“…(common names: "jarilla", "jarilla de la montaña", "crespa", "pispa", "pispita", "jarilla fina"), Zuccagnia punctata Cav. (common names: "jarilla pispito", "pus pus", "lata", "jarilla macho") and Tetraglochin andina Ciald (common names: "horizonte", "canguia", "rancha-rancha", "kailla", "añahuaya") are medicinal plants that grown in arid and semiarid regions of Argentina, and are used to treat mycosis, gastrointestinal, respiratory, and inflammatory diseases according to ethnobotanical data in several local communities in Argentina (Carabajal et al, 2020;Moreno et al, 2018a). Jarillas aerial parts are collected, dried and commercialized in northern Argentina, mainly in the Calchaquies valleys (Fig.…”