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Advisor(s)
Abstract(s)
Plants continue to constitute key elements of medical practice in West African countries. The
Cabo Verde archipelago hosts a great diversity of medicinal plants and local markets are
considered important sites for trading plants harvested by rural communities. This study has two
main goals: (i) to assess the medicinal uses of native species in Santiago, the biggest island of the
archipelago, and (ii) to evaluate the antioxidant, antimicrobial and antidiabetic/antihyperglycemic activities of two native trees (Tamarix senegalensis and Sideroxylon marginatum)
used in traditional medicine and traded in local markets. Our results revealed that on Santiago
Island, 24 native plants are used in traditional medicine. The main uses of these species (e.g.,
forage, timber, food and fibres), their medicinal applications, the plant parts used, their mode of
administration and conservation status are presented here for the first time. Moreover, the
pharmacological characterization of two native tree species revealed that hydroethanolic extracts
were richer in phenolic compounds and more active than their aqueous counterparts. All the
studied extracts revealed significant antioxidant properties (DPPH and FRAP assays) and were
generally moderately active against Gram-positive bacteria. All the extracts inhibited the activities of the carbohydrate digestive enzymes α-glucosidase and α-amylase in a dose-dependent
manner. For α-glucosidase, the detected inhibitory activity (IC50 values from 2.0 ± 0.2 μg/mL
Description
Keywords
Ethnobotany Local markets Native flora Natural compounds Sideroxylon marginatum Tamarix senegalensi West Africa
Pedagogical Context
Citation
Publisher
Cell Press