Author/Authors :
Tesfaye Duguma, Haile Department of Postharvest Management - College of Agriculture and Veterinary Medicine - Jimma University, Ethiopia
Abstract :
The scarcity, high cost, and unreliable supply of healthy food in developing countries have resulted in the search for cheap and
alternative sources of healthy and nutritious food. Wild edible plants (WEPs) are one of the alternative sources of healthy and
nutritious food, and they are crucially important in supporting the global food basket in all parts of the world in general and in
sub-Saharan Africa in particular. These wild edible plants have played a significant role in supplying food and nutritional
requirements and increasing the health status of poor communities in many rural parts of the world. In Ethiopia, rural
communities use wild edible plants as a means of survival especially during times of drought and famine and during other
forms calamities and crises. Wild edible plants have high nutritional content, including proteins, vitamin B2, and vitamin C,
which can be used as alternatives to conventional plant-based human diets. The available literature has revealed that some wild
edible plants also have medicinal properties. Even though wild edible plants are important for food security, they are usually
overlooked and perceived as food for poor families. This review indicates that fruits are the most commonly used WEPs, both
for consumption and medicinal value, and most plant parts are eaten directly in raw forms. This review focuses on the
commercial exploitation of wild edible plants as a source of dietary supplements and alternative medicines and as a means to
generate income; it also focuses on consumer perception toward wild edible plants in Ethiopia. Despite easy accessibility and
availability, the consumption of wild edible plants is challenged by numerous factors. This review suggests that nutrition policies
have to promote the utilization of wild edible plants as one pillar of food and nutrition security. Bioactive compound contents and antinutritional factor contents of wild and medicinal plants need further investigation.
Keywords :
Wild Edible Plant , Nutritional Contribution , Consumer Perception , Ethiopia