2009
DOI: 10.1186/1746-4269-5-16
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Uses of medicinal plants by Haitian immigrants and their descendants in the Province of Camagüey, Cuba

Abstract: Background: Haitian migrants played an important role shaping Cuban culture and traditional ethnobotanical knowledge. An ethnobotanical investigation was conducted to collect information on medicinal plant use by Haitian immigrants and their descendants in the Province of Camagüey, Cuba.

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Cited by 64 publications
(55 citation statements)
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“…Its fruits have different shapes and sizes that are used as bowls, vessels or bottles for drinking or transporting water, bags for provisions, utensils for cooking, and eating, bailing water from canoes, construction of fish traps, manufacture of body ornaments, and musical instruments (Steward, 1948;Patiño, 1967;Morton, 1968;Price, 1982;Bennett, 1992;Heiser, 1993;Meulenberg, 2011). Medicinal uses are also similar across its distribution (Morton, 1968;Duke, 2009), which include neutralization of snake venom and intestinal parasites treatment (Otero et al, 2000;Volpato et al, 2009;Ramos, 2015;Paulo, 2016).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Its fruits have different shapes and sizes that are used as bowls, vessels or bottles for drinking or transporting water, bags for provisions, utensils for cooking, and eating, bailing water from canoes, construction of fish traps, manufacture of body ornaments, and musical instruments (Steward, 1948;Patiño, 1967;Morton, 1968;Price, 1982;Bennett, 1992;Heiser, 1993;Meulenberg, 2011). Medicinal uses are also similar across its distribution (Morton, 1968;Duke, 2009), which include neutralization of snake venom and intestinal parasites treatment (Otero et al, 2000;Volpato et al, 2009;Ramos, 2015;Paulo, 2016).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Its fruits have different shapes and sizes that are used as bowls, vessels or bottles for drinking or transporting water, bags for provisions, utensils for cooking, and eating, bailing water from canoes, construction of fish traps, manufacture of body ornaments, and musical instruments (Steward, 1948;Patiño, 1967;Morton, 1968;Price, 1982;Bennett, 1992;Heiser, 1993;Meulenberg, 2011). Medicinal uses are also similar across its distribution (Morton, 1968;Duke, 2009), which include neutralization of snake venom and intestinal parasites treatment (Otero et al, 2000;Volpato et al, 2009;Ramos, 2015;Paulo, 2016).While the great phenotypic variability of cultivated treegourd is a distinctive feature among Crescentia species (Gentry, 1980), its wild populations from Mexican savannahs in the Yucatan Peninsula have smaller, elongated fruits with thinner exocarps (Aguirre-Dugua et al, 2012). The indehiscent and thicker exocarp of cultivated treegourd fruits makes the spontaneous dispersal of seeds impossible (Aguirre-Dugua et al, 2012).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In this context, the main forces that guide the changes in the traditional medicinal knowledge, as cited by Volpato (2009) are: (a) the adaptation of the original knowledge to the new (host) environment; and (b) the development of strategies to obtain the original remedies (Pieroni et al, 2005b;Volpato et al, 2007).…”
Section: Brazilian Biodiversity and Cultural Richnessmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Malvaceae is a wooden botanical species that is endemic to Jamaica and Cuba ( Figure 1). 1,2 However, there is little information about the biological properties of this species. 3 Nonclinical studies have provided evidence on some biological activities of quercetin, rutin, and gossypitrin, the major flavonoids of T. elatus flowers.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%