Ethnobotanists
are racing against time to document and understand traditional knowledge
systems before they vanish.
A
Sense of Urgency and a Need for Action
As a global
community we are now in the midst of a crisis in loss of biological
and cultural diversity. Both medicinal plant knowledge systems and the
rich biological resources on which they depend are being erased at an
unprecedented and unacceptable rate. In many societies and communities
undergoing accelerated westernization, fewer young people are interested
in devoting themselves to the extensive training required to learn about
traditional healing plants. Fortunately, as this decline has accelerated,
there has been a resurgent interest in ethnobotany, the study of the
cultural knowledge of plants, including plants used for medicines. Ethnobotanists
are racing against time to document and understand traditional knowledge
systems before they vanish (Balick and Cox
1996).
In the interest
of human health, it is prudent to reduce further loss of biological
and cultural diversity. Indigenous peoples living side by side with
wildland biodiversity hold the key to survival for that diversity and
the knowledge of its use. The perceived monetary value of rainforest
resources threatens these places and the people, plants, and animals
that inhabit them. It is vital that we realize the potential economic
value of saving habitats and indigenous cultures, which far outweighs
the land's value for farming, ranching, timber, or mining.
The current
worldwide pattern of biological and cultural destruction is being called
the "sixth great extinction," in reference to the previous
five great biodiversity crashes in the earth's history. The last great
crash, which doomed the dinosaurs to extinction 65 million years ago,
followed the same pattern as those that preceded it -- at each great
extinction, it is the most highly evolved (i.e. biologically specialized)
and seemingly dominant species that go extinct. If we do not reverse
the current extinction trends, we may very well be consigning our species
to following the same path taken by the dinosaurs. As apocalyptic as
this may sound, history has repeatedly shown that humans are not above
the natural order and cannot expect to be spared the dinosaurs' fate
if we are so foolhardy as to press the planet to its very limits.
Further
Reading
If you are interested
in doing further reading on the topic of biodiversity's contribution
to modern medicinal products, treatment options, and research tools,
ethnobiologist Mark Plotkin's book Medicine Quest: In Search of
Nature's Healing Secrets (published in 2000 by Viking Penguin)
is highly recommended. With perhaps 90 percent of all species still
unidentified -- and only a fraction of the known species on this planet
have been surveyed for potentially bioactive compounds suitable for
medicinal use -- the pharmacology of nature is a vast treasure house
waiting to be tapped. "The value of nature as a source of novel
compounds with therapeutic applications increases (rather than diminishes)
as technology advances" because today's screening process for drugs
is so efficient. An enjoyable and lively book with numerous detailed
examples of the many medicinal compounds derived from natural sources
currently being investigated.

References
on this page:
Balick,
Michael J. and P.A. Cox. 1996. Plants, People, and Culture: The Science
of Ethnobotany. New York: Scientific American Library.