Indigenous knowledge of wild plants collected in Darfur, Sudan
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Date
2020
Authors
Hegazy, Ahmad K.
Hosni, Hasnaa A.
Lovett- Doust, Lesley
Kabiel, Hanan F.
Badawy, El-Shafie M.
Mwavu, Edward N.
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Ethnobotany Research and Applications
Abstract
The lives of the “Fur”, indigenous
people of Darfur, Sudan are intimately connected to
local wild plants, but the traditional uses of these
plants are, so far, poorly documented. Many species
are indigenous to the region, but others are
introduced, and have naturalized over millennia.
Methods: For a month each summer from 2014-
2016, using questionnaire interviews, direct
observation of practices, and a literature review, 58
species were identified. An “importance value” for
each was determined, based on the intensity and
season(s) of use, in eight use categories. For each
species, a “concordance ratio” characterized the
degree of agreement between indigenous
knowledge and our current “scientific understanding”
of their value.
Results: All species were multi-use; animal forage,
“other functional uses”, traditional medicine, and
construction predominated. Some species are
declining due to overharvesting by the growing local
population, exacerbated by conflict and refugee
encampments. Most of the species are used in
traditional medicines, but active ingredients have
been scientifically confirmed for only half of them.
Surprisingly, several species with known medicinal
ingredients are not used locally.
Conclusions: The “Fur” people have long combined
agriculture with pastoralism and wildcrafting. For this
to be sustainable, it is critical to understand cultural
contexts and recognize multi-use species. This can
help identify new medicines, and guide sustainable
development of local resources, adapted to local
conditions. Naturalized wild fruit trees may have
evolved drought resistance in this increasingly dry
savanna climate; such genes might usefully be
incorporated in crop strains elsewhere as climate
change proceeds.
Description
Keywords
Ethnobotany, Multipurpose-Use Plants, Importance Value, Indigenous Knowledge Index, Scientific Knowledge Index
Citation
Hegazy, A. K., Hosni, H. A., Lovett-Doust, L., Kabiel, H. F., Badawi, E. S., & Mwavu, E. N. (2020). Indigenous knowledge of wild plants collected in Darfur, Sudan. Ethnobotany Research and Applications, 19, 1-19. http://dx.doi.org/10.32859/era.19.47.1-19