For generations, many plants were investigated to find new drugs and combat drug-resistant microbials and the appearance of undesirable side effects of antibiotics. In this way, the search for new antimicrobial agents and the discovery of novel chemical structures from plant extracts has continued. Phytochemical screening of traditional medicinal plants is very important in identifying new sources of new natural products for drugs (Savithramma et al., 2011). Around 80% of the plant products discovered to date are said to be of plant origin and their the annual market for herbal products had sales exceeded the US $65 billion (Savithramma et al., 2011; Sasi et al., 2020). The global herbal medicine market size was estimated to be US$ 83 billion in 2019 and is expected to reach US$ 550 billion by 2030 at a CAGR of 18.9% through 2030 (InsightSLICE, 2021).
On the other hand, practices focused on individual species encourage the sustainability of only the targeted medicinal plants. This, in turn, causes the emergence of drug-resistant microbes’ or the loss of neglected medicinal plants. Consequently, this urges searching for indigenous knowledge and other plants tied/linked with the same information. In another facet, searching for a drug and earning huge money by selling processed and raw resources of medicinal plants are posing constraints to the conservation efforts of threatened medicinal plants. Though the traditional uses of the plants of the area reconfirmed during the preliminary ethnobotanical field study were documented, the quality and quantity of the phytochemicals are yet to be scientifically validated.
Laboratory work targeting conservation was initiated in this study as follow-on from the results of ethnobotanical field study and information analysis undertaken in Dawuro Zone of Southwestern Ethiopia. Of the plants used and reported medicinal, Maerua oblongifolia (Forsk.) A. Rich. (Capparaceae) locally known as “Sangganaa” in Dawuro language, was one of the most widely used medicinal plants. It was among other medicinal plants extensively used in the traditional herbal healing system in Dawuro for the treatment of both human and domestic animals in addition to serving as detergent for washing purposes (Agize et al., 2013; Ekero et al., 2018).
Maerua oblongifolia (Forsk.) A. Rich (Capparaceae) is a woody shrub/tree plant. Its traditional use of root part was known in the study area for generations (Agize et al., 2013). This part was pounded; chewed; administered as dry bath, and taken either with other plants or alone in the form of drink; smoke (except for pregnant women) orally, nasally or anally. Traditionally, they use this plant’s root to treat anthrax, stomachache, severe abdominal cramp, hook worm, body swelling, mump, tetanus, eye disease, liver cirrhosis, gonorrhea, meningitis and for different disease of both humans and cattle (Agize et al., 2013; Ekero et al., 2018). Most of the traditional medicinal use practice of the area has similarity with other areas. It was approved that the plant is used to cure various diseases such as fever, stomach ache, skin infections, urinary calculi, diabetes mellitus, epilepsy, pruritis, rigidity in lower limbs, and abdominal colic (Bhalakiya and Nainesh, 2019; Sasi et al., 2020); wound healing property (Arulanand et al., 2018; Sasi et al., 2020); for dog bite (Rady et al., 2019); to treat diabetes (Raju et al., 2014); for debility and aphrodisiac (Shodhganga, 2019); purifying the blood and to keep the body cool, diabetes and inflammatory diseases like arthritis (Santosh, 2019); as alternative tonic and stimulant (Revolvy, 2019); to treat Hypocholesterolaemia, malaria, abdominal pains and used as astringent (Mohamed et al., 2010); stomach ache and abdominal pains (Meragiaw, 2016) and act as alterative and energy stimulant (Savithramma, 2016).
It is indicated by local informants and herbalists that the species has been endangered in the area because of the widespread use of its root as a detergent, medicine, and for other purposes. Its growth in water stress areas, stony places of lowlands 300m-1350 m above sea level (Kuria et al., 2017), unsustainable harvesting (Agize et al., 2013), and not domesticated being found only in the wild were also some of its threatened conditions. In general, the importance/relevance of this research work is justified since the species is locally threatened, the multiple uses that target material derived from the root part, harmful harvesting methods, and the variety of health problems traditionally treated by the remedy derived from it.
Thus, the activity was done to see whether the possibility to shift root use to other parts (root bark, stem bark and leaf) of the plant is plausible and worth considerations in future conservation efforts. In other word, the research attempted to check why knowledgeable persons focus on root rather than other parts i.e, to check the indigenous knowledge of using root because of the secondary metabolite found concentrated in the root or/and the continued use of this part because of acquisition from parents and others.
The study aimed at identifying the best strategy for conservation and sustainable utilization of the locally threatened traditional medicinal plant, M. oblongifolia, through an ethnobotanical knowledge-led phytochemical analysis and antimicrobial testing using extracts from its different parts.