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Published byLionel Rose Modified over 9 years ago
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Ethnobotany Old and New
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Ginseng root – Panax pseudoginseng
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Foxglove – Digitalis purpurea Foxglove may be useful as a way to cure people of “grosse and slimie flegme and naughtie humors” – from Gerard’s Herbal - 1597
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Foxglove
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William Withering - holding a foxglove
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Withering’s work on Foxglove Began experiments with foxglove in 1775 - Withering had heard about an old family cure for dropsy 156 tests conducted over 9 years Reported his findings in a paper published in 1785, “An Account of the Foxglove and Some of its Medical Uses” Powdered foxglove leaf is still prescribed in tablets or capsules to treat congestive heart failure The somewhat crude powdered drug is called Digitalis after the plant Foxglove produces more than 30 different cardiac glycosides - two in particular - Digoxin and Digitoxin are produced from foxglove and prescribed to heart patients around the world today
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Digitalis medicine
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Linneaus in Sami clothing
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Polytrichum moss – used as bedding
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Pinguicula – insectivorous plant, enzyme used to curdle milk
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Linneaus pioneered techniques that are basic to ethnobotanists practicing today 1. He traveled alone or with only a few companions to distant lands with a minimum of gear 2. In the field Linneaus ate indigenous foods and learned to use plants as the indigenous people used them 3. Linneaus developed a deep rapport with the people he lived with and studied
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After Linneaus – great age of botanical exploration Linneaus’s students Peter Kalm explored North America Frederick Hasselquist – the Middle East Pehr Osbeck – China Daniel Solander – around the world with Captain Cook
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Other botanical explorers Alexander van Humboldt – the Amazon Aime Bonpland – Mexico, Columbia, Orinoco and Amazon Rivers, Paraguay, Argentina Alfred Russell Wallace – 4 years in Amazonia, 8 years in Malay Archipelago Joseph Hooker – Ceylon, Himalayas, Antarctica, Palestine, Morocco, directed Royal Botanic Gardens Kew Richard Spruce – 17 years Amazon and Andes
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von Humboldt and Bonpland
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Hooker and Spruce
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Richard Schultes, Kiowa Roadman Belo Kozad, and Weston La Barre – 1936, Oklahoma
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Lophophora williamsii – peyote cactus
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Richard Schultes – Amazonia, late 1940’s
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Tagetes lucida – Mexican hallucinogenic marigold
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Two Great Challenges for Ethnobotanists Today 1. We still must catalog what is known about plants, document which plants are and are not important to a society, and record the vast amount of folk beliefs about different plant species.
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Two Great Challenges for Ethnobotanists Today 2. An even more difficult task is to understand not just how a particular group uses plants but how that group perceives plants, how it interprets those perceptions, how those perceptions influence the behavior of that society, and how those activities and behaviors influence the plants and ecosystem upon which the society depends.
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Ethnobotanical Methods Researchers and Informants in Bolivia
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William Withering and foxglove as a modern medicine
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Basic Working Method in Ethnobotany 1)Folk knowledge of a plant’s possible benefit to humans accumulates. 2)Indigenous people use that plant to benefit themselves 3)The folk knowledge is then related to a scientist 4)The scientist collects and identifies the plant 5)The scientist tests the plant to determine if it really is beneficial to humans. The form of the scientific test can vary significantly depending upon the potential use of the plant – whether as food, fiber, a dye, medicine, etc. 6)The scientist will attempt to determine what exactly makes the plant beneficial - what substance or aspect of the plant is beneficial. 7)The scientist determines the structure of the pure substance
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Rhubarb – Rheum x. cultorum Edible stems, deadly toxic leaves
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Study of the on-going process of domestication 1. Informant interviews – especially about desired traits, planting methods, methods of selection for breeding or seed stock. 2. Participant observation 3. Collection of native texts 4. Field observations – grain, fruit, or vegetable measurements; altitude, temperature, varietal flowering and maturation rates; mapping locations and distances to fields from farm or village; soil and vegetative analysis of sample fields at various stages of crop-fallow cycle.
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Phytoanthropology Phytoanthropology examines the extent of similarities and differences in the responses of various human communities to their plant neighbors, and the reasons for these human responses.
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Bo Tree – Ficus religiosa
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Silk Cotton Tree – Bombax ceiba
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Arrowhead – Sagittaria sagittifolia
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