Back to Search Start Over

Medicinal plants in the southern region of the State of Nuevo León, México

Authors :
Estrada Castillón, Eduardo
Soto Mata, Brianda Elizabeth
Garza López, Miriam
Villarreal Quintanilla, José Ángel
Jiménez Pérez, Javier
Pando Moreno, Marisela
Sánchez Salas, Jaime
Scott Morales, Laura Magdalena
Cotera Correa, Mauricio
Estrada Castillón, Eduardo
Soto Mata, Brianda Elizabeth
Garza López, Miriam
Villarreal Quintanilla, José Ángel
Jiménez Pérez, Javier
Pando Moreno, Marisela
Sánchez Salas, Jaime
Scott Morales, Laura Magdalena
Cotera Correa, Mauricio
Publication Year :
2012

Abstract

Background: Although the flora of the State of Nuevo León is well known, there are few records of ethnobotancial information. An ethnobotanical study was undertaken in order to know the medicinal plants used by people living at the scrublands and oak-pine forest areas in the southern Nuevo León. Collection of plants specimens and interviews were carried out among the people of the municipalities of Aramberri, Galeana, and Zaragoza. Since former studies in the region are scarce, the aim of this work was to record the medicinal species and their uses in the scrublands and oak-pine forest areas, of southern Nuevo León, Mexico, and also to know if there are differences in the number of species and number of uses knowledge by people. Methods: Field work was carried out over a 2 years period; useful plants were collected and a total of 105 people from 46 different villages were interviewed. A database was compiled using data collected by means of semi structured interviews. The data were analyzed by means of non-parametric statistics, using goodness-of-fit test (Chi-squared) (number of species known by people of each municipality, number of uses known by people of each municipality), Chi-squared modified to incorporate the Yates Correction (number of species known by people living at scrublands and oak-pine forest); the Kruskall-Wallis test (number of species known by women and men of the three municipalities), and the Spearman’s rank correlation coefficient (age and number of species known, and age and number of uses). Results: A total of 163 medicinal plant species were recorded in the study area, comprising 108 wild and 55 cultivated plants. A total of 117 species were recorded in the oak-pine forest, and 111 in the scrublands area, a total of 68 were recorded in both areas; 68 medicinal species are used in all three municipalities, 40 wild and 28 cultivated. We documented 235 different medicinal uses. The most common plant parts used for medicinal purposes were found

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
text, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1196831170
Document Type :
Electronic Resource