| Literature DB >> 33243238 |
Joshua Petelka1, Barbara Plagg2,3, Ina Säumel4, Stefan Zerbe1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Worldwide mountain regions are recognized as hotspots of ethnopharmacologically relevant species diversity. In South Tyrol (Southern Alps, Italy), and due to the region's high plant diversity and isolated population, a unique traditional botanical knowledge of medicinal plants has flourished, which traces its history back to prehistoric times. However, changes in rural life and culture may threaten this unique biodiversity and cultural heritage. Our study aims to collect and analyze information on native plants used in traditional folk medicine, focusing on the preservation of botanical and cultural diversity.Entities:
Keywords: Ecosystem restoration; Human health; Nature conservation; Traditional ecological knowledge; Traditional medicine
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33243238 PMCID: PMC7690129 DOI: 10.1186/s13002-020-00419-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Ethnobiol Ethnomed ISSN: 1746-4269 Impact factor: 2.733
Fig. 1Geographic location of South Tyrol in Northern Italy (grey) [24] and geographical distribution of language groups in South Tyrol according to the census of 2011 [25]. Impressions from South Tyrol landscape: a Marienberg Abbey with the highest Benedictine monastery garden in Europe conserve traditional medicinal knowledge. b Sulden in the middle of the Stelvio National Park known for the large variety of wild growing medicinal plants. c The organic herb farmers of the Ahrntal produce medicinal herbs for regional markets (Photographs: Sylvia Butenschön)
Fig. 3The most frequent cited traditional medicinal plant species in South Tyrol. The number of citations per species (a), vernacular names (b), usage categories (c), and medicinal-usage categories (d) are given. The abbreviation of species names consists of the first three letters of the genus name and the first three letters of the specific name (e.g., HypPer = Hypericum perforatum; AlcVul = Alchemilla vulgaris). The Pareto line is also given. Full list is provided in Appendix C
Use versatility of traditional medicinal plants of South Tyrol
| Use type | Count | Most frequent plant families | Examples of plant species |
|---|---|---|---|
| Medicine | 276 | Asteraceae, Rosaceae | |
| Alimentary | 128 | Rosaceae | |
| Veterinary | 70 | Asteraceae | |
| Spiritual | 55 | Asteraceae | |
| Cosmetics | 44 | Asteraceae | |
| Domestic | 43 | Fagaceae, Pinaceae and Rubiaceae |
Medicinal use spectrum of traditional medicinal plants in South Tyrol, classified into 12 human disorder categories based on the International Classification of Primary Care (ICPC-2) [44]. The category nutraceuticals is based on plants that have been reported as either being eaten or consumed as a beverage for their medicinal use
| Disorders | Plants | Most frequent plant families | Examples of plant species | Nutraceutical food plants |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Digestive | 152 | Asteraceae | 91 | |
| Skin | 133 | Asteraceae | 65 | |
| Respiratory | 128 | Asteraceae | 73 | |
| General and unspecified | 102 | Asteraceae | 63 | |
| Musculoskeletal | 93 | Asteraceae | 43 | |
| Urology | 80 | Asteraceae | 45 | |
| Neurological | 76 | Asteraceae | 34 | |
| Cardiovascular | 74 | Rosaceae | 51 | |
| Pregnancy, Childbirth, Family Planning | 49 | Asteraceae | 33 | |
| Eye | 29 | Orobanchaceae | 14 | |
| Endocrine/Metabolic and Nutritional | 26 | Rosaceae | 19 | |
| Psychological | 19 | Equisetaceae and Rosaceae | 17 |
Endangered and protected medicinal plants species used in traditional folk medicine in the region of South Tyrol according to [29]
| Red-list status | Count | Species |
|---|---|---|
| Extinct | 2 | |
| Critically endangered | 1 | |
| Endangered | 4 | |
| Vulnerable | 8 | |
| Near threatened | 11 | |
| Least concern | 238 | |
| Data deficient | 2 | |
| Not evaluated | 11 |
a = protected, and b = partially protected. See complete list in Appendix
Fig. 4Comparison of species without pharmacological or phytochemical evidence, with evidence of negative and of positive effects regarding number of citations in folk medicinal literature (a), number of vernacular names (b), overall use versatility (c), and medicinal use versatility (d) in South Tyrol. For results of the Kruskal-Wallis rank sum test, see text
Fig. 5Comparison of cultivated versus wild medicinal species regarding the a number of citations in folk medicinal literature, b number of vernacular names, c overall use versatility, and d medicinal use versatility in South Tyrol. Number of overall use versatility comparing non protected and (partially) protected species (e) and herbs versus woody species (shrubs and trees; f). For results of the Kruskal-Wallis rank sum test, see text
Medicinal species in South Tyrol that are predominately alpine according to [52] and with the altitudinal range alp = alpine, sniv = sub-nival, suba = sub-alpine, mont = montane, and coll = colline; in bold = predominantly alpine occurrence (according to [22])
| Altitudinal range | Count | Plant species |
|---|---|---|
| alp-sniv | 5 | |
| Alp | 2 | |
| suba-sniv | 3 | |
| suba-alp | 14 | |
| mont-alp | 20 | |
| mont-suba | 6 | |
| coll-alp | 5 | |
| coll-suba | 4 |
Overview of various ethnobotanical studies of mountain regions in Europe
| Reference | Country/Region | Study area | Number of species | EI | Source | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Total flora | MP | |||||
| [ | Central- southern Italy (Molise) | 378 km2 | ca. 800 | 70 | 6.0 % | 54 Informants |
| [ | Eastern Italian Alps (Friuli- Venezia Giulia) | 5,700 km2 | ca. 3335 | 177 | 5.3 % | n.d. Informants |
| [ | Western Italian Alps (Liguria) | 86 km2 | ca. 1500 | 105 | 7.0 % | 65 Informants |
| [ | Northern Italian Alps (Lombardy) | 896 km2 | ca. 2185 | 184 | 8.4 % | 328 Informants |
| Present study | Northern Italian Alps (South Tyrol) | 7,400 km2 | ca. 2169 | 275 | 12.0 % | 17 Literature sources (a.o. 81 informants in [ |
| [ | North-west Spain (Basque Country) | 802 km2 | ca. 1133 | 139 | 12.3 % | 207 Informants |
| [ | Albanian Alps (Kosovo) | 3,500 km2 | ca. 1609 | 98 | 6.1 % | 91 Informants |
| [ | Eastern Switzerland (Prättigau) | 610 km2 | ca. 1414 | 204 | 14.4 % | 91 Informants |
MP medicinal plants, EI ethnobotanicity index