Difference between revisions of "Ethnobotany" - New World Encyclopedia

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'''Ethnobotany''' is the study of the relationship between [[plants]] and [[person|people]]: From"[[Ethnology|ethno]]" - study of people and "[[botany]]" - study of plants. Ethnobotany studies the complex relationships between (uses of) plants and cultures. The focus of ethnobotany is on how plants have been or are used, managed and perceived in human societies and includes plants used for food, medicine, divination, cosmetics, dyeing, textiles, for building, tools, currency, clothing, rituals, social life, and music.
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'''Ethnobotany''' is the systematic study of the relationships between [[plant]]s and [[human|people]]. It is not simply the study of the human "use" of plants; rather, ethnobotany locates plants within their cultural context in particular societies, and situates peoples within their [[ecology|ecological]] contexts. Ethnobotanists examine:
 +
*the culturally specific ways that humans perceive and classify different kinds of plants
 +
*the things humans do to plant [[species]], such as destroying "weeds" or "domesticating" and planting specific kinds of food and medicinal plants
 +
*the ways in which various members of the plant world influence human cultures.  
 +
This inquiry ranges from the geopolitical impact of the European demand for [[spice]]s (which helped to launch the [[Age of Exploration]]) to the role of hallucinogenic snuffs used by Amazonian [[shaman]]s in religious rituals.
  
Ethnobotany is considered a branch of '''ethnobiology'''. Ethnobiology is the study of the past and present interrelationships between [[human culture]]s and the [[plant]]s, [[animal]]s, and other organisms in their environment, including relationships with [[ecosystems]] as a whole. The term ethnobiology did not come into use until the twentieth century (Sillitoe, 2006). It was originally and is still being referred to as [[biological anthropology]] by many scholars in related disciplines. However, unlike the traditional biological anthropology, which primarily studies humans and the nonhuman primates as biological organisms, ethnobiology is wider in scope, both in academic and practical aspects. Most importantly, ethnobiology makes apparent academic connection between human cultural practices and subdisciplines of biology.  Ethnobiology is an interdisciplinary subject which draws on knowledge from many different fields of knowledge such as [[linguistics]], [[anthropology]], [[biology]], [[chemistry]]. The principal disciplines of enthnobiology include ethnobotany, ethnozoology, ethnoecology and more.  
+
Attributes such as [[creativity]], reason, and curiosity, coupled with a desire to benefit others—attributes common in the scientific community—aids those studying ethnobotany to make important contributions. For example, the study of indigenous food production and local medicinal knowledge offers the promise of practical implications for developing sustainable [[agriculture]] and discovering new [[medicine]]s.
 +
{{toc}}
 +
The term “ethnobotany” was coined in 1895, by J.M. Harshberger, an American botanist at the University of Pennsylvania. Modern ethnobotany is an interdisciplinary field drawing together scholars from [[anthropology]], [[botany]], [[archaeology]], [[geography]], [[medicine]], [[linguistics]], [[economics]], [[landscape architecture]], and [[pharmacology]].  
  
 +
==Overview==
  
==History of Ethnobotany==
+
Ethnobotany is considered a branch of [[ethnobiology]], the study of past and present interrelationships between [[human culture]]s  and the [[plant]]s, [[animal]]s, and other organisms in their environment. Like its parent field, ethnobotany makes apparent the connection between human cultural practices and the sub-disciplines of biology.  
Though the term "ethnobotany" was not coined until 1895 by the US botanist Harshberger, the history of the field begins long before that.  In AD 77, the Greek surgeon [[Dioscorides]] published "''De Materia Medica''", which was a catalog of about 600 plants in the Mediterranean. It also included information on how the Greeks used the plants, especially for medicinal purposes.  This illustrated herbal contained information on how and when each plant was gathered, whether or not it was poisonous, its actual use, and whether or not it was edible (it even provided recipes).  Dioscorides stressed the economic potential of plants.  For generations, scholars learned from this herbal, but did not actually venture into the field until after the Middle Ages.  
 
  
In 1542 [[Leonhart Fuchs]], a [[Renaissance]] artist, lead the way back into the field.  His "''De Historia Stirpium''" cataloged 400 plants native to Germany and Austria.
+
Ethnobotanical studies range across space and time, from archaeological investigations of the role of plants in ancient civilizations to the bioengineering of new crops. Furthermore, ethnobotany is not limited to nonindustrialized or nonurbanized societies. In fact, [[adaptation|co-adaptation]] of plants and human cultures has changed—and perhaps intensified—in the context of urbanization and globalization in the twentieth and twenty-first centuries. Nonetheless, [[indigenous]], non-Westernized cultures play a crucial role in ethnobotany, as they possess a previously undervalued knowledge of local ecology gained through centuries or even millennia of interaction with their [[biotic]] (living) environment.
  
[[John Ray]] (1686-1704) provided the first definition of "[[species]]" in his "''Historia Plantarum''":  a species is a set of individuals who give rise through reproduction to new individuals similar to themselves.  
+
The significance of ethnobotany is manifold. The study of indigenous food production and local medicinal knowledge may have practical implications for developing [[sustainable]] agriculture and discovering new medicines. Ethnobotany also encourages an awareness of the link between [[biodiversity]] and cultural diversity, as well as a sophisticated understanding of the mutual influence (both beneficial and destructive) of plants and humans.
  
In 1753 [[Carolus Linnaeus|Carl Linnaeus]] wrote "''Species Plantarum''", which included information on about 5,900 plants.  Linnaeus is famous for inventing the [[binomial nomenclature|binomial method of nomenclature]], in which all species (mineral, vegetable or animal) get a two part name ([[genus]], [[species]]).
+
===The influence of plants on human culture===
 +
Why might plants have come to function as the material basis for human culture? The combination of their immobility (terrestrial plants must remain rooted in the soil) and tremendous production of [[cellulose]] makes plants a far more efficient and reliable source of building materials and food than animals.
  
The 19th century saw the peak of [[botanical]] exploration.  [[Alexander von Humboldt]] collected data from the new world, and the famous [[Captain Cook]] brought back information on plants from the South Pacific.  At this time major botanical gardens were started, for instance the [[Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew]].
+
The biochemical diversity of plants, which contributes to their myriad medicinal and dietary uses, might also be traced in part to their immobility. Plants produce chemicals as a way of interacting with other organisms in their environment, either for mutual gain—such as enlisting [[animal]]s in the transport of [[pollen]] or [[seed]]s—or as a mechanism of defense, to repel or poison [[predator]]s or [[parasite]]s. Modern societies depend on chemical agents in plants for 25 percent of prescription drugs and nearly all recreational chemicals, such as the [[caffeine]] in [[coffee]], the [[nicotine]] in [[tobacco]], and the [[theophylline]] in [[tea]].
  
Edward Palmer collected artifacts and botanical specimens from peoples in the North American West (Great Basin) and Mexico from the 1860s to the 1890s.
+
==Historic roots of ethnobotany==
 +
[[Image:Arabic_herbal_medicine_guidebook.jpeg|thumb|350px|An Arabic edition of [[Dioscorides]]’s ''De Materia Medica'' (circa 1334) describes the medicinal features of [[cumin]] and [[dill]].]]
  
Once enough data existed, the field of "[[aboriginal botany]]" was founded. Aboriginal botany is the study of all forms of the vegetable world which [[indigenous peoples|aboriginal peoples]] use for food, medicine, textiles, ornaments, etc.
+
Although ethnobotany did not emerge as an academic discipline until the end of the nineteenth century, its roots extend back to Greek, Roman, and Islamic sources. In 77 C.E., the Greek surgeon [[Dioscorides]] published ''De Materia Medica,'' a catalog of about 600 plants found in the Mediterranean. This illustrated book of ''herbal'' (a book that describes the appearance, medicinal properties, and other characteristics of plants used in herbal medicine), which influenced scholars through the Middle Ages, contained information on how and when each plant was gathered, its use by the Greeks, and whether or not it was edible. (Dioscorides even provided recipes.) He also assessed the economic potential of these plants.
  
The first individual to study the emic perspective of the plant world was a German physician working in Sarajevo at the end of 19th Century: Leopold Glueck. His published work on traditional medical uses of plants done by rural people in Bosnia (1896) has to be considered the first modern ethnobotanical work.
+
However, the systematic study of plants was not confined to the West: The earliest known herbal was compiled by Chinese emperor Shen Nung sometime before 2000 B.C.E., and both the [[Inca]]s of [[South America]] and the [[Aztec]]s of [[Mesoamerica]] maintained botanical gardens.
  
Other scholars analysed uses of plants under an indigenous/local perspective in the early 20th century:  e.g. [[Matilda Coxe Stevenson]], Zuni plants (1915); [[Frank Hamilton Cushing|Frank Cushing]], Zuni foods (1920); and the team approach of Wilfred Robbins, JP Harrington, and Barbara Freire-Marreco, Tewa pueblo plants (1916).
+
The [[Renaissance]] in Europe saw a revival of interest in ethnobotany, which was intensified by geographic exploration and later colonialism. In 1542, Renaissance artist Leonhart Fuchs published ''De Historia Stirpium,'' a catalogue of 400 plants native to Germany and Austria. [[John Gerard]] (1545-1611/12) published the most popular of sixteenth century herbals, the ''General Historie of Plants,'' which remained in print for over 400 years. [[John Ray]] (1686-1704) provided the first definition of [[species]] in his ''Historia Plantarum''.  
  
==Modern Ethnobotany==
+
In 1753, the Swedish botanist [[Carolus Linnaeus|Carl Linnaeus]] wrote ''Species Plantarum,'' which included information on approximately 5,900 plants. Linnaeus, known as "the father of taxonomy," is famous for popularizing the [[binomial nomenclature|binomial method of nomenclature]], in which all living [[organism]]s are assigned a two-part name ([[taxonomy#Scientific or biological classifcation|genus]], [[species]]).   
Beginning in the 20th century, the field of ethnobotany experienced a shift from the raw compilation of data to a greater methodological and conceptual reorientation. This is also the beginning of academic ethnobotany.   
 
  
Today the field of ethnobotany requires a variety of skills: botanical training for the identification and preservation of plant specimens; anthropological training to understand the cultural concepts around the perception of plants; linguistic training, at least enough to transcribe local terms and understand native morphology, syntax, and semantics.
+
The nineteenth century saw the peak of [[botany|botanical]] exploration.  [[Alexander von Humboldt]] collected data from “the New World,” and the famous [[Captain Cook]] brought back information on plants from the South Pacific. At this time, major botanical gardens were founded in Europe, such as the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew (commonly known as Kew Gardens).
  
==See also==
+
The modern discipline of ethnobotany began to emerge in the late nineteenth century in part out of field-work concentrated in the north American West. Researchers referred to their work as "aboriginal botany," which studied the forms of plant-life used by [[indigenous peoples|aboriginal peoples]]. From the 1860s to the 1890s, Edward Palmer collected artifacts and botanical specimens from peoples in the Great Basin region and [[Mexico]]. Other scholars who analyzed the uses of plants under an indigenous/local perspective included [[Matilda Coxe Stevenson]], [[Zuni]] plants (1915); [[Frank Hamilton Cushing|Frank Cushing]], Zuni foods (1920); and the team of Wilfred Robbins, J.P. Harrington, and Barbara Freire-Marreco, [[Tewa]] pueblo plants (1916).
*[[Botany]]
 
*[[Anthropology]]
 
*[[Ethnography]]
 
*[[Ethnomedicine]]
 
  
== Literature ==
+
==Modern ethnobotany==
*Alexiades, M.: ''Selected guidelines for ethnobotanical research: A field manual''
+
Beginning in the twentieth century, the field of ethnobotany experienced a shift from the raw compilation of data to a greater methodological and conceptual reorientation. Today, the practice of ethnobotany requires a variety of skills:
*Cotton, C.: ''Ethnobotany''
+
*'''botanical training''' for the identification and preservation of plant specimens
* Harrison, K. David. (2006) When Languages Die: The Extinction of the World's Languages and the Erosion of Human Knowledge. New York and London: Oxford University Press.
+
*'''anthropological training''' to understand the cultural concepts around the perception of plants
*Martin, G.: ''Ethnobotany''
+
*'''linguistic training''' to transcribe local terms and understand native [[morphology]], [[syntax]], and [[semantics]].
 +
 
 +
Ethnobotanists engage in a broad array of research questions and practices, which do not lend themselves to easy categorization. However, the following headings attempt to describe some of the key areas of modern study.
 +
 
 +
===Ethnomedicine===
 +
[[Image:Atropa bella-donna1.jpg|thumb|left|200px|The drug atropine has its origins in ''Atropa belladonna'' (or "deadly nightshade"), pictured here.]]
 +
'''Ethnomedicine''' is a sub-field of [[medical anthropology]] that deals with the study of [[traditional medicine]]s—not only those with relevant written sources (e.g., [[Traditional Chinese Medicine]] and [[Ayurveda]]), but also those whose knowledge and practices have been orally transmitted over the centuries.
 +
 
 +
While the focus of ethnomedical studies is often the indigenous perception and use of traditional medicines, another stimulus for this type of research is drug discovery and development. Major pharmaceuticals such as [[digoxi]]n, [[morphine]], and [[atropine]] have been traced to [[foxglove]], [[opium]], and [[belladonna]], respectively. Ethnomedical investigations in this century have led to the development of important drugs such as [[reserpine]] (a treatment for [[hypertension]]) [[podophyllotoxin]] (the base of an important anti-cancer drug), and [[vinblastine]] (used in the treatment of certain [[cancer]]s).
 +
 
 +
===Agriculture===
 +
[[Agriculture]] may be defined as the culturally influenced selection of plants with specific genetic characteristics that are desired by humans to create domesticated plants, or crops.
 +
 
 +
Ethnobotany contributes to an understanding of agriculture in two ways:
 +
#By revealing ways to create genetically altered plants for human purposes.
 +
#By describing and explaining the many different ways the same crop can be raised, whether for economic gain, a desire for sustained yield, or other culturally specific purposes.
 +
 
 +
One example of the mutual influence of plants and human cultures is illustrated by the [[Irish potato famine]] of the mid-nineteenth century. The Irish cultivation of potatoes was an example of ''monoculture,'' the practice of planting crops with the same patterns of growth resulting from genetic similarity. Monoculture can lead to large scale crop failure when the single genetic variant (or [[cultivar]]) becomes susceptible to a disease. The famine, which resulted in somewhere between 500,000 and one million deaths, was caused by the cultivar's susceptibility to ''Phytophthora infestans.'' The famine partially triggered widespread Irish immigration to [[Great Britain]], the [[United States]], [[Canada]], and [[Australia]].
 +
 
 +
===Plants in religion and ritual===
 +
[[Image:Urarina_shaman_B_Dean.jpg|thumb|left|An Urarina [[shaman]].]]
 +
An '''entheogen,''' in the strictest sense, is a [[psychoactive]] substance (most often some [[plant]] matter with hallucinogenic effects) that occasions an enlightening [[spirituality|spiritual]] or [[mystical]] experience. Entheogens have played a pivotal role in the spiritual practices of most American cultures for millennia. One of the founders of modern ethnobotany, Richard Evans Schultes of Harvard University, documented the ritual use of peyote cactus among the [[Kiowa]] who live in what has became Oklahoma in the [[United States). Used traditionally by many cultures of what is now [[Mexico]], peyote spread to [[North America]] in the nineteenth century, replacing the [[toxic]] entheogen ''Sophora secundiflora'' ([[Mescalbean|mescal bean]]).
 +
 
 +
Indigenous peoples of [[South America]] employ a wide variety of entheogens. Better-known examples include [[ayahuasca]] (''Banisteriopsis caapi'' plus admixtures) among indigenous peoples (such as the Urarina) of Peruvian [[Amazon|Amazonia]]. Other well-known entheogens include: Borrachero (''Brugmansia'' spp); [[San Pedro (cactus)|San Pedro]] (''Trichocereus'' spp); and various [[tryptamine]]-bearing snuffs. The familiar [[tobacco]] plant, when used uncured in large doses in [[shamanic]] contexts, also serves as an entheogen in South America.
 +
 
 +
===Folk classification===
 +
'''Folk classification''' refers to how members of a language community name and categorize [[plant]]s and [[animal]]s. This type of ethnobotanical study relies on an ''emic'' approach: That is, a description of behavior in terms meaningful (consciously or unconsciously) to the actor. 
 +
 
 +
The first individual to study an ''emic'' perspective of the plant world was [[Leopold Glueck]], a German physician working in Sarajevo. His 1896 publication on the traditional medicinal uses of plants by rural people in Bosnia may be considered the first modern ethnobotanical work.
 +
 
 +
===Archaeoethnobotany===
 +
[[Image:Guila Naquitz cave.jpg|right|200px|thumb|Guila Naquitz Cave, site of the oldest known remains of maize.]]
 +
'''Archaeoethnobotany''' (or ''paleoethnobotany'') is the study of the ethnobotany of the ancient past. It is closely linked to ethnobotany, as it is difficult to understand the [[ecology]] of modern environments without considering the environmental history that often involves prehistoric human interventions.
 +
 
 +
The history of the domestication of the cereal grain [[maize]] (commonly known as "corn") is of particular interest to archaeoethnobotanists. The process is thought by some to have started 7,500 to 12,000 years ago. Recent genetic evidence suggests that maize domestication occurred 9000 years ago in central Mexico, perhaps in the highlands between Oaxaca and Jalisco. Archaeological remains of early maize cobs, found at Guila Naquitz Cave in the Oaxaca Valley, date back roughly 6,250 years; the oldest cobs from caves near Tehuacan, Puebla, have been dated to approximately 2750 B.C.E.
 +
 
 +
==References==
 +
* Alexiades, M., and J. Wood Sheldon, Eds. 1996. ''Selected Guidelines for Ethnobotanical Research: A Field Manual''. New York: New York Botanical Garden Press. ISBN 0893274046
 +
* Balick, M. J., and P. A. Cox. 1996. ''Plants, People, and Culture: The Science of Ethnobotany.'' New York: Scientific American Library. ISBN 0716750619
 +
* Cotton, C. M. 1996. ''Ethnobotany: Principles and Applications''. New York: John Wiley & Sons. ISBN 047195537X
 +
* Harrison, K. D. 2006. ''When Languages Die: The Extinction of the World's Languages and the Erosion of Human Knowledge''. New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0195181921
 +
* Martin, G. J. 2004. ''Ethnobotany: A Methods Manual.'' London: Earthscan. ISBN 1844070840
 +
* Minnis, P. E., Ed. 2000. ''Ethnobotany: A Reader.'' Norman, OK: University of Oklahoma Press. ISBN 0806170158
  
 
==External links==
 
==External links==
*[http://www.econbot.org/home.html Society for Economic Botany]
+
All links retrieved March 22, 2024.
*[http://guallart.anthro.uga.edu/ISE/ International Society of Ethnobiology]
+
 
*[http://ethnobiology.org/ Society of Ethnobiology]
+
*[http://www.econbot.org/home.html Society for Economic Botany].  
*[http://www.ethnomedico.com/english/ General Information on Ethnobotany and Ethnomedicine]
+
*[http://ethnobiology.org/ Society of Ethnobiology].  
*[http://www.ethnobiomed.com/ Journal of Ethnobiology and Ethnomedicine]
+
*[http://www.ethnobiomed.com/ Journal of Ethnobiology and Ethnomedicine].
*[http://www.ethnobotanyjournal.org/ Journal of Ethnobotany Research and Applications]
+
*[http://www.ethnobotanyjournal.org/ Journal of Ethnobotany Research and Applications].
* [http://www.sonoma.edu/asc/projects/WarmSprings/index.html/ "Before Warm Springs Dam: History of Lake Sonoma Area"]  This California study has information about one of the first ethnobotanical mitigation projects undertaken in the USA.
+
 
 +
 
 +
{{Biology-footer}}
  
{{credit2|Ethnobotany|95353439|Ethnobiology|99915189}}
+
{{credit|Ethnobotany|95353439|Ethnobiology|99915189|Herbal|108399334|Ethnomedicine|93557079|John_Gerard|112787430|Irish_Potato_Famine|115355194|Monoculture|113489272|Entheogen|114231090|Emic_and_etic|113402634|Maize|115328831}}
 
[[Category:Life sciences]]
 
[[Category:Life sciences]]

Latest revision as of 04:35, 22 March 2024


Ethnobotany is the systematic study of the relationships between plants and people. It is not simply the study of the human "use" of plants; rather, ethnobotany locates plants within their cultural context in particular societies, and situates peoples within their ecological contexts. Ethnobotanists examine:

  • the culturally specific ways that humans perceive and classify different kinds of plants
  • the things humans do to plant species, such as destroying "weeds" or "domesticating" and planting specific kinds of food and medicinal plants
  • the ways in which various members of the plant world influence human cultures.

This inquiry ranges from the geopolitical impact of the European demand for spices (which helped to launch the Age of Exploration) to the role of hallucinogenic snuffs used by Amazonian shamans in religious rituals.

Attributes such as creativity, reason, and curiosity, coupled with a desire to benefit others—attributes common in the scientific community—aids those studying ethnobotany to make important contributions. For example, the study of indigenous food production and local medicinal knowledge offers the promise of practical implications for developing sustainable agriculture and discovering new medicines.

The term “ethnobotany” was coined in 1895, by J.M. Harshberger, an American botanist at the University of Pennsylvania. Modern ethnobotany is an interdisciplinary field drawing together scholars from anthropology, botany, archaeology, geography, medicine, linguistics, economics, landscape architecture, and pharmacology.

Overview

Ethnobotany is considered a branch of ethnobiology, the study of past and present interrelationships between human cultures and the plants, animals, and other organisms in their environment. Like its parent field, ethnobotany makes apparent the connection between human cultural practices and the sub-disciplines of biology.

Ethnobotanical studies range across space and time, from archaeological investigations of the role of plants in ancient civilizations to the bioengineering of new crops. Furthermore, ethnobotany is not limited to nonindustrialized or nonurbanized societies. In fact, co-adaptation of plants and human cultures has changed—and perhaps intensified—in the context of urbanization and globalization in the twentieth and twenty-first centuries. Nonetheless, indigenous, non-Westernized cultures play a crucial role in ethnobotany, as they possess a previously undervalued knowledge of local ecology gained through centuries or even millennia of interaction with their biotic (living) environment.

The significance of ethnobotany is manifold. The study of indigenous food production and local medicinal knowledge may have practical implications for developing sustainable agriculture and discovering new medicines. Ethnobotany also encourages an awareness of the link between biodiversity and cultural diversity, as well as a sophisticated understanding of the mutual influence (both beneficial and destructive) of plants and humans.

The influence of plants on human culture

Why might plants have come to function as the material basis for human culture? The combination of their immobility (terrestrial plants must remain rooted in the soil) and tremendous production of cellulose makes plants a far more efficient and reliable source of building materials and food than animals.

The biochemical diversity of plants, which contributes to their myriad medicinal and dietary uses, might also be traced in part to their immobility. Plants produce chemicals as a way of interacting with other organisms in their environment, either for mutual gain—such as enlisting animals in the transport of pollen or seeds—or as a mechanism of defense, to repel or poison predators or parasites. Modern societies depend on chemical agents in plants for 25 percent of prescription drugs and nearly all recreational chemicals, such as the caffeine in coffee, the nicotine in tobacco, and the theophylline in tea.

Historic roots of ethnobotany

An Arabic edition of Dioscorides’s De Materia Medica (circa 1334) describes the medicinal features of cumin and dill.

Although ethnobotany did not emerge as an academic discipline until the end of the nineteenth century, its roots extend back to Greek, Roman, and Islamic sources. In 77 C.E., the Greek surgeon Dioscorides published De Materia Medica, a catalog of about 600 plants found in the Mediterranean. This illustrated book of herbal (a book that describes the appearance, medicinal properties, and other characteristics of plants used in herbal medicine), which influenced scholars through the Middle Ages, contained information on how and when each plant was gathered, its use by the Greeks, and whether or not it was edible. (Dioscorides even provided recipes.) He also assessed the economic potential of these plants.

However, the systematic study of plants was not confined to the West: The earliest known herbal was compiled by Chinese emperor Shen Nung sometime before 2000 B.C.E., and both the Incas of South America and the Aztecs of Mesoamerica maintained botanical gardens.

The Renaissance in Europe saw a revival of interest in ethnobotany, which was intensified by geographic exploration and later colonialism. In 1542, Renaissance artist Leonhart Fuchs published De Historia Stirpium, a catalogue of 400 plants native to Germany and Austria. John Gerard (1545-1611/12) published the most popular of sixteenth century herbals, the General Historie of Plants, which remained in print for over 400 years. John Ray (1686-1704) provided the first definition of species in his Historia Plantarum.

In 1753, the Swedish botanist Carl Linnaeus wrote Species Plantarum, which included information on approximately 5,900 plants. Linnaeus, known as "the father of taxonomy," is famous for popularizing the binomial method of nomenclature, in which all living organisms are assigned a two-part name (genus, species).

The nineteenth century saw the peak of botanical exploration. Alexander von Humboldt collected data from “the New World,” and the famous Captain Cook brought back information on plants from the South Pacific. At this time, major botanical gardens were founded in Europe, such as the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew (commonly known as Kew Gardens).

The modern discipline of ethnobotany began to emerge in the late nineteenth century in part out of field-work concentrated in the north American West. Researchers referred to their work as "aboriginal botany," which studied the forms of plant-life used by aboriginal peoples. From the 1860s to the 1890s, Edward Palmer collected artifacts and botanical specimens from peoples in the Great Basin region and Mexico. Other scholars who analyzed the uses of plants under an indigenous/local perspective included Matilda Coxe Stevenson, Zuni plants (1915); Frank Cushing, Zuni foods (1920); and the team of Wilfred Robbins, J.P. Harrington, and Barbara Freire-Marreco, Tewa pueblo plants (1916).

Modern ethnobotany

Beginning in the twentieth century, the field of ethnobotany experienced a shift from the raw compilation of data to a greater methodological and conceptual reorientation. Today, the practice of ethnobotany requires a variety of skills:

  • botanical training for the identification and preservation of plant specimens
  • anthropological training to understand the cultural concepts around the perception of plants
  • linguistic training to transcribe local terms and understand native morphology, syntax, and semantics.

Ethnobotanists engage in a broad array of research questions and practices, which do not lend themselves to easy categorization. However, the following headings attempt to describe some of the key areas of modern study.

Ethnomedicine

The drug atropine has its origins in Atropa belladonna (or "deadly nightshade"), pictured here.

Ethnomedicine is a sub-field of medical anthropology that deals with the study of traditional medicines—not only those with relevant written sources (e.g., Traditional Chinese Medicine and Ayurveda), but also those whose knowledge and practices have been orally transmitted over the centuries.

While the focus of ethnomedical studies is often the indigenous perception and use of traditional medicines, another stimulus for this type of research is drug discovery and development. Major pharmaceuticals such as digoxin, morphine, and atropine have been traced to foxglove, opium, and belladonna, respectively. Ethnomedical investigations in this century have led to the development of important drugs such as reserpine (a treatment for hypertension) podophyllotoxin (the base of an important anti-cancer drug), and vinblastine (used in the treatment of certain cancers).

Agriculture

Agriculture may be defined as the culturally influenced selection of plants with specific genetic characteristics that are desired by humans to create domesticated plants, or crops.

Ethnobotany contributes to an understanding of agriculture in two ways:

  1. By revealing ways to create genetically altered plants for human purposes.
  2. By describing and explaining the many different ways the same crop can be raised, whether for economic gain, a desire for sustained yield, or other culturally specific purposes.

One example of the mutual influence of plants and human cultures is illustrated by the Irish potato famine of the mid-nineteenth century. The Irish cultivation of potatoes was an example of monoculture, the practice of planting crops with the same patterns of growth resulting from genetic similarity. Monoculture can lead to large scale crop failure when the single genetic variant (or cultivar) becomes susceptible to a disease. The famine, which resulted in somewhere between 500,000 and one million deaths, was caused by the cultivar's susceptibility to Phytophthora infestans. The famine partially triggered widespread Irish immigration to Great Britain, the United States, Canada, and Australia.

Plants in religion and ritual

An Urarina shaman.

An entheogen, in the strictest sense, is a psychoactive substance (most often some plant matter with hallucinogenic effects) that occasions an enlightening spiritual or mystical experience. Entheogens have played a pivotal role in the spiritual practices of most American cultures for millennia. One of the founders of modern ethnobotany, Richard Evans Schultes of Harvard University, documented the ritual use of peyote cactus among the Kiowa who live in what has became Oklahoma in the [[United States). Used traditionally by many cultures of what is now Mexico, peyote spread to North America in the nineteenth century, replacing the toxic entheogen Sophora secundiflora (mescal bean).

Indigenous peoples of South America employ a wide variety of entheogens. Better-known examples include ayahuasca (Banisteriopsis caapi plus admixtures) among indigenous peoples (such as the Urarina) of Peruvian Amazonia. Other well-known entheogens include: Borrachero (Brugmansia spp); San Pedro (Trichocereus spp); and various tryptamine-bearing snuffs. The familiar tobacco plant, when used uncured in large doses in shamanic contexts, also serves as an entheogen in South America.

Folk classification

Folk classification refers to how members of a language community name and categorize plants and animals. This type of ethnobotanical study relies on an emic approach: That is, a description of behavior in terms meaningful (consciously or unconsciously) to the actor.

The first individual to study an emic perspective of the plant world was Leopold Glueck, a German physician working in Sarajevo. His 1896 publication on the traditional medicinal uses of plants by rural people in Bosnia may be considered the first modern ethnobotanical work.

Archaeoethnobotany

Guila Naquitz Cave, site of the oldest known remains of maize.

Archaeoethnobotany (or paleoethnobotany) is the study of the ethnobotany of the ancient past. It is closely linked to ethnobotany, as it is difficult to understand the ecology of modern environments without considering the environmental history that often involves prehistoric human interventions.

The history of the domestication of the cereal grain maize (commonly known as "corn") is of particular interest to archaeoethnobotanists. The process is thought by some to have started 7,500 to 12,000 years ago. Recent genetic evidence suggests that maize domestication occurred 9000 years ago in central Mexico, perhaps in the highlands between Oaxaca and Jalisco. Archaeological remains of early maize cobs, found at Guila Naquitz Cave in the Oaxaca Valley, date back roughly 6,250 years; the oldest cobs from caves near Tehuacan, Puebla, have been dated to approximately 2750 B.C.E.

References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

  • Alexiades, M., and J. Wood Sheldon, Eds. 1996. Selected Guidelines for Ethnobotanical Research: A Field Manual. New York: New York Botanical Garden Press. ISBN 0893274046
  • Balick, M. J., and P. A. Cox. 1996. Plants, People, and Culture: The Science of Ethnobotany. New York: Scientific American Library. ISBN 0716750619
  • Cotton, C. M. 1996. Ethnobotany: Principles and Applications. New York: John Wiley & Sons. ISBN 047195537X
  • Harrison, K. D. 2006. When Languages Die: The Extinction of the World's Languages and the Erosion of Human Knowledge. New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0195181921
  • Martin, G. J. 2004. Ethnobotany: A Methods Manual. London: Earthscan. ISBN 1844070840
  • Minnis, P. E., Ed. 2000. Ethnobotany: A Reader. Norman, OK: University of Oklahoma Press. ISBN 0806170158

External links

All links retrieved March 22, 2024.


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