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The impacts of forest degradation on medicinal plant use and implications for health care in Eastern Amazonia

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Title The impacts of forest degradation on medicinal plant use and implications for health care in Eastern Amazonia
 
Creator Shanley, P.
Luz, L.
 
Subject medicinal plants
non-timber forest products
losses
health care
deforestation
 
Description Over the last three decades, forest degradation in the Brazilian Amazon has diminished the availability of some widely used medicinal plant species. Results of a 9-year market study suggest that forests represent an important habitat for medicinal plants used in eastern Amazonia: Nine of the twelve top-selling medicinal plants are native species, and eight are forest based. Five of the top-selling species have begun to be harvested for timber, decreasing the availability of their barks and oils for medicinal purposes. Many of these medicinal plants have no botanical substitute, and pharmaceuticals do not yet exist for some of the diseases for which they are used. Market surveys indicate that all socioeconomic classes in Amazonia use medicinal plants because of cultural preferences, low cost, and efficacy. Degradation of Amazonian forests may signify not only the loss of potential pharmaceutical drugs for the developed world but also the erosion of the sole health care option for many of Brazil’s rural and urban poor.
 
Date 2003
2012-06-04T09:08:42Z
2012-06-04T09:08:42Z
 
Type Journal Article
 
Identifier Shanley, P., Luz, L. 2003. The impacts of forest degradation on medicinal plant use and implications for health care in Eastern Amazonia . BioScience 53 (6) :573-584.
https://hdl.handle.net/10568/18690
https://www.cifor.org/knowledge/publication/1216
 
Language en
 
Format p. 573-584
 
Source BioScience