Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- Preface
- Acknowledgements
- 1 Diversity and sustainability: evolution, information and institutions
- Part A Plant communities and the generation of information
- 2 Chemical diversity in plants
- 3 Ethnobotany and the search for balance between use and conservation
- Part B The value of plant-generated information in Pharmaceuticals
- Part C The institutions for regulating information from diversity
- Part D The importance of cultural diversity in biodiversity conservation
- Index
2 - Chemical diversity in plants
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 21 January 2010
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- Preface
- Acknowledgements
- 1 Diversity and sustainability: evolution, information and institutions
- Part A Plant communities and the generation of information
- 2 Chemical diversity in plants
- 3 Ethnobotany and the search for balance between use and conservation
- Part B The value of plant-generated information in Pharmaceuticals
- Part C The institutions for regulating information from diversity
- Part D The importance of cultural diversity in biodiversity conservation
- Index
Summary
Introduction
Life is sustained in all living organisms through the metabolism of universally distributed ‘primary’ biochemicals; sugars, amino acids, common enzyme cofactors, nucleic acids, proteins, etc. In addition to the primary chemicals, plants and microorganisms accumulate a wide variety of others which are restricted in their distribution, usually to taxonomically related groups, and which appeared to their nineteenth century discoverers to have no role in the life of the organisms in which they were found. These ‘secondary’ compounds are responsible for the wide chemical diversity seen in plants and microorganisms and those of higher plants in particular have played a crucial role in human cultural and economic development as medicines, pesticides, dyes, flavourings, building materials, etc. These compounds gave to plants properties which were known, before the rise of the chemical sciences, as their ‘virtues’ and helped make civilisation both possible and tolerable.
This review will consider the discovery, evolution, distribution, role and economic value of the secondary compounds of higher plants and the importance of preserving the heterogeneity still to be found in wild species. We will argue that the range of chemicals found in plants provides a unique resource for the chemical industry in its search for new drugs and pesticides which will not be rendered valueless by the ‘rational’ approaches of molecular gene technology and ‘designer’ drugs, nor by the screening of molecules of microbial or synthetic origin.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Intellectual Property Rights and Biodiversity ConservationAn Interdisciplinary Analysis of the Values of Medicinal Plants, pp. 19 - 44Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1995
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