Centre for Development and Environment, University of Bern, Hallerstrasse 10, 3012 Berne, Switzerland.
Evid Based Complement Alternat Med. 2012;2012:959285. doi: 10.1155/2012/959285. Epub 2011 Nov 29.
This paper presents a study of patterns in the distribution and transmission of medicinal plant knowledge in rural Andean communities in Peru and Bolivia. Interviews and freelisting exercises were conducted with 18 households at each study site. The amount of medicinal plant knowledge of households was compared in relation to their socioeconomic characteristics. Cluster analysis was applied to identify households that possessed similar knowledge. The different modes of knowledge transmission were also assessed. Our study shows that while the amount of plant knowledge is determined by individual motivation and experience, the type of knowledge is influenced by the community of residence, age, migratory activity, and market integration. Plant knowledge was equally transmitted vertically and horizontally, which indicates that it is first acquired within the family but then undergoes transformations as a result of subsequent contacts with other knowledge sources, including age peers.
本文研究了秘鲁和玻利维亚安第斯农村社区中药用植物知识的分布和传播模式。在每个研究点,对 18 户家庭进行了访谈和自由列表练习。比较了家庭药用植物知识的数量与其社会经济特征的关系。应用聚类分析来识别具有相似知识的家庭。还评估了不同的知识传播模式。我们的研究表明,尽管植物知识的数量取决于个人的动机和经验,但知识的类型受到居住社区、年龄、迁徙活动和市场融合的影响。植物知识是垂直和水平传播的,这表明它首先是在家庭中获得的,但随后由于与其他知识来源的接触而发生变化,包括年龄相近的人。