Abstract

Domestic animals play a very important role in the human civilization. Besides human being, plants are used as medicines for many domestic animals. The therapeutic practices are very common among the tribes of Chamla, rich in ethnoveterinary medicinal plants. Due to poor availability of modern healthcare facilities and poverty of indigenous people, they depend on local medicinal plants for the healthcare of their domestic animals. This study is the first attempt to document the indigenous knowledge and evaluate the conservation status of medicinal plants and practices of herbal remedies by the local people of Chamla Valley in the treatment of their livestock. Semi-structured questionnaire was used and 120 local inhabitants were interviewed to note the traditional practices regarding plant species uses. Well-known statistical indices, Use Value formula and Relative Frequency Citations were used for quantification of the recorded data. It was observed that 50 medicinal plants belonging to 38 families were reported, where Poaceae was the most cited. The common livestock are goats, sheep, buffalos, cows, bulls, and donkeys. Most of the herbs, which are used in livestock treatment, are wild and few plants are cultivated. The common livestock diseases are red water, 3 days sickness, diarrhea, tympany, and indigestion among others. Most of the plants are used in fresh condition. According to the results, Brassica nigra was used for placenta retention, Butea monosperma for constipation, Calotropis procera for indigestion and 3 days sickness. Canabis sativa, Cedrella serrata, Allium sativum, and Origanum vulgare were used for fever. The traditional plant collection techniques have resulted in huge losses of these valuable plant resources. The ethnobotanical conservation assessment revealed that due to increased exploitation and un-sustainable harvesting, 49% of these economically valued medicinal plant species are decreasing in last 30 years. Some of the plants are only present on high altitudes while they had been finished in the foothills like Paeonia emodi and Berberis lycium. Lack of scientific knowledge, ignorance, poverty, and joblessness, as well as land development, construction and fires, add more pressure on flora and fauna of the area and various species are under the threat of extinction.

Highlights

  • Livestock keeping is one of the vital economic sources forming integral part of the traditional tribal community

  • The current study showed that farmers have a preference to collect medicinal plants directly from the field, since they can collect and use the plants

  • All of the understory medicinal plant species were used for curing various veterinary ailments

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Summary

Introduction

Livestock keeping is one of the vital economic sources forming integral part of the traditional tribal community. Different plants have been used to cure a disease or several diseases at a time, but toward the middle of 20th century the contribution of medicinal plants to medicine was reduced by approximately one fourth as research and development favored the use of synthetic chemicals. This trend is reversing once again in favor of plants, as they have been discovered to possess natural products that are chemically balanced, effective, less injurious with none or much less side effects [3]. Their traditional practices of plant remedies date back at least 7,000 years [1].The influences of traditional medicine upon western medicine have been both indirect and direct [4]

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