Abstract

BackgroundLocally harvested wild edible plants (WEPs) provide food as well as cash income for indigenous people and are of great importance in ensuring global food security. Some also play a significant role in maintaining the productivity and stability of traditional agro-ecosystems. Shangri-la region of Yunnan Province, SW China, is regarded as a biodiversity hotspot. People living there have accumulated traditional knowledge about plants. However, with economic development, WEPs are threatened and the associated traditional knowledge is in danger of being lost. Therefore, ethnobotanical surveys were conducted throughout this area to investigate and document the wild edible plants traditionally used by local Tibetan people.MethodsTwenty-nine villages were selected to carry out the field investigations. Information was collected using direct observation, semi-structured interviews, individual discussions, key informant interviews, focus group discussions, questionnaires and participatory rural appraisal (PRA).ResultsInformation about 168 wild edible plant species in 116 genera of 62 families was recorded and specimens were collected. Most species were edible greens (80 species) or fruits (78). These WEPs are sources for local people, especially those living in remote rural areas, to obtain mineral elements and vitamins. More than half of the species (70%) have multiple use(s) besides food value. Some are crop wild relatives that could be used for crop improvement. Several also have potential values for further commercial exploitation. However, the utilization of WEPs and related knowledge are eroding rapidly, especially in the areas with convenient transportation and booming tourism.ConclusionWild food plants species are abundant and diverse in Shangri-la region. They provide food and nutrients to local people and could also be a source of cash income. However, both WEPs and their associated indigenous knowledge are facing various threats. Thus, conservation and sustainable utilization of these plants in this area are of the utmost importance. Documentation of these species may provide basic information for conservation, possibly further exploitation, and will preserve local traditional knowledge.

Highlights

  • Harvested wild edible plants (WEPs) provide food as well as cash income for indigenous people and are of great importance in ensuring global food security

  • The most preferred plants include Maianthemum, Allium, Aralia, Arundinaria faberi, Fargesia melanostachys, Pteridium aquilinum var. latiusclum, Matteuccia struthiopteris, Zanthoxylum bungeanum, Ligusticum daucoides, Hippophae rhamnoides subsp. yunnanensis and Pistacia weinmanniifolia

  • During our survey we found that most people are reluctant to cultivate hull-less barley because planting grapes can bring more cash income

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Summary

Introduction

Harvested wild edible plants (WEPs) provide food as well as cash income for indigenous people and are of great importance in ensuring global food security. WEPs play an important role in ensuring food security and improve the nutrition in the diets of many people in developing countries [1,5] They are potential sources of species for domestication and provide valuable genetic traits for developing new crops through breeding and selection [7,8]. China is renowned for its wide use of wild harvested resources in the human diet, and many studies have focused on wild edible plants [17,18,19,20,21,22,23,24,25,26,27,28] These ethnobotanical surveys play an important role in conserving traditional knowledge associated with WEPs, and contribute to nutritional analysis of the most widely used species [1,13]. Nutritional analyses may provide significant information for the utilization of those species that have the best nutritional values, helping to maintain dietary diversity and improve local food security [1,2,15]

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