Close X
Saturday, November 30, 2024
ADVT 
Health

Himalayan Viagra fuels gold rush for local Tibetans

Darpan News Desk IANS, 31 Oct, 2014 08:12 AM
    Overwhelmed by people trying to find the prized medicinal fungus known as Himalayan Viagra, two isolated Tibetan communities have managed to implement a successful system for the sustainable harvest of the precious natural resource, suggests research.
     
    “There is this mistaken notion that indigenous people are incapable of solving complicated problems on their own. These communities show that people can be incredibly resourceful when it is necessary to preserve their livelihoods,” explained Geoff Childs, associate professor of anthropology from Washington University in St. Louis.
     
    Located high in the Himalayan foothills along Nepal’s northern Gorkha District border with China’s Tibet Autonomous Region (TAR), the tiny rural communities of Nubri and Tsum now reap as much as 80 percent of their annual income during the caterpillar fungus (locally called Yartsa gunbu) spring harvest season.
     
    Yartsa gunbu fetch more per ounce than gold in some Chinese markets.
     
    “Although local incomes are still modest by Western standards, residents have seen average annual incomes rise from an average of a few hundred dollars to upwards of $4,000,” researchers noted.
     
    Finding a single spore of the fungus could yield the cash equivalent of what local men typically make over several days carrying a heavy backpack of goods across mountain passes.
     
    Yartsa gunbu results from a fungal infection that invades the bodies of ground-burrowing ghost moth caterpillars.
     
    In early spring, pinky-sized spores of the fungus emerge from the caterpillars’ mummified bodies and pop up in remote grassland pastures across the Tibetan Plateau.
     
    Meanwhile, outside experts warn that over-harvest of the fungus could cause irreparable damage to fragile high-mountain pastures, with some suggesting yartsa gunbu production already had declined by 40 percent.
     
    Despite dire predictions, Childs and Washington University anthropology graduate student Namgyal Choedup suggest that local communities are rising to the challenge.
     
    “The communities’ harvest protocols represent an indigenous form of regulatory management - one that may prove sustainable and equitable over the long-term,” they noted.
     
    The paper appeared in the journal Himalaya.

    MORE Health ARTICLES

    Family meals protect kids from obesity

    Family meals protect kids from obesity
    Even having as few as one or two family meals a week during adolescence may protect your kids from being obese when they turn into adults, says a study....

    Family meals protect kids from obesity

    Teenagers' sense of invalidation linked to suicide risk

    Teenagers' sense of invalidation linked to suicide risk
    Independent of other known risk factors, measuring the sense of family or peer invalidation - or lack of acceptance - that teenagers harbour can...

    Teenagers' sense of invalidation linked to suicide risk

    Spine loss common in schizophrenia, bipolar disorder

    Spine loss common in schizophrenia, bipolar disorder
    Schizophrenia and bipolar disorder appear to be linked with dendritic spine loss in the brain, suggesting the two disorders may share common pathophysiological elements....

    Spine loss common in schizophrenia, bipolar disorder

    Pathway between brain and blood pressure identified

    Pathway between brain and blood pressure identified
    In a finding that may lead to improved treatments for hypertension and heart failure, scientists have uncovered a new pathway through which the brain...

    Pathway between brain and blood pressure identified

    Common painkiller may treat ageing lungs

    Common painkiller may treat ageing lungs
      Researchers have found that ibuprofen, a non-steroidal anti-inflammatory painkiller, could reduce lung inflammation associated with ageing....

    Common painkiller may treat ageing lungs

    Marijuana protects in traumatic brain injuries

    Marijuana protects in traumatic brain injuries
    The active ingredient in marijuana, tetrahydrocannabinol or THC, may help protect the brain in cases of traumatic brain injury, says a study....

    Marijuana protects in traumatic brain injuries