The linkage between herbal medicines and the sustainability of medical plants from which they are manufactured is increasingly being understood and receiving attention through international accords and trade labeling systems. However, little attention is paid to the fair trade aspects of this sector, including the issue of benefit-sharing agreements with traditional societies whose knowledge and resources are being exploited for commercial herbal medicine development and production. This article examines the case of Prunus africana (Hook.f.) Kalkman, from equatorial Africa. While the conservation and cultivation dimension of the trade in P. africana has been much discussed in literature, no research appears to have focused on the traditiona...
Tanzania is endowed with more than 10,000 plant species, of which 1,100 are endemic. The coastal reg...
Maintaining cultural identity and preference to treat cultural bound ailments with herbal medicine a...
Trading standards for export Cue: The global market for medicinal plants is huge, amounting to mil...
AbstractEthnopharmacological relevanceAfter almost 50 years of international trade in wild harvested...
In many African countries, medicinal bio-resources are seen as a vehicle to promote sustainable live...
This article explores the contradictions that have emerged along the commodity chain of the endanger...
Prunus africana trees' bark from moist forests on Mt. Cameroon produce medicinal extractive that is ...
Prunus africana is a multipurpose medicinal tree of worldwide fame in treatment of benign prostate c...
The exploitation of natural resources in general and biodiversity in particular by human beings, is ...
Global demand for treating prostate disorders with Prunus africana bark extract has made P. africana...
Paper prepared and presented on behalf of the ’Association of African Medicinal Plants Standards – A...
This brief documents current knowledge about pygeum (Prunus africana). It aims to inform decision ma...
ii Prunus africana is a commercially valuable tree species for medicinal properties of its bark, whi...
The increasing demand for Prunus africana resources is an opportunity for its conservation and comme...
Medicinal plants are a huge reservoir of therapeutic agents for the treatment of human and other ani...
Tanzania is endowed with more than 10,000 plant species, of which 1,100 are endemic. The coastal reg...
Maintaining cultural identity and preference to treat cultural bound ailments with herbal medicine a...
Trading standards for export Cue: The global market for medicinal plants is huge, amounting to mil...
AbstractEthnopharmacological relevanceAfter almost 50 years of international trade in wild harvested...
In many African countries, medicinal bio-resources are seen as a vehicle to promote sustainable live...
This article explores the contradictions that have emerged along the commodity chain of the endanger...
Prunus africana trees' bark from moist forests on Mt. Cameroon produce medicinal extractive that is ...
Prunus africana is a multipurpose medicinal tree of worldwide fame in treatment of benign prostate c...
The exploitation of natural resources in general and biodiversity in particular by human beings, is ...
Global demand for treating prostate disorders with Prunus africana bark extract has made P. africana...
Paper prepared and presented on behalf of the ’Association of African Medicinal Plants Standards – A...
This brief documents current knowledge about pygeum (Prunus africana). It aims to inform decision ma...
ii Prunus africana is a commercially valuable tree species for medicinal properties of its bark, whi...
The increasing demand for Prunus africana resources is an opportunity for its conservation and comme...
Medicinal plants are a huge reservoir of therapeutic agents for the treatment of human and other ani...
Tanzania is endowed with more than 10,000 plant species, of which 1,100 are endemic. The coastal reg...
Maintaining cultural identity and preference to treat cultural bound ailments with herbal medicine a...
Trading standards for export Cue: The global market for medicinal plants is huge, amounting to mil...