939 resultados para traditional knowledge
Estudos químicos e biológicos de espécies do gênero Lippia (Verbenaceae) nativas no Cerrado paulista
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Coordenação de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superior (CAPES)
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Brazil is a country with the largest world´s vegetal genetic diversity and the Environmental Protection Area (APA) of the “Serra da Mantiqueira” is a very heterogeneous region, representing one of the richest sources of pharmacologically actives materials. The population uses medicinal plants and according to the OMS, 80% of the population uses them in primary treatment of several diseases. Nevertheless, the loss of traditional knowledge associated with medicinal plants is occurring quickly. The ethnopharmacological strategy uses traditional knowledge to the search for medicinal plants that can have bioactive substances against diseases that afflicting the population and thus protect traditional knowledge. The “cipó-prata” (Trigonia nívea Cambess.) is a native plant normally found in the “Bacia do Paraná” region and present in the flora in the neighborhood of “Marins”, Piquete-SP and usually, said for the treatment of renal and urinary diseases. So, the objective of this study was test if the “cipóprata” (Trigonia nívea Cambess.) has effects on the renal excretion of water and salt, in anesthetized Wister rats. The tests were made in males Wistar rats and randomly distributed into 4 experimental groups: Group I – aqueous control, Group II – treated with aqueous extract (EA) of “cipó-prata”, Group III – water control + “tween 80”, Group IV – treated with ethanol extract (EE) and “cipó-prata”. All groups were subjected to experimental protocol, composed of three periods: Balance (40 minutes), Basal (30 minutes) and Experimental (90 minutes), occurring the urine collection every 30 minutes, from the basal period and measuring blood pressure every 10 minutes. The aqueous extract (EA) of “cipó-prata” (Trigonia nívea Cambess.) presented diuretic effect of 173% (B-2,4±1,19 μL/min reaching 6,6±1,45 μL/min, in the period EX3) and ...(Complete abstract click electronic access below)
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Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Científico e Tecnológico (CNPq)
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Pós-graduação em Ciências Sociais - FFC
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Cerrado is the second biggest biome of Brazil. The broadest floristic diversity includes many species with medicinal properties. First, in this study was highlighted some important aspects that known Cerrado at Brazilian environmental sitting and main problems of impacts at the biome by the inside of our country. Second, a bibliographic search was presented to point uses and importance of plants at treatments, setting some examples of Cerrado’s species that has medicinal properties. Then, a reflection about the relation of use, popular knowledge and the local communities participation at the construction of conservationist and sustainable thoughts. Finally, a real example of conservation based on traditional knowledge in a riverain population.
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Pós-graduação em Agronomia (Horticultura) - FCA
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In this article we present the plants used for the treatment of malaria and associated symptoms in Santa Isabel do Rio Negro in the Brazilian Amazon. The region has important biological and cultural diversities including more than twenty indigenous ethnic groups and a strong history in traditional medicine. The aims of this study are to survey information in the Baniwa, Baré, Desana, Piratapuia, Tariana, Tukano, Tuyuca, Yanomami ethnic communities and among caboclos (mixed-ethnicity) on: a) plant species used for the treatment of malaria and associated symptoms; b) dosage forms and c) distribution of these anti-malarial plants in the Amazon. Information was obtained through classical ethnobotanical and ethnopharmacological methods from interviews with 146 informants in Santa Isabel municipality on the upper Negro River, Brazil. Fifty-five mainly native neotropical plant species from 34 families were in use. The detailed uses of these plants were documented. The result was 187 records (64.4%) of plants for the specific treatment of malaria, 51 records (17.5%) of plants used in the treatment of liver problems and 28 records (9.6%) of plants used in the control of fevers associated with malaria. Other uses described were blood fortification ('dar sangue'), headache and prophylaxis. Most of the therapeutic preparations were decoctions and infusions based on stem bark, root bark and leaves. These were administered by mouth. In some cases, remedies were prepared with up to three different plant species. Also, plants were used together with other ingredients such as insects, mammals, gunpowder and milk. This is the first study on the anti-malarial plants from this region of the Amazon. Aspidosperma spp. and Ampelozizyphus amazonicus Ducke were the most cited species in the communities surveyed. These species have experimental proof supporting their anti-malarial efficacy. The dosage of the therapeutic preparations depends on the kind of plant, quantity of plant material available, the patient's age (children and adults) and the local expert. The treatment time varies from a single dose to up to several weeks. Most anti-malarial plants are domesticated or grow spontaneously. They are grown in home gardens, open areas near the communities, clearings and secondary forests, and wild species grow in areas of seasonally flooded wetlands and terra firme (solid ground) forest, in some cases in locations that are hard to access. Traditional knowledge of plants was found to be falling into disuse presumably as a consequence of the local official health services that treat malaria in the communities using commercial drugs. Despite this, some species are used in the prevention of this disease and also in the recovery after using conventional anti-malarial drugs.
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Traditional knowledge is now a source for research in the search for new biologically active compounds and how effective therapy that addresses the current health care. Health policies using these sources have been encouraged by international and national organizations like the World Health Organization and the Brazilian Ministry of Health. Aromatherapy and essential oils are one of these strands rising trade and as an object of study. This monograph aims to present general aspects about essential oils and their use in natural therapies such as aromatherapy.
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The Amazon region has a large sociobiodiversity, where lives people with traditional knowledge about the uses of its natural resources. The Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD) in 1992 recognized the autonomy of each nation over its genetic resources and the rights of traditional populations about the knowledge of the use of these natural resources. In 2001 it was published the law M.P. 2.186-16/2001 which created the Conselho Nacional de Gestão do Patrimônio Genético (CGEN) and the first rules about access to genetic resources and associated traditional knowledge in Brazil. Since his creation, the actions of CGEN have received criticism from various sectors, both private and public, and, unlike its initial proposal, has become one of the main obstacles of ethnobotanical studies, the bureaucracy, the long process analysis and communication difficulties with this organ.
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Coordenação de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superior (CAPES)
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Coordenação de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superior (CAPES)
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Os valores culturais podem ter um impacto construtivo nas práticas científicas e levar a variações culturais legítimas nas abordagens sobre as mesmas. Segue-se que o conhecimento tradicional ou indígena não precisa opor-se ao conhecimento científico, e somente a investigação caso-a-caso pode estabelecer se as credenciais cognitivas de itens particulares do conhecimento tradicional são adequadas ou deficientes. Com base em uma análise de como as estratégias metodológicas podem tanto competir quanto complementar umas às outras, eu argumento que o que há de defensável na noção de incomensurabilidade de Thomas Kuhn e a possibilidade da solidez do status científico do conhecimento tradicional compartilham da mesma fonte.
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Terrestrische Vegetation, vor allem tropischer Regenwald, emittiert grosse Mengen flüchtiger organischer Verbindungen (VOCs) in die rnAtmosphäre, die durch Oxidationsreaktionen und Deposition der Reaktionsprodukte wieder entfernt werden. Die Oxidation wird vor allem durch Hydroxyl-Radikale (OH) initiiert, die hauptsächlich durch Photodissoziation von Ozon gebildet werden. Zuvor ging man davon aus, dass biogene VOCs OH in unverschmutzter Luft abbauen und dadurch die atmosphärische Oxidationskapazität verringern. Umgekehrt, führt rndie Oxidation von VOCs in verschmutzter Luft durch die katalytische Wirkung von Stickstoffoxiden (NOx = NO + NO2) zu schädlicher Oxidationsmittelbildung. Flugzeugmessungen atmosphärischer Spurengase, die über dem unberührten Amazonas-Regenwald durchgeführt worden sind, haben jedoch unerwartet hohe OH-Konzentrationen aufgezeigt. Das VOC mit der höchsten Emission in dieser Region war Isopren, dessen Oxidation als stärkeste OH-Senke berechnet wurde. In dieser Arbeit wurde die Hypothese genauestens untersucht, dass die natürliche Isopren-Oxidation in niedrig-NOx Luft OH effizient erneuert. Es wurde ein sehr detaillierter Oxidationsmechanismus für Isopren entwickelt, in dem neueste experimentelle und theoretische Fortschritte umgesetzt worden sind. Die Haupt-OH-Rückgewinnungswege wurden angewendet wodurch gezeigt wurde, dass sie wesentlich zur Oxidation unter niedrig-NOx Bedingungen beitragen. Verstärkte OH-Konzentrationen blieben unter verminderten Lichtverhältnissen, wie sie unter dichten Vegetationsdächern typisch sind, dauerhaft erhalten. Im Vergleich zu Flugzeugmessungen, der neue Oxidationsmechanismus reproduziert die OH-Konzentrationen innerhalb des Unsicherheitsbereiches. Darüber hinaus zeigten Simulationen eine erhebliche Produktion eines Isopren-Dihydroxyepoxids, das ein potenziell wichtiger Vorläufer organischer Aerosole in der Atmosphäre sein könnte. Es wurde einen neuen vereinfachten Oxidationsmechanismus auf Basis des traditionellen Wissenstands entwickelt und seine Anwendung für globale atmosphärische Studien getestet. Die Eingliederung der neuen Oxidationswege in diesen Mechanismus ermöglicht es folgende Auswirkungen der verstärkten VOC-Oxidation zu studieren die Zusammensetzung der Atmosphäre, den Austausch zwischen Erdoberfläche und Atmosphäre, Aerosole und Klima.
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Recent demographic changes have made settlement patterns in the Canadian Arctic increasingly urban. Iqaluit, capital of Canada’s newest territory, Nunavut, is home to the largest concentration of Inuit and non-Inuit populations in the Canadian North. Despite these trends, Inuit cultural identity continues to rest heavily on the perception that to learn how to be authentically Inuit (or to be a better person), a person needs to spend time out on the land (and sea) hunting, fishing, trapping, and camping. Many Inuit also maintain a rather negative view of urban spaces in the Arctic, identifying them as places where Inuit values and practices have been eclipsed by Qallunaat (‘‘white people’’) ones. Some Inuit have even gone so far as to claim that a person is no longer able to be Inuit while living in towns like Iqaluit. This article examines those aspects of Canadian Inuit identity, culture, and tradition that disfavor the acceptance of an urban cultural identity. Based on ethnographic research conducted on Baffin Island in the mid 1990s and early 2000s, the many ways Iqaluit and outpost camp Inuit express the differences and similarities between living on the land and living in town are described. Then follows an examination of how the contrast of land and town is used in the rhetoric of Inuit politicians and leaders. Finally, a series of counterexamples are presented that favor the creation of an authentic urban Inuit identity in the Arctic, including recent attempts on the part of the Nunavut Territorial Government to make education and wage employment in the region more reliant on Inuit Qaujimajatuqangit, or Inuit traditional knowledge.1
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While the WTO agreements do not regulate the use of biotechnology per se, their rules can have a profound impact on the use of the technology for both commercial and non-commercial purposes. This book seeks to identify the challenges to international trade regulation that arise from biotechnology. The contributions examine whether existing international obligations of WTO Members are appropriate to deal with the issues arising for the use of biotechnology and whether there is a need for new international legal instruments, including a potential WTO Agreement on Biotechnology. They combine various perspectives on and topics relating to genetic engineering and trade, including human rights and gender; intellectual property rights; traditional knowledge and access and benefit sharing; food security, trade and agricultural production and food safety; and medical research, cloning and international trade.