Abstract

With both a full collection of native vascular plant distributions and a full checklist of source plants of the Chinese Materia Medica (CMM), the Uygur Medicine (UM), and the Kazak Medicine (KM) for the Xinjiang region, we defined medicinal plant: vascular plant ratios (simplified as medicinal plant ratios hereafter) as the value of medicinal plant richness divided by vascular plant richness. We aimed to find whether the ratios are constant or change in different environments, which environmental variables determine medicinal plant ratios, and whether the ratios are more influenced by human or by natural environments. Finally, suggestions for medicinal plant conservation were addressed. We found that (1) medicinal plant ratios were not constant, and they were high in the Tarim Basin which was largely covered by desert, while they were relatively low in mountainous areas, especially in the Tianshan Mountains where the general species richness was high; (2) medicinal plant ratios were not significantly influenced by human activities, indicated by human population density distributions, but they were highly correlated with plant species richness and climate, i.e. ratios decreased with plant species richness and MAP, and were related quadratically with MAT; (3) CMM ratio and UM ratio were more influenced by plant richness than by climate, while KM ratio was more influenced by climate. We concluded that the percentages of plants used as medicines were not influenced by distances from human settlements, but were determined by species richness or climate. We suggest that (1), in general, the medicinal plant ratio could be a complementary indicator for medicinal plant conservation planning and (2), for the region of Xinjiang, not only high diversity areas, but also some extreme environments should be considered as compensation for a better protection of medicinal plants.

Highlights

  • Traditional healthcare delivery systems were long developed in different cultures [1], e.g., in China [2, 3], Pakistan [4], and Tanzania [5]

  • Chinese Materia Medica (CMM) ratio was mostly explained by plant species richness and mean annual precipitation (MAP), while the influences of mean annual temperature (MAT) and population were relatively weaker

  • Medicinal plant ratios were high in the Tarim Basin, whereas they were relatively low in mountainous areas, especially in the Tianshan Mountains

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Summary

Introduction

Traditional healthcare delivery systems were long developed in different cultures [1], e.g., in China [2, 3], Pakistan [4], and Tanzania [5]. In some developing countries, using local traditions and beliefs continues to be the mainstay of health care [1]. Herbal medicines are the major part of medicines used for the traditional medical systems. There exist a large number of monographs introducing medicinal plants, including checklists or pictorials. These books usually do not record any information of non-medicinal plants. We do not know how people choose plants as medicinal plants, i.e. whether there are high percentages of medicinal plants in high diversity regions, or the opposite, or the percentage is constant in different regions

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