The evolution of herbal medicine: behavioural perspectives
The popularity of herbal supplements, and evidence of scientific legitimacy in the use of some medicinal herbs, prompts a question about whether the origin of herbal medicine was the result of animals and humans learning that specific herbs are effective for preventing or treating
certain maladies, or a result of natural selection to seek out and use herbs with markers of efficacy such as a bitter taste? Examining the predictions and requirements of the learned and
evolutionary explanations points primarily to an evolutionary model, which accounts for the use
of ineffective as well as toxic medicinal herbs, and that was expanded by learning and social transmission.
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The current popularity of traditional herbal supplements, coupled with recent findings that add scientific legitimacy to the use of some medicinal herbs, prompts a question about the origins of herbal medicine in animals and ancestral humans. Medicinal herbs are used by animals and humans with the apparent prophylactic effects of reducing the likelihood or severity of illness from pathogens or parasites in the future. Medicinal herbs with anti-inflammatory, antimicrobial, immunomodulatory and/or analgesic properties are used in a therapeutic way to treat maladies such as inflammatory conditions and acute infections,
particularly in humans, and could have proven lifesaving to individuals living in nature. Was the origin of such types of herbal medicine the result of animals and humans learning that specific plant parts are effective for preventing or treating certain maladies, or was the origin a result of natural selection for a behavioural predisposition to seek out and use plant parts with particular physical or chemosensory markers of efficacy? Examining the predictions and requirements of both the learned and evolutionary explanations points primarily to an evolutionary model for the origin of herbal medicine that was expanded and enhanced
by learning and social transmission. The evolutionary explanation accounts for the continued use of ineffective, as well as effective, medicinal herbs and the use of medicinal herbs with toxic effects. In animals
one can point to origins of the practice of herbal medicine, as well as other behavioural defences against pathogens and parasites, as analogues of many aspects of modern human medicine and health care.Volume: August 2005, Volume 70, Issue 2
Keywords: herbal medicine; human evolution; parasites and behavior