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cross_type 0.30 — supporting 3 facts

India is the geographic focus for ethnobotanical research, as evidenced by studies documenting traditional plant use in Ladakh [1], the Kashmir Himalaya [2], and Odisha [3].

Facts (3)

Sources
Medicinal plants meet modern biodiversity science - OUCI ouci.dntb.gov.ua Charles C. Davis, Patrick Choisy · Elsevier BV 1 fact
claimPanda et al. investigated the antiparasitic activity of plants in the Asteraceae family, with a focus on ethnobotanical use by tribes in Odisha, India.
Psychoactive plants in Ancient World: notes from an Ethnobotanist academia.edu Academia.edu 1 fact
referenceNavchoo, I. A. and G. M. Buth documented the ethnobotany of Ladakh, India, specifically regarding beverages, narcotics, and foods, in a 1990 study.
The traditional use of wild edible plants in pastoral and agro ... link.springer.com Springer 1 fact
referenceSingh, Sultan, Hassan, Gairola, and Bedi conducted a case study on the ethnobotany, traditional knowledge, and diversity of wild edible plants and fungi in the District of Kashmir Himalaya, India, published in the Journal of Herbs, Spices & Medicinal Plants in 2016.