Wild food plants (WFPs) are designated as functional foods owing to their nutritional potential and as a source of bioactive compounds vital for human health. In times of geopolitical upheaval and nutritional imbalance in mountainous areas of the world, the contribution of WFPs is extraordinary. Lotkuh is a remote mountainous region in the Eastern Hindukush that supports distinctive global plant biodiversity. The documentation and nutritional analysis of the wild edible plants have not yet been subjected to scientific investigation, even though WFPs make up a significant component of the inhabitant's diet. The current study is the first scientific investigation of the nutritional profile of 16 WFPs in the Hindukush region of Pakistan. Plants were collected from different parts of the study area and were subjected to proximate analysis adhering to the standard protocols of AOAC international. Proximate analysis revealed higher moisture in (91.5 g/100 g FW) and (90.5 g/100 g FW), while had the lowest (25.4 g/100 g FW). and had (23.2 g/100 g) and (14.0 g/100 g) protein, whereas contained (3.6 g/100 g). had the highest lipid (56.50 g/100 g), followed by (45.50 g/100 g), and (0.91 g/100 g). with high carbohydrate (87.50 g/100 g) was followed by (80.83 g/100 g), whereas had the least (18.51 g/100 g). High crude fiber (19.33 g/100 g) was found in followed by with (15.50 g/100 g). and had low fiber of 1.387 and 1.377 g/100 g. Vitamin C was high in (90.63 mg/100 g), (86.96 mg/100 g), and (90.45 mg/100 g). Ca concentration was (948.33 mg/100 g) in followed by whereas the lowest Ca (20.03 mg/100 g) was recorded in . Mg was high in (994.00 mg/100 g) and lowest (10.01 mg/100 g) in . (54.30 mg/100 g), (34.33 mg/100 g), and (26.04 mg/100 g) had the maximum iron. Mn was high in (14.33 mg/100 g), (6.33 mg/100 g), and (4.60 mg/100 g). (12.16 mg/100 g), (10.30 mg/100 g), and (4.16 mg/100 g) were the leading in Zn concentration whereas (0.22 mg/100 g). The current study establishes the hitherto unidentified nutritional profile of the WFPs in the area. The prospect of nutritional research on WFPs in the Eastern Hindukush is established by this study.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.heliyon.2023.e14449 | DOI Listing |
J Ethnobiol Ethnomed
May 2024
Phytoecology Lab, Department of Botany, University of Peshawar, Peshawar, 25120, Pakistan.
Background: In northwestern Pakistan, Lotkuh is a high-altitude terrain nestled within the eastern Hindu Kush region. Enclaved by towering peaks and harboring a unique culture, the region mirrors the geographical and cultural diversity of Pakistan. In this geographically isolated region, a treasure trove of ethnobotanical knowledge unfolds through generations of interaction between the inhabitants and indigenous plants, resulting in a profound understanding of the plant uses in nutritional, medicinal, cultural, and ritual contexts.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEnviron Monit Assess
June 2023
Department of Botany, Ecology Laboratory, Sikkim University, 6th Mile Gangtok-737102, Sikkim, India.
Forests serve as a sink and source of carbon and play a substantial role in regional and global carbon cycling. The Himalayan forests act as climate regulators of the Hindukush region, which is experiencing climate change at a high pace, and a proper understanding of these systems is necessary to mitigate this problem. We hypothesize that the variance of abiotic factors and vegetation will influence the carbon sink and source function of the different forest types of the Himalayas.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Ethnobiol Ethnomed
March 2023
University of Gastronomic Sciences, Piazza Vittorio Emanuele II 9, 12042, Pollenzo, Bra, Italy.
Background: The Patrak Valley is home to communities, which have been inextricably linked with nature for generations, and local plant knowledge (LPK) represents an important part of their local cultural diversity. In general, globalization has come at the expense of local plant knowledge among several mountain societies, and therefore the current investigation has been undertaken to record the (possibly) last remaining wild food plant/mushroom foraging practices among Pathans, Kohistanis, and Gujjars living in the highlands of the Hindukush, North Pakistan.
Methods: Data on the uses of wild food plants and mushrooms (WFPs) were collected through 120 semi-structured interviews.
Heliyon
March 2023
Plant Ecology Lab, Department of Botany, University of Peshawar, 25000, Pakistan.
Wild food plants (WFPs) are designated as functional foods owing to their nutritional potential and as a source of bioactive compounds vital for human health. In times of geopolitical upheaval and nutritional imbalance in mountainous areas of the world, the contribution of WFPs is extraordinary. Lotkuh is a remote mountainous region in the Eastern Hindukush that supports distinctive global plant biodiversity.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Sci Food Agric
January 2018
International Centre for Integrated Mountain Development (ICIMOD), Kathmandu, Nepal.
The status of food and nutrition security and its underlying factors in the Hindu-Kush Himalayan (HKH) region is investigated. In this region, one third to a half of children (<5 years of age) suffer from stunting, with the incidence of wasting and under-weight also being very high. The prevalence of stunting, wasting and under-weight in children is particularly high in some mountain areas such as Meghalaya state in India, the western mountains and far-western hills of Nepal, Balochistan province in Pakistan, eastern Afghanistan, and Chin state in Myanmar.
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