SNAKES USED IN ETHNOMEDICINE IN NORTHEAST BRAZIL |
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Authors: | RÔMULO ROMEU DA NÓBREGA ALVES GENTIL ALVES PEREIRA FILHO YURI CLÁUDIO CORDEIRO DE LIMA |
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Affiliation: | 1.Departamento de Sistemática e Ecologia, CCEN, Programa de Pós-Gradua??o em Ciências Biológicas (Zoologia),Universidade Federal da Paraíba,Jo?o Pessoa,Brasil;2.Departamento de Biologia,Universidade Estadual da Paraíba,Campina,Brasil;3.Departamento de Sistemática e Ecologia,CCEN,Jo?o Pessoa,Brasil |
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Abstract: | This paper documents zootherapeutic practices in Northeast Brazil. It is primarily based on field surveys carried out in fishing villages located in the States of Maranhão and Paraíba, where dwellers provided information on snake species used as medicine, body parts used to prepare the remedies, and the illnesses to which the remedies were prescribed. The species used as medicinal drug and their respective families were: Crotalus durissus (rattlesnake), Bothrops leucurus (‘lance head’, a venomous snake), and Lachesis muta (bushmaster) of the family Crotalidae; and Boa constrictor (boa constrictor), Epicrates cenchria (‘salamanta’), and Eunectes murinus (anaconda) of the family (Boidae). These zootherapeutical resources were used for the cure of 14 illnesses. The most commonly cited species were Crotalus durissus (n=26) e Boa constrictor (n=6), Apparently, the medicinal use of snakes does not pose a threat for their population in the studied sites. |
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Keywords: | ethnoecology folk medicine traditional medical drugs zootherapy |
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