# Wild Species from the Family Apiaceae, Traditionally Used as Food in Some Mediterranean Countries

**Authors:** Ekaterina Kozuharova, Giuseppe Antonio Malfa, Rosaria Acquaviva, Benito Valdes, Alla Aleksanyan, Daniela Batovska, Christina Stoycheva, Moh Rejdali, Abdel Rahman Al-Tawaha, Pasquale Marino, Vivienne Spadaro

PMC · DOI: 10.3390/plants13162324 · 2024-08-21

## TL;DR

This paper reviews wild Apiaceae plants used as food in Mediterranean countries, highlighting how local climate affects their distribution and consumption more than cultural ties.

## Contribution

The study identifies unique patterns of plant use and distribution across 13 Mediterranean regions, emphasizing the role of climate over cultural exchange.

## Key findings

- 81 wild umbellifers are traditionally used as food across 13 Mediterranean study sites.
- 50 of these plants are consumed in only one country despite being distributed in multiple.
- Local climate, rather than cultural proximity, strongly influences plant consumption patterns.

## Abstract

Mediterranean countries are a cauldron of cultural exchange, with a strong emphasis on wild plants in cuisine traditions. Many of these plants belong to the family Apiaceae. The common climate determines the common range of distribution. While many plants have wide distribution, the range of distribution of others is restricted to Western Mediterranean or North Africa. This review investigates wild plants from the family Apiaceae traditionally used as food in 13 study sites—11 countries in the Mediterranean and adjacent territories—the mainland and 3 islands. The aim is to trace patterns of native distribution versus consumption. As a result, 81 wild umbellifers are listed, traditionally used as food. Their consumption and distribution patterns are described and discussed. Interestingly in 8 of the 13 study sites (61.5%) are recorded 50 plant taxa (66.7% of all wild umbellifers, traditionally used as food) which are consumed in only one particular country. These are as follows: 8 taxa in Morocco, 9 taxa in Spain, 2 taxa in Sicily, 3 taxa in Bulgaria 3 taxa in Crete, 8 taxa in Armenia, 14 taxa in Turkey, and 3 taxa in Jordan. However, these 50 restrictedly consumed plants are distributed in more than one country (except 15 taxa, which are endemics). Many of the plants that are used in certain countries are not consumed by the neighboring people. The results of the two statistical tests, namely Jaccard index and heatmap clustering (double dendrogram), are discussed. The presence of an outlier, such as Bulgaria, which shares borders, history, and culture with Greece and Turkey, emphasizes the importance of local climate for plant distribution and consumption over cultural interactions. The same was observed for some pairs of countries, such as Spain and Morrocco and Turkey and Armenia, although they had the highest number of common plants that are both distributed and consumed as food.

## Linked entities

- **Species:** Apiaceae (taxon 4037)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** injury to people or property (MESH:C000719191)
- **Chemicals:** C. Presl. (-)
- **Species:** Astrodaucus orientalis (species) [taxon 79162], Pastinaca sativa (parsnip, species) [taxon 4041], Apium graveolens Dulce Group (celery, no rank) [taxon 117781], Sium sisarum (skirret, species) [taxon 240844], Apium graveolens (species) [taxon 4045], Angelica tatianae Bordz [taxon 62994], Grammosciadium platycarpum (species) [taxon 109124], Ferula orientalis (species) [taxon 662814], Chaerophyllum macropodum (species) [taxon 109103], Anisotaenia angulata (species) [taxon 325741], Bupleurum fruticosum (species) [taxon 48103], Pimpinella anisum (species) [taxon 271192], Petroselinum crispum (parsley, species) [taxon 4043], Levisticum officinale (lovage, species) [taxon 48042], Ferula (genus) [taxon 52470], Thapsia villosa (species) [taxon 512635], Ferulago stellata (species) [taxon 2583432], Diploneis sp. C (species) [taxon 2861878], Anethum graveolens (dill, species) [taxon 40922], Conopodium majus (species) [taxon 173702], Diplotaenia cachrydifolia (species) [taxon 325714], Chaerophyllum macrospermum (species) [taxon 109104], Ostericum sieboldii (species) [taxon 49560], Bunium pachypodum (species) [taxon 377492], Centella asiatica (Asiatic pennywort, species) [taxon 48106], Pimpinella kotschyana (species) [taxon 271206], Helosciadium nodiflorum (species) [taxon 99497], Ferula assa-foetida (asafoetida, species) [taxon 52471], Scandix pecten-veneris (shepherd's needle, species) [taxon 40909], Coriandrum sativum (cilantro, species) [taxon 4047], Bilacunaria microcarpa (species) [taxon 325710], Elaeoselinum leucotrichum (species) [taxon 79158], Ferula communis (giant fennel, species) [taxon 54829], Bupleurum gibraltaricum (species) [taxon 198841], Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606], Ferula sinkiangensis (species) [taxon 1271632], Daucus carota (carrot, species) [taxon 4039], Cuminum cyminum (cumin, species) [taxon 52462], Aegopodium tribracteolatum (species) [taxon 1170854], Diplotaenia turcica (species) [taxon 706666], Heracleum antasiaticum (species) [taxon 360619], Oenanthe javanica (species) [taxon 49556], Conopodium pyrenaeum (species) [taxon 2559071], Bunium balearicum (species) [taxon 377472], Tordylium apulum (species) [taxon 489417]

## Figures

6 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11358945/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11358945