Nutritional and Functional Properties of Wild Food-Medicine Plants From the Coastal Region of South China

Food-medicine plants play an important role in providing nutrition and treating chronic diseases, especially in many minority communities and developing regions. The coastal region of South China has abundant resources of medicinal plants. A long history of cross-cultural medicinal practices among d...

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Main Authors: Yuan Xu PhD, Dan Liang MSc, Gang-Tao Wang MSc, Jun Wen PhD, Rui-Jiang Wang PhD
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2020-04-01
Series:Journal of Evidence-Based Integrative Medicine
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/2515690X20913267
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spelling doaj-eb69efed54504019b0c778c3f508aaec2020-11-25T03:36:02ZengSAGE PublishingJournal of Evidence-Based Integrative Medicine2515-690X2020-04-012510.1177/2515690X20913267Nutritional and Functional Properties of Wild Food-Medicine Plants From the Coastal Region of South ChinaYuan Xu PhD0Dan Liang MSc1Gang-Tao Wang MSc2Jun Wen PhD3Rui-Jiang Wang PhD4 South China Botanical Garden, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Guangzhou, China South China Botanical Garden, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Guangzhou, China University of Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing, China National Museum of Natural History, Smithsonian Institution, Washington, DC, USA South China Botanical Garden, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Guangzhou, ChinaFood-medicine plants play an important role in providing nutrition and treating chronic diseases, especially in many minority communities and developing regions. The coastal region of South China has abundant resources of medicinal plants. A long history of cross-cultural medicinal practices among different minority groups has facilitated the development of a remarkable dietary culture by using food-medicine plants. However, integrative ethnobotanical research on both nutritional and functional properties of the food-medicine plants in this region is still limited. In this study, 27 commonly used wild food-medicine plants were recorded and analyzed from the coastal region of South China. Most of them are good sources for calcium (47.83-1099.89 mg/100 g fresh weight), dietary fiber (3.00-31.87 mg/100 g fresh weight), iron (1.17-24.73 mg/100 g fresh weight), and vitamin C (0.44-68.32 mg/100 g fresh weight). Solanum americanum has the highest average nutritive value and is also considered to be good sources for proteins (7.90 g/100 g fresh weight). Medicinal properties of the studied species can be classified into 8 categories: treatment of the damp-heat syndrome, digestive diseases, urologic diseases, arthropathy, respiratory diseases, gynecological diseases, snake or insect bites, and uses as a tonic. Treating the damp-heat syndrome or expelling warm pathogenic factors is the most commonly used ethnomedicinal practice in the study area. The present study highlights that the local ethnomedicinal practices are deeply influenced by local natural conditions and customs. Food-medicine plants with superior key nutrients have been used regularly in the diet as medicinal food to alleviate common endemic diseases.https://doi.org/10.1177/2515690X20913267
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Yuan Xu PhD
Dan Liang MSc
Gang-Tao Wang MSc
Jun Wen PhD
Rui-Jiang Wang PhD
spellingShingle Yuan Xu PhD
Dan Liang MSc
Gang-Tao Wang MSc
Jun Wen PhD
Rui-Jiang Wang PhD
Nutritional and Functional Properties of Wild Food-Medicine Plants From the Coastal Region of South China
Journal of Evidence-Based Integrative Medicine
author_facet Yuan Xu PhD
Dan Liang MSc
Gang-Tao Wang MSc
Jun Wen PhD
Rui-Jiang Wang PhD
author_sort Yuan Xu PhD
title Nutritional and Functional Properties of Wild Food-Medicine Plants From the Coastal Region of South China
title_short Nutritional and Functional Properties of Wild Food-Medicine Plants From the Coastal Region of South China
title_full Nutritional and Functional Properties of Wild Food-Medicine Plants From the Coastal Region of South China
title_fullStr Nutritional and Functional Properties of Wild Food-Medicine Plants From the Coastal Region of South China
title_full_unstemmed Nutritional and Functional Properties of Wild Food-Medicine Plants From the Coastal Region of South China
title_sort nutritional and functional properties of wild food-medicine plants from the coastal region of south china
publisher SAGE Publishing
series Journal of Evidence-Based Integrative Medicine
issn 2515-690X
publishDate 2020-04-01
description Food-medicine plants play an important role in providing nutrition and treating chronic diseases, especially in many minority communities and developing regions. The coastal region of South China has abundant resources of medicinal plants. A long history of cross-cultural medicinal practices among different minority groups has facilitated the development of a remarkable dietary culture by using food-medicine plants. However, integrative ethnobotanical research on both nutritional and functional properties of the food-medicine plants in this region is still limited. In this study, 27 commonly used wild food-medicine plants were recorded and analyzed from the coastal region of South China. Most of them are good sources for calcium (47.83-1099.89 mg/100 g fresh weight), dietary fiber (3.00-31.87 mg/100 g fresh weight), iron (1.17-24.73 mg/100 g fresh weight), and vitamin C (0.44-68.32 mg/100 g fresh weight). Solanum americanum has the highest average nutritive value and is also considered to be good sources for proteins (7.90 g/100 g fresh weight). Medicinal properties of the studied species can be classified into 8 categories: treatment of the damp-heat syndrome, digestive diseases, urologic diseases, arthropathy, respiratory diseases, gynecological diseases, snake or insect bites, and uses as a tonic. Treating the damp-heat syndrome or expelling warm pathogenic factors is the most commonly used ethnomedicinal practice in the study area. The present study highlights that the local ethnomedicinal practices are deeply influenced by local natural conditions and customs. Food-medicine plants with superior key nutrients have been used regularly in the diet as medicinal food to alleviate common endemic diseases.
url https://doi.org/10.1177/2515690X20913267
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