Ethnobotanical Study of Edible Wild Plants in Libya

This study was designed to document the use and conservation of edible wild plants in Libya. Data were collecte through semi-structured interviews and focus group discussions. A total of 145 edible wild plant species were identified; of these, herbs represented the majority with 119 species. Regardi...

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Main Author: Mohammed Mahklouf
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Sciendo 2019-12-01
Series:European Journal of Ecology
Subjects:
raw
Online Access:https://journals.ku.edu/EuroJEcol/article/view/13363
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spelling doaj-02ee7da98c634b8ba3ef2db1c49709da2021-02-10T21:46:47ZengSciendoEuropean Journal of Ecology1339-84742019-12-015210.2478/eje-2019-0011Ethnobotanical Study of Edible Wild Plants in LibyaMohammed MahkloufThis study was designed to document the use and conservation of edible wild plants in Libya. Data were collecte through semi-structured interviews and focus group discussions. A total of 145 edible wild plant species were identified; of these, herbs represented the majority with 119 species. Regarding the parts used, the most consumed parts were leaves (in 64 species), followed by young shoots (in 39 species), fruits (in 35 species), seeds (in 16 species), flowers and roots (in 14 species each), and 8 species were consumed as a whole plant. Studies on the mode of consumption revealed a total of 12 ways of consumption, of which the majority were consumed raw (90 species), followed by consumption after cooking (56 species) and as a salad (41 species).https://journals.ku.edu/EuroJEcol/article/view/13363ethnobotanyedibleruralrawcookedflora
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Mohammed Mahklouf
spellingShingle Mohammed Mahklouf
Ethnobotanical Study of Edible Wild Plants in Libya
European Journal of Ecology
ethnobotany
edible
rural
raw
cooked
flora
author_facet Mohammed Mahklouf
author_sort Mohammed Mahklouf
title Ethnobotanical Study of Edible Wild Plants in Libya
title_short Ethnobotanical Study of Edible Wild Plants in Libya
title_full Ethnobotanical Study of Edible Wild Plants in Libya
title_fullStr Ethnobotanical Study of Edible Wild Plants in Libya
title_full_unstemmed Ethnobotanical Study of Edible Wild Plants in Libya
title_sort ethnobotanical study of edible wild plants in libya
publisher Sciendo
series European Journal of Ecology
issn 1339-8474
publishDate 2019-12-01
description This study was designed to document the use and conservation of edible wild plants in Libya. Data were collecte through semi-structured interviews and focus group discussions. A total of 145 edible wild plant species were identified; of these, herbs represented the majority with 119 species. Regarding the parts used, the most consumed parts were leaves (in 64 species), followed by young shoots (in 39 species), fruits (in 35 species), seeds (in 16 species), flowers and roots (in 14 species each), and 8 species were consumed as a whole plant. Studies on the mode of consumption revealed a total of 12 ways of consumption, of which the majority were consumed raw (90 species), followed by consumption after cooking (56 species) and as a salad (41 species).
topic ethnobotany
edible
rural
raw
cooked
flora
url https://journals.ku.edu/EuroJEcol/article/view/13363
work_keys_str_mv AT mohammedmahklouf ethnobotanicalstudyofediblewildplantsinlibya
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