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Survey of Edible Caterpillars in Gbado-Lite City (North Ubangi, Democratic Republic of the Congo) and Medicinal Value of Their Host Plants

Authors :
Koto-te-Nyiwa Ngbolua
null Robijaona Rahelivololoniaina Baholy
null Rakotondrazafy Jennie Irma Norosoa
null Ruphin Djoza Djolu
null Colette Masengo Ashande
null Felix Mboka Mune
null John Koyanza Wangombe-Dawe
null Michel Mobale Mongeke
null Jean-Jacques Domondo Amogu
null Blaise Mbembo-Wa-Mbembo
null Moises Monizi Mawunu
Source :
Britain International of Exact Sciences (BIoEx) Journal. 4:102-114
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Budapest International Research and Critics Institute, 2022.

Abstract

The purpose of this study was to conduct a survey of edible caterpillars and the ethno-medical value of their host plants in Gbado-Lite using the "snowball" sampling technique. The results of this study show that Anaphe panda, A. venata, Elaphrodes lactea, Imbrasia epimethea, I. oyemensis, I. truncata and Pseudanthera discrepans are the most consumed caterpillars. Drying is the most used preservation method (82.4%); ground collection is the most used harvesting method (86.3%) while evisceration (45.1%) and dehairing (33.3%) are the main cooking methods used. Harvesting is done more in the forest (94.1%) from May to July (86.3%). The vast majority (98%) of host plants are used in traditional medicine; leaves (53%) and bark (45%) are the most used parts, while decoction is the most used method of preparing therapeutic recipes (92%). The felling of trees (39%) and traditional agriculture (26%) are to varying degrees the main causes of the disappearance of edible caterpillars and their host plants. Incomplete cooking (78.4%) and/or the host plant (19.6%) are the main causes of consumer poisoning. It is therefore desirable that sustainable participatory management strategies for edible caterpillars and their host plants be put in place in North Ubangi Province. These include community agroforestry, which should be practiced in peri-urban areas in order to strengthen the resilience of communities to climate change while at the same time fighting hunger and poverty. Indeed, the domestication of species would allow annihilating the pressure on wild resources, to conserve them, to fight against deforestation and to ensure the availability and sustainability of edible caterpillars. Those phytochemical, pharmacological and toxicological studies could be carried out on host plants in order to identify compounds of medical interest contained in these plants.

Subjects

Subjects :
General Medicine

Details

ISSN :
26861208 and 26861216
Volume :
4
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Britain International of Exact Sciences (BIoEx) Journal
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........0a87582b6a13ddb7d1f7f14962a3f356
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.33258/bioex.v4i2.731