The Gran Chaco is the most extensive wooded region in South America after the Amazon Rain Forest, and is also a pole of cultural diversity. This study summarises and updates a total of 573 ethnobotanical data on the use of wild food plants by 10 indigenous groups of the Gran Chaco, as published in various bibliographical sources. In addition, estimates are given as to the levels of endemicity of those species, and intercultural comparative analyses of the plants used are made. A total of 179 native vegetable taxa are used as food of which 69 are endemic to, or characteristic of, this biogeographical region. In all, almost half these edible species belong to the Cactaceae, Apocynaceae, Fabaceae and Solanaceae botanical families, and the most...
Edible plants with underground storage organs (USOs) are neglected resources. We studied the local e...
The Gran Chaco is a wide ecologic-geographic region comprising northern Argentina, western Paraguay,...
Wild edible food plants (WFPs) are valuable resources in the traditional food systems of many local ...
The Gran Chaco is the most extensive wooded region in South America after the Amazon Rain Forest, an...
We analyze and compare plant knowledge and uses of medicinal and edible plants of two rural communit...
The species of the genus Physalis L. (Solanaceae) are grasses or shrubs, practically all of which ar...
This study was carried out in the four rural communities (Pedrinhas, Ladeira, Caroba and Cajueiro) s...
Fabaceae is of great ethnobotanical importance in indigenous and urban communities throughout the wo...
Background: Traditionally part of the human diet, plants with edible fleshy fruits (PEFF) contain bi...
Until now, the survival of Andean crops has been due to the existence of numerous local communities ...
Inhabitants of rural communities in Argentine-Chilean Patagonia are mainly of Mapuche-Tehuelche orig...
The Kaxinawá indigenous people (auto-identified as the Huni Ku?) are native to the western Amazon, o...
Wild Edible Plants (WEPs) still play a vital role in the subsistence of many traditional communities...
Background: Wild plants are used as food for human populations where people still depend on natural ...
Traditionally, wild edible food has been important sources of nutrition to human populations in rura...
Edible plants with underground storage organs (USOs) are neglected resources. We studied the local e...
The Gran Chaco is a wide ecologic-geographic region comprising northern Argentina, western Paraguay,...
Wild edible food plants (WFPs) are valuable resources in the traditional food systems of many local ...
The Gran Chaco is the most extensive wooded region in South America after the Amazon Rain Forest, an...
We analyze and compare plant knowledge and uses of medicinal and edible plants of two rural communit...
The species of the genus Physalis L. (Solanaceae) are grasses or shrubs, practically all of which ar...
This study was carried out in the four rural communities (Pedrinhas, Ladeira, Caroba and Cajueiro) s...
Fabaceae is of great ethnobotanical importance in indigenous and urban communities throughout the wo...
Background: Traditionally part of the human diet, plants with edible fleshy fruits (PEFF) contain bi...
Until now, the survival of Andean crops has been due to the existence of numerous local communities ...
Inhabitants of rural communities in Argentine-Chilean Patagonia are mainly of Mapuche-Tehuelche orig...
The Kaxinawá indigenous people (auto-identified as the Huni Ku?) are native to the western Amazon, o...
Wild Edible Plants (WEPs) still play a vital role in the subsistence of many traditional communities...
Background: Wild plants are used as food for human populations where people still depend on natural ...
Traditionally, wild edible food has been important sources of nutrition to human populations in rura...
Edible plants with underground storage organs (USOs) are neglected resources. We studied the local e...
The Gran Chaco is a wide ecologic-geographic region comprising northern Argentina, western Paraguay,...
Wild edible food plants (WFPs) are valuable resources in the traditional food systems of many local ...