subject predicate object context
37031 Creator ce5b733bb54d91c76a73d8adcb28edd9
37031 Creator ext-6798f05cd1f2d85c07bd40c97f51147a
37031 Creator ext-d8f09eaa6fb9e123ace74e868d433c5a
37031 Creator ext-f1c471d1a67721df4bbd93bc918e29ac
37031 Date 2003-03-25
37031 Is Part Of repository
37031 Is Part Of p00113891
37031 abstract Sacred groves are ‘traditionally managed’ forest patches that functionally link social life and forest management system of a region. It is believed that one of the prime utilities of sacred groves is the protection and occasional supply of medicinal plants. We assessed the regeneration among sacred groves of the central Western Ghats, India, and compared it with the ‘state-managed reserve forests’. Overall, nearly 60% of the regenerating species were medicinally important. The density of regenerating medicinal plants among sacred groves was almost twice as that of reserve forests. There were a higher number of seedlings (Class-II), saplings (Class-III) and poles (Class-IV) of medicinally important plants in sacred groves than among reserve forests. Further, we found that nearly 40% of medicinally important species were unique to sacred groves; in contrast, only 11% was unique to reserve forests. However, nearly equal proportions (29 vs 27%) of ‘non-medicinal plants’ were unique to sacred groves and to reserve forests. These results suggest that informal management systems such as sacred groves have not only conserved useful species, but people have tended to ‘discover’ medicinal values more often among plants unique to sacred groves, than those found in other landscapes. Perhaps, this typifies one preliminary step in medicinal-plant domestication.
37031 authorList authors
37031 issue 6
37031 status peerReviewed
37031 uri http://data.open.ac.uk/oro/document/142363
37031 uri http://data.open.ac.uk/oro/document/142364
37031 uri http://data.open.ac.uk/oro/document/142365
37031 uri http://data.open.ac.uk/oro/document/142366
37031 uri http://data.open.ac.uk/oro/document/142367
37031 uri http://data.open.ac.uk/oro/document/142368
37031 uri http://data.open.ac.uk/oro/document/169315
37031 volume 84
37031 type AcademicArticle
37031 type Article
37031 label Boraiah, K. T.; Vasudeva, R.; Bhagwat, Shonil A. and Kushalappa, C. G. (2003). Do informally managed sacred groves have higher richness and regeneration of medicinal plants than state-managed reserve forests? Current Science, 84(6) pp. 804–808.
37031 label Boraiah, K. T.; Vasudeva, R.; Bhagwat, Shonil A. and Kushalappa, C. G. (2003). Do informally managed sacred groves have higher richness and regeneration of medicinal plants than state-managed reserve forests? Current Science, 84(6) pp. 804–808.
37031 Title Do informally managed sacred groves have higher richness and regeneration of medicinal plants than state-managed reserve forests?
37031 in dataset oro