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Identification of the Diversity of Medicinal Plants Used by Battra in North Bengkulu Kiki Fanisah; Iwan Setiawan; Deni Parlindungan; Bhakti Karyadi; Aprina Defianti; Ariefa Primair Yani
Jurnal Penelitian Pendidikan IPA Vol. 9 No. 10 (2023): October
Publisher : Postgraduate, University of Mataram

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.29303/jppipa.v9i10.3876

Abstract

All kinds of plants that are found in nature and have medicinal properties are considered medicinal plants. Utilization of medicinal plants can be used directly and mixed. Battra is a person who has knowledge of traditional medicine and is capable of concocting medicinal plants. North Bengkulu is one of the districts that still use conventional medical care. Utilizing medicinal plants that are proven to be able to treat those derived from natural ingredients can be healthful because of very few side effects compared to drugs that contain chemicals. The goal of the study was to catalog the various medicinal herbs used by Battra North Bengkulu. This study used 10 respondents' interviews as its approach. Battra uses 64 species from 37 families of medicinal plants as traditional medicinal ingredients. The most common type of family is Fabaceae. The habitus group that is widely used is 45% trees. Types of diseases that are commonly treated traditionally using these plants include fever, toothache, itching, cramps, internal heat, scales, stomach pain, malaria, long-term fever, colds (cholera), ulcers, lungs, kidney stones, jaundice, high blood pressure, appendicitis, fussy children, eye disease, intestinal worms, kesapo, sprains, tumors and gout. In the processing of medicinal plants by Battra in North Bengkulu, 11 processes the highest drug processing method was by boiling as much as 37%.
Sexual Dimorphism of Shell Turtles (Cuora amboinensis) in the Ex-situ Conservation Area, Bengkulu University, Sumatra Rezki Nopantri; Bhakti Karyadi; Deni Parlindungan; Sutarno Sutarno; Aceng Ruyani; A. A. Sukarso
Advances in Tropical Biodiversity and Environmental Sciences Vol. 8 No. 2 (2024): June 2024: Pages 58-118
Publisher : Institute for Research and Community Services Udayana University (LP2M Universitas Udayana)

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.24843/ATBES.2024.v08.i02.p09

Abstract

This research aims to determine the physical differences between male and female turtles based on the secondary morphological characteristics of Cuora amboinensis. The method used in this research is a visual method with metric data presented in photos and measurement data, with a sample size of 20 individuals consisting of 12 females and 8 males. The research was carried out in September–December 2023 at the biodiversity study center at Bengkulu University. Observation results identified male C. amboinensis turtles with larger heads and brighter chins than female turtles. The carapace is oval with small bumps on vertebral 5 and wider marginal edges than in female turtles; the male's plastron displays a distinctive concave while the females have a flatter plastron. Male turtles have longer and thicker tails than female turtles. There are differences in the morphological characteristics of male and female C. amboinensis turtles, specifically in the head, carapace, plastron, and tail morphology.