Help:Classification of uses
Introduction
Categories are a particular feature of Mediawiki. They appear in a bottom bar of any page. They are very useful to group and classify similar pages. The problem is that useful plants form a very large group, and categories consiting of thousands of elements would not be workable. This is why we propose to split the biggest categories in order to maintain a reasonable number of species.
We consider here as major all the species which are produced commercially and traded on long distances. Species only used locally are considered as minor.
Comments are welcome, but changes will be difficult to implement when many species will be documented, as changes have to be done manually.
See also an introduction on Use groups.
List of categories
Here are the base categories proposed for recognition in Pl@ntUse. The words in bold give the names of categories that should be put at the end of each species page if relevant. The categories are then automatically grouped to form higher categories. For example, Tropical fruit, major > Tropical fruit > Fruit > Fruits and nuts > Use groups, major > Use groups.
The links are to the introduction page for each use group.
Food uses
- Cereals (including pseudo-cereals): Cereal, cultivated / Pseudo-cereal, cultivated / Cereal, wild / Pseudo-cereal, wild.
- Pulses: Pulse, major / Pulse, minor.
- Vegetables: Temperate vegetable, major / Temperate vegetable, minor / Temperate vegetable, wild / Tropical vegetable, major / Tropical vegetable, minor / Tropical vegetable, wild.
- Fruits (including nuts): Temperate fruit, major / Temperate fruit, minor / Temperate fruit, wild / Tropical fruit, major / Tropical fruit, minor / Tropical fruit, wild / Nut, major / Nut, minor / Nut, wild.
- Sugar plants: Sugar.
- Starches (other than cereals): Starch, major / Starch, minor.
- Oil plants (in part, including fats): Food oil / Industrial oil.
- Dyes and tannins (in part): Food colorant / Textile dye / Body dye / Tannin.
- Spices and condiments: Spice, major / Spice, minor / Herb, major / Herb, minor.
- Stimulants and beverage plants (including plants used for chewing or smoking): Beverage / Chewing plants / Smoking plants
- Food additives: Additive.
Non-food uses
- Dyes and tannins (in part)
- Technical plants (industry...): Cork.
- Ornamentals (including hedge and wayside plants): Hedge / Ornamental tree / Pot plant / Cut flower / Foliage / Bulb / Garden plant, temperate / Garden plant, tropical.
- Timbers (including bamboos used for construction): Temperate timber, major / Temperate timber, minor / Tropical timber, major / Tropical timber, minor / Bamboo.
- Auxiliary plants (including shade and nurse trees, live supports, cover crops, mulches, green manures, fallow crops, live fences, windbreaks, erosion-controlling plants, land reclamation species, and water-cleaning agents)
- Fuel plants (including plants used for the production of charcoal and as tinder): Fuel.
- Medicinal plants (including poisonous plants used as pesticide, fish poison or dart poison, and narcotic plants): Human medicine, temperate' / Human medicine, tropical / Veterinary medicine, temperate / Veterinary medicine, tropical / Fish poison / Arrow poison / Narcotic.
- Essential oils (including aromatic woods and plants producing camphor)
- Exudates (including plants producing latex, resin, balsam, gum, wax and aromatic resin): Latex / Resin / Gum / Wax /Aromatic resin.
- Oil plants (in part)
- Fibres (including rattans, and plants used for packing and thatching, as tying material, and for making paper, baskets, mats, wickerwork, wattle work and toothbrushes): Textile fibre / Basketry / Tying / Filling fibre / Paper / Toothbrush.
- Forages (including feed for fish and insects such as silkworms): Forage / Fish feed / Insect feed.
- Bee plants: Bee plant.
- Plants used for social, magic or religious purposes: Religion / Magics / Body ornament / Plant for playing.
- Plants imbedded in culture (including art, literature, symbolism): Art / Literature / Symbol.
Novel uses
- Industrial plants (in particular those giving a raw material for green chemistry)
- Model plants for research, or as tool for plant breeding: Model plant.
- Wild relatives of crops (the use of which is potential and indirect): CWR.