Abstract Background Wild edibles continue to be a significant contributor to the global food basket in much of the developing world. A consensus has now been formed that information on wild edibles is an important part of ethnobotanical knowledge and hence elucidating region-specific patterns of habitat management and consumption assists policy making with regard to natural conservation, human nutrition, and human health. Using an original data set from Gujarat, India, the present research aims to document the collective knowledge of wild edibles possessed by the local Vasava tribe, as well as the habitat usage and consumption trends of these species. Methods Data were collected using three approaches: key informant interviews to record the...
The “Indus-Vedic” cultural heritage of India is well-known. Wild edible plants, sometimes known as w...
Abstract Background Local people in the Himalayan region use a wide range of wild and non-cultivated...
The present communication deals with the ethnobotanical exploration,identification,concerns and futu...
Abstract Background From time immemorial, wild plants have been used for edible purposes. They still...
Despite significant evidence base on quantifying ecosystem services, the role of biodiversity in sup...
Wild edibles plants refer to non-cultivated edible plants seen in the natural forest, fallow land, a...
Throughout history, wild edible plants have sustained human populations in each of the inhabited con...
Abstract Background Wild edible plants (WEPs) refer to edible species that are not cultivated or dom...
The wild edibles served as a dietary supplement and medicine for thousands of years, particularly in...
Locally harvested wild edible plants (WEPs) provide food as well as cash income for indigenous peopl...
An ethnobotanical survey with respect to food plants showed that tribals depend much upon forest pro...
419-429 In North Karnataka, fifty-one species of wild plants belonging to forty-six genera a...
Wild edible plants are used as a source of food by local people where they still rely on natural res...
412-418The ethnobotanical study on wild edible plants was carried out from January 2010 to June 20...
Present study focuses on documentation of wild edible vegetables from Jawhar tehsil of Palghar distr...
The “Indus-Vedic” cultural heritage of India is well-known. Wild edible plants, sometimes known as w...
Abstract Background Local people in the Himalayan region use a wide range of wild and non-cultivated...
The present communication deals with the ethnobotanical exploration,identification,concerns and futu...
Abstract Background From time immemorial, wild plants have been used for edible purposes. They still...
Despite significant evidence base on quantifying ecosystem services, the role of biodiversity in sup...
Wild edibles plants refer to non-cultivated edible plants seen in the natural forest, fallow land, a...
Throughout history, wild edible plants have sustained human populations in each of the inhabited con...
Abstract Background Wild edible plants (WEPs) refer to edible species that are not cultivated or dom...
The wild edibles served as a dietary supplement and medicine for thousands of years, particularly in...
Locally harvested wild edible plants (WEPs) provide food as well as cash income for indigenous peopl...
An ethnobotanical survey with respect to food plants showed that tribals depend much upon forest pro...
419-429 In North Karnataka, fifty-one species of wild plants belonging to forty-six genera a...
Wild edible plants are used as a source of food by local people where they still rely on natural res...
412-418The ethnobotanical study on wild edible plants was carried out from January 2010 to June 20...
Present study focuses on documentation of wild edible vegetables from Jawhar tehsil of Palghar distr...
The “Indus-Vedic” cultural heritage of India is well-known. Wild edible plants, sometimes known as w...
Abstract Background Local people in the Himalayan region use a wide range of wild and non-cultivated...
The present communication deals with the ethnobotanical exploration,identification,concerns and futu...