Urban foraging has recently become popular as a way for people to reconnect with nature and to apply the traditional ethnobotanical knowledge in an urban context. In this study a two-year ethnobotanical survey was conducted in an urban park in Rimini, Italy, through a citizen science approach involving high school students as interviewers. The aim of the study was to assess the willingness to forage in an urban context and to document the local knowledge of wild plants. A total of 176 informants were interviewed, providing data on plant uses across eight distinct categories. The majority of informants (53.4%) are willing to forage in urban parks, but a significant proportion (30.7%) was unfavourable to this practice, citing concerns about plant pollution and potential legal issues, among other reasons. Knowledge of gathering was mainly acquired from family members and friends, although one-fourth of the respondents learned to forage through self-learning. Within the recruited sample, descriptive tendencies in the willingness to forage were observed among gender, age, or learning groups, although these observations did not reach statistical differences ( p >0.05). A total of 90 plant species belonging to 45 families was reported in the survey, and the most cited plants were in the food category. The engagement of high school students as co-researchers turned effective for collecting ethnobotanical data, even though some limitations emerged. Addressing the critical issues raised by foragers and investigating the effects of these measures opens up future prospects for continuing research. • A citizen science approach enabled urban ethnobotanical data collection. • Most citizens • support and are interested in foraging in urban parks. • Edible plants were more often recognized than medicinal ones. • Within the sample, women were more represented than man among foragers. • Logistic regression showed some descriptive trends in foragers’ attitudes ( p > 0.05).
Marincich et al. (Wed,) studied this question.