| Literature DB >> 35501874 |
Fernanda Olivares1, Carla Marchant2, José Tomás Ibarra3,4,5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Traditional veterinary medicine (TVM) or ethnoveterinary medicine comprises knowledge, practices, and beliefs about farm animals. Its study serves to offer ecologically and culturally appropriate strategies for the management of animals and their health in a context marked by the increased use of synthetic pharmaceuticals, social-environmental degradation, pollution, and climate change. In this study, we examine the TVM that Mapuche and non-Mapuche campesinos in the southern Andes have about the management of animals and their health. In addition, we investigate the main factors influencing the current use of TVM.Entities:
Keywords: Animal production; Ethnoveterinary medicine; Local ecological knowledge; Medicinal plants
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35501874 PMCID: PMC9063118 DOI: 10.1186/s13002-022-00534-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Ethnobiol Ethnomed ISSN: 1746-4269 Impact factor: 3.404
Fig. 1Study area in the Curarrehue and Pucón municipal districts, Araucanía Region, southern Chilean Andes
Fig. 2People in charge of different livestock species in the southern Chilean Andes
Corpus and praxis of TVM by Mapuche and non-Mapuche campesinos, southern Chilean Andes
| Season of year | Description | Category | Animal management | Description |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Winter | (AT) (LIT) (BIO) | Supplementary feeding | Feeding animals with bales, concentrate, oats, bamboo ( | |
| (AT) (BIO) | Animal shelter | The practice of providing shelter for animals in pens, sheds, pigsties, coops, and trees | ||
| Spring | (AT) (BIO) | Calving | Planning of calving for different species to reduce neonatal and postnatal deaths associated with feed deficits and extreme weather conditions. The organization of calving permits a supply of animal protein for consumption and/or sale at different times of the year | |
| (AT) (BIO) | Shearing | Planning of shearing before the | ||
| (AS) (AT) | Tail docking | The tail docking of ewes to facilitate the mating and lambing of future breeding ewes is carried out during the waning moon, which is associated with a decrease in body fluids, preventing hemorrhages and facilitating the coagulation of the cut | ||
| Summer | (AT) (LIT) (HID) (BIO) (EG) | Cattle transhumance | The practice of transhumance in which cattle are moved to mountainous areas from December to March for feeding and mating | |
| (AT) (BIO) | Fodder storage | The practice of storing unbaled grass with salt in sheds | ||
| (AT) (BIO) | Seed harvesting | The seeds of cat grass ( | ||
| (AT) (BIO) | Ram separation | The ram is separated from the sheep flock in order to send the ewes to early mating, scheduling lambing for a season with greater forage availability and better weather conditions | ||
| The right time to implement this | (AS) (AT) | Castration | The practice of removing the testicles of cattle destined to become steers or bullocks and pigs reserved for fattening during a waning moon | |
| Autumn | (AT) (BIO) | Mating | This practice consists of bringing together the previously separated rams with the flock of ewes for mating in April and/or May | |
| Annual | (BIO) | Adding ash to chicken coops | The practice of using ash in chicken coops to control ectoparasites such as bed bugs ( | |
| (AT) (BIO) | Late release of sheep | The practice of releasing the flock of sheep confined in barns, sheds, and/or pens after 9 am to prevent the animals from ingesting slugs ( | ||
| (LIT) (BIO) | Fertilization with animal manure | Incorporation of animal manure into the grassland for fertilization. There are different methods such as: spreading and incorporating the fresh manure left by the livestock when grazing; leaving the sheep manure to dry in sheds and then incorporating it into the meadows; preparing a mixture of manure from different animal species for incorporation into the meadows once it has dried; and mixing animal manure with different organic waste | ||
Nomenclature: Knowledge categories: (AS): Astronomical; (AT): Atmospheric; (BIO): Biological; (EG): Eco-geographic; (HD): Hydrosphere; (LIT): Lithosphere
Fig. 3Images showing a summer grazing area (“veranada”); b sheep flock next to rams
Ethnoveterinary plant species mentioned by Mapuche and non-Mapuche campesinos, southern Chilean Andes
| Scientific name1 | Local name | Mapuche name | Family | Origin2 | Life form3 | Use form4 | Species5 | Frequency6 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Canelo | Winteraceae | N | T | P; I | C, H, P, S | 24 | ||
| Hierba de la vaca, juquillo | Juncaceae | N | H | R | C | 20 | ||
| Siete venas | Plantaginaceae | E | H | I; W | C, G, H, P, Pi, S | 10 | ||
| Trun, trune | Rosaceae | N | H | D | C, S | 8 | ||
| Palo santo | Cunoniaceae | N | T | R; D | C, S | 7 | ||
| Peumo | Lauraceae | N | T | P; D | C, S | 6 | ||
| Radal | Proteaceae | N | T | D; R | C, S | 6 | ||
| Corcolén | Flacourtiaceae | N | S | I; P | C, H, S | 5 | ||
| Matico | Scrophulariaceae | N | S | W | C, G, H, P, Pi, S | 5 | ||
| Frutilla | Rosaceae | N | H | R | C | 4 | ||
| Maqui | Elaeocarpaceae | N | T | D; I; M | C | 4 | ||
| Quinoa | Amaranthaceae | N | H | I | P | 4 | ||
| Triaca | Cunoniaceae | N | T | I; R | C, S | 4 | ||
| Liuto | Alstroemeriaceae | N | H | M | C | 2 | ||
| Orocoipo | Santalaceae | N | S | D | C, S | 2 | ||
| Paico | Chenopodiaceae | N | H | D | S | 2 | ||
| Ajenjo | Asteraceae | E | H | I | H | 1 | ||
| Ají | Solanaceae | E | H | I | P | 1 | ||
| Ajo | Liliaceae | E | H | I | P | 1 | ||
| Coihue | Fagaceae | N | T | D | C | 1 | ||
| Hierba buena | Lamiaceae | E | H | R | C | 1 | ||
| Hinojo | Apiaceae | E | H | D | S | 1 | ||
| Laurel de campo | Lauraceae | E | T | I | P | 1 | ||
| Maravilla | Asteraceae | E | H | P | P | 1 | ||
| Nalca | Gunneraceae | N | H | R | C | 1 | ||
| Notro | Proteaceae | N | T | E | C, S | 1 | ||
| Parrilla | Grossulariaceae | N | S | M | C | 1 | ||
| Quila, coyocho | Poaceae | N | S | E | C, S | 1 | ||
| Quillay | Quillajaceae | N | T | I | S | 1 | ||
| Quinchamalí | Santalaceae | N | H | D | C | 1 |
1Plant author names are given only for species identified at the species level. Nomenclature: 2Origin: N = Native; E = Exotic. 3Life form: A = Tree; S = Shrub; H = Herb. 4Use form: D = Diarrhea; W = Wounds; I = Infection; M = Mastitis; P = Parasites; Q = Eye disease; R = Retained afterbirth. 5Species: C = Cattle; G = Goats; H = Horses; P = Poultry; Pi = Pigs; S = Sheep.6Frequency: Number of mentions of each plant species
Informant consensus factor (ICF) by animal disease category mentioned by Mapuche and non-Mapuche campesinos, southern Andes
| Disease/symptoms category | Nº of species used | Nº of reported uses | ICF value |
|---|---|---|---|
| Infectious diseases | 11 | 17 | 0.38 |
| Diarrhea | 10 | 25 | 0.63 |
| Retention of placenta | 7 | 36 | 0.80 |
| Mastitis | 3 | 4 | 0.33 |
| Wounds | 2 | 12 | 0.91 |
| Parasites | 4 | 31 | 0.90 |
| Eye disease | 2 | 2 | 0.00 |