Abstract

BackgroundAnimal-based remedies constitute an integral part of Traditional Medicine and this is true in Brazil as well both in rural and urban areas of the country. Due to its long history, zootherapy has in fact become an integral part of folk medicine in the country. The use of these natural resources for medical purposes, however, is not restricted to human diseases treatment, being also widely used for the treatment of animal illnesses. Ethnoveterinary is a science that involves the popular practical knowledge used to treat and prevent animal diseases. This study documents ethnoveterinary practices in one local semi-arid region in Northeast Brazil and discusses the findings in the surveyed area.MethodsInformation was obtained through the use of semi-structured questionnaires. A total of 20 respondents (09 men and 11 women) provided information on animal species and body parts used as medicine, information concerning the illnesses to which the remedies were prescribed were also obtained.Results and conclusionEleven animal species were used in the treatment of 11 diseases in the surveyed area. The species inventoried comprise 3 taxonomic categories: mammals (05), reptiles (04) and birds (02). The obtained results proves that the use of animals or their derived products as therapeutic resources to the treatment of animal diseases represent a common practice and is culturally important in the studied area. It is evident that the popular knowledge about the ethnoveterinary practices is, frequently, passed through generations. We also noticed that, besides the cultural aspects, the socio-economic context permeates the use of zootherapics, since these practices constitute an alternative to the medicines acquired in veterinarian pharmacies, which have a high cost.

Highlights

  • Animal-based remedies constitute an integral part of Traditional Medicine and this is true in Brazil as well both in rural and urban areas of the country

  • The results reveal that Ethnoveterinary medicine (EVM) is an activity mainly orally passed through generations, specially from father to child and constitutes part of the culture of the people who live in the Caatinga region, as noticed through passages of some interviewees' testimonies: ".we learn from the old people, it passes from father to child." male, 76; ".it's a parents' tradition heritage." male, 72

  • Eleven animal species were used for ethnoveterinary purposes in the surveyed area

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Summary

Methods

Information was obtained through the use of semi-structured questionnaires. A total of 20 respondents (09 men and 11 women) provided information on animal species and body parts used as medicine, information concerning the illnesses to which the remedies were prescribed were obtained.

Results and conclusion
Background
Materials and methods
Results and Discussion
42. Huntington HP: Using Traditional ecological knowledge in science
52. Scarpa GF
54. Adeola MO
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