Ethnobotany: A Methods Manual

Front Cover
Routledge, Sep 23, 2010 - Nature - 296 pages

Ethnobotany, the study of the classification, use and management of plants by people, draws on a range of disciplines, including natural and social sciences, to show how conservation of plants and of local knowledge about them can be achieved. Ethnobotany is critical to the growing importance of developing new crops and products such as drugs from traditional plants.

This book is the basic introduction to the field, showing how botany, anthropology, ecology, economics and linguistics are all employed in the techniques and methods involved. It explains data collection and hypothesis testing and provides practical ideas on fieldwork ethics and the application of results to conservation and community development. Case studies illustrate the explanations, demonstrating the importance of collaboration in achieving results.

Published with WWF, UNESCO and Royal Botanic Gardens Kew.

 

Contents

1 Data collection and hypothesis testing
1
2 Botany
27
3 Ethnopharmacology and related fields
67
4 Anthropology
95
5 Ecology
137
6 Economics
171
7 Linguistics
201
8 Ethnobotany conservation and community development
223
References
253
Further reading
261
Index
263
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About the author (2010)

Gary Martin is Director of the Global Diversity Foundation and a Research Fellow and Lecturer in the Anthropology Department at the University of Kent at Canterbury.

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