2005
DOI: 10.1007/s10531-004-0256-4
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Application of Diversity Indices to Appraise Plant Availability in the Traditional Medicinal Markets of Johannesburg, South Africa

Abstract: The lack of scientific rigour in analysing ethnobotanical surveys has prompted researchers to investigate ways of quantitatively describing their data, including the use of ecological diversity indices. There are numerous indices and measures available to describe sample diversity. Twenty-two measures of species richness, diversity and evenness were reviewed using six sets of ethnomedicinal data derived from 50 formal muti shop traders (of different ethnicities) and 100 informal street traders of traditional m… Show more

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Cited by 47 publications
(38 citation statements)
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(58 reference statements)
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“…Diversity -A highest plant diversity was cited for plants from type A habitats (well-preserved forest), when compared to type B (old successional forest) and types C + D (recently disturbed areas). Using rarefaction curves (Magurran 1988;Begossi 1996;Williams et al 2005), we observe that for the same number of interviews, there is a higher number of expected species from well preserved forest, followed by recently disturbed environments and old successional vegetation (Fig. 3).…”
Section: Use Descriptionmentioning
confidence: 95%
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“…Diversity -A highest plant diversity was cited for plants from type A habitats (well-preserved forest), when compared to type B (old successional forest) and types C + D (recently disturbed areas). Using rarefaction curves (Magurran 1988;Begossi 1996;Williams et al 2005), we observe that for the same number of interviews, there is a higher number of expected species from well preserved forest, followed by recently disturbed environments and old successional vegetation (Fig. 3).…”
Section: Use Descriptionmentioning
confidence: 95%
“…Hill's diversity numbers were used to compare proportions of rare, intermediate and common species (Magurran 1988;Williams et al 2005). Hill's numbers provide a method to describe the relationship between diversity indices (Magurran 1988) and, according to Williams et al (2005), the values of N1 (ShannonWiener, base e), N2 (reciprocal of Simpson's index, 1/D) and N∞(reciprocal of the proportional abundance of the commonest species, or reciprocal of BergerParker index), corresponding to measures of abundant, very abundant, and most abundant species in a sample, respectively.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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