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Traditional wild vegetables gathered by four religious groups in Kurram District, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, North-West Pakistan
by
Abbas, Wasim
, Hussain, Wajid
, Hussain, Wahid
, Hussain, Kamal
, Pieroni, Andrea
, Badshah, Lal
in
Agriculture
/ Amaranthus viridis
/ Biomedical and Life Sciences
/ Cultural heritage
/ Cultural resources
/ Ecological effects
/ Economic conditions
/ Ethnobotany
/ evolution
/ Flowers & plants
/ Food
/ Food plants
/ Food security
/ Foraging behavior
/ indigenous knowledge
/ kinship
/ Life Sciences
/ Malva neglecta
/ Medicinal plants
/ Pakistan
/ Plant Genetics and Genomics
/ Plant Physiology
/ Plant resources
/ Plant Sciences
/ Plant Systematics/Taxonomy/Biogeography
/ Portulaca oleracea
/ Religion
/ Religious groups
/ Research Article
/ Rumex dentatus
/ Socioeconomics
/ Vegetables
/ West Asia
/ Wild plants
2020
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Traditional wild vegetables gathered by four religious groups in Kurram District, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, North-West Pakistan
by
Abbas, Wasim
, Hussain, Wajid
, Hussain, Wahid
, Hussain, Kamal
, Pieroni, Andrea
, Badshah, Lal
in
Agriculture
/ Amaranthus viridis
/ Biomedical and Life Sciences
/ Cultural heritage
/ Cultural resources
/ Ecological effects
/ Economic conditions
/ Ethnobotany
/ evolution
/ Flowers & plants
/ Food
/ Food plants
/ Food security
/ Foraging behavior
/ indigenous knowledge
/ kinship
/ Life Sciences
/ Malva neglecta
/ Medicinal plants
/ Pakistan
/ Plant Genetics and Genomics
/ Plant Physiology
/ Plant resources
/ Plant Sciences
/ Plant Systematics/Taxonomy/Biogeography
/ Portulaca oleracea
/ Religion
/ Religious groups
/ Research Article
/ Rumex dentatus
/ Socioeconomics
/ Vegetables
/ West Asia
/ Wild plants
2020
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Traditional wild vegetables gathered by four religious groups in Kurram District, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, North-West Pakistan
by
Abbas, Wasim
, Hussain, Wajid
, Hussain, Wahid
, Hussain, Kamal
, Pieroni, Andrea
, Badshah, Lal
in
Agriculture
/ Amaranthus viridis
/ Biomedical and Life Sciences
/ Cultural heritage
/ Cultural resources
/ Ecological effects
/ Economic conditions
/ Ethnobotany
/ evolution
/ Flowers & plants
/ Food
/ Food plants
/ Food security
/ Foraging behavior
/ indigenous knowledge
/ kinship
/ Life Sciences
/ Malva neglecta
/ Medicinal plants
/ Pakistan
/ Plant Genetics and Genomics
/ Plant Physiology
/ Plant resources
/ Plant Sciences
/ Plant Systematics/Taxonomy/Biogeography
/ Portulaca oleracea
/ Religion
/ Religious groups
/ Research Article
/ Rumex dentatus
/ Socioeconomics
/ Vegetables
/ West Asia
/ Wild plants
2020
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Traditional wild vegetables gathered by four religious groups in Kurram District, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, North-West Pakistan
Journal Article
Traditional wild vegetables gathered by four religious groups in Kurram District, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, North-West Pakistan
2020
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Overview
Studying how traditional knowledge regarding wild food plants and particularly wild vegetables changes over time and space is crucial for understanding which socio-ecological variables may have an influence on traditional foraging behaviors. Recent work has found that religious affiliation may play a central role since, in specific cultural contexts, religion shapes kinship relations and consequently the vertical transmission of traditional knowledge and practices. In order to further test this hypothesis, a field ethnobotanical study specifically focusing on wild vegetables was conducted among four religious communities (Shias, Sunnis, Christians, and Sikhs) in Kurram District, North-West Pakistan. Results show that a remarkable bio-cultural heritage comprising fifty-five folk wild food taxa survives today; most of the wild plants were however quoted by few informants, suggesting that this traditional knowledge system is possibly under threat. More than the half of the quoted wild vegetables were not yet reported so far in the Pakistan wild food ethnobotanical literature. The most commonly gathered wild vegetables were
Amaranthus viridis
L.
, Margarospermum officinale
L.
, Malva neglecta
Wallr.,
Portulaca oleracea
L., and
Rumex dentatus
L. Most of the recorded wild vegetables were quoted by Shia and, to less extent, by Sunni community members, while Christians and Sikhs showed an extremely restricted wild plant food repertoire. These differences may be related to the different history and socio-economic conditions of the considered religious groups, to geographical/ecological factors and probably to the very specific origin of the Shia groups (Turi tribe) of the region, which moved from Western Asia a few centuries ago. Moreover, a remarkable portion of the quoted wild vegetables are perceived to have specific medicinal properties. A serious reconsideration of the recorded wild food plant resources, especially also within educational platforms, could be crucial for fostering culturally-appropriate food security strategies in marginal areas of Pakistan.
Publisher
Springer Netherlands,Springer Nature B.V
Subject
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