2017
DOI: 10.1007/s12231-017-9367-1
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Comparison of Herbarium Label Data and Published Medicinal Use: Herbaria as an Underutilized Source of Ethnobotanical Information

Abstract: The use of herbarium specimens as vouchers to support ethnobotanical surveys is well established. However, herbaria may be underutilized resources for ethnobotanical research that depends on the analysis of large datasets compiled across multiple sites. Here, we compare two medicinal use datasets, one sourced from published papers and the other from online herbaria to determine whether herbarium and published data are comparable and to what extent herbarium specimens add new data and fill gaps in our knowledge… Show more

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Cited by 23 publications
(19 citation statements)
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“…While references contained more use reports than herbarium specimens (30,679 vs. 885), herbarium specimens added 159 species and new localities that were found in references (Fig. 1), illustrating that herbaria are important ethnobotanical repositories (Souza and Hawkins 2017).…”
Section: Spatiotemporal Trendsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…While references contained more use reports than herbarium specimens (30,679 vs. 885), herbarium specimens added 159 species and new localities that were found in references (Fig. 1), illustrating that herbaria are important ethnobotanical repositories (Souza and Hawkins 2017).…”
Section: Spatiotemporal Trendsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Efforts are being made to set methodological guidelines and data standards, increasing the quality ethnobotanical and ethnomedicinal data collection and providing quality criteria for the selection of literature [60,101]. Meanwhile, for some applications where whole ethnopharmacopoeias are considered, it might be appropriate to use large data sets compiled using data from herbarium vouchers to complement the ethnobotanical literature [102].…”
Section: Data Availabilitymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In Brazil, the Leguminosae comprises c. 2,800 species in more than 200 genera ( Flora of Brazil 2020 in Construction, 2016 ). The species diversity, widespread distribution, and many reported uses ( Souza and Hawkins, 2017 ), and the availability of phylogenetic information ( Legume Phylogeny Working Group [LPWG], 2013 ) have prompted us to select the family as a case study. We focus on Brazil since its vast biodiversity is a potential source of new medicines as well as a source of primary health care: it is estimated that 66% of the population has no access to commercial drugs ( Mazzari and Prieto, 2014 ).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%