Medicinal plants are an essential part of indigenous pharmaceutical systems. We studied the medicinal plants used by the Popoluca of the Sierra Santa Marta (Eastern Mexico). This study is part of a series on the ethnopharmacology of various Macro-Mayan groups. During 16 months of ethnobotanical fieldwork, 614 taxa used medicinally and 4488 individual use-reports were documented. The data are analysed using the concept of the "healers' consensus" in order to identify culturally important medicinal plants. The medicinal uses of the plants were grouped into 13 illness categories. The responses for each species were summarized for each of the categories and were ordered by frequency of mention. The most frequently recorded medicinal plants of t...
Mesoamerica (MA) is one of the bioculturally most diverse areas of the world. Research on the neurol...
The taste and smell of the environment are important to humans in everyday life and are of particula...
Medical Ethnobotany of the Yucatec Maya: Healers' Consensus as a Quantitative Criterion. Economic Bo...
Medicinal plants are an essential part of indigenous pharmaceutical systems. We studied the medicina...
We studied the medicinal plants used by the Popoluca of the Sierra de Santa Marta (eastern Mexico). ...
As in most peasant cultures medicinal plants are a very important resource for the Nahua of the Sier...
Medicinal plants are an important element of indigenous medical systems in Mexico. These resources a...
The Zapotec inhabitants of the Sierra de Oaxaca foothills (Mexico) live in an area of great botanic ...
Local empirical knowledge about medicinal properties of plants is the basis for their use as home re...
Abstract—Medicinal plants are an important element of indigenous medical systems in Mexico. These re...
Most ethnopharmacological studies overlook food plants, yet many edible plants, also have medicinal ...
In the biological sciences the use of medicinal plants in indigenous cultures is commonly seen as be...
As for all Mexican peasant cultures, plants are an essential part of everyday life for Nahua of the ...
An ethnobotanical study was performed to collect information on the use of medicinal plants in Papan...
The botanical collections of early explorers and the later ethnobotany have played important roles i...
Mesoamerica (MA) is one of the bioculturally most diverse areas of the world. Research on the neurol...
The taste and smell of the environment are important to humans in everyday life and are of particula...
Medical Ethnobotany of the Yucatec Maya: Healers' Consensus as a Quantitative Criterion. Economic Bo...
Medicinal plants are an essential part of indigenous pharmaceutical systems. We studied the medicina...
We studied the medicinal plants used by the Popoluca of the Sierra de Santa Marta (eastern Mexico). ...
As in most peasant cultures medicinal plants are a very important resource for the Nahua of the Sier...
Medicinal plants are an important element of indigenous medical systems in Mexico. These resources a...
The Zapotec inhabitants of the Sierra de Oaxaca foothills (Mexico) live in an area of great botanic ...
Local empirical knowledge about medicinal properties of plants is the basis for their use as home re...
Abstract—Medicinal plants are an important element of indigenous medical systems in Mexico. These re...
Most ethnopharmacological studies overlook food plants, yet many edible plants, also have medicinal ...
In the biological sciences the use of medicinal plants in indigenous cultures is commonly seen as be...
As for all Mexican peasant cultures, plants are an essential part of everyday life for Nahua of the ...
An ethnobotanical study was performed to collect information on the use of medicinal plants in Papan...
The botanical collections of early explorers and the later ethnobotany have played important roles i...
Mesoamerica (MA) is one of the bioculturally most diverse areas of the world. Research on the neurol...
The taste and smell of the environment are important to humans in everyday life and are of particula...
Medical Ethnobotany of the Yucatec Maya: Healers' Consensus as a Quantitative Criterion. Economic Bo...