Natural Remedies and Nutraceuticals Used in Ethnoveterinary Practices in Inland Southern Italy

Traditional animal health practices are today only rarely used in Europe, as many natural remedies applied for the treatment of animals have been replaced by modern pharmaceuticals. Modern institutionalized veterinary services tend to cover every aspect of animal health care, and influence most of the veterinary practices carried out by shepherds and farmers. However, in some areas, particularly of the Mediterranean, such traditional practices persist. Few ethnoveterinary studies have been conducted in the Mediterranean. In this survey, we analysed the natural remedies that are still in use or were used until very recently to treat animals in central Lucania (inland southern Italy). Plants constitute the mainstay of the folk-veterinary regimen (about 40 preparations), but there are also a few animal- and mineral-derived preparations. Among them, the veterinary use of Cistus incanus, Colutea arborescens, Daphne laureola, and Erigeron acer is reported for the first time. Moreover, the study identified diverse traditional plant nutraceuticals used to improve animal health, as well as the quality of milk and dairy products. An important potential output of this study may be the development of eco-sustainable integrated projects focused on the maintenance of traditional animal breeding and healthcare systems. Pharmacological and toxicological considerations relating to possible applications of the recorded traditional knowledge in modern evidence-based veterinary medicine are also discussed.

[1]  F. Amico,et al.  Medicinal plants and phytotherapy in Mussomeli area (Caltanissetta, Sicily, Italy) , 1997 .

[2]  N. Etkin,et al.  Food as medicine and medicine as food. An adaptive framework for the interpretation of plant utilization among the Hausa of Northern Nigeria. , 1982, Social science & medicine.

[3]  K. Glander The impact of plant secondary compounds on primate feeding behavior , 1982 .

[4]  T. Johns The Origins of Human Diet and Medicine: Chemical Ecology , 1996 .

[5]  M. Nicoletti,et al.  Isolation and partial synthesis of 7,8-dehydro-6β,10-dihydroxy-11-noriridomyrmecin, a methylcyclopentanoid monoterpene from Scrophularia canina , 1991 .

[6]  F. Lafont,et al.  Essential Oils in Calamintha sylvatica Bromf. ssp. ascendens (Jordan) P.W. Ball: Wild and Cultivated Productions and Antifungal Activity , 2002 .

[7]  A. Sukura,et al.  Plants as De-Worming Agents of Livestock in the Nordic Countries: Historical Perspective, Popular Beliefs and Prospects for the Future , 2001, Acta veterinaria Scandinavica.

[8]  C. Quave,et al.  Ethnopharmacy of the ethnic Albanians (Arbëreshë) of northern Basilicata, Italy. , 2002, Fitoterapia.

[9]  M. Vabi,et al.  Ethnoveterinary Medicine in the Northern Provinces of Cameroon , 2004, Veterinary Research Communications.

[10]  A. E. Sollod,et al.  Ethnoveterinary medicine in Afghanistan: an overview of indigenous animal health care among Pashtun Koochi nomads , 1995 .

[11]  M. Huffman Animal origins of herbal medicine , 2002 .

[12]  V. De Feo,et al.  Medicinal plants and phytotherapy in the Amalfitan Coast, Salerno Province, Campania, southern Italy. , 1993, Journal of ethnopharmacology.

[13]  K. Akut,et al.  Ethnoveterinary medical practice for ruminants in the subhumid zone of northern Nigeria. , 2002, Preventive veterinary medicine.

[14]  S. Torres,et al.  A randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial to investigate the efficacy and safety of a Chinese herbal product (P07P) for the treatment of canine atopic dermatitis. , 2001, Veterinary dermatology.

[15]  A. Menghini,et al.  Traditional phytotherapy in the Peninsula Sorrentina, Campania, southern Italy. , 1992, Journal of ethnopharmacology.

[16]  Kumudini M. Meepagala,et al.  Molluscicidal and antifungal activity of Erigeron speciosus steam distillate. , 2002, Pest Management Science.

[17]  C. Lans,et al.  Observations on ethnoveterinary medicines in Trinidad and Tobago. , 1998, Preventive veterinary medicine.

[18]  R. Wrangham,et al.  Condensed Tannins in Fruits Eaten by Chimpanzees , 1983 .

[19]  E. F. Guèye Ethnoveterinary medicine against poultry diseases in African villages , 1999 .

[20]  Y. Guan,et al.  Erigeron breviscapus prevents defective endothelium-dependent relaxation in diabetic rat aorta. , 1999, Life sciences.

[21]  E. Mathias,et al.  Ethnoveterinary Medicine: An annotated bibliography of community animal healthcare , 2001 .

[22]  C. Lans,et al.  Medicinal plants used for dogs in Trinidad and Tobago. , 2000, Preventive veterinary medicine.

[23]  C. Lans,et al.  Bmc Complementary and Alternative Medicine Medicinal and Ethnoveterinary Remedies of Hunters in Trinidad , 2001 .

[24]  M. Huffman,et al.  Seasonal trends in intestinal nematode infection and medicinal plant use among chimpanzees in the Mahale Mountains, Tanzania , 1997, Primates.

[25]  P. Sharma,et al.  Ethnobotanical studies in northwest and Trans-Himalaya. V. Ethno-veterinary medicinal plants used in Jammu and Kashmir, India. , 1989, Journal of Ethnopharmacology.

[26]  C. Lans,et al.  Ethnoveterinary medicines used for ruminants in Trinidad and Tobago. , 1998, Preventive veterinary medicine.

[27]  G. Scarpa Plants employed in traditional veterinary medicine by thecriollos of the northwestern Argentine Chaco , 2000 .

[28]  A. Afolayan,et al.  Antimicrobial activity of some plants used for the treatment of livestock disease in the Eastern Cape, South Africa. , 2002, Journal of ethnopharmacology.

[29]  G. Hardy,et al.  Nutraceuticals and functional foods: introduction and meaning. , 2000, Nutrition.

[30]  P. Garber,et al.  Seed Swallowing in Tamarins: Evidence of a Curative Function or Enhanced Foraging Efficiency? , 1997, International Journal of Primatology.

[31]  J. Bauer Evaluation of nutraceuticals, dietary supplements, and functional food ingredients for companion animals. , 2001, Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association.

[32]  A. Pieroni,et al.  Ritual botanicals against the evil-eye in Tuscany, Italy , 2002 .

[33]  M. L. Leporatti,et al.  Usi nuovi, rari o interessanti di piante officinali di alcune zone della Calabria , 1989 .

[34]  J. Agbedahunsi,et al.  Ethno-veterinary medicine: screening of Nigerian medicinal plants for trypanocidal properties. , 2001, Journal of ethnopharmacology.

[35]  I. Kostova Fraxinus ornus L. , 2001, Fitoterapia.

[36]  S. Brag,et al.  Treatment of ruminal indigestion according to popular belief in Sweden. , 1994, Revue scientifique et technique.

[37]  N. Etkin,et al.  Should we set a place for diet in ethnopharmacology? , 1991, Journal of ethnopharmacology.

[38]  G. Birrenkott,et al.  Topical application of garlic reduces northern fowl mite infestation in laying hens. , 2000, Poultry science.

[39]  G. Stojanović,et al.  Composition of the Essential Oil of Calamintha vardarensis (Greuter et Burdet) Silic , 2002 .

[40]  L. Viegi,et al.  PRIMA INDAGINE SULLE PIANTE UTILIZZATE IN MEDICINA VETERINARIA POPOLARE IN ALCUNE LOCALITÀ DELL'ALTA VAL DI CECINA , 1999 .

[41]  Evelyn Mathias-Mundy Ethnoveterinary medicine : an annotated bibliography , 1989 .

[42]  G. Flamini,et al.  Antimicrobial activity of the essential oil of Calamintha nepeta and its constituent pulegone against bacteria and fungi , 1999, Phytotherapy research : PTR.

[43]  J. O. Ole-Miaron The Maasai ethnodiagnostic skill of livestock diseases: a lead to traditional bioprospecting. , 2003, Journal of ethnopharmacology.

[44]  P. Tomei,et al.  Curing animals with plants: traditional usage in Tuscany (Italy). , 2001, Journal of ethnopharmacology.

[45]  M. Minja Medicinal plants used in the promotion of animal health in Tanzania. , 1994, Revue scientifique et technique.

[46]  G. Flamini,et al.  In vitro and in vivo efficacy of extracts of Artemisia verlotorum against Psoroptes cuniculi , 2001, Veterinary Record.