolo | H; L, Fr | - Crush fruits or leaves, mix with ash and water then drench | |
| - Crush fruits or leaves and mix with tobacco or cannabis and ash then drench | ||||||
| Common fruit: +++; VU | NI 037 | Caricaceae | Papaali; Owak | T; R, S | - Roots crushed, boiled with water and little paraffin, then drench | |
| - Dried seeds crushed and boiled with water, then drench | ||||||
| Ubiquitous: ++; NE | NI 005 | Lamiaceae | Kyewamala; Omwombyer | S; L | - Crush leaves, mix with water and give to drink | |
| - Drench with decoction before calf suckles (ECF) | ||||||
| Ubiquitous by roadsides: +++; NE | NI 001 | Caesalpinaceae | Gasia; Coga macon | S; L | - Boil dry leaves with little rock salt and drench or crush fresh leaves and drench. | |
| - Cut and give the animals as fodder | ||||||
| Wildly growing: ++; NE | NI 004 | Leguminosae | Muluku; Kineke | S; L | - Crush fresh leaves and drench | |
| - Boil dried leaves, cool and drench | ||||||
| Cultivated: ++; NE | NI 032 | Euphorbiaceae | Kiloowa; Olwiro | S; L, Fr | - Crush fresh leaves and fruits then drench | |
| - Crush leaves and put on the wound | ||||||
| Wildly growing: ++; NE | NI 033 | Euphorbiaceae | Nsogasoga; Laliya | S; L, S | - Decoction by boiling leaves and crushed seeds; cooling and drenching | |
| Wildy growing or planted: ++; NE | NI 006 | Meliaceae | Niimu; Nyakanyaka | T; L | - Crush fresh leaves and drench | |
| - Crush fruits, boil them, cool and drench | ||||||
| Rare herb: +; NE | NI 031 | Leguminosae –Papilionoideae | Kikakala | H; L, B | - Boil leaves or bark for one hour, cool and drench | |
| Common weed, invasive: +++; NE | NI 027 | Poaceae | Lumbugu; Coga macon | G; L, R | - Boil leaves and roots, cool then drench | |
| Wildly growing, rare: +; NE | NI 034 | Caesalpinaceae | Mukyula; Lakera/Lurogo | T; L | - Boil leaves, mixed with | |
| - Crush fresh leaves, mix with water and spray on skin (ectoparasites) | ||||||
| Grown in some homes: ++; NE | NI 007 | Moringaceae | Moringa | S; L, Fr | - Crush fresh leaves, add ash and red pepper then drench | |
| - Boil dried leaves then cool and drench | ||||||
| Wildly growing: ++; NE | NI 026 | Papilionoideae | Jirikiti; Lucoro | T; B | - Pound the bark and leave to dry. Soak 3 handfuls of pounded dried bark in water (2 hours) and drench 1 cow or 2 goats. | |
| Wildly growing: ++; NE | NI 028 | Phytolaccaceae | Luwoko; Olango | H; L, Fr | - Infusion of the leaves, fruits then drench | |
| Practice 1 | | | | Human urine | N/A | - Collect, add ash and ethanol, give orally |
| Practice 2 | | | | Human urine | N/A | - Mix with ash and rock salt, give to drink |
| In homes: ++; NE | NI 008 | Solanaceae | Kamulali; Pilipili | H; L, Fr | - Add ash + water to freshly squeezed leaves then drench | |
| - Mix with | ||||||
| - Mix with | ||||||
| Wildly growing: ++; NE | NI 022 | Acanthaceae | Amatovu; Achika | S; L | - Beat the legs with ends of the leaves until animal stands | |
| Wildly growing: +; NE | NI 016 | Vitaceae | Kibombo; Ogali | H; L | - Crush leaves, add ash and drench | |
| In grazing lands: ++; NE | NI 018 | Asteraceae | Mweramanyo; Owak | T; L, B | - Decoction from leaves and bark then drench | |
| Common weed: ++; NE | NI 029 | Lamiaceae | Kifumufumu; Okwero/ Achika | H; L | - Drench with warm decoction twice daily for three days | |
| Practice 3 | | | | | N/A | -Drench with decoction from boiled grass hoppers |
| Rare herb: +; NE | NI 035 | Cucurbitaceae | Kifuula; Lango | H; L | - Drench of decoction made by boiling leaves, adding little rock salt and cow ghee | |
| Practice 4 | | | | Cooking oil | N/A | Use large bore tube e.g. horse pipe to give orally |
| Practice 5 | | | | Omo liquid/very soapy water | N/A | Give animal to drink |
| In grazing lands: +; | NI 009 | Euphorbiaceae | Enkukuulu; Acak-Acak | T; La | - Break and drop sap onto the lymph node or wound | |
| - Decoction drench removes afterbirth | ||||||
| Around paddocks: ++; LC | NI 010 | Euphorbiaceae | Lukoni, Labuka | S; La | - Break the leaves and put sap on the lymph nodes or wounds | |
| Rare, in grazing lands: +; NE | NI 025 | Lamiaceae | Mukuzanyana; Okwero | S; R | - Pounded roots put in boiling water for one hour, cooled then drench | |
| - Same to treat Bovine Ephemeral Fever | ||||||
| - Same for helminthosis | ||||||
| Wildly growing: ++; NE | NI 030 | Asteraceae | Akafugankande | S; L, R | - Decoction of the roots then drench to relieve respiratory distress in ECF | |
| Wildly growing: +; NE | NI 012 | Euphorbiaceae | Kafumba | H; L, Fl | - Break leaf and put sap on lymph node; irritate and dry the skin | |
| Commonly grown: +++; NE | NI 020 | Poaceae | Muwemba; Any wagi - Enkanja | G; S | - Mix crushed fruits with roots of | |
| - Smear on the skin | ||||||
| Wildly growing: ++; NE | NI 023 | Cucurbitaceae | Bombo; Bomo | H; L | - Water extraction of the leaves, drench | |
| Wildly growing: ++; NE | NI 015 | Lamiaceae | Kamunye; Odwongo | S; L, Fl | - Decoction applied daily externally with pressure on the wound for a week or more | |
| Practice 6 | | | | Methylated Spirit | N/A | - Apply topically on wounds |
| Practice 7 | | | | Soapy water | | - Add OMOR and wash the skin |
| Grown food: +++; NE | NI 013 | Convolvulaceae | Amalagala; Maku | H; L | - Give animal the vines to eat | |
| - Crush leaves without water and smear on the vulva | ||||||
| Grazing land weed: ++; NE | NI 014 | Poaceae | Ajuu | G; R | - Remove roots from stump, boil for one hour, cool and drench animal | |
| Wildly growing: ++; NE | NI 019 | Anacardiaceae | Kakwansokwanso; Atakarach | H; L; Fr | - Fresh fruits and leaves are crushed and mixed with water, sieved and drenched | |
| Rare, in forests: +; NE | NI 024 | Ebeneceae | Mpojwa | T; L, Fr | - Leaves and dried fruits are crushed and a decoction is drenched | |
| Ubiquitous wildly growing: +++; NE | NI 011 | Solanaceae | Entengotengo; Ocuga | H; L, Fr | - Smear crushed fresh fruit around the vulva | |
| - Squeeze sap from burnt fruit to wound | ||||||
| Wildly growing: ++; NE | NI 017 | Solanaceae | Kikutizangalabi | S; Fr | - Squeeze fruits in water or milk then given orally as drench (cough) | |
| - Heat ripe fruits and smear on the vulva | ||||||
*Availability of the plants varies; + Rare or endangered; ++ Available but not common; +++ Ubiquitous and quite common.
**Month and year indicated for collection date.
***One commonly used English name; some have many while others have none as indicated in the table.
****Habit: G: Grass; H: herb; Li: Liana; S: shrub; T: tree.
Plant parts: B - Bark; L - Leaves; La - Latex; Fl - Flowers; Fr - Fruits; R - Roots; S - Seeds.
aBoil leaves or crush fresh leaves then drench; also used for stomach ache and fever in People or animals.
Used on wounds, spray to prevent mites.
cCrush and mix with water then spray animal to treat ectoparasites.
dCrush and boil leaves – drench treats uterine prolapse; decoction also treats cattle skin diseases including mange.
eAlso for estrus induction (bring animal to heat) and smear on the wounds for wound healing.
fAlso treats theileriosis and wounds.
Legend Table 3:
A summary of 40 plants and seven practices used in treatment of livestock and chicken diseases in Gulu and Mpigi districts. Details of preparation, plant part used, conservation/biodiversity status, common English, Acholi and Luganda names are provided. Twenty plants were used to treat helminthosis; wounds and ectoparasites (8), Theileriosis (6), retained placenta (5), Bovine Ephemeral Fever (4), and one each for Newcastle disease, uterine prolapse, constipation and retained placenta.
Figure 3Relative availability of plant materials within communities.