POTENTIAL USE OF VASCULAR ENDEMIC PLANTS AS A SOURCE OF NEW MEDICINES
Abstract
The biodiversity of W Balkan includes 7,000 vascular plants. In ethnobotany of this region people use approximately 960 plant species in traditional human and veterinarian phytotherapy and nutrition [1,2]. Except of more common plants therea are a lot of endemic and relic vascular plant species as a potentials for the production of new medicines through edvanced biotehnology and genetical engeneering [3]. Wester Balkan area are so rich in endemic species. In our investigation more than 579 plant species have been found on the Dinaric Mts. only [4]. Main aims of this presentation is to found of richnees of of medicinal wild flora and to deteriminate their phylogenetic-biochemical relationship with common medicinal plants as well as d, to evaluate biodiversity of the potential medicinal flora and its possibility in terms of new chemical compound's discoveries and modes of use in contemporary phytotherapy and biotechnology. In order to achieve all planned aims, it has been applied adequate methodology: intensive field research on different vertical profiles, including ethnobotanical interviews, followed at the end by comparative taxonomic-biochemical method. Among plants that could be potentially significant in terms of the pharmacology and pharmacy it was detected 450 endemic species of Dinaric Mts. and other parts of W Balkan. The most significant new resources are contained within endemic genera: Pinus (Pinaceae), Drypis, Dianthus, Minuartia, Saponaria, Silene (Caryophyllaceae), Ranunculus, Anemone, Pulsatilla, Aquilegia, Helleborus (Ranunculaceae), Berteroa, Aubretia, Malkolmia, Alyssum, Cardamine (Brassicaceae), Potentilla, Sibireja, Geum, Dryas (Rosaceae), Astragalus, Genista, Oxytropis, Anthyllis (Fabaceae) Athamanta, Eryngium, Pancicia, Peucedanum, Seseli, Bunium (Apiaceae), Acinos, Micromeria, Salvia, Satureja, Stachys, Teucrium, Thymus, Scutellaria (Labiatae), Euphrasia, Pedicularis, Scrophularia (Scrophulariaceae), Veronica, Plantago (Plantaginaceae), Achillea, Amphoricarpos, Centaurea, Crepis, Leucathemum, Senecio, Doronicum (Asteraceae), Lilium, Chouardia, Allium (Liliaceae) and others. Those plants are potentiall sources of new metabolites, such as alcaloids, heterozides, saponins, essential oils, tannins, carbohydrates, proteins as well as other secondary and primary metabolites. References: 1.Redzic, S.(2006)Proc.1st IFOAM Intern. Conf. Organic Wild Production, 117-141. 2. Redzic, SJ. (2006)Ecol.Food & Nutr. 45, 3,189-232. 3.Redzic, S.(2008) Planta Medica 74(9):1143-1144. 4. Redzic, S. (2007) Planta Medica 73(9): 1013-1013.Published
How to Cite
Issue
Section
License
Copyright: Creative Commons Attribution CC.
This license lets others distribute, remix, tweak, and build upon your work, even commercially, as long as they credit you for the original creation. This is the most accommodating of licenses offered. Recommended for maximum dissemination and use of licensed materials. View License Deed | View Legal Code Authors can also self-archive their manuscripts immediately and enable public access from their institution's repository. This is the version that has been accepted for publication and which typically includes author-incorporated changes suggested during submission, peer review and in editor-author communications.