ABSTRACT

This book offers a broad summary of the wild plants and their usage, as well as the growing interest in ethnopharmacology research. The book comprises of important issues such as diversity of wild plants with emphasis on medicinal and food plants, threats to wild plants and traditional ethnobotanical knowledge, their uses in skin diseases, snake-bites, in cosmeceuticals, etc. Moreover, the ethnopharmacological relevance of wild plants in Latin America has been discussed. The chapters include a wide range of case studies, giving updated evidence on the importance of their wild plant resources from different countries including Peru, Nepal, Bangladesh, India, Pakistan, Brazil. In addition, some specific species are used to explain their potential properties, as well as the dangers of their use without guidance of trained natural healers. The book discusses traditional usage and properties of wild plants and is entirely different from other related publications and useful for the researchers working in the areas of conservation biology, botany, ethnobiology, ethnopharmacology, policymakers, etc.

part |33 pages

General

part |212 pages

Specific Countries

chapter 10|16 pages

The Zigzag Trail of Symbiosis among Chepang, Bat, and Butter Tree

An Analysis on Conservation Threat in Nepal

part |210 pages

Specific Plants and Ailments

chapter 12|34 pages

Choerospondias axillaris (Hog plum)

Multiple Health Benefits

chapter 13|18 pages

Artemisia Species

Medicinal Values with Potential Therapeutic Uses

chapter 15|63 pages

Subfamily Bombacoideae

Traditional Uses, Secondary Metabolites, Biological Activities, and Mechanistic Interpretation of the Anti-Inflammatory Activity of its species

chapter 16|25 pages

Ayahuasca

Inherent Dangers in Its Consumption

chapter 17|18 pages

Exploring the Plant Kingdom for Sources of Skincare Cosmeceuticals

From Indigenous Knowledge to the Nanotechnology Era