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Urban Ethnobotany and Thesis Outline

Nat Bletter

Graduate Student, New York Botanical Garden
Ph.D., Lehman College, City University of New York
New York
"Quantitative Cross-Cultural Medical Ethnobotany of Peru and Mali"
Expertise: Ethnobotany

nbletter@nybg.org


Profile

Ethnobotany has proven to be a valuable method to find new herbal medicines and plant-derived drugs, but given limited resources, thousands of plants to consider, and many cultures to investigate, where can we focus our attention? With only about 0.5% of the known 250,000 species of angiosperms examined for medicinally active compounds, 25% of all pharmacy-prescribed western drugs being derived from plants, and a more than $25 billion yearly worldwide market in plant-based medicines, this is obviously a fruitful area to explore. Techniques are needed to narrow in on the plants with the highest medical potential, however. Building on previous work in quantitative ethnobotany, a new way to determine plants with high medical potential that are worthy of further investigation is being explored. High-potential candidates are picked by finding related plants from unrelated cultures that are used to treat the same or related diseases. The relations between cultures, plants, and diseases are derived from phylogenetic trees where feasible. This is a method of corroborating that the plants have biologically active compounds in them, and it avoids problems in previous similar techniques where plants are grouped by family. This technique is then used to analyze and compare herbal remedies for diabetes, eczema, asthma, malaria, and uterine fibroids collected from herbalists from different traditions (Ayurvedic, Chinese, European, Dominican, and Cuban) around New York City, as well as Itza and Q’eqchí Mayan groups in Guatemala, the Asháninka of Peru, and the Malinké of Mali.

Selected Publications

Bletter, N., Reynertson, K., and Velasquez Runk, J., 2007, “Artificae Plantae: The taxonomy, ecology, and ethnobotany of the Simulacraceae”, invited paper to Ethnobotany Research and Applications, 5: 159-177.

Bletter, N., 2007, "The Biodiversity of Your Refrigerator- An Exercise in Food Origins." Ethnobotany Research and Applications 5:233-239.

Bletter, N., 2007, "A quantitative synthesis of the medicinal ethnobotany of the Malinké of Mali and the Asháninka of Peru, with a new theoretical framework." Journal of Ethnobiology and Ethnomedicine.

Bletter, N., Janovec, J, Brosi B, and Daly, D. C. 2004. “A digital base map for studying the Neotropical flora”, Taxon, 53(2): 469-477.

Bletter, N. and D. Daly. 2006. "Cacao and its relatives in South America: An overview of taxonomy, ecology, biogeography, chemistry, and ethnobotany" in Cameron L. McNeil ed. Chocolate in Mesoamerica: A Cultural History of Cacao, University Press of Florida.

Bletter, N. 2006. "Talking Books: A New Method of Returning Ethnobiological Research Documentation to the Non-literate." Economic Botany, 60(1).



                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                   
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