Extensive Definition
Ethnobotany (from "ethno" - study of
culture and "botany" -
study of plants) is the scientific
study of the relationships that exist between people and plants.
Ethnobotanists aim to reliably document, describe
and explain complex relationships between cultures and (uses of)
plants: focusing, primarily, on how plants are used, managed and
perceived across human societies (eg. as foods; as medicines; in
divination; in cosmetics; in dyeing; as textiles; in construction;
as tools; as currency; as clothing; in literature; in rituals; and
in social life.)
History of ethnobotany
Though the term "ethnobotany" was not coined until 1895 by the US botanist John William Harshberger, the history of the field begins long before that. In AD 77, the Greek surgeon Dioscorides published "De Materia Medica", which was a catalog of about 600 plants in the Mediterranean. It also included information on how the Greeks used the plants, especially for medicinal purposes. This illustrated herbal contained information on how and when each plant was gathered, whether or not it was poisonous, its actual use, and whether or not it was edible (it even provided recipes). Dioscorides stressed the economic potential of plants. For generations, scholars learned from this herbal, but did not actually venture into the field until after the Middle Ages.In 1542 Leonhart
Fuchs, a Renaissance
artist, led the way back into the field. His "De Historia Stirpium"
cataloged 400 plants native to Germany and Austria.
John Ray
(1686-1704) provided the first definition of "species" in his "Historia
Plantarum": a species is a set of individuals who give rise through
reproduction to new individuals similar to themselves.
In 1753 Carl
Linnaeus wrote "Species Plantarum", which included information
on about 5,900 plants. Linnaeus is famous for inventing the
binomial method of nomenclature, in which all species get a two
part name (genus, species).
The 19th century saw the peak of botanical exploration.
Alexander von Humboldt collected data from the new world, and
the famous Captain Cook
brought back information on plants from the South Pacific. At this
time major botanical gardens were started, for instance the
Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew.
Edward Palmer collected artifacts and botanical
specimens from peoples in the North American West (Great Basin) and
Mexico from the 1860s to the 1890s.
Once enough data existed, the field of "aboriginal
botany" was founded. Aboriginal botany is the study of all
forms of the vegetable world which aboriginal
peoples use for food, medicine, textiles, ornaments, etc.
The first individual to study the emic
perspective of the plant world was a German physician working in
Sarajevo at the end of 19th Century: Leopold Glueck. His published
work on traditional medical uses of plants done by rural people in
Bosnia (1896) has to be considered the first modern ethnobotanical
work.
The term "ethnobotany" was first used by a
botanist named John W. Harshberger in 1895 while he was teaching at
the University of Pennsylvania. Although the term was not used
until 1895, practical interests in ethnobotany go back to the
beginning of civilization when people relied on plants as a way of
survival.
Other scholars analysed uses of plants under an
indigenous/local perspective in the 20th century: e.g. Matilda
Coxe Stevenson, Zuni plants (1915); Frank
Cushing, Zuni foods (1920); Keewaydinoquay
Peschel, Anishinaabe fungii (1998), and the team approach of
Wilfred Robbins, JP Harrington, and Barbara Freire-Marreco, Tewa
pueblo plants (1916).
In the beginning, ethonobotanical specimens and
studies were not very reliable and sometimes not helpful. This is
because the botanists and the anthropologists did not come together
on their work. The botanists focused on identifying species and how
the plants were used instead of including how plants fit into
people's lives. On the other hand, anthropologists were interested
in the cultural role of plants and not the scientific aspect.
Therefore, early ethnobotanical data does not really include both
sides. In the early twentieth century, botanists and
anthropologists finally collaborated and the collection of
reliable, detailed data began.
Modern ethnobotany
Beginning in the 20th century, the field of ethnobotany experienced a shift from the raw compilation of data to a greater methodological and conceptual reorientation. This is also the beginning of academic ethnobotany. The founding father of this discipline is Richard Evans Schultes.Today the field of ethnobotany requires a variety
of skills: botanical training for the identification and
preservation of plant specimens; anthropological training to
understand the cultural concepts around the perception of plants;
linguistic training, at least enough to transcribe local terms and
understand native morphology, syntax, and semantics.
Native healers are often reluctant to accurately
share their knowledge to outsiders. Schultes actually apprenticed
himself to an Amazonian shaman, which involves a long term
commitment and genuine relationship. In Wind in the Blood: Mayan
Healing & Chinese Medicine by Garcia et. al. the visiting
acupuncturists were able to access levels of Mayan medicine that
anthropologists could not because they had something to share in
exchange. Cherokee medicine priest David
Winston describes how his uncle would invent nonsense to
satisfy visiting anthropologists.
Scientific journals covering ethnobotanical research
The Latin American and Caribbean Bulletin of
Medicinal and Aromatic Plants (Abbreviated BLACPMA) or Boletin
latinoamericano y del caribe de plantas medicinales y aromaticas
(ISSN-0717 7917) is a bimonthly scientific publication directed to
diverse professionals and technicians linked to the field of
medicinal and aromatic plants. It accepts papers related with the
Bulletin's areas of interest, which are agronomy, anthropology and ethnobotany, industrial
applications, botany,
quality and normalization, ecology and biodiversity, economy and
markets, pharmacology, phytochemistry, legislation, information and
diffusion of events, courses, prizes, regulations, news, market
questions, reports, bibliography, or any other material type that
is important to publish.
See also the following peer-reviewed
journals:
- Journal of Ethnobiology
- Ethnobotany Research and Applications
- Journal of Ethnobiology and Ethnomedicine
- Journal of Ethnopharmacology
- Economic Botany
References
Literature
- Alexiades, M.: Selected guidelines for ethnobotanical research: A field manual
- Cotton, C.: Ethnobotany
- Martin, G.: Ethnobotany
- Mckenna, T.: True Hallucinations
External links
- Society for Economic Botany
- International Society of Ethnobiology
- Society of Ethnobiology
- Journal of Ethnobiology and Ethnomedicine
- Journal of Ethnobotany Research and Applications
- Latin American and Caribbean Bulletin of Medicinal and Aromatic Plants
- "Before Warm Springs Dam: History of Lake Sonoma Area" This California study has information about one of the first ethnobotanical mitigation projects undertaken in the USA.
ethnobotany in Catalan: Etnobotànica
ethnobotany in Czech: Etnobotanika
ethnobotany in German: Ethnobotanik
ethnobotany in Spanish: Etnobotánica
ethnobotany in French: Ethnobotanique
ethnobotany in Italian: Etnobotanica
ethnobotany in Lithuanian: Etnobotanika
ethnobotany in Dutch: Etnobotanie
ethnobotany in Norwegian: Etnobotanikk
ethnobotany in Polish: Etnobotanika
ethnobotany in Portuguese: Etnobotânica
ethnobotany in Russian:
Этноботаника