Nikita Patel, Krishna Upadhaya
This paper reports an ethnobotanical study
that focused on the traditional medicinal plants used by local communities to
treat various human diseases. The study focused on documentation of medicinal
plants used to treat various human diseases in the study area. Ethnobotanical
data were collected using surveys, interviews, field walks, and observations
with local peoples. A total of 67 medicinal plants, were collected and
identified. Crushing was a widely used mode of preparation of traditional remedies
where oral administration was the dominant route. Local people in the study
area possess a rich traditional knowledge on medicinal plants used to treat
various human ailments. However, agricultural expansion and lack of interest by
the young generation became a major threat to the medicinal plant diversity and
the retention of the knowledge. It is, therefore, necessary to preserve this
indigenous knowledge on traditional medicines by proper documentation,
identification of plant species used, and the mode of preparation. To save
medicinal plants from becoming rare in the area, cultivation of the medicinal
plants by local communities is suggested.
Indigenous People,
Ethnobotany, Medicinal Plants, Polo forest area
VOL.15, ISSUE No.3, September 2023