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Ginseng (Panax quinquefolium
LINN.) Click on graphic for larger
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Ginseng
Botanical: Panax quinquefolium (LINN.) Family: N.O.
Araliaceae
---Synonyms---Aralia quinquefolia. Five Fingers. Tartar
Root. Red Berry. Man's Health. ---Part Used---Root.
---Habitat---Ginseng is distinguished as Asiatic or Chinese
Ginseng. It is a native of Manchuria, Chinese Tartary and other parts of
eastern Asia, and is largely cultivated there as well as in Korea and
Japan.
Panax, the generic name, is derived from the Greek Panakos
(a panacea), in reference to the miraculous virtue ascribed to it by the
Chinese, who consider it a sovereign remedy in almost all diseases.
It was formerly supposed to be confined to Chinese Tartary, but now is
known to be also a native of North America, from whence Sarrasin
transmitted specimens to Paris in 1704.
The word ginseng is said to mean 'the wonder of the world.'
---Description---The plant grows in rich woods
throughout eastern and central North America, especially along the
mountains from Quebec and Ontario, south to Georgia. It was used by the
North American Indians. It is a smooth perennial herb, with a large,
fleshy, very slow-growing root, 2 to 3 inches in length (occasionally
twice this size) and from 1/2 to 1 inch in thickness. Its main portion is
spindle-shaped and heavily annulated (ringed growth), with a roundish
summit, often with a slight terminal, projecting point. At the lower end
of this straight portion, there is a narrower continuation, turned
obliquely outward in the opposite direction and a very small branch is
occasionally borne in the fork between the two. Some small rootlets exist
upon the lower portion. The colour ranges from a pale yellow to a brownish
colour. It has a mucilaginous sweetness, approaching that of liquorice,
accompanied with some degree of bitterness and a slight aromatic warmth,
with little or no smell. The stem is simple and erect, about a foot high,
bearing three leaves, each divided into five finely-toothed leaflets, and
a single, terminal umbel, with a few small, yellowish flowers. The fruit
is a cluster of bright red berrles.
The plant was first introduced into England in 1740 by the botanist
Collinson.
Chinese Ginseng is a larger plant, but presents practically the same
appearance and habits of growth. Its culture in the United States has
never been attempted, though it would appear to be a promising field for
experiment.
Father Jartoux, who had special privileges accorded him in the study of
this plant, says that it is held in such esteem by the natives of China,
that the physicians deem it a necessity in all their best prescriptions,
and regard it as a remediable agency in fatigue and the infirmities of old
age. Only the Emperor has the right to collect the roots. The prepared
root is chewed by the sick to recover health, and by the healthy to
increase their vitality; it is said to remove both mental and bodily
fatigue, to cure pulmonary complaints, dissolves tumours and prolongs life
to a ripe old age.
Father Jartoux was satisfied that its praise was justified, and he adds
his own testimony to its efficacy in relieving fatigue and increasing
vitality. The roots are called, by the natives of China, Jin-chen,
meaning 'like a man,' in reference to their resemblance to the human form.
The American Indian name for the plant, garantoquen, has the same
meaning.
Owing to the enormous demand for the root in China recourse was had to
the American species, Panax quinquefolium (Linn.), and in 1718 the
Jesuits of Canada began shipping the roots to China, and the first
shipment from North America to Canton yielded enormous profits. In 1748
the roots sold at a dollar a pound in America and nearly five in China.
Afterwards, the price fluctuated, but the root is still eagerly purchased
by Chinese traders for export to China, and at the present time commands a
yet higher price in the American markets, though it is not an official
medicine and has only a place in the eclectic Materia Medica. The American
Consul at Amoy stated a few years ago that it is possible to market twenty
million dollars worth of American Ginseng annually to China, if it could
be produced; but since its collection for exportation, it has been so
eagerly sought that it has become exterminated in many districts where it
was formerly abundant.
This has led to its cultivation and to various devices for preserving
the natural supply. In Canada a fine is imposed for collecting between
January and the 1st of September. Among the Indians, it is customary to
collect the root only after the maturity of the fruit and to bend down the
stem before digging the root, thus providing for its propagation. Indian
collectors assert that a large number of such seeds will germinate, and
that they have been able to increase their area of collection by this
method.
In 1876, 550,624 lb. were exported at an average price of 1 dollar 17
cents; the amount available for export since then has steadily decreased
and the price has gone up in proportion, till in 1912 the export was only
155,308 lb., at an average price of 7 dollars 20 cents per pound.
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---Cultivation---On account of the growing
scarcity of the American Ginseng plant, experiments have been made by the
State of Pennsylvania to determine whether it can be grown profitably,
resulting in the conclusion that in five years, starting with seeds and
one year plants (or sooner if a start were made with older plants), an
acre of ground would yield a profit of 1,500 dollars, without allowance
for rental, but many precautions are necessary for success. The cultivated
plants produced larger roots than those of the wild plant.
In 1912 it was estimated that the acreage of cultivated Ginseng in the
United States was about 150 acres, and it is calculated that to supply
China with twenty million dollars' worth of dry root would require the
American growers to plant 1,000 acres annually for five years, before this
estimated annual supply could be sold. The cultivation of Ginseng would
therefore appear to offer a rich field to American agriculture. It
presents, however, considerable difficulty, owing to the great care and
special methods required and to the fact that it is a very slow-growing
crop, so that rapid returns can hardly be anticipated, and it is doubtful
if its cultivation can be carried on profitably except by specialists in
the crop. None the less, the percentage returns for the industrious,
patient and painstaking farmer are large, and the demand for a fine
article for export is not at all likely to be exceeded by the supply.
For successful cultivation of Ginseng in America, it is stated that a
loose, rich soil, with a heavy mulch of leaves and about 80 per cent shade
- generally provided artificially is necessary.
It is difficult to cultivate it here with success. A rich compost is
necessary. Most of the species of this genus need greenhouse treatment in
this country. Propagation by cuttings of the roots is the most successful
method, the cuttings being placed in sand, under a handglass. Seeds,
generally obtained from abroad, are sown in pots in the early spring and
require gentle heat. When the plants are a few inches high, they must be
transplanted into beds or sheltered borders. They require a good, warm
soil, but much shade. To grow on a commercial basis is not considered
feasible in this country.
---Harvesting, Preparation for Market---The root
should be collected only in the autumn, in which case it retains its plump
and handsome appearance after drying. It is much more highly prized when
of a fine light colour, which it is more apt to assume when grown in deep,
black, fresh mould.
The best root is said to be that collected by the Sioux Indian women,
who impart this white appearance by rotating it with water in a
partly-filled barrel, through which rods are run in a longitudinal
direction. In no other way, it is said, can the surface be so thoroughly
and safely cleansed.
The structure of the root is fleshy and somewhat elastic and flexible,
and it is of a firm, solid consistence if collected at the proper time and
properly cured. The bark is very thick, yellowish-white, radially striate
in old roots and contains brownishred resin cells. The wood is strongly
and coarsely radiate, with yellowish wood wedges and whitish rays.
The best roots for the Chinese market are sometimes submitted before
being dried to a process of clarification, which renders them yellow,
semi-transparent and of a horny appearance and enhances their value. This
condition is gained by first plunging them in hot water, brushing until
thoroughly scoured and steaming over boiling seed. Its commercial value is
determined in a high degree by its appearance. The roots are valued in
accordance with their large size and light colour, their plumpness and
fine consistence, their unbroken and natural form, and above all by the
perfectly developed condition of the branches.
---Constituents---A large amount of starch and
gum, some resin, a very small amount of volatile oil and the peculiar
sweetish body, Panaquilon. This occurs as a yellow powder, precipitating
with water a white, amorphous substance, which has been called Panacon.
[Top]
---Medicinal Action and Uses---Panax is not
official in the British Pharmacopoeia, and it was dismissed from the
United States Pharmacopceia at a late revision. It is cultivated almost
entirely for export to China.
In China, both varieties are used particularly for dyspepsia, vomiting
and nervous disorders. A decoction of 1/2 oz. of the root, boiled in tea
or soup and taken every morning, is commonly held a remedy for consumption
and other diseases.
In Western medicine, it is considered a mild stomachic tonic and
stimulant, useful in loss of appetite and in digestive affections that
arise from mental and nervous exhaustion.
A tincture has been prepared from the genuine Chinese or American root,
dried and coarsely powdered, covered with five times its weight of alcohol
and allowed to stand, well-stoppered, in a dark, cool place, being shaken
twice a day. The tincture, poured off and filtered, has a clear,
light-lemon colour, an odour like the root and a taste at first bitter,
then dulcamarous and an acid reaction.
---Substitutes---A substitute for Ginseng,
somewhat employed in China, is the root of Codonopsis Tangshen, a
bell-flowered plant, used by the poor as a substitute for the costly
Ginseng.
Ginseng is sometimes accidentally collected with Senega Root
(Polygala Senega, Linn.) and with Virginian Snake Root
(Aristolochia Serpentaria, Linn.), but is easily detected, being
less wrinkled and twisted and yellower in colour. It is occasionally found
with the collected root of Cypripedium parviflorum (Salis) and
Stylophorum diphyllum (Nuttall).
Blue Cohosh (Caulophyllum thalictroides, Linn.) is often called
locally in the United States 'Blue' or 'Yellow Ginseng,' and Fever Root
(Triosteum perfoliatum, Linn.) also is sometimes given the name of
Ginseng.
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