Use este identificador para citar ou linkar para este item: http://www.alice.cnptia.embrapa.br/alice/handle/doc/856186
Título: Ethnobiology and health among the Kulina People from the Upper Envira River, State of Acre, Brazil.
Autoria: HAVERROTH, M.
NEGREIROS, P. R. M.
BARROS, L. C. P.
Afiliação: MOACIR HAVERROTH, CPAF-AC; União Educacional do Norte (Uninorte); Universidade Estadual Paulista "Julio de Mesquita Filho".
Ano de publicação: 2010
Referência: The Open Complementary Medicine Journal, n. 2, p. 42-57, 2010.
Conteúdo: This article is about an ethnobiological and ethnoecological research among Kulina People from the Upper Envira River, located in the Amazon Region, State of Acre, Brazil. The data was collected during two work trips to 10 villages of three Indian Lands (IL) in 2008 and 2009. The field work was based on participant observation, open, semi-structured and structured interviews and walk-in-the-woods technique. The total population was 423 distributed in 77 dwellings. The gender proportion is 49,7% of women to 50,3% of men. Fifty one per cent are under 15 years old. The most important health problems are respiratory and digestive signs and symptoms, dermatosis and ophidian attacks. Kulina diet is based on cultivated foods, hunt and fishes. There is a variety of fruits collected in the forest. The cultivation system has high biodiversity and is about 1 ha. We recorded 193 medicinal plants species to a large number of purposes. The number of species recorded, indications by Kulina about properties and potential uses to health for these plants indicate an important ethnobotanic knowledge and requires new researches among them. We calculate that a great number of species is yet to register.
Thesagro: Pesquisa
Planta medicinal
NAL Thesaurus: Traditional medicine
Indigenous knowledge
Medicinal plants
Palavras-chave: Índios Kulina
Etnobiologia
Ethnobiology
Conhecimento tradicional
Alto rio Envira
Acre
Amazônia Ocidental
Western Amazon
Amazonia Occidental
Plantas medicinales
Conocimiento tradicional
Medicina tradicional
Notas: Special issue: Medical Ethnobiology.
Tipo do material: Artigo de periódico
Acesso: openAccess
Aparece nas coleções:Artigo em periódico indexado (CPAF-AC)

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