| Literature DB >> 32513199 |
Jessica P R Thorn1,2,3, Thomas F Thornton4,5, Ariella Helfgott4, Kathy J Willis6,7,8.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Despite a rapidly accumulating evidence base quantifying ecosystem services, the role of biodiversity in the maintenance of ecosystem services in shared human-nature environments is still understudied, as is how indigenous and agriculturally dependent communities perceive, use, and manage biodiversity. The present study aims to document traditional ethnobotanical knowledge of the ecosystem service benefits derived from wild and tended plants in rice-cultivated agroecosystems, compare this to botanical surveys, and analyze the extent to which ecosystem services contribute social-ecological resilience in the Terai Plains of Nepal.Entities:
Keywords: Agrobiodiversity conservation; Ethnobotany; Ethnoecology; Ethnomedicine; Ethnopharmacology; Food security; Indigenous knowledge; Medicinal plants; Traditional Ecological knowledge
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32513199 PMCID: PMC7278186 DOI: 10.1186/s13002-020-00382-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Ethnobiol Ethnomed ISSN: 1746-4269 Impact factor: 2.733
Fig. 1Map of study area in the Central and Western zones of the Terai Plains of Nepal (n = 40 villages)
Relative diversity, abundance, and use categories of plant species
| Chitwan | Rupandehi | Deukhuri | Dang | All farms | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Species diversity | 3 ± 0.26 | 3.22 ± 0.17 | 3.14 ± 0.14 | 2.99 ± 0.08 | 3.09 ± 0.08 | ||||
| Species abundance | 9.4 ± 1.66 | 12.1 ± 2.06 | 9.6 ± 1.06 | 7.9 ± 0.69 | 9.75 ± 0.74 | ||||
| Total sp. | Unique sp. | Total sp. | Unique sp. | Total sp. | Unique sp. | Total sp. | Unique sp. | All sp. | |
| All uses | 38 | 5 | 49 | 11 | 44 | 6 | 31 | 5 | 75 |
| Fuel | 11 | 1 | 10 | 0 | 12 | 1 | 15 | 3 | 17 |
| Fodder | 8 | 2 | 9 | 1 | 11 | 2 | 8 | 2 | 17 |
| Food | 11 | 2 | 15 | 2 | 13 | 2 | 12 | 3 | 25 |
| Timber | 15 | 3 | 11 | 1 | 14 | 2 | 13 | 1 | 20 |
| Soil | 8 | 1 | 6 | 0 | 9 | 2 | 4 | 0 | 11 |
| Medicine | 29 | 2 | 38 | 8 | 37 | 4 | 24 | 4 | 56 |
| Spiritual | 15 | 2 | 21 | 5 | 12 | 2 | 8 | 1 | 27 |
| Pesticide | 4 | 0 | 8 | 1 | 6 | 0 | 4 | 0 | 8 |
Fig. 2Multiple uses of wild and tended plants across four landscapes in the Terai Plains of Nepal
Fig. 3Composite schematic view illustrating a typical multi-layered, heterogeneous, integrated cropping system in the Terai. a road; b pathway; c rice paddy fields; d lentil and soya bean grown along boundaries; e tube wells or slurry processing for biogas; f vegetable garden (e.g., bottle gourd, cucumber, tomato, beans, okra, sesame), spices (e.g., ginger, turmeric), and cosmetics (e.g., aloe vera) with mulched patches and ridges/bunds for water efficiency; g buffalo, goat, or pig pen and fuel wood storage; h cluster of trees alongside boundary for windbreaks (e.g., Dendro clamus strictus), fuel wood and timber (e.g., Dalbergia sisoo, Shorea robusta, Melia azedarach), fruit (e.g., Psidium guajava), fodder (e.g., Azadirachta indica, Abizia lebbeck), religious value (e.g., Aegle marmelos), or shade (e.g., Magnifera indica); i house roof made of reed thatch, covered with creepers and gourds for esthetic value, insulation, temperature regulation, and food (Adapted from [33])
Fig. 4Cluster analysis of caste and plant species abundance. The figure shows knowledge is clustered around four statistically dissimilar groups. Black lines indicate relationships that are significantly supported, while red lines indicate no significant difference was detected
The number of useful plants reported by female and male informants in the Terai Plains of Nepal (Values show the mean ± SE).
| No. medicinal plants reported | Female (age category in years) | Male (age category in years) | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 18–39 years | ≥ 40 years | Total | 18–39 years | ≥ 40 years | Total | |
| (33.57 ± 1.54) | (50.73 ± 1.64) | (38.73 ± 1.47) | (35.86 ± 0.88) | (43.75 ± 1.93) | (46.59 ± 2.01) | |
| 1–5 | 1 | 0 | 1 | 2 | 1 | 3 |
| 6–10 | 4 | 2 | 6 | 2 | 14 | 16 |
| 11–15 | 1 | 2 | 3 | 3 | 4 | 7 |
| 16–20 | 1 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 2 | 2 |
| 21–25 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| 26–30 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 1 |
| Total | 7 | 4 | 11 | 7 | 22 | 29 |
Key plant species and their major uses in Central and Western Terai Plains of Nepal
| Scientific name, authority name, voucher number | Family | English name | Common name | Type | Part used | Uses | Reference, status |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Amaranthaceae | Hill chaff flower | Shrub | Leaves, stem | • Household (toothbrush–stem) | IUCN (2004) [ | ||
| • Spiritual (In | |||||||
| Acoraceae | Sweet flag | Herb/Monocot | Root | • Medicine (cough, common cold, increases internal heat, chronic fever, juice of root given orally or chewed to clear the throat) | IUCN (2004) [ | ||
| Rutaceae | Bengal Quince | Tree | Root, leaves, fruit | • Medicine (Three leaves are used weekly for diabetes, root juice given orally for asthma and cold) | IUCN (2004) [ | ||
| • Spiritual (fruit pulp offered to Lord Shiva, women e fast on Mondays and use it the leaf with the Dubo leaf for the wellbeing of husbands, Newari’s marry the fruit) | |||||||
| Leguminosae | Black siris | Tree | Bark, stem, leaves, seeds | • Timber | Mishra (2013) [ | ||
| • Compost | |||||||
| • Fodder (sweet seeds) | |||||||
| • Medicine (reduces inflammation using bark) | |||||||
| • Fuel (cooking) | |||||||
| Xanthorrhoeaceae | Aloe vera | Herb | Leaves, root | • Medicine (Cooling burns on skin, jaundice) | Govt of Nepal (2014) [ | ||
| • Cosmetic (face cream) | |||||||
| Compositae | Mugwort | Herb | Leaves, flowers, roots | • Spiritual (flower used for worship offering) | IUCN (2004) [ | ||
| • Medicine (stomach pains, digestion—tender root, antibiotic for cuts) | |||||||
| • Fodder (leaves) | |||||||
| • Compost manure | |||||||
| • Pesticide | |||||||
| • Rice diseases | |||||||
| Moraceae | Jackfruit | Tree | Fruit, stem, leaves | • Food (fruit, seed is eaten, roasted or cooked as a vegetable) | Storrs and Storrs (1998) [ | ||
| • Pesticide | |||||||
| • Household (wood is used for a pot used to make yoghurt, called “ | |||||||
| Asparagaceae | Asparagus | Herb | Root | • Medicine (nutrition of humans/animals, paralysis, root powder given orally to increase lactation and tonic after delivery) | Singh et al. (2012) [ | ||
| • Food (alcohol) | |||||||
| Meliaceae | Margosa tree | Tree | Leaves, bark | • Medicine (cough, gastritis, arthritis, wounds—and tender twigs paste, high blood pressure and high uric acid—fresh leaves given orally, scabies—fresh leaves used to wash ski, fever—bath in water boiled with neem leaves, pneumonia—boil 2-3 leaves and drink water) | IUCN (2004) [ | ||
| • Pesticide | |||||||
| • Household (young stem used to brush teeth) | |||||||
| Malvaceae | Silk cotton tree | Tree | Flowers, root | • Household (mattresses, cotton) | IUCN (2004) [ | ||
| • Timber | |||||||
| • Medicine (root decoction is given as tonic, anti-dysenteric, urinary infections) | |||||||
| Arecaceae | Coconut | Tree | Bark, fruit | • Food (fruit) | WCFP (2015), Accepted name | ||
| • Spiritual (Coconut with milk inside is a holy offering) | |||||||
| • Timber | |||||||
| Apiaceae | Black cumin | Herb | Seeds | • Medicine (cold—infused) | USDA (2015), Accepted name | ||
| • Fuel (cooking) | |||||||
| Leguminosae | Flame of the forest | Tree | Entire tree | • Medicine (diuretic) | IUCN (2004) [ | ||
| • Pesticide to kill mosquitos | |||||||
| • Spiritual (Tree represents the God of Fire and flowers are used to worship Shivatri in Hinduism tree was used to achieve enlightenment in Theravada Buddhism) | |||||||
| • Household (leaves pieced together to make a leaf-plate ( | |||||||
| Apocynaceae | Crown flower | Shrub | Latex | • Medicine (Massage milk into sprained areas (muscles/joints) | Singh et al. (2012) [ | ||
| • Disservice (if the milk goes into the eye it can damage) | |||||||
| • Spiritual (referred to as the Tuesday bush) | |||||||
| Cannabaceae | Cannibis | Shrub | Entire plant | • Food | Mishra (2003) [ | ||
| • Medicine (headache, dysentery, asthma) | |||||||
| • Veterinary (diarrhea, abscess of goats) | |||||||
| Caricaceae | Papaya | Tree | Latex, fruit | • Household (Milk latex used to make soap) | Kerkhoff (2003) [ | ||
| • Medicine (muscle pain, tiredness—fruit infused) | |||||||
| • Fuel (cooking) | |||||||
| Apiaceae | Indian pennywort | Herb | Entire plant | • Medicine (fever, chest and urinary tract infections, typhoid blood purifier, pneumonia—infused) | IUCN (2004) [ | ||
| Lauraceae | Indian cassia | Tree | Leaves | • Spiritual (ritual importance during festivals) | IUCN (2004) [ | ||
| • Medicine (sore throat—infused) | |||||||
| • Food (Leaves eaten, imparting a strong cassia- or cinnamon like aroma to dishes) | |||||||
| Rutaceae | Makrut lime | Tree | Stem | • Timber | Kerkhoff (2003) [ | ||
| Araceae | Taro or Elephant ear | Herb | Stem, leaves, root, latex | • Food (leaves, root, stem or corn eaten as a vegetable) | Singh et al. (2012) [ | ||
| • Medicine (latex sooths itching) | |||||||
| Capparaceae | Garlic pear | Tree | Fruit | • Medicine (rheumatism, kidney, bladder stones, tonic) | IUCN (2004) [ | ||
| • Food (vegetable high in iron) | |||||||
| Zingiberaceae | Black turmeric | Herb | Leaves, root | • Medicine (stomach ailments, natural antibiotic for colds—infused) | IUCN (2004) [ | ||
| Convolvulaceae | Mistletoe | Climber | Entire plant | • Medicine (fever -juice of plant given orally, rheumatism and jaundice—plant paste applied externally) | Singh et al. (2012) [ | ||
N206-31 | Poaceae | Lemongrass | Grass | Leaves | • Medicine (aromatic stimulant, oil, colds- infused) | Govt of Nepal (2014), Accepted name | |
| Poaceae | Bermuda or Dog tooth’s grass | Herb | Entire plant | • Spiritual (green grass used to decorate garlands) | Singh et al. (2012) [ | ||
| • Fodder | |||||||
| Leguminosae | Indian rosewood | Tree | Bark, stem | • Fodder | IUCN (2004) [ | ||
| • Timber (house, furniture) | |||||||
| • Fuel (cooking) | |||||||
| Poaceae | Feathery bamboo | Baas (N) | Grass | Entire plant | • Timber (Fences for farms and livestock, windbreaks, houses) | Storrs and Storrs (1998) [ | |
| • Fuel (cooking) | |||||||
| Verbenaceae | Golden dewdrop or Forgetmenot | Shrub | Flowers | • Ornamental (grown for decoration along roadsides) | Storrs and Storrs (1998) [ | ||
| Myrtacaeae | Gum tree | Tree | Stem | • Timber (furniture) | Storrs and Storrs (1998) [ | ||
| Compositae | Croftonweed or sticky snakeroot | Shrub | Flowers | • Invasive weed, plant around the house and it prevents snakes from coming in, flower is used for worship, invasive species seeds used for making antibiotic, fodder, pesticide, compost | USDA (2015), Accepted name | ||
| Euphorbiaceae | Asthma plant | Herb | Entire plant | • Fodder | Singh et al. (2012) [ | ||
| • Cosmetic (seed used to wash hair) | |||||||
| • Medicine (plant juice applied to wounds) | |||||||
| Euphorbiaceae | Cactus, Royles’ or Sullu spurge | Tree | Entire plant | • Timber (fences, have thorns to protect from wild animal raids) | IUCN (2004) [ | ||
| • Medicine (ground material is used for coughs) | |||||||
| Moraceae | Banaya fig, or Indian Banyan | Tree | Bark, latex | • Medicine (milky latex applied on muscular pain, infused barks given orally for diabetes) | IUCN (2004) [ | ||
| Moraceae | Cluster fig, or Indian fig tree | Tree | Fruit, stem | • Food (fruit) | Storrs and Storrs (1998) [ | ||
| • Timber | |||||||
| Moraceae | Bhodi or Peepal tree | Tree | Entire plant | • Medicine (cuts, cough—bark) | IUCN (2004) [ | ||
| • Spiritual (sacred tree in Hinduism, Jainism and Buddhism) | |||||||
| Moraceae | Roxburgh fig | Tree | Leaves, fruit | • Fodder | IUCN (2004) [ | ||
| • Food (fruit) | |||||||
| Bursaraceae | Garuga | Tree | Leaves | • Fodder | Mishra (2003) [ | ||
| • Veterinary (medicine) | |||||||
| Malvaceae | Chinese hibiscus | Shrub | Flowers, seeds, roots | • Spiritual (flowers placed in entrance to homes as offerings) | Ross (2003), Accepted name | ||
| • Food (infusion) | |||||||
| Bignoniaceae | Jacaranda | Tree | Flowers | • Ornamental • Spiritual (flowers placed in entrance to homes as offerings) | IUCN (2004) [ | ||
| Euphorbiaceae | Physic nut | Tree | Seeds, stems | • Timber (fences, livestock pens) | Storrs and Storrs (1998) [ | ||
| • Household (biodiesel produced on a small-scale, seeds used for burning candles, brushing the teeth—shoot) | |||||||
| • Medicine (prevents gingivitis) | |||||||
| Acanthaceae | Malabar nut | Shrub | Entire plant | • Medicine (headaches, dizziness, coughs, malaria treatment- dried powder of entire plant, swelling—grind leaves and drink) | IUCN (2004) [ | ||
| • Pesticide | |||||||
| • Compost for seedlings in rice fields | |||||||
| • Timber (windbreaks, fences, houses) | |||||||
| • Fodder | |||||||
| • Food (vegetable) | |||||||
| Anacardiaceae | Indian ash tree | Tree | Leaves | • Fodder | Mishra (2003) [ | ||
| Verbenaceae | Lantana | Herb | Flowers | • Spiritual (ornamental flower) | Ghosh (2012) Ethnobotanical Soc of Nepal (2015), Accepted name | ||
| • Disservice (invasive species, toxic to livestock) | |||||||
| Leguminosae | Leucaena | Tree | Stem, leaves | • Fodder (for goats) | Kerkhoff (2003) [ | ||
| • Fuel (cooking) | |||||||
| • Soil (erosion prevention along riverbanks) | |||||||
| Sapindaceae | Litchee | Tree | Fruit | • Food (fruit) | Kerkhoff (2003) [ | ||
| • Medicine (tonic, bites of animals) | |||||||
| Anacardiaceae | Mango | Tree | Fruit, bark | • Food (fruit) | Storrs and Storrs (1998) [ | ||
| • Shade | |||||||
| • Medicine (stomach pains, fever—bath in cool water) | |||||||
| • Fuel (heating) | |||||||
| • Timber (house, furniture) | |||||||
| Anacardiaceae | Marking nut tree | Tree | Fruit | • Medicine (fruit and nuts used for skin allergies, ash used for scorpion or snake bites) | Storrs and Storrs (1998) [ | ||
| Meliaceae | Persian lilac | Tree | Leaves, Flowers and fruit | • Fodder | Kerkhoff (2003) [ | ||
| • Pesticides (leaves stored in airtight container and left to decay, and sprayed on leaves) | |||||||
| • Fuel (cooking) | |||||||
| • Medicine (blood purifier–root, nausea, worms, leaf paste applied for scabies) | |||||||
| Labiatae | Peppermint | Herb | Entire plant | • Medicine (nausea, painkiller for headaches, neck pain, joint/back pain—applied externally with four parts oil and one part of crushed mint) | Singh et al. (2012) [ | ||
| • Food (pickle) | |||||||
N302-35 | Magnoliaceae | Champak | Tree | Flowers, leaves | • Medicine (blood pressure, diabetes) | Storrs and Storrs (1998) [ | |
| • Spiritual (offering in temples and homes) | |||||||
| Leguminosae | Touch-me-not or Humble plant | Shrub | Leaves | • Medicine (constipation, extended stomach—roots ground and is mixed with Tulsi, Rudilo, Beloti leaves, Titepati and the root of Datiwan—eaten on Tuesdays and Thursdays) | IUCN (2004) [ | ||
| • Fodder | |||||||
| Musaceae | Banana | Shrub | Entire plant | • Food (fruit) | Kerkhoff (2003) [ | ||
| • Soil (soil potassium input) | |||||||
| • Household (leaf used to place meat which is cut on top) | |||||||
| •Medicine (dysentery – fruit roasted) | |||||||
| Rubiaceae | Kadamba tree | Tree | Stem, leaves | •Timber (low-grade wood used for light construction) | WCFP (2015), Accepted name | ||
| • Fuel (cooking, heating) | |||||||
| • Medicine (mouth gargle—extract of leaves) | |||||||
| • Fodder (cattle) | |||||||
| • Spiritual (in Hinduism the sacred couple of Shiva and Parvati came to | |||||||
| Oleaceae | Coral jasmine | Shrub | Flowers, seeds, leaves | • Spiritual (flower used in several Hindu religious stories and is often related to the Kalpavriksha) | Govt of Nepal (2012), Accepted name | ||
| • Medicine (cough, asthma, diuretic) | |||||||
| Lamiaceae | Holy or Sacred basil | Herb | Entire plant | • Medicine (cough, fever, immune booster—infused daily with turmeric) | IUCN (2004) [ | ||
| • Spiritual (grown in homes for daily offering) | |||||||
| •Soil (ground cover to retain moisture) | |||||||
| Oxalidaceae | Creeping sorrel | Creeper | Flowers, leaves | • Food (leaves edible, with tangy taste of lemon) | IUCN (2004) [ | ||
| • Disservice (invasive weed in fallow land) | |||||||
| Crassulaceae | Life plant, Air plant, Miracle leaf | Herb | Root, leaves, stem | • Compost manure (leaves) | Mandal et al. (2013) [ | ||
| • Timber (fences, canals) | |||||||
| • Disservice (if the leaves are eaten by the livestock they die) | |||||||
| • Fuel (cooking) | |||||||
| Melanthiaceae | Herb paris | Herb | Leaves, fruit | • Medicine (fever, headache—mix with tobacco) | Madhu et al. (2010), Accepted name | ||
| • Veterinary (medicine for livestock) | |||||||
| • Spiritual (Gurungs (a caste) harvest the fruit on Tuesdays of mid-April) | |||||||
| Phyllanthaceae | Indian gooseberry | Tree | Leaves, bark, fruit | • Food (fruit) | IUCN (2004) [ | ||
| • Medicine (gastric problems including dysentery, constipation, stomach tumors and back pain—bark juice given orally, sore throat and colds—decoction) | |||||||
| • Household (used in soaps and cosmetics) | |||||||
| Lamiaceae | Bengal pogostemon | Herb | Flowers, roots, leaves, shoots | • Medicine (temperature balance, sinus, cold, sedative, stimulant, styptic)) | Dongol (2005), Accepted name | ||
| • Compost manure | |||||||
| • Spiritual (flowers used for garlands) | |||||||
| • Household (patchouli / dilem essential oil) | |||||||
| Myrtaceae | Guava | Tree | Fruit, stem | • Food (fruit) | Kerkhoff (2003) [ | ||
| • Fuel (cooking, heating) | |||||||
| • Medicine (throat, diarrhea, vomiting) | |||||||
| Leguminosae | Indian kudzu | Climber | Root, fruit | • Medicine (relieves constipation, eases bowel movement, boosts immunity) | IUCN (2004) [ | ||
| Apocynaceae | Indian snakeroot | Shrub | Flowers, roots | • Medicine (stomach pain, bowel disorder, dysentery, hypotension, sedative) | Govt of Nepal (2014), Accepted name | ||
| • Spiritual (used in meditation) | |||||||
| Euphorbiaceae | Castor oil | Shrub | Root, leaves, seeds | • Medicine (sprains – seed oil or leaves heated and massaged, rheumatic pain—given orally) | Storrs and Storrs (1998) [ | ||
| Salicaceae | Willow | Tree | Entire plant | • Ornamental | Aziz (2007), Accepted name | ||
| • Timber | |||||||
| • Shade | |||||||
| • Fodder | |||||||
| • Medicine (fever) | |||||||
| Sapindaceae | Soap nut | Tree | Fruit, leaves | • Household (nut used for soap, leaves used for baskets) | IUCN (2004) [ | ||
| • Food | |||||||
| • Medicine (epilepsy, salivation) | |||||||
| Dipterocarpaceae | Sal tree | Tree | Root, bark, resin, seed | • Timber (hardwood for furniture, buildings) | Storrs and Storrs (1998) [ | ||
| • Fuel (cooking) | |||||||
| • Medicine (Diarrhea, bloody dysentery—administered orally) | |||||||
| Myraceae | Black plum or Indian blackberry | Tree | Fruit, bark, seed, leaf | • Medicine (Diarrhea, indigestion, headaches, constipation—fruit given orally, bronchitis—bark, leaf and seed, powder is given orally to reduce sugar levels in blood for diabetes and to improve the heart) | IUCN (2004) [ | ||
| • Fodder | |||||||
| • Food (fruit eaten or fermented for alcohol) | |||||||
| Combretaceae | Barro or Bekkeric myrobalan | Tree | Seeds | • Household (soap, hair oil) | IUCN (2004) [ | ||
| • Medicine (gastric, dry cough, cold—roast the seed and chew) | |||||||
N405-70 | Combretaceae | Yellow or Chebulic myrobalan | Tree | Fruit | • Food (fruit, young leaves pickled or made into preserves when boiled and added with sugar) | Bhattarai et al. (2006) [ | |
| • Fuel | |||||||
| • Fodder | |||||||
| • Medicine (compounds of chebulic acid inhibit the growth of malignant tumors, cures blindness) | |||||||
| Poaceae | Kangaroo or Rui grass | Tree | Stem, leaves | • Timber (furniture) | Storrs and Storrs (1998) [ | ||
| • Medicine (pain in the body) | |||||||
| • Household (clothing dye) | |||||||
| • Fodder | |||||||
| • Fuel (cooking) | |||||||
N304-02 | Poaceae | Broom or Bouquet grass | Herb | Leaf, stem | • Household (used to make brooms) | Shankar et al. (2001), Accepted name | |
| Menispermaceae | Guduchi | Shrub | Leaves | • Medicine (fever, maintains thermal balance) | IUCN (2004) [ | ||
| • Fodder | |||||||
| Lamiaceae | Chaste tree | Shrub | Leaves | • Medicine (stomach pain, juice given orally) | IUCN (2004) [ | ||
| Rutaceae | Winged prickly ash | Tree | Fruit | • Medicine (toothache, common cold, cough, fever—particularly for children) | Govt of Nepal (2014), Accepted name | ||
| Zingiberaceae | Ginger | Herb | Root | • Medicine (sore throat, cough) | USDA (2013), Accepted name |
Ailment categories of medicinal plants identified during interviews
| Ailment category | Biomedical term | Species used | No uses | No taxa |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Gastro-intestinal illness | Stomach pain | 11 | 5 | |
| Dysentery | 5 | |||
| Intestinal worms | 1 | |||
| Diarrhea | 3 | |||
| Indigestion | 2 | |||
| Vomiting | 1 | |||
| Nausea | 2 | |||
| Gastritis | 1 | |||
| Constipation | 5 | |||
| Stomach tumors | 1 | |||
| Extended stomach | 1 | |||
| Fever | Fever | 3 | 9 | |
| Typhoid | 1 | |||
| Malaria | 2 | |||
| Dermatological disorders | Scabies | 8 | 2 | |
| Cut | 1 | |||
| Skin allergies | 1 | |||
| Scorpion/snake bites | 1 | |||
| Burns | 1 | |||
| Styptic | 1 | |||
| Wounds | 1 | |||
| Itching | 1 | |||
| Cardio-vascular/blood | Blood purifier | 3 | 2 | |
| Blood pressure | 2 | |||
| Jaundice | 2 | |||
| Ear | Throat | 4 | 3 | |
| Salivation | 1 | |||
| Bronchitis | 1 | |||
| Sinus infection | 1 | |||
| Ureno-genital problems | Urinary tract infections | 5 | 2 | |
| Diuretic | 3 | |||
| High uric acid | 1 | |||
| Bladder stones | 1 | |||
| Kidney stones | 1 | |||
| Respiratory diseases | Cough | 4 | 9 | |
| Common cold | 8 | |||
| Asthma | 2 | |||
| Pneumonia | 2 | |||
| Skelto-muscular pain and swelling | Swelling | 9 | 1 | |
| Arthritis | 1 | |||
| Muscular pain | 2 | |||
| Neck pain | 1 | |||
| Headache | 1 | |||
| Sprains | 2 | |||
| Back pain | 3 | |||
| Inflammation | 1 | |||
| Joint pain | 3 | |||
| Rheumatic pain | 4 | |||
| Dental and eye disorders | Toothache | 2 | 1 | |
| Blindness | 1 | |||
| Other | Epilepsy | 11 | 1 | |
| Dizziness | 1 | |||
| Stimulant | 3 | |||
| Diabetes | 3 | |||
| Tonic | 2 | |||
| Immune booster | 3 | |||
| Hypertension | 1 | |||
| Sedative | 2 | |||
| Tumors | 1 | |||
| Lactation | 1 | |||
| Tonic after delivery | 1 |