Journal of
Medicinal Plants Research

  • Abbreviation: J. Med. Plants Res.
  • Language: English
  • ISSN: 1996-0875
  • DOI: 10.5897/JMPR
  • Start Year: 2007
  • Published Articles: 3835

Full Length Research Paper

Ethnopharmaceutically important medicinal plants and its utilization in traditional system of medicine, observation from the Northern Parts of Pakistan

Hassan Sher1, Mohammed N. Alyemeni1, Leonard Wijaya1 and Abdul J Shah2
1Department of Botany and Microbiology, College of Science, King Saud University, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. 2Department of Pharmacy, COMSATS Abbottabad Campus Pakistan.
Email: [email protected]

  •  Accepted: 11 August 2010
  •  Published: 18 September 2010

Abstract

Wild medicinal plants gathering for the treatment of various human ailments is an ancient tradition that has endured in mountainous areas of Pakistan. In order to understand the pattern and uses of plants, a study on the Ethnopharmaceutically important medicinal plants of Shawar valley, District Swat was conducted during summer 2008. Information’s about these plant resources were collected through semi-structured interviews, field observation and group discussion. In order to documents the preset use of medicinal plants growing in and around the study area an elderly person up to age group 60 was mostly interviewed. The study revealed that 87 plants species of 58 families of having ethnomedicinal importance. There were 50 Dicotyledonous families, 3 Monocotyledons families (Aliaceae, Iridacea and Poaceae), 2 Gymnosperms families (Pinaceae and Taxaceae) 2 Pteridophytes families (Polypodiaceae and Pteridaceae) and family Halvelaceae of fungi. These species were used for the curing of various human ailments in indigenous system of medicines. Some plants are used singly while many others are used in combination with other plants or edible items. Similarly, few plants species are considered for the treatment of only one specific disease while several other have multiple such medicinal uses. These are mostly used for the curing of gastro-intestinal problems, emmenagogue and antispasmodic and also for general body tonic. The detail local uses, local method of recipe preparation and application along with their local name and disease treated were reported for each species. The study also observed that the availability of pharmaceutically and therapeutically important MAP species is declining and the number of rare and threatened species among the MAPs is increasing in the area. Further study is, therefore, required to quantify the availability of species and to suggest suitable method for their production and conservation. Recommendations are, therefore, given in the spheres of training in identification, sustainable collection, value addition, trade monitoring and cooperative system of marketing of medicinal plants.

 

Key words: Medicinal plants, human ailments, traditional system of medicines.