| Literature DB >> 33997546 |
Huifu Zhuang1,2, Chen Wang2, Yanan Wang1, Tao Jin1, Rong Huang1, Zihong Lin1, Yuhua Wang2.
Abstract
Of all types of interactions between humans and plants, the utilization of plants by people is the most direct and influential. China has a long history of using native plants and a large body of recorded knowledge on uses. Here, we present an inventory of plant uses in China based on an extensive survey of the literature. Twelve categories of usage are recognized (medicinal, edible, etc.), these categories being chosen according to an integration of various current standards. A total of 50,521 use-citations were recorded, covering 10,808 species and infraspecies, representing 28% of the Chinese flora. Additional information is included in the dataset on taxonomy and endangerment status. Analysis of the data reveals that the eight plant families with the greatest numbers of species used in China, namely Asteraceae, Fabaceae, Rosaceae, Ranunculaceae, Poaceae, Lamiaceae, Orchidaceae, and Liliaceae, are also the top eight most species-rich Chinese plant families. However, there are some families that are over-represented or under-representation in certain use categories, compared with their relative abundance in the total flora. There are indications that rare and endangered species are being subject to some degree of over-exploitation. A disproportionately high number of used species are Chinese endemics (3552 species, representing over 33% of used species). A total of 20% of used species have been classified as threatened nationally or globally, according to at least one of the various threat assessments that have been made for the Chinese flora. This comprehensive inventory of the useful plants of China, with relevant ethnobotanical information included, provides a baseline for further studies of plant resources. It will be useful in follow-up research. The scientific dataset it contains will be useful for the protection and sustainable utilization of plant resources in China.Entities:
Keywords: China; Ethnobotany; Plant diversity; Traditional knowledge; Useful plants
Year: 2020 PMID: 33997546 PMCID: PMC8103417 DOI: 10.1016/j.pld.2020.09.003
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Plant Divers ISSN: 2468-2659
Use-categories used for categorizing uses of the Chinese useful flora, with definitions of each category, numbers of species and use-citations per species and the percentages of the total Chinese used flora belonging to each category.
| Usage | Abbr. | Classification criteria | No. of species or infraspecies | No. of use-citation | % of total Chinese used flora |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Medicine | MD | Species reported as medicinal in pharmacopeias, medicine books or through ethnobotanical research, or prescribed for the treatment of certain diseases. | 9772 | 37,523 | 90.41 |
| Edible | ED | Species reported as used for vegetable, fruit, cereal, or condiment; or used as sources of tea and drinks. | 2061 | 5163 | 19.07 |
| Ornamental or greening plants | OP | Species reported as used in gardens and parks, used as greenery, used as for soil and water conservation, and sand fixation. | 1102 | 1570 | 10.20 |
| Industrial raw materials | IN | Species reported as used in industrial materials, such as rubber, resin, tanning material, essential oil, etc. | 767 | 1103 | 7.10 |
| Timber or construction material | TC | Species reported as sources of timber and building material. | 779 | 1212 | 7.21 |
| Fiber | FB | Species reported as sources of fiber in ethnobotanical studies or used by people to make textiles, baskets, ropes, or mattress in botanical texts. | 692 | 1089 | 6.40 |
| Oilseeds | OI | Species reported as sources of oilseed. | 547 | 724 | 5.06 |
| Fodder | FO | Species reported as used for forage, bee keeping, or used as veterinary medicine. | 752 | 1145 | 6.96 |
| Pesticide | PE | Species used for pesticide. | 183 | 216 | 1.69 |
| Religious or cultural uses | RC | Species of religious significance, or reported as used by people in certain ceremonies, rituals. | 149 | 180 | 1.38 |
| Dyeing or pigment | DP | Species used for Dyeing. | 129 | 206 | 1.19 |
| Others | OT | Species that could not be classified in the previous categories, such as species used as green manure, hobby, tobacco, toys, etc. | 352 | 390 | 3.26 |
Endemism and conservation status of useful plants.
| Endemic/conservation status∗ | EDN | RDN | RLBCN | CITESG | IUCNG | PSESPG |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Total species number of each status category in Chinese flora | 13,960 | 2330 | 6468 | 1512 | 7470 | 117 |
| All uses | 3552 | 476 | 1186 | 341 | 1353 | 24 |
| Medicine | 3159 | 418 | 998 | 315 | 1154 | 16 |
| Edible | 548 | 60 | 154 | 19 | 174 | 1 |
| Ornamental or planting | 264 | 71 | 131 | 50 | 147 | 7 |
| Industrial raw materials | 180 | 27 | 66 | 5 | 78 | 4 |
| Timber or construction material | 234 | 51 | 125 | 3 | 134 | 9 |
| Fiber | 165 | 5 | 26 | 3 | 29 | 0 |
| Oilseeds | 138 | 27 | 49 | 3 | 56 | 4 |
| Fodder | 103 | 8 | 18 | 1 | 22 | 0 |
| Pesticide | 21 | 2 | 5 | 0 | 5 | 0 |
| Religious or cultural uses | 33 | 8 | 16 | 5 | 20 | 0 |
| Dyeing or pigment | 22 | 3 | 5 | 0 | 6 | 0 |
| Others | 75 | 8 | 21 | 3 | 24 | 0 |
∗Abbreviations: ED (Endemic); RD (Red Data List of Chinese Plants); RLBC (Red List of Biodiversity in China, Higher Plant); CITES (Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora); IUCN (International Union for Conservation of Nature); PSESP (Plant Species with Extremely Small Populations). The superscript abbreviations “N”and “G” refer to national and global respectively.
Fig. 1Scatterplot of the families of vascular plants in China, comparing total numbers of species with the numbers of useful species.
Families with the highest numbers of useful plants in China (top 5) for each use category.
| Use category | Number of families | Top 5 families | Numbers of useful species |
|---|---|---|---|
| All uses | 283 | Asteraceae | 743 |
| Fabaceae | 583 | ||
| Rosaceae | 426 | ||
| Ranunculaceae | 413 | ||
| Lamiaceae | 373 | ||
| Medicine | 275 | Asteraceae | 716 |
| Fabaceae | 542 | ||
| Ranunculaceae | 413 | ||
| Rosaceae | 383 | ||
| Lamiaceae | 369 | ||
| Edible | 203 | Rosaceae | 153 |
| Poaceae | 126 | ||
| Asteraceae | 114 | ||
| Fabaceae | 102 | ||
| Liliaceae | 91 | ||
| Ornamental or greening plants | 170 | Poaceae | 107 |
| Fabaceae | 93 | ||
| Rosaceae | 52 | ||
| Orchidaceae | 43 | ||
| Asteraceae | 35 | ||
| Fodder | 115 | Poaceae | 138 |
| Fabaceae | 96 | ||
| Asteraceae | 56 | ||
| Lamiaceae | 27 | ||
| Rosaceae | 25 | ||
| Timber or construction material | 106 | Poaceae | 79 |
| Fabaceae | 59 | ||
| Lauraceae | 46 | ||
| Fagaceae | 39 | ||
| Pinaceae | 37 | ||
| Industrial raw materials | 125 | Rosaceae | 45 |
| Asteraceae | 43 | ||
| Lauraceae | 41 | ||
| Lamiaceae | 41 | ||
| Fagaceae | 39 | ||
| Fiber | 100 | Poaceae | 130 |
| Fabaceae | 55 | ||
| Urticaceae | 34 | ||
| Moraceae | 32 | ||
| Tiliaceae | 32 | ||
| Oilseeds | 113 | Lauraceae | 50 |
| Theaceae | 14 | ||
| Sapindaceae | 11 | ||
| Rutaceae | 19 | ||
| Rosaceae | 20 | ||
| Pinaceae | 13 | ||
| Pesticide | 62 | Fabaceae | 38 |
| Ranunculaceae | 16 | ||
| Asteraceae | 13 | ||
| Euphorbiaceae | 11 | ||
| Solanaceae | 8 | ||
| Sacrifice or culture | 70 | Poaceae | 9 |
| Fabaceae | 7 | ||
| Cupressaceae | 7 | ||
| Rutaceae | 6 | ||
| Salicaceae | 5 | ||
| Dyeing or pigment | 51 | Fabaceae | 17 |
| Rubiaceae | 8 | ||
| Asteraceae | 6 | ||
| Euphorbiaceae | 5 | ||
| Anacardiaceae | 5 | ||
| Others | 103 | Poaceae | 39 |
| Fabaceae | 30 | ||
| Rosaceae | 13 | ||
| Euphorbiaceae | 12 | ||
| Polygonaceae | 12 |
Plant families in China with the highest and lowest residual values in regression analyses of numbers of useful species against total number of species.
| Family name | Number of useful species | Predicted number | Standardized residual |
|---|---|---|---|
| Rosaceae | 426 | 287 | 5 |
| Ranunculaceae | 413 | 281 | 5 |
| Lamiaceae | 373 | 242 | 5 |
| Liliaceae | 317 | 228 | 3 |
| Fabaceae | 583 | 496 | 3 |
| Athyriaceae | 18 | 86 | −3 |
| Ericaceae | 165 | 250 | −3 |
| Orchidaceae | 332 | 423 | −3 |
| Dryopteridaceae | 47 | 149 | −4 |
| Cyperaceae | 104 | 259 | −6 |
| Poaceae | 374 | 548 | −7 |
| Ranunculaceae | 413 | 252 | 5 |
| Lamiaceae | 369 | 217 | 5 |
| Rosaceae | 383 | 257 | 4 |
| Asteraceae | 716 | 615 | 3 |
| Fabaceae | 542 | 444 | 3 |
| Liliaceae | 291 | 204 | 3 |
| Dryopteridaceae | 47 | 134 | −3 |
| Ericaceae | 130 | 224 | −3 |
| Cyperaceae | 89 | 232 | −5 |
| Poaceae | 182 | 490 | −10 |
| Rosaceae | 153 | 49 | 10 |
| Liliaceae | 91 | 40 | 5 |
| Moraceae | 49 | 9 | 4 |
| Fagaceae | 54 | 17 | 3 |
| Poaceae | 126 | 94 | 3 |
| Scrophulariaceae | 8 | 36 | −3 |
| Ranunculaceae | 16 | 49 | −3 |
| Cyperaceae | 3 | 45 | −4 |
| Orchidaceae | 14 | 73 | −5 |
| Poaceae | 107 | 56 | 8 |
| Fabaceae | 93 | 50 | 7 |
| Clusiaceae | 33 | 3 | 5 |
| Rosaceae | 52 | 29 | 4 |
| Arecaceae | 21 | 3 | 3 |
| Cupressaceae | 19 | 2 | 3 |
| Lamiaceae | 8 | 25 | −3 |
| Scrophulariaceae | 3 | 21 | −3 |
| Cyperaceae | 7 | 26 | −3 |
| Ranunculaceae | 7 | 29 | −3 |
| Asteraceae | 35 | 70 | −5 |
Fig. 2Numbers of species in the Chinese flora having records of use for different numbers of use categories, as recognized in this study. For example, 28,366 species have no records of use of any type and 7494 species have one known types of use.
Fig. 3Number of plant use-citation of each species in different use category. Abbreviated codes refer to Table 1. Medicinal and edible plants have significantly more use-citations than other category of plants. Asterisks indicate significant differences between each two usage categories determined by Student's t-test (∗∗, P < 0.01). Error bars are ±SE.
Fig. 4Number of use-citations per use-category for plants in the Chinese flora. The total number of use-citations for all use-categories is 50,521.