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This article is the sixth in a series on NSF's Long Term Research in Environmental Biology (LTREB) awards. Visit parts one, two, three, four, and five.
We entered a vale at 5 o'clock, then crossed a run and rode along a rich level for several miles, and under the delightful protection of very tall trees that brought us to a creek...where we lodged surrounded by ginseng.
--John Bartram, 1751, Travels from Pensilvania to Onandaga, Oswego and Lake Ontario in Canada
Being
surrounded by ginseng--a low-growing green-leafed herb of North
American forests--may have been common in 1751, but today? Ginseng is
under siege.
Biologist James McGraw of West Virginia University
should know. Today on World Environment Day, and indeed every day,
McGraw says that we can learn much about the environment around us from
one small plant.
Funded by a National Science Foundation (NSF)
Long Term Research in Environmental Biology (LTREB) grant, McGraw and
colleagues peer into the lives of more than 4,000 individual ginseng
plants each year to see how they're faring.
"These understory
plants are subject to all manner of [environmental] stresses," says
McGraw. "After a while, you begin to wonder why there are any left."
Facing a panoply of threats
First,
he says, there's harvesting for medicinal uses, "which is widespread
and often illegally or at least unethically done. Then we have our
four-footed friends--white-tailed deer--which eat a significant number
of plants every year."
The plants' next challenge is the growth of
invasive species such as multiflora rose and garlic mustard, which
compete with ginseng.
The effects of global warming, including
summers with heat waves and droughts, add to the burden for these plants
of cooler climes. "Ginseng is also affected by ice storms, late frosts
and hurricane flooding," says McGraw.
Then these Indiana
Joneses of the plant world must survive what McGraw refers to as
"natural pests:" insects defoliators and fungal pathogens.
Last--but definitely not least--is us.
"We're
just beginning to understand what humans are doing to the forests where
ginseng thrives: timbering, suppressing natural fires, mining, clearing
land for housing developments, the list goes on and on," says McGraw.
The
persistence of a slow-growing and valuable medicinal plant "despite all
this," he says, "is a testament to the resilience of nature--and to the
stewardship of those land-owners who care about protecting biodiversity
in their forests."
Species in an extinction vortex
Tigers, elephants and ginseng all share a common feature, says Saran Twombly, director of NSF's LTREB program.
"These dwindling populations face increasing threats that trap them in an extinction vortex," Twombly says.
"McGraw's
research relies on long-term data to identify the factors threatening
populations of this important forest plant. The results show the
knife-edge that separates healthy and unhealthy populations."
The NSF LTREB award "has been critical to our understanding of the 'big picture' of ginseng conservation," says McGraw.
He and colleagues work on one species of ginseng, Panax quinquefolius L., American ginseng. This member of the ginseng family, whose genus name Panax means "all heal" in Greek, hides deep in eastern deciduous woodlands.
The
plant was historically found in rich, cool hardwood forests--from
southern Quebec and Ontario south to northern Georgia, and west as far
as Minnesota, eastern Oklahoma and northern Louisiana.
"Ginseng
populations vary from frequent to uncommon to rare across the
landscape," says McGraw, "but they're almost always small, usually fewer
than 300 plants."
Medicinal plant for the ages
The
species has long been valued for its medicinal qualities, especially by
Asian cultures. They've integrated American ginseng into traditional
medicinal practices as a complement to native Asian ginseng species.
In Asia, ginseng is considered an adaptogen--it enhances overall energy levels.
"In
western medicine, ginseng has exhibited anti-cancer properties in cell
cultures," says McGraw. "It's also shown beneficial effects on blood
sugar and obesity, as well as on enhancing the immune system for
prevention of colds and flu."
After ginseng was discovered in
North America, the market quickly became profitable enough to fuel
intense wild harvesting, eventually reaching an industrial scale.
"Ginseng
shares a part of early American history," says McGraw. "Its roots--the
most sought-after parts--were first exported to Asia from the United
States in the early 1700s."
In one typical year (1841), more than
290,000 kilograms of dry ginseng roots were shipped from North America
to the Asian continent.
"Although average root size was larger in
the 1800s than it is today," says McGraw, "even a conservative estimate
suggests that this represents at least 64 million roots."
Ginseng at the forefront
Harvest
of the plant has continued apace, he says, particularly in the
Appalachian region, where the sale of ginseng still supplements
household incomes.
Ecologists began studying ginseng because of
its value as a wild-harvested species, and its decrease in abundance
after decades of harvesting.
Now, however, ginseng has become an
important model species--a sensitive indicator of the effects of global
and regional environmental change on deciduous forests.
"The
prominence of American ginseng has led to its use as a 'phytometer' [a
gauge] to better understand how change is affecting lesser-known plant
species in eastern North America," says McGraw.
The data in his
project come from 30 ginseng populations in seven states. "Our study
populations are in habitats from suburban woodlots to rich, old-growth
forests," McGraw says.
In a paper published this year in the Annals of The New York Academy of Sciences,
McGraw and co-authors state that the Asian market has made ginseng
North America's most important harvested wild medicinal plant over the
past two centuries.
That status prompted a listing on CITES
(Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna
and Flora) Appendix II. All species on Appendix II are susceptible to
extinction in the absence of trade controls.
Most states with
ginseng populations are converging on a uniform start date for
harvesting--Sept. 1. "That allows time after harvest for planting ripe
seeds that will lead to recovery of the plants," McGraw says.
Since
forests are, for the most part, open to everyone, ginseng will continue
to be harvested as long as there is immediate profit to be made,
scientists believe.
Successful sustainability in such open access
habitats, they say, depends on management of the resource by those who
actively harvest it.
Sustainability and ginseng
McGraw
and colleagues' research shows that ginseng harvesters willing to
employ a stewardship strategy gain the most benefit by harvesting when
seeds are ripe, usually in autumn months, then planting the seeds to
ensure high germination rates.
September is a summertime away. But in northeastern forests, ginseng leaves have already unfurled.
"Now
they face a gamut of environmental challenges," says McGraw. "They're
rooted in place, left with whatever nature--or more likely humans--dish
out. If we want ginseng to be part of the future landscape, we had best
tread very carefully."
"Ginseng is not everywhere common," wrote
Swedish naturalist Peter Kalm in 1749. "Sometimes you may search the
woods for several miles without finding a single plant. Round Montreal
they formerly grew in abundance, but there is not a single plant to be
found, so they have been rooted out."
By three centuries later, northeastern forests may be empty--at least of an unassuming and "all healing" herb named ginseng.
-- | Cheryl Dybas, NSF (703) 292-7734 | cdybas@nsf.gov |
Related Websites
NSF LTREB Project: Wild Ginseng Conservation:
NSF LTREB Project: Wild Ginseng Conservation:
http://www.wildginsengconservation.com
NSF Science, Engineering and Education for Sustainability Programs:
NSF Science, Engineering and Education for Sustainability Programs:
http://www.nsf.gov/sees
NSF Publication: Discoveries in Long-Term Environmental Research:
NSF Publication: Discoveries in Long-Term Environmental Research:
http://www.nsf.gov/pubs/2013/nsf13083/nsf13083.pdf?WT.mc_id=USNSF_25&WT.mc_ev=click
NSF Publication: Discoveries in Sustainability:
NSF Publication: Discoveries in Sustainability:
The National Science Foundation (NSF)
Guillermo Gonzalo Sánchez Achutegui
ayabaca@gmail.com
ayabaca@hotmail.com
ayabaca@yahoo.com
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