1. The conservation of native priority medicinal plants in a Caatinga area in Ceará, northeastern Brazil
- Author
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Delmacia Gonçalves de Macêdo, Manuele E. Saraiva, Bianca Vilar de Almeida, Francisca de Fátima Silva de Sousa, Márcia Jordana Ferreira Macêdo, Thatiane Maria Souza de Araújo, Liana Geraldo Souza de Oliveira, Daiany Alves Ribeiro, Marta Maria de Almeida Souza, Maria de Oliveira Santos, and Julimery Gonçalves Ferreira Macedo
- Subjects
0106 biological sciences ,Conservation of Natural Resources ,Biome ,availability ,Ethnobotany ,Forests ,therapeutic practices ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,Traditional knowledge ,Hymenaea courbaril ,lcsh:Science ,Plants, Medicinal ,Multidisciplinary ,biology ,Agroforestry ,Native plant ,biology.organism_classification ,Natural resource ,Geography ,Amburana cearensis ,Sustainability ,lcsh:Q ,biodiversity conservation ,Brazil ,010606 plant biology & botany - Abstract
Much of the Brazilian semiarid region faces a considerable process of degradation of natural resources, and ethnobotanical studies have collaborated with important information about the use and traditional knowledge, serving as a tool to design conservation strategies of native plant species. Thus, this study aimed to determine medicinal species meriting conservation priorities in a “Caatinga” area in the northeastern of Brazilian territory. The ethnobotanical data were collected through semi-structured interviews with key subjects selected through the “snowball” technique. The availability and species conservation priority was verified by relative density, risk of collection, local use and use of diversity in the forest fragment sampled. It was recorded 42 native medicinal plants and conservation priority score was calculated for seven species, including Mimosa tenuiflora, Hymenaea courbaril , Ximenia americana and Amburana cearensis need immediate conservation and attention, since their collection does not occur in a sustainable way. In order to ensure the perpetuation of the species and the sustainability of traditional therapeutic practice there needs to be a development of conservation practices of caatinga remaining to better conserve the species of the biome.
- Published
- 2017