Open Access Journals



Title : Perceptions and Attitudes of Tharu Ethnic Group Towards Medicinal Ethnobiology in the Dekhatbhuli Village of Kanchanpur, Nepal
Authors : Suraj Prasad Joshi,Lata Pant,Balram Awasthi

Tharu, Medicoethnobiology, Dependency, Attitude, Perception, Conservation : In the present exploration we identify dependency pattern of Tharu ethnic group on medicinal plant and animals for traditional use and understanding their attitude as well as role in conservation. The perception of Tharu people was conducted in Dekhatbhuli village of Kanchanpur district Nepal to understanding knowledge on medicinal animal and plant species the Tharu community uses for treating different ailments. Data were collected through questionnaire survey, interviews with key informants (Bharras) and through group discussions. Random sampling method was used for selection of respondent. The result showed that the indigenous Tharu traditional healers and elders are rich in ethno medicinal knowledge. The elder people also belief in the traditional medicine and they showed the positive view towards the conservation of them were found under category not dependent. Almost all of the healer respondents were found to have played role in conservation of medicinal plant and animal and positive attitude towards conservation. The majority of elder people (97.21%) has great faith towards the traditional healer and was found to have played some role in medicinal plant and animal conservation. But, majority of young (83.53%) people have lacking of knowledge on medical ethno-biology. This vast knowledge on ethno-biology is poorly handed over to the young generation. Easy access to health services, few local healers, negligence of youngsters toward the continuation of traditional knowledge and disappearing of ethnic characters are the main challenge verge to extinction. This research will be milestone for policy making bodies and local people to aware about conservation of medical ethno biology in timely.

Keywords : Tharu , Medicoethnobiology , Dependency , Attitude , Perception , Conservation : In the present exploration we identify dependency pattern of Tharu ethnic group on medicinal plant and animals for traditional use and understanding their attitude as well as role in conservation. The perception of Tharu people was conducted in Dekhatbhuli village of Kanchanpur district Nepal to understanding knowledge on medicinal animal and plant species the Tharu community uses for treating different ailments. Data were collected through questionnaire survey , interviews with key informants (Bharras) and through group discussions. Random sampling method was used for selection of respondent. The result showed that the indigenous Tharu traditional healers and elders are rich in ethno medicinal knowledge. The elder people also belief in the traditional medicine and they showed the positive view towards the conservation of them were found under category not dependent. Almost all of the healer respondents were found to have played role in conservation of medicinal plant and animal and positive attitude towards conservation. The majority of elder people (97.21%) has great faith towards the traditional healer and was found to have played some role in medicinal plant and animal conservation. But , majority of young (83.53%) people have lacking of knowledge on medical ethno-biology. This vast knowledge on ethno-biology is poorly handed over to the young generation. Easy access to health services , few local healers , negligence of youngsters toward the continuation of traditional knowledge and disappearing of ethnic characters are the main challenge verge to extinction. This research will be milestone for policy making bodies and local people to aware about conservation of medical ethno biology in timely.
Download Pdf


Title : Ethnoecology of Gerres filamentosus (Cuvier, 1829) along the south Konkan coast of Maharashtra, India
Authors : L. S. Uskelwar,V. H. Nirmale,M. S. Sawant,R. A. Pawar ,A. S. Pawase,S. Y. Metar

Ethnoecology, biological studies, comparative studies, G. filamentosus, Ratnagiri and Sindhudurg districts : Ethnoecology can be understood as the ways in which people: “experience ecology, of ways in which they engage with, and build upon, the ecological relationships of which they are a part”. Investigations were carried out to collect and document the local ecological knowledge on Gerres filamentosus and compare the local knowledge on biology with biological studies and published literature. A total of 100 fishers from Ratnagiri and Sindhudurg districts constituted the sample size of the study. The ethnoecological knowledge on local name and identification of Gerres, its habitat and fishery season, size at first maturity, food and feeding and spawning season was collected. Similarly the local knowledge on effect of lunar cycle, wind direction, water colour and temperature on availability of G. filamentosus has been documented. The views of fishers on feeding habit, size at first maturity and spawning season of G. filamentosus were compared with biological studies and published literature. Mann-Whitney U-test showed agreement between local ecological knowledge, biological studies and published literature.

Keywords : Ethnoecology , biological studies , comparative studies , G. filamentosus , Ratnagiri and Sindhudurg districts : Ethnoecology can be understood as the ways in which people: “experience ecology , of ways in which they engage with , and build upon , the ecological relationships of which they are a part”. Investigations were carried out to collect and document the local ecological knowledge on Gerres filamentosus and compare the local knowledge on biology with biological studies and published literature. A total of 100 fishers from Ratnagiri and Sindhudurg districts constituted the sample size of the study. The ethnoecological knowledge on local name and identification of Gerres , its habitat and fishery season , size at first maturity , food and feeding and spawning season was collected. Similarly the local knowledge on effect of lunar cycle , wind direction , water colour and temperature on availability of G. filamentosus has been documented. The views of fishers on feeding habit , size at first maturity and spawning season of G. filamentosus were compared with biological studies and published literature. Mann-Whitney U-test showed agreement between local ecological knowledge , biological studies and published literature.
Download Pdf


Title : Ethnobotanical Survey of Plants Used For Prevention against Mosquito Bites and Control of Malaria In Assosa District, Western Ethiopia
Authors : Desta Ejeta Fereda

Traditional medicinal plants have played a major role in the enhancement of health care in developing countries around the world. Ethiopia has been practicing traditional botanical medicine for the curing of human biological, mental or physical disorders. Ethno botanical study was carried out to survey medicinal plants and their uses for malaria control in Assosa district. Information was collected from 150 medicinal plants users and traditional medicine healers via interviewer-administered questionnaires. The informants were selected randomly from four different villages of Assosa district, Southwestern Ethiopia. A total of 11 species of ethno botanical medicinal plants used for malaria control were identified. Of eleven ethno botanical plants, Allium sativum and Echinops kebericho were majorly used for malaria treatment and vector prevention in Assosa district. Leafs were the mostly used part of the plant and most of the medicinal plants were used for treating infections. The indigenous knowledge and practice of traditional medicinal plants in the study area were at risk of getting lost. The communities in the current study area practiced traditional ethno botanical medicine for malaria therapy and disease prevention. The indigenous practices contributed to the sustained use, management and protection of medicinal plants and multiple-use of ethno botany/indigenous trees. The current study suggests that similar studies in areas not previously covered should be carried out in order to get a full picture of the country’s medicinal plants potential in the future.

Keywords : Ethno-botany , Medicinal Plants , Mosquitoes , Malaria
Download Pdf


Title : In vitro response of GA3 in caulogenesis of Fiver nut
Authors : Manju Rakesh,Patil NM

A protocol was optimized for the caulogenesis of fiver nut. Internodal explant showed immediate response in shoot regeneration and production of callus in in vitro cultures of Caesalpinia bonducella (L.) Roxb. commonly known as fiver nut. MS medium supplemented with 1 to 10 mg/l GA 3 was found to induce callus. The Internodal explant inoculated on MS medium with 6 mg/l GA3 was found to produce shoots after 35 days of inoculation. Maximum amount of pale yellow coloured friable callus was produced in 7mg/l GA3 of dry weight 1.513± 0.108 g. The method can be used to generate callus and shoot which are natural sources of pharmaceutical Compounds without disturbing the natural population of the plant.

Keywords : fiver nut , caulogenesis , callus
Download Pdf


Title : Ethnomedicinal plants used by the Khasia Community people in Moulvibazar district of Bangladesh
Authors : Md. Sah Alam,M. Rafiqul Haider

The paper describes the traditional knowledge related to ethnomedicinal knowledge and plant parts utilization for curing various ailments by the Khasia community of Moulvibazar district. Total 45 plants were identified belonging to 37 families used by the Khasia community to treat different ailments. These medicinal plants were mostly used for treatment of anemia, asthma, cough, cold, constipation, dysentery, diarrhea, eczema, fever, headache, heart disease, itches, injury, jaundice, menstrual problem, piles, skin diseases, stomach problem, sex problems, toothache, urinary problem, rheumatism and others. Leaves were mostly used (35%), rhizome (19%) and root (12%) along with bark, stem, flowers, fruit and gum/resign.

Keywords : Ethnomedicinal , Medicinal plants , Khasia , Baidday’s , Moulvibazar , Bangladesh
Download Pdf


Title : Traditional knowledge on use of medicinal plants in Kitui County, Kenya
Authors : Daniel Patrick Kisangau,Matheaus Kauti,Royford Mwobobia,Titus Kanui,Nashon Musimba

Background: The use of traditional medicines in Kenya accounts for more than 70% or more of basic health-care treatments. Documentation of herbal plants is necessary because they are becoming more important, especially due to escalating costs of drugs and the focus on organic products in most developing countries. More so, with the development of resistance of pathogens to drugs, ethno-veterinary and ethno-human medicine might be the route to take since herbs tend to be broad spectrum in use. The aim of this study was to document traditional knowledge on ethnobotanical uses of medicinal plants in Kitui County. Method: Data was collected through semi-structured open-ended questionnaires administered to 68 households in the study area. Simple random sampling was used to select households who were the final sampling units. Results: Majority of the respondents (51.5%) had attended school up to primary level. Only about 6% of respondents were engaged as full-time herbalists whereas 90% had acquired traditional knowledge through informal trainings. A total of 62% of the informants acquired traditional herbal knowledge through apprenticeship from relatives with 29.4% of respondents taking between six months to one year to learn. A total of 42 plant species in 25 families were used in treating one or more disease conditions. Aloe secunduflora locally known as Kiluma was the most common medicinal plant, mentioned by 71% of the respondents. Other commonly used plants were Acacia nilotica, Zanthoxylum chalybeum and Azadirachta indica. Plucking of leaves (45.0%), digging of roots (31.4%) and debarking (11.6%) were the most commonly used methods of harvesting medicinal plants. The most commonly used plant parts were leaves (42%), stem bark (31%) and roots (21%). Acacia tortilis and Terminalia brownii were the most commonly used in the category of non-medicinal plant uses with 30% and 25% use frequencies respectively. The most common non-medicinal plant uses in the area were firewood, charcoal and animal feed. Conclusion: The study provides crucial ethnopharmacological lead towards discovery of natural drugs for treatment of both human and livestock diseases in Kitui County. The study provides platform for conservation of the documented plant resources based on their vulnerability to over-exploitation.

Keywords : Traditional knowledge , medicinal plants , Kitui
Download Pdf


Title : Traditional herbs used for snake bites among hill Tribes of Tamil Nadu - Literature Review
Authors : Sathish Kumar Krishnamurthy,Ranjith Kumar M.,Monisha A.

Mortality due to Snakebites occurs in South Asian countries in highest ratio, particularly in India. Giving primary care in initial stages is very crucial.[1] In India, Tribals’ save themselves using traditional medicines for many centuries including poisonous bites.[2] Tribals’ of Tamilnadu identify and preserve herbals from ancient times 2 . Literatures (Four) were identified and reviewed for ethnomedicine used among tribals of Tamilnadu for snakebites during 1990 to 2014. Among hill tribes (Palliyar, Irular and Malayali) 18 plants were identified for treating snakebites either individually or as a combination drugs. These herbs were advised with food restrictions. Literatures on ethnomedicine by Tamilnadu tribals need to be documented. We recommend training the health care units in tribal areas on knowledge of ethnomedicine in case of emergency including snake bites to save lives.

Keywords : Snake bites , hill tribes
Download Pdf


Title : Plants used in ethnoveterinary practices by Sugalis of Krishna District, Andhra Pradesh, India
Authors : B. Nageswara Rao Naik,Z. Vishnuvaradhan

Krishna District, Andhra Pradesh

Keywords : Ethnoveterinary medicinal plants
Download Pdf
Manuscript Code : The present study enumerated a total of 30 ethnoveterinary medicinal plant species used by Sugalis of Krishna district in Andhra Pradesh, India. This study gains prominence by the fact that such studies were not reported earlier from Krishna district. Nine Sugali villages (thands) constitute the present study area and information was elicited from tribal vaidyas (medical practitioners) and elderly people in the age group of 55-65 years. The 30 plant species belong to 19 different families and are used for the remedy of 10 livestock diseases. The findings of present study tally with the previous published reports in that the same plant species were used in the treatment of other veterinary ailments of livestock also. The medicinal use of these 30 plants species in conjecture with their similar utility reported earlier led to believe that the phytochemical screening of these plants would result in valuable active compounds of great veterinary significance.


Title : A comprehensive review on Psidium guajava Linn (Amaratafalam)
Authors : Raksha Mishra,Pallavi Tiwari,Mayank Srivastava,C. S. Singh,Saurav Ghoshal

Plants for thousands of years have been used to enhance health and for medicinal purposes. Psidium guajava is one which has an enormous wealth of medicinal value. Psidium guajava Linn, belonging to the Myrtaceae family, has been reported anti-diarrheal, hepatoprotective, hypoglycemic, lipid lowering, antibacterial and antioxidant activities. Psidium guajava is an important food crop and medicinal plant in tropical and subtropical countries is widely used like food and in folk medicine around of the world. The phytochemical screening of bark of Psidium guajava revealed the presence of metabolites and compounds tested for such as flavonoids, tannins, reducing sugar, terpenes, saponin, anthraquinones and alkaloids. The proximate analysis of dried bark gave a moisture content of 0.41 %, ash value of 11.5 %, acid insoluble ash of 4.5 %, Water soluble ash of 9.5 %, alcohol soluble extractive value of 20.8 % and water extractive value of 24.8 %.

Keywords : Psidium guajava L , Myrtaceae , Phytochemical constituents , Pharmacological actions
Download Pdf


Title : Survey and documentation of indigenous and traditional knowledge of medicinal plants used by the Irular tribe of Nilgiri District, Tamilnadu
Authors : Panneer Selvam K,R. Ezhumala,A. Vijayaragavan,M. Senthilkumar,P. Samydurai,M. Saradha,K. Praveen Kumar

An ethnobotanical survey was carried out among the ethnic groups (Irular) in Nilgiri District, Tamil Nadu. The tribal communities of Irular have rich knowledge about medicinal plants and its traditional uses. Therefore, we have done an exhaustive ethnobotanical survey in this area. In this present investigation, it is observed that the tribes being used 43 wild valuable plant species belonging to 28 families were identified with relevant information and documented in this paper with regard to their botanical name, family, vernacular name, parts used and utilization by the local tribal people for different human ailments. The common diseases treated by the herbal practitioner were asthma, cold, cough, indigestion, aphrodisiacs, paralyzes, skin diseases and diabetes.

Keywords : Ethnic groups , ITK , Irulas and skin diseases.
Download Pdf


Submit a Manuscript.

Open J-Gate .docstac IndianScience.in
RB
Slide Share Author Stream
Google Scholar
JOUR Informatics
e-journals.org
Research Gate

International Journal of Ethnobiology & Ethnomedicine (ISSN 2394-0891) is a peer-reviewed journal with indexing and abstracting in many databases. It publishes various categories of manuscripts in the areas of Ethnopharmacology, Ethnomedicine, Indigenous/Traditional Medicine, Ethnobotany, Ethnochemistry, Ethnozoology, Ethnoecology, Ethnoveterinary, Ethnogastronomy, Paleoethnobotany, Zooarchaeology as well as all related areas in medicine, drugs, food, nutrition, environment and medical anthropology. Research work containing indigenous medical knowledge documentation, toxicological & pharmacological investigation are highly welcome. Young authors including early career scientists, assistant professors, post doctoral fellows and Ph.D. students are highly encouraged to share their ideas about the latest topics in their scientific expertise as a review or mini review.

Following categories of manuscripts are considered for publication

  • Research Article
  • Review Article
  • Data Report
  • Opinion
  • Commentary
  • News & Highlights
  • Short Research Communication
  • Letter to the Editor
  • Methods & Protocol
  • Mini Review

Young authors including early career scientists, assistant professors, post doctoral fellows, M.Phil & Ph.D. students are highly encouraged to submit a review article or mini review. When you decide to write a review article for our journal, you have to first create a brief summary of the review article. This brief summary includes title, authors details, abstract, a graphical abstract, a short details about your review article and suitable references. Submit this brief summary to the journal. If your proposal is found suitable, our academic editors will help you during the development of your article. During the submission of the proposal select the option “review proposal” in the manuscript submission system.

Terms of submission

The scientific information provided in manuscripts must be relevant and useful for the scientific and agricultural community, and also not currently under consideration or published by another journal/magazine/newsletter/or any other print and e-platform. The manuscript must be approved by all the co-authors for the contents and submission for publication in the journal. There is no page limit for manuscript. Long research articles and extensive reviews are also published by journals.

No word limit for full length research and review articles.

Area of Publication

Ethnopharmacology, Ethnomedicine, Indigenous/Traditional Medicine, Ethnobotany, Ethnochemistry, Ethnozoology, Ethnoecology, Ethnoveterinary, Ethnogastronomy, Paleoethnobotany, Zooarchaeology as well as all related areas in medicine, drugs, food, nutrition, environment and medical anthropology. Research work containing indigenous medical knowledge documentation, toxicological & pharmacological investigation are highly welcome.

Peer Review

Manuscripts are sent for peer review to independent reviewers/ academic editors.

Preparation of Manuscript

Manuscript can be submitted by any of the contributing author(s). Manuscript files should be submitted only in Microsoft Word format (doc or docx).

Title and Authorship Information

The following information should be included with manuscript title

  • Full author(s) name
  • Affiliation(s) where the research work was carried out and institutional mailing addresses of all author(s)
  • Email addresses of all author(s) including corresponding author(s)
  • Mobile no. of all author(s)
  • Social media links of all author(s) ( facebook, Twitter, Youtube, Instagram)
Title should be short & informative, to be typed in only the first letter of the first word capital; also, after colon or hyphen, first letter of the first word capital. Latin names are to be given in italics. Names of authors to be typed in first letters capital . Author for correspondence should be indicated with an asterisk (*).

Each manuscript must include Graphical abstract, Abstract/Summary, Keywords, Introduction, Conclusions, Conflict of Interest (if any), Acknowledgement (if any), Funding statement (if any), Abbreviations (if any), and References.

In case of Short Research Communication and Research Article, Materials and Methods, Results & Discussion should be included.

Authors of each manuscrits should also clearly mention the categories of manuscript as following:

Category of manuscript: Review Article, Research Article, Data Report, Opinion, Commentary, News & Highlights, Mini Review, Short Research Communication, Letter to the Editor, Methods & Protocols.

Tables

Tables should be cited consecutively in the text. Every table must have a descriptive title and if numerical measurements are given, the units should be included in the column heading. Vertical rules should not be used.

Figures

The line drawings, illustrations or photographs will be accepted in Word files, GIF, JPEG, etc. Lettering, numbering, symbols and lines in the graphs/illustrations should be sufficiently clear and large.

Graphical Abstract

Each manuscript must be submitted along with a graphical abstract. It should be designed in such a way so that visual representation will be interactive along with showing scientific summary of the article.

References

All references should be listed consecutively, as they appeared in the text at the end of the manuscript. References should be in APA style.

In-text citation style

In text citation should be done using numbers in square brackets. e.g., “ inflammation, and cancer [1–3].”; “ cause severe diseases [4, 5]”.

Plagiarism Policy

Plagiarism checking facility will be provided to authors. It is the responsibility of authors to prepare their manuscript without plagiarism. Plagiarism report will be sent to the authors, and they should add necessary corrections in the manuscript if required. Any kind of plagiarism is not acceptable. Even after acceptance or publication, if plagiarism is reported in the manuscript, it will be retracted.

Article Processing Charges

3000 INR per Manuscript. Authors should have to submit the charges after acceptance of manuscript.

Submission Preparation Checklist

  • Manuscript in Microsoft Word file formats
  • Tables submit in separate file
  • Figures submit in separate file
  • Graphical Abstract

How to Submit Manuscript

Authors may submit their manuscript by using online manuscript management system using following link or by sending us directly by email at editorial@anveshika.org

For any other query regarding manuscript preparation and submission, please contact us at Mobile No. and WhatsApp No. 7991337001, or email us at editorial@anveshika.org

After Publication of Manuscript

Authors may submit their CV to work as academic editor and reviewer in the journals published by Anveshika Publishing & Informatics. Submit your CV using the “Join Us” tab present on the journal website, or e-mail at editorial@anveshika.org.

For any further quarry, contact us using following details:

Email: editorial@anveshika.org

Mobile No. and WhatsApp No. 7991337001

Statement of Human and Animal Rights

In the research work where human subjects or material were involved, all authors should clearly declare that entire experiment work was done as per ethical standards of the responsible committee on human experimentation (both institutional and national) and with the Helsinki Declaration of 1975, as revised in 2000 and 2008. In case of animal experiments, authors should clearly reveal that all experimental procedures were done according to institutional and national guidelines for animal care and laboratory use.

Statement of Informed Consent

Patients have a right to privacy that should not be infringed without informed consent. Identifying information, including patients' names, initials, or hospital numbers, should not be published in written descriptions, photographs, and pedigrees unless the information is essential for scientific purposes and the patient (or parent or guardian) provides written informed consent for publication. Authors should also identify individuals who provide writing assistance and disclose the funding source for this assistance. Identifying details should be omitted if they are not essential. Complete anonymity is difficult to achieve; however, informed consent should be obtained if there is any doubt. For example, masking the eye region in photographs of patients is inadequate to ensure anonymity. If identifying characteristics are altered to protect the patient, such as in genetic pedigrees, authors should guarantee that alterations do not distort scientific meaning.

Publication Ethics and Publication Malpractice Statement

Editor’s responsibilities

Editors are responsible for taking the decision to publish a submitted manuscript on the basis of quality, originality, scope and relevance. Editor and editorial staff will maintain the necessary confidentiality of the manuscript and will not use it for any other purpose.

Reviewer’s responsibilities

Reviewers should screen the manuscript for various quality parameters and provide the relevant comments to the editors, which helps them in decision making. Reviewers must carefully check the literature citation, writing quality, experiment setup and scientific relevance of results. A special emphasis will be given on plagiarism checking of manuscript. Reviewers will also maintain the necessary confidentiality of the manuscript and will not use it for any other purpose. Conflicts of interest regarding collaboration with authors of submitted manuscript must be disclosed to the editor, and then excluded from the review process.

Author’s responsibilities

Manuscript submitted to our journal should not be published in any other journal, and also not currently under consideration by another journal. The manuscript must be approved by all the co-authors for their scientific contents and submission for publication in the journal.

Authors should provide the details of their experimental work so that others may replicate the experiments. Authors should prepare their raw data and submit it to editors/reviewers upon request.

Any kind of fraud or unethical practices like Fabrication/ Falsification of Data, Plagiarism, Unacceptable Author Contribution, Citation Manipulation, Concurrent Submissions, and Redundant Publications are totally unacceptable. All authors must give a clear statement that no unethical practices are involved in this research work. All authors have a responsibility to disclose the conflicts of interests and financial support for work, if any.

After publication of the manuscript, if any error is found in research work, the chief-editor should be immediately informed. After deep discussion with the research team, the manuscript will be corrected or even withdrawn.

Literature source for ethical standard

  • Committee on Publication Ethics (COPE). Code of Conduct and Best-Practice Guidelines for Journal Editors.
  • Graf C, Wager E, Bowman A, Fiack S, Scott-Lichter D, Robinson A. Best Practice Guidelines on Publication Ethics: a publisher's perspective. Int J Clin Pract Suppl. 2007 Jan;61(152):1-26.
  • International Committee of Medical Journal Editors. Uniform Requirements for Manuscripts Submitted to Biomedical Journals: Writing and Editing for Biomedical Publication. 2006.
  • American Psychological Association. Ethical Principles of Psychologists and Code of Conduct, Section 8 ‘Research and Publication’.
  • American Chemical Society. Ethical Guidelines.