Abstract

BackgroundEthnobotanical research has demonstrated that several wild food plants (WFP) are used for medicinal purposes. Therefore, in addition to constituting an important source of nutrients, WFP can be used to help treat and avoid health problems. This study sought to characterize the traditional use of plants considered simultaneously as food and medicine by local specialists in the community of Caeté-Açu, which borders Chapada Diamantina National Park (NE Brazil). We also sought to identify the variables that influence the species’ cultural importance.MethodsWe selected local specialists based on a snowball sample and used a free-listing technique to register the wild plants they knew that are both edible and medicinal. Then, we asked the specialists to rank each plant component cited according to the following attributes: (1) ease of acquisition, (2) taste, (3) smell, (4) nutritional value, and (5) medicinal value. We used multiple regression to determine the variables that influence the cultural salience.ResultsThe most culturally salient species was Anredera cordifolia (Ten.) Steenis. The main medicinal effects associated with this species were related to body strengthening, intestinal regulation, and stomach issues. The most salient used species were those that were easiest to acquire and had the highest perceived nutritional values.ConclusionIt is likely that the sociocultural backgrounds of the respondents (elders, former miners, or descendants of miners) and the historical importance of wild food plants to local diets increased the predictive power of the perceived nutritional importance and ease of acquisition of these plants.

Highlights

  • Ethnobotanical research has demonstrated that several wild food plants (WFP) are used for medicinal purposes

  • Pieroni and Quave [6], in a study including Albanians and Italians in Lucania (Southern Italy), synthesized such relations in three possible contexts: (1) a given plant is used both as medicine and food but without any further association between the two (e.g., the plant component used for Medeiros et al Journal of Ethnobiology and Ethnomedicine (2021) 17:37 medicinal purposes is different from the part consumed as food); (2) a food plant is considered healthy but without a unique or specific medicinal target; and (3) a plant is consumed to obtain a specific medicinal effect

  • We aimed to characterize the traditional use of wild plants that are both food and medicine by local specialists in a rural community bordered by the Chapada Diamantina National Park (NE Brazil)

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Summary

Introduction

Ethnobotanical research has demonstrated that several wild food plants (WFP) are used for medicinal purposes. Several ethnobotanical studies have directed efforts to understand this food-medicine continuum, there is a lack of investigations dedicated to finding the main variables related to the species’ cultural importance in such a context. Most studies are focused on eliciting the reasons behind the maintenance and abandonment of the traditional uses of these products as a whole and do not focus on specific differences in cultural importance among plants. Such studies have indicated sociocultural aspects, health claims, and availability as important factors [7,8,9]

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