Universidad Autónoma Metropolitana Iztapalapa, Avenida San Rafael Atlixco 186, Colonia Vicentina, CP. 09340, CDMX, Mexico.
Universidad Autónoma de Querétaro, Avenida de las Ciencias, S/N, Juriquilla. Delegación Santa Rosa Jáuregui, CP 7623, Querétaro, Mexico.
J Ethnobiol Ethnomed. 2021 Jan 28;17(1):7. doi: 10.1186/s13002-020-00431-y.
Oaxaca is one of the most diverse states in Mexico from biological and cultural points of view. Different ethnic groups living there maintain deep and ancestral traditional knowledge of medicinal plants as well as traditional practices and beliefs about diseases/illnesses and cures. Previous ethnobotanical research in this state has helped document this knowledge, but with the addition of more studies, more records appear. We updated the inventory of medicinal knowledge between the different ethnic groups that inhabit the Oaxacan territory.
A database was constructed from two sources: (1) original data from a 3-year project in 84 municipalities of Oaxaca inhabited by eight ethnic groups and (2) different electronic databases.
Records of 1032 medicinal plants were obtained; 164 families were registered, with Asteraceae, Fabaceae, and Rubiaceae being the most commonly used. A total of 770 species were reported in 14 vegetation types; the most important species came from temperate forests. Only 144 species corresponded to introduced species, and 272 were listed in a risk category. Illnesses of the digestive and genitourinary systems as well as culture-bound syndromes were treated with high numbers of medicinal plants. The Mestizo, Mixe, Mixtec, and Zapotec ethnic groups exhibited the greatest number of recorded medicinal plants. The 17 species that were used among almost all ethnic groups in Oaxaca were also used to cure the highest number of diseases.
Inventories of medicinal plants confirm the persistence of traditional knowledge and reflect the need to recognize and respect this cosmovision. Many species are gathered in wild environments. The most important illnesses or diseases recorded in the present inventory are also mentioned in different studies, suggesting that they are common health problems in the rural communities of Mexico.
Medicinal plants are essential for ethnic groups in Oaxaca. It is necessary to recognize and understand the complex ancestral processes involved in the human-nature interaction and the role of these processes in the conservation of biodiversity and in the survivorship of ethnic groups that have persisted for centuries. Finally, this study serves as a wake-up call to respect those worldviews.
从生物和文化的角度来看,瓦哈卡州是墨西哥最多样化的州之一。生活在那里的不同族群拥有深厚而古老的药用植物传统知识,以及关于疾病/病症和治疗方法的传统习俗和信仰。该州之前的民族植物学研究有助于记录这些知识,但随着更多研究的加入,出现了更多的记录。我们更新了居住在瓦哈卡州领土上的不同族群之间的药用知识清单。
从两个来源构建了一个数据库:(1)在瓦哈卡州 84 个由 8 个族群居住的城市进行了为期 3 年的项目的原始数据,以及(2)不同的电子数据库。
获得了 1032 种药用植物的记录;登记了 164 个科,其中菊科、豆科和茜草科最为常用。共报告了 14 种植被类型中的 770 种物种;最重要的物种来自温带森林。只有 144 种是引种物种,272 种被列入风险类别。消化系统和泌尿系统疾病以及文化相关的综合征都用大量的药用植物进行治疗。梅斯蒂索人、米斯特克人、米斯特克人和萨波特克人族群表现出记录的药用植物数量最多。在瓦哈卡州几乎所有族群中都使用的 17 种物种也被用于治疗最多的疾病。
药用植物清单证实了传统知识的持续存在,并反映了承认和尊重这种世界观的必要性。许多物种都是在野生环境中采集的。本清单中记录的最重要的疾病或病症也在不同的研究中被提及,这表明它们是墨西哥农村社区常见的健康问题。
药用植物对瓦哈卡州的族群至关重要。有必要认识和理解人类与自然相互作用中涉及的复杂古老过程,以及这些过程在保护生物多样性和维持延续了几个世纪的族群生存方面的作用。最后,这项研究呼吁人们尊重这些世界观。