Abstract

Medicinal plants provide indigenous and peasant communities worldwide with means to meet their healthcare needs. Homegardens often act as medicine cabinets, providing easily accessible medicinal plants for household needs. Social structure and social exchanges have been proposed as factors influencing the species diversity that people maintain in their homegardens. Here, we assess the association between the exchange of medicinal knowledge and plant material and medicinal plant richness in homegardens. Using Tsimane' Amazonian homegardens as a case study, we explore whether social organization shapes exchanges of medicinal plant knowledge and medicinal plant material. We also use network centrality measures to evaluate people's location and performance in medicinal plant knowledge and plant material exchange networks. Our results suggest that social organization, specifically kinship and gender relations, influences medicinal plant exchange patterns significantly. Homegardens total and medicinal plant species richness are related to gardeners' centrality in the networks, whereby people with greater centrality maintain greater plant richness. Thus, together with agroecological conditions, social relations among gardeners and the culturally specific social structure seem to be important determinants of plant richness in homegardens. Understanding which factors pattern general species diversity in tropical homegardens, and medicinal plant diversity in particular, can help policy makers, health providers, and local communities to understand better how to promote and preserve medicinal plants in situ. Biocultural approaches that are also gender sensitive offer a culturally appropriate means to reduce the global and local loss of both biological and cultural diversity.

Highlights

  • Medicinal plants provide locally accessible, culturally appropriate, and economically affordable healthcare options for people with scarce access to biomedical healthcare systems

  • Using Tsimane’ Amazonian homegardens as a case study, we explore whether social organization shapes exchanges of medicinal plant knowledge and medicinal plant material

  • Our results suggest that social organization, kinship and gender relations, influences medicinal plant exchange patterns significantly

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Summary

Introduction

Medicinal plants provide locally accessible, culturally appropriate, and economically affordable healthcare options for people with scarce access to biomedical healthcare systems. Tropical homegardens support high species diversity and help communities to meet health needs, constituting in situ germplasm banks, biodiversity reservoirs, and medicine cabinets (Finerman and Sackett 2003, Huai and Hamilton 2009). Diversity in homegardens Tropical homegardens are renowned for their typically high levels of biological diversity This species diversity is the result of gardeners’ meticulous selection and management, which is aimed at providing products they consider to be important to subsistence and livelihoods (Kumar and Nair 2006). Finerman and Sackett (2003) have observed that in the Ecuadorian Andes, where gardens are managed by women and are largely devoted to medicinal plant production, species composition reflects household demographics (e.g., age, composition) and stage in the life cycle (e.g., reproductive status), as well as specific health needs of individuals in the household In Peruvian Amazonian gardens, differences in homegarden diversity are related to ethnicity (Uranina, mestizos, and Achuar) in terms of species richness, homegarden composition, and the presence of medicinal plants; some medicinal species are exclusively cultivated by one or another ethic group (Perrault-Archambault and Coomes 2008). Finerman and Sackett (2003) have observed that in the Ecuadorian Andes, where gardens are managed by women and are largely devoted to medicinal plant production, species composition reflects household demographics (e.g., age, composition) and stage in the life cycle (e.g., reproductive status), as well as specific health needs of individuals in the household

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