Sharing Plant Uses with Animals: Plants Used for Feeding and Curing Humans and Animals in the Spanish Inventory of Traditional Knowledge Related to Biodiversity
Trabajo presentado en la 57th Annual Meeting of the Society for Economic Botany (Cultural resilience and resource extraction: preserving plants & people of degraded ecosystems), celebrada en Pine Mountain (USA) del 5 al 9 de junio de 2016.Spain has a very rich and dynamic traditional ecological knowledge system that has suffered severe
erosion over the last decades. This knowledge has been deeply influenced by a rich and diverse historical
heritage that includes many centuries old documents from ancient cultures, some over 2000 years old.
Spanish acute useful flora comprises around 3,000 species, most of them autochthonous. A team of more
than 70 scientists from more than 30 universities and other research centres are developing the Spanish
Inventory of Traditional Knowledge. The inventory includes a database with information from over180
papers. The review of such papers showed that more than 2,300 plant species are used in human and
animal food and medicine: 1,681 in human medicine, 1,295 in animal food, 953 in human food and 709 in
veterinary medicine. Nearly 14% of the species (313) are shared in the four categories and a very
important amount of species are used both for humans and animals: 35% of the species (800) are
employed in animal food and medicine, 31% (710) in human food and medicine, 28% (650) in human and
veterinary medicine and 27% (624) in animal and human food. This high percentage of overlap between
human and animal uses may indicate that the observation of animal behaviour , specially feeding and selfmedication
behaviours, might have given clues to humans on how to use food and medicinal plants[Lo1]. It also reinforces the idea that food and medicine represent a continuum not only for humans, but also for
animals.Peer reviewe