Medicine
Plants and fungi are a vital part of healthcare. Over 80% of the world's people rely on traditional medicine, much of which is based on plant remedies. Traditional Chinese medicine alone uses over 5,000 plant species.
The importance of plants
In the developed world around a quarter of all prescriptions contain materials isolated from plants. Others, like aspirin, are synthesised copies of chemicals found naturally in plants, or are modified from the initial natural product.
The Madagascar periwinkle (Catharanthus roseus) has yielded two drugs for the treatment of cancer: it is the source of alkaloids used to treat childhood leukaemia and Hodgkin's disease.
Medicinal plants are mostly harvested from the wild, which can put them under great pressure. In Europe alone, an estimated 150 medicinal plant species are at risk from over-harvesting.
Despite the high reliance on plants in medicine, less than 20% of the described plant species have been investigated for the presence of bioactive compounds. Many more medicines have yet to be developed from plant materials.
The importance of fungi
Fungi also provide extraordinarily powerful medicines that have revolutionized our health, with examples including antibiotics, immunosuppressants, and cholesterol medicine.
Browse profiles of medicinal plants and fungi
Cojoba graciliflora
Guadeloupe blackbead
Cola nitida
kola nut
Commiphora guidottii
scented myrrh
Crinum brachynema
karnaphul
Crinum purpurascens
starry crinum
Crinum woodrowii
Woodrow's crinum lily
Cucurbita pepo
pumpkin
Curcuma inodora
scentless turmeric
Curcuma pseudomontana
hill turmeric
Cuscuta epithymum
clover dodder
Daucus carota
wild carrot
Digitalis purpurea
common foxglove
Dioscorea strydomiana
Strydom's yam
Dodonaea viscosa
hopbush
Drimia maritima
maritime squill
Echinacea angustifolia
narrow-leaved purple coneflower
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