Quantitative ethnobotanical documentation of medicinal plants used by the indigenous ati tribes in Panay Island, Philippines / Cecilia Salugta Cordero, Ulrich Meve and Grecebio Jonathan Duran Alejandro

The Ati (Negritos) are the aboriginal people of the Philippines comprising of more than 25 tribal groups that are scattered in the major islands of the country. In Panay Island of Western Visayas, they are recognized as gatherers, sellers, and traders of medicinal plants. This study aims to document...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Salugta Cordero, Cecilia, Meve, Ulrich, Jonathan Duran Alejandro, Grecebio
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Universiti Teknologi MARA, Perak 2022
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ir.uitm.edu.my/id/eprint/65503/1/65503.pdf
https://ir.uitm.edu.my/id/eprint/65503/
https://myjms.mohe.gov.my/index.php/myse/article/view/18832
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
id my.uitm.ir.65503
record_format eprints
spelling my.uitm.ir.655032022-08-29T09:15:12Z https://ir.uitm.edu.my/id/eprint/65503/ Quantitative ethnobotanical documentation of medicinal plants used by the indigenous ati tribes in Panay Island, Philippines / Cecilia Salugta Cordero, Ulrich Meve and Grecebio Jonathan Duran Alejandro Salugta Cordero, Cecilia Meve, Ulrich Jonathan Duran Alejandro, Grecebio NA Architecture Study and teaching. Research RV Botanic, Thomsonian, and eclectic medicine The Ati (Negritos) are the aboriginal people of the Philippines comprising of more than 25 tribal groups that are scattered in the major islands of the country. In Panay Island of Western Visayas, they are recognized as gatherers, sellers, and traders of medicinal plants. This study aims to document the medicinal plants used by the two Ati tribes in Panay Island. Semi-structured interviews were conducted to determine the therapeutic use of medicinal plants in ethnomedicine. Use value (UV), relative frequency citation (RFC), relative importance index (RI), informant consensus factor (ICF), and fidelity level (FL) were used to evaluate the plant importance and Jaccard’s Index (JI) was used to determine the similarity of the medicinal plants between the study sites. A total of 160 medicinal plant species in 55 families and 144 genera were used to treat 93 diseases in 17 different disease categories. The family Fabaceae was best represented with 17 species. The leaf was the most frequently used plant part and decoction was the most common method of preparation. Musa x paradisiaca had the highest UV (0.69) and Blumea balsamifera had the highest RFC (0.56) and RI (0.89) values. Diseases and symptoms, signs or clinical findings of the respiratory system recorded the highest ICF (0.75) with high use report. Spondias purpurea, Gynura procumbens, and Cyanthillium cinereum had the highest FL (100%). The JI (29%) showed a low similarity of medicinal plant compositions between the study sites. This study serves as an ethnobotanical basis for further pharmacological research and investigations, and as an awareness for preserving cultural heritage, traditional knowledge, and biological diversity. Universiti Teknologi MARA, Perak 2022-08 Article PeerReviewed text en https://ir.uitm.edu.my/id/eprint/65503/1/65503.pdf Quantitative ethnobotanical documentation of medicinal plants used by the indigenous ati tribes in Panay Island, Philippines / Cecilia Salugta Cordero, Ulrich Meve and Grecebio Jonathan Duran Alejandro. (2022) Malaysian Journal of Sustainable Environment (MySE), 9 (2). pp. 143-170. ISSN 0128-326X https://myjms.mohe.gov.my/index.php/myse/article/view/18832 doi.org/10.24191/myse.v9i2.18832 doi.org/10.24191/myse.v9i2.18832
institution Universiti Teknologi Mara
building Tun Abdul Razak Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Teknologi Mara
content_source UiTM Institutional Repository
url_provider http://ir.uitm.edu.my/
language English
topic NA Architecture
Study and teaching. Research
RV Botanic, Thomsonian, and eclectic medicine
spellingShingle NA Architecture
Study and teaching. Research
RV Botanic, Thomsonian, and eclectic medicine
Salugta Cordero, Cecilia
Meve, Ulrich
Jonathan Duran Alejandro, Grecebio
Quantitative ethnobotanical documentation of medicinal plants used by the indigenous ati tribes in Panay Island, Philippines / Cecilia Salugta Cordero, Ulrich Meve and Grecebio Jonathan Duran Alejandro
description The Ati (Negritos) are the aboriginal people of the Philippines comprising of more than 25 tribal groups that are scattered in the major islands of the country. In Panay Island of Western Visayas, they are recognized as gatherers, sellers, and traders of medicinal plants. This study aims to document the medicinal plants used by the two Ati tribes in Panay Island. Semi-structured interviews were conducted to determine the therapeutic use of medicinal plants in ethnomedicine. Use value (UV), relative frequency citation (RFC), relative importance index (RI), informant consensus factor (ICF), and fidelity level (FL) were used to evaluate the plant importance and Jaccard’s Index (JI) was used to determine the similarity of the medicinal plants between the study sites. A total of 160 medicinal plant species in 55 families and 144 genera were used to treat 93 diseases in 17 different disease categories. The family Fabaceae was best represented with 17 species. The leaf was the most frequently used plant part and decoction was the most common method of preparation. Musa x paradisiaca had the highest UV (0.69) and Blumea balsamifera had the highest RFC (0.56) and RI (0.89) values. Diseases and symptoms, signs or clinical findings of the respiratory system recorded the highest ICF (0.75) with high use report. Spondias purpurea, Gynura procumbens, and Cyanthillium cinereum had the highest FL (100%). The JI (29%) showed a low similarity of medicinal plant compositions between the study sites. This study serves as an ethnobotanical basis for further pharmacological research and investigations, and as an awareness for preserving cultural heritage, traditional knowledge, and biological diversity.
format Article
author Salugta Cordero, Cecilia
Meve, Ulrich
Jonathan Duran Alejandro, Grecebio
author_facet Salugta Cordero, Cecilia
Meve, Ulrich
Jonathan Duran Alejandro, Grecebio
author_sort Salugta Cordero, Cecilia
title Quantitative ethnobotanical documentation of medicinal plants used by the indigenous ati tribes in Panay Island, Philippines / Cecilia Salugta Cordero, Ulrich Meve and Grecebio Jonathan Duran Alejandro
title_short Quantitative ethnobotanical documentation of medicinal plants used by the indigenous ati tribes in Panay Island, Philippines / Cecilia Salugta Cordero, Ulrich Meve and Grecebio Jonathan Duran Alejandro
title_full Quantitative ethnobotanical documentation of medicinal plants used by the indigenous ati tribes in Panay Island, Philippines / Cecilia Salugta Cordero, Ulrich Meve and Grecebio Jonathan Duran Alejandro
title_fullStr Quantitative ethnobotanical documentation of medicinal plants used by the indigenous ati tribes in Panay Island, Philippines / Cecilia Salugta Cordero, Ulrich Meve and Grecebio Jonathan Duran Alejandro
title_full_unstemmed Quantitative ethnobotanical documentation of medicinal plants used by the indigenous ati tribes in Panay Island, Philippines / Cecilia Salugta Cordero, Ulrich Meve and Grecebio Jonathan Duran Alejandro
title_sort quantitative ethnobotanical documentation of medicinal plants used by the indigenous ati tribes in panay island, philippines / cecilia salugta cordero, ulrich meve and grecebio jonathan duran alejandro
publisher Universiti Teknologi MARA, Perak
publishDate 2022
url https://ir.uitm.edu.my/id/eprint/65503/1/65503.pdf
https://ir.uitm.edu.my/id/eprint/65503/
https://myjms.mohe.gov.my/index.php/myse/article/view/18832
_version_ 1743110454040854528
score 13.188404