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Teaching about medicinal plants at school: Following in the footprints of Frei Veloso

Brandão MGL;
Fonseca RS;
Souza JP;
Santos AC;
Mencarelli FA;
Scopel M

Maria das Graças Lins Brandão

Rômulo dos Santos Fonseca

Juliana de Paula Souza

Aparecida Celia dos Santos

Fernando Antônio Mencarelli

Marina Scopel


Resumo

Brazil is home to the richest, most important and diverse flora in the world. This fact reveals the great plant potential of the country in the development of medicines, cosmetics, nutraceuticals and other innovative products (NEWMAN & CRAGG, 2012). In addition to the vast biodiversity, Brazil also has a rich socio-diversity, built over the centuries by the miscegenation of Amerindian, African and European cultures (VALLI & BOLZANI, 2019). However, despite its recognized potential, native vegetation in Brazil is undergoing an intense process of destruction, caused by a sequence of highly impactful economic cycles, which began with the exploitation of pau-brasil, in the 16th century (DEAN, 1996). Currently, only 7% of the Atlantic Forest is preserved, while other ecosystems such as the Amazon, the cerrados and the caatinga are being rapidly replaced by monocultures of eucalyptus, sugar cane, soy and cattle raising. The consequences of these processes on useful and medicinal native plants are dramatic: a study carried out by the Center Specialized in Aromatic, Medicinal and Toxic Plants Ceplamt/UFMG (supported by FAPEMIG) between 2004-2005, with the population of the mining area of Estrada Real, in Minas Gerais, showed that, even among the elderly inhabitants of rural areas, knowledge about the medicinal applications of native plants was forgotten (BRANDÃO & MONTEMOR, 2008). As a consequence, most of the plants used today as medicines are exotic species, that is, native to other continents, but which have been introduced here since the beginning of Portuguese colonization (FERRÃO, 2004).

 

DOI:https://doi.org/ 10.56238/devopinterscie-156


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Este trabalho está licenciado sob uma licença Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.

Copyright (c) 2023 Maria das Graças Lins Brandão, Rômulo dos Santos Fonseca, Juliana de Paula Souza, Aparecida Celia dos Santos, Fernando Antônio Mencarelli, Marina Scopel

##plugins.themes.gdThemes.article.Authors##

  • Maria das Graças Lins Brandão
  • Rômulo dos Santos Fonseca
  • Juliana de Paula Souza
  • Aparecida Celia dos Santos
  • Fernando Antônio Mencarelli
  • Marina Scopel