| Literature DB >> 29343263 |
Mayana Lacerda Leal1, Rubana Palhares Alves2, Natalia Hanazaki3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: People's diets are usually restricted to a small number of plant species, even in regions with great diversity. We investigated the knowledge of residents in Ribeirão da Ilha, a district of Florianópolis (Santa Catarina, Brazil), about unconventional food plants (UFP). We report the UFP of the region, the parts used, the methods of processing, and the reasons for reduced use or even lack of use.Entities:
Keywords: PANC; edible plants; ethnobotany; local knowledge; urban foraging
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29343263 PMCID: PMC5773074 DOI: 10.1186/s13002-018-0209-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Ethnobiol Ethnomed ISSN: 1746-4269 Impact factor: 2.733
Fig. 1Ribeirão da Ilha district, Santa Catarina Island and communities included in the study. 1 = Alto do Ribeirão, 2 = Ribeirão da Ilha, 3 = Costeira do Ribeirão, 4 = Caiacanga, 5 = Tapera do Ribeirão, 6 = Caieira da Barra do Sul
Unconventional food plants according residents of Ribeirão da Ilha district, Florianópolis, Brazil (N = 21 interviews)
| Botanical Family Species | Portuguese name | Part used | Origin | Number of citations |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Amaranthaceae | ||||
| | mastruz | B | N | 1 |
| Anacardiaceae | ||||
| | caju | F | N2 | 1 |
| | cajá-manga | F | E2 | 1 |
| | cajaca, cajá | F | N2 | 1 |
| | seriguela | F | E | 2 |
| Annonaceae | ||||
| | fruta-conde | F | N | 1 |
| | fruto-conde | F | E2 | 2 |
| | fruta-do-conde-do-mato, curtiça | F | N | 1 |
| Arecaceae | ||||
| | ticum | C | N | 1 |
| | tucum, ticum | F, C | E | 5 |
| | butiá | F, C | N | 2 |
| | butiá | F, C | N | 3 |
| | butiá | F, C | N | 1 |
| | açaí | F | N2 | 1 |
| | coco-de-ripa, açaí | F, C | N | 2 |
| Asteraceae | ||||
| | dente-de-leão | C | E | 1 |
| Bixaceae | ||||
| | urucum | C | N | 1 |
| Boraginaceae | ||||
| | caramona, mijigrilo | F | N | 8 |
| Bromeliaceae | ||||
| | bromélia (“chup-chup”), gravatá | L, F, B | N | 2 |
| | ananá | F | N | 1 |
| Cactaceae | ||||
| | cacto-cardero, cacto | F | N2 | 1 |
| | olho-de-pinto | F | N | 1 |
| Clusiaceae | ||||
| | bacupari | NA | N2 | 1 |
| | bacopari, bacupari, abricó, damasco | F | N | 10 |
| | biricó, abiricó | F | E | 2 |
| Cucurbitaceae | ||||
| | melãozinho | F | E | 1 |
| | melãozinho | F | E | 1 |
| Ebenaceae | ||||
| | sapota | F | E | 3 |
| | marmelo | F | N | 1 |
| Ericaceae | ||||
| | camarinha | F | N | 1 |
| Fabaceae | ||||
| | angá-banana, angá, ingá | F, C | N2 | 4 |
| | angá | F | N2 | 2 |
| | angá-feijão, ingá-feijão, angá | F, C | N | 6 |
| | angá, angá-macaco, ingá, ingá-macaco | F | N | 6 |
| | angá, angá-banana | F | N | 2 |
| | angá, ingá | F | N | 2 |
| | ingá, angá, ingá-banana | F | N | 3 |
| Malpighiaceae | ||||
| | acerola | F | E | 3 |
| Melastomataceae | ||||
| | mixirica, mixirico | F | N | 1 |
| Moraceae | ||||
| | jaca | F | E | 5 |
| | jaca | F | E | 1 |
| | figo-roxo, figo | F | E | 1 |
| | amora-do-mato, amorinha, amora, amorinha-do-mato | F | E | 9 |
| Myrtaceae | ||||
| | gabiroba | F | N | 1 |
| | gabiroba | F | N | 2 |
| | grumixama | F | N | 5 |
| | grumixama | F | N2 | 1 |
| | jabuticaba | F | N | 5 |
| | cabeluda | F | N2 | 7 |
| | jabuticaba | F | N | 7 |
| | jabuticaba | F | N2 | 5 |
| | cambucá | F | N | 8 |
| | araçá, araçá-amarelo, araçá-roxo, araçá-vermelho, araçá-manteiga | F | N | 7 |
| | araçá-cavalo | F | N | 1 |
| | jambolão, jambo | F | E | 1 |
| | jambo | F | E | 6 |
| Passifloraceae | ||||
| | maracujá-roxo | F | N | 1 |
| Poaceae | ||||
| | capim-limão | L | E | 1 |
| Rosaceae | ||||
| | ameixa-amarela | F | E | 11 |
| | framboesa | F | E | 1 |
| | maranguinho-do-mato | F | N | 3 |
| | amora-do-mato, amorinha, amorinha-do-mato | F | N | 5 |
| Sapotaceae | ||||
| | biricó | F | E2 | 1 |
| | abiu | F | N2 | 1 |
| Solanaceae | ||||
| | rebenta-cavalo | F | N | 1 |
| Tropaeolaceae | ||||
| | capuchinha | B | E | 1 |
Part used: stem (S), flower (B), leaf (L), fruit (F), root (R), seed (C). Plant origin: native (N) or exotic (E) to Brazil. No data available (NA). *The currently used species were marked with an asterisk
1The interviewees considered these as different plants, but they belong to the same botanical species
2These species do not occur naturally in the region, and were probably cultivated by the residents