Ethnobotanical uses of wild flora and fungi on the circum-Sicilian island of Pantelleria, Italy Cassandra L. Quave, Ph.D. Emory University Department of Dermatology Center for the Study of Human Health E-mail: [email protected]Website: http://etnobotanica.us/ Twitter: @QuaveEthnobot Alessandro Saitta, Ph.D. Università di Palermo Department of Agricultural and Forest Sciences
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Ethnobotanical uses of wild flora and fungi on the circum-Sicilian island of Pantelleria, Italy - 2015
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Ethnobotanical uses of wild flora and fungi on the
circum-Sicilian island of Pantelleria, Italy
Cassandra L. Quave, Ph.D. Emory University Department of Dermatology Center for the Study of Human Health E-mail: [email protected] Website: http://etnobotanica.us/ Twitter: @QuaveEthnobot
Lactic-acid fermentation of the flower buds in salt to make capers!
Methods • PIC of community governance
and individuals • 42 informants
▫ age ranged from 28-90, with a median age of 64 and gender distribution of 59.5% male and 40.5% female
• Free-listing and semi-structured interviews complemented with a booklet composed of photos of 28 fungi and 93 plants
• Data analysis based on informant consensus factor, free-listing percent measure, fidelity levels, and use-value citation index
Results • Galt and Galt (1978) documented 107 specific uses of
local botanical taxa • Of these, 45 were not quoted by any informants in
our 2014 survey, representing a loss of 42% of the uses documented 45 years ago
• An additional 235 specific uses of local flora and fungi were recorded in the present work, which were not included in the original study.
• A total of 95 plant taxa and 17 fungal taxa, representing 44 and 9 plant and fungal families, respectively, were cited by the study participants.
• Data on 2,124 use citations were collected, representing a total of 297 distinct sets of communal knowledge regarding specific taxa
Informant Consensus Factor
𝐹𝑖𝑐 =𝑁𝑢𝑐 −𝑁𝑡𝑁𝑢𝑐 − 1
• Nuc : total number of use citations in each category
• Nt : number of taxa used in that category
• High Fic values (near 1.0) are obtained when one or a few species are reported to be used by a large proportion of informants for a particular category, whereas lower Fic values indicate that informants disagree over which taxa to use
Informant consensus on use of plants & fungi
Category of Local Use Number of
Taxa
Number of Use
Reports
Informant’s Consensus
Factor (Fic)
Food 52 795 0.936
Household 41 497 0.919
Maritime 9 55 0.852
Nuisance 22 160 0.868
Ethnoveterinary 29 275 0.898
Dermatological 17 88 0.816
Gastrointestinal 12 137 0.919
General health 8 29 0.750
Musculoskeletal & Neurological 7 23 0.727
Oral health 1 2 1.000
Otolaryngological & Respiratory 5 7 0.333
Urological 7 56 0.891
Total 210 2124
Basket weaving for Agricultural & Fishing Tools
Daphne gnidium L., Thymelaeaceae
Opuntia ficus-indica (L.) Mill. , Cactaceae “ficcund’india” ;“prickly pear”; “indian fig” Food, medicine and hunting tool!
Malva arborea (L.) Webb & Berthel.
Conclusions
• TEK concerning wild foods, household uses and ethnoveterinary applications is widespread
• Wild plants and fungi still collected and eaten
• Knowledge, but not practice, of historic maritime applications (e.g. fish poisons, boat construction, fiber dyes)
• Loss of detail in plants used in spiritual healing (e.g. use of Ruta chalapensis)
Acknowledgments
• Funding support provided Emory University Center for the Study of Human Health.
• We would like to extend our heartfelt thanks to the Commune of Pantelleria and all Pantescan communities and people who agreed to participate in this study.
• We also thank Marco Caputo for assistance with field collection of voucher specimens.