Nutraceutical Uses of Traditional Leafy Vegetables and Transmission of Local Knowledge from Parents to Children in Southern Benin
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Abstract
This study assessed dierences on the uses and transmission of traditional knowledge
(TK) about three traditional leafy vegetables (Crassocephalum crepidioides (Juss. ex Jacq.) S. Moor,
Launaea taraxacifolia (Willd.) Amin ex C. Jerey, and Vernonia amygdalina Del.) of the Asteraceae family
over two generations in three villages: Adjohoun, Dangbo, and Pobè (southern Benin). Individual
semi-structured ethnobotanical interviews of 360 respondents were conducted in the villages with
young girls, boys, and their two parents. The relative frequency of citation, use value, and Jaccard
similarity index were used for data analyses. Vernonia amygdalina was the most commonly known and
used vegetable in all villages, while L. taraxacifolia was confined to Pobè. Factors such as village of
survey, generation, and gender aected the use value of the species, but the patterns of recognition and
cultivation were species-specific. Leaves were the most used plant part. Traditional knowledge was
largely acquired from parents (90% of citation), and both mothers and fathers transmitted a similar
amount of knowledge to their progenies. The knowledge on V. amygdalina was transmitted to a larger
scale than knowledge of C. crepidioides and L. taraxacifolia. Irrespective of the species, transmission of
TK was higher in Pobè. Gender and generation knowledge dynamic hypothesis is species-specific.
TK transmission was species-specific too and may be linked to the local importance and use of those
resources. These findings will inform strategies and programs for the sustainable use and conservation
of leafy vegetables in local communities and national research and development institutions.
