Barcoding and traditional health practitioner perspectives are informative to monitor and conserve frogs and reptiles traded for traditional medicine in urban South Africa.

IF 5.5 1区 生物学 Q1 BIOCHEMISTRY & MOLECULAR BIOLOGY Molecular Ecology Resources Pub Date : 2023-10-16 DOI:10.1111/1755-0998.13873
Fortunate M Phaka, Edward C Netherlands, Maarten Van Steenberge, Erik Verheyen, Gontran Sonet, Jean Hugé, Louis H du Preez, Maarten P M Vanhove
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

Previous literature suggests that Indigenous cultural practices, specifically traditional medicine, are commonplace among urban communities contrary to the general conception that such practices are restricted to rural societies. We reviewed previous literature for records of herptiles (frog and reptile species) sold by traditional health practitioners in urban South Africa, then used visual confirmation surveys, DNA barcoding and folk taxonomy to identify the herptile species that were on sale. Additionally, we interviewed 11 IsiZulu and SePedi speaking traditional health practitioners to document details of the collection and pricing of herptile specimens along with the practitioners' views of current conservation measures for traditional medicine markets. The 34 herptile species recorded in previous literature on traditional medicine markets included endangered and non-native species. Spectrophotometry measurements of the DNA we extracted from the tissue of herptiles used in traditional medicine were an unreliable predictor of whether those extractions would be suitable for further experimental work. From our initial set of 111 tissue samples, 81 sequencing reactions were successful and 55 of those sequences had species-level matches to COI reference sequences on the NCBI GenBank and/or BOLD databases. Molecular identification revealed that traditional health practitioners correctly labelled 77% of the samples that we successfully identified with DNA barcoding in this study. Our mixed methodology approach is useful for conservation planning as it updates knowledge of animal use in Indigenous remedies and can accurately identify species of high conservation priority. Furthermore, this study highlights the possibility of collaborative conservation planning with traditional health practitioners.

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条形码和传统健康从业者的观点有助于监测和保护南非城市中以传统药物交易的青蛙和爬行动物。
先前的文献表明,土著文化习俗,特别是传统医学,在城市社区中很常见,这与这种习俗仅限于农村社会的普遍观念相反。我们查阅了以前的文献,了解南非城市传统卫生从业者出售的鲱鱼(青蛙和爬行动物)的记录,然后使用视觉确认调查、DNA条形码和民间分类学来识别出售的鲱鱼物种。此外,我们采访了11位讲伊西祖鲁语和塞佩迪语的传统健康从业者,记录了赫普提标本的收集和定价细节,以及从业者对当前传统医药市场保护措施的看法。在以前的传统医药市场文献中记录的34种herptile物种包括濒危物种和非本土物种。分光光度法测量我们从传统医学中使用的疱疹病毒组织中提取的DNA,是预测这些提取是否适合进一步实验工作的不可靠指标。从我们最初的111个组织样本中,81个测序反应成功,其中55个序列与NCBI GenBank和/或BOLD数据库中的COI参考序列具有物种水平匹配。分子鉴定显示,在本研究中,传统健康从业者用DNA条形码正确标记了我们成功鉴定的77%的样本。我们的混合方法论方法对保护规划很有用,因为它更新了土著补救措施中动物使用的知识,可以准确地确定高度保护的物种。此外,这项研究强调了与传统卫生从业者合作进行保护规划的可能性。
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来源期刊
Molecular Ecology Resources
Molecular Ecology Resources 生物-进化生物学
CiteScore
15.60
自引率
5.20%
发文量
170
审稿时长
3 months
期刊介绍: Molecular Ecology Resources promotes the creation of comprehensive resources for the scientific community, encompassing computer programs, statistical and molecular advancements, and a diverse array of molecular tools. Serving as a conduit for disseminating these resources, the journal targets a broad audience of researchers in the fields of evolution, ecology, and conservation. Articles in Molecular Ecology Resources are crafted to support investigations tackling significant questions within these disciplines. In addition to original resource articles, Molecular Ecology Resources features Reviews, Opinions, and Comments relevant to the field. The journal also periodically releases Special Issues focusing on resource development within specific areas.
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