Futurity

Absurdly expensive ‘Himalayan Viagra’ faces extinction

Climate change and a booming demand could be devastating for a fungus aphrodisiac that can sell for more than three times the price of gold.

A parasitic fungus that grows wild throughout the Himalayas and sells for more than its weight in gold could vanish if current harvesting and climate trends continue, researchers warn.

The fungus, Ophiocordyceps sinensis, survives by preying on ghost moth caterpillars in some of the highest reaches of the Himalayas. The fungus infects and eats the insides of a caterpillar that burrows underground for winter. What the parasite does next may be too gruesome to mention over a supposedly healing bowl of aphrodisiac soup (price: $688) made in Las Vegas with a mere quarter-ounce of the stuff.

“It kills them and then sprouts out of their heads, like a unicorn horn,” says lead author Kelly Hopping, an ecologist who conducted the research as a postdoctoral scholar at Stanford University’s School of Earth, Energy & Environmental Sciences.

$11 billion market

Beginning in the 1990s, demand for the fungus as an aphrodisiac, impotence cure, and remedy for the deadly SARS virus—while unsupported by scientific evidence—helped to jumpstart a global trade. Since then, belief in a wide range of healthful effects from the fungus has fueled a market valued at some $11 billion, as well as concern that harvesting rates have become unsustainable.

Official harvest records are unreliable, however, because much of the caterpillar fungus trade goes through illegal channels. The new study, which appears in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, presents the most comprehensive data to date addressing whether and why caterpillar fungus production might be on the decline, and the likely consequences of a possible crash for the communities that depend on the fungus for their livelihood.

Researchers became interested in the fungus as a way to understand what happens when a niche biological product gives wealthy consumers outsized influence over rural livelihoods, land-use choices, and ecosystems in producer regions.

Research on ecosystem degradation tends to focus on the expansion of globally traded agricultural commodities such as oil palm, soy, cattle, and timber—the biggest drivers for deforestation.

Rhino horns

The ripple effects of commodities that grow and trade on a smaller scale are less understood—but potentially profound, says coauthor Eric Lambin, a professor of Earth system science, who points to rhinoceros horn as an example.

“An emblematic mammal species is being brought to extinction due to the demand for a product which is viewed in some traditional cultures as having virtues,” Lambin says.

Caterpillar fungus may lack the charisma of a rhinoceros, but as one of the world’s most expensive biological commodities, it has become a primary source of income for hundreds of thousands of collectors. And at a time when up to one-third of the world’s parasite species could go extinct within a few decades—potentially opening new niches for other, invasive parasites to exploit—conservation biologists increasingly see a need to protect parasites as well as their hosts.

There’s no question intensive harvesting takes a toll on both people and the environment across an increasingly vulnerable landscape, says Lambin, who is also a senior fellow at the Stanford Woods Institute for the Environment.

While many local collectors try to minimize impacts, large influxes of people drawn to the Himalayan rangelands during the peak harvest season can end up degrading ecosystems by disturbing fragile soils, cutting swaths of shrubs and trees for fuel, and leaving trash around their harvesting camps.

‘Himalayan gold’

Widely known in Tibet as yartsa gunbu, or “summer grass, winter worm,” people have used caterpillar fungus in traditional medicine throughout the Himalayan region and in China for centuries to treat ailments ranging from cancer and kidney disease to inflammation and aging. In more recent years it has earned the nicknames “Himalayan Viagra” and “Himalayan gold.”

To get around the problem of patchy trade data for the valuable fungus, researchers turned to collectors’ own knowledge of production trends in China, Bhutan, Nepal, and India, as reported in dozens of case studies. The researchers then bolstered the published accounts by interviewing 49 collectors across the Tibetan Plateau.

With this data and 400 records of where the fungus has been found throughout the four countries since the 1970s, the group built models predicting how much fungus would grow in a given area based on factors like climate and elevation. The results show the fungus tends to be more prolific in higher, colder areas around the margins of areas underlain by permafrost.

Currently, caterpillar fungus is sufficiently abundant in springtime in prime production areas that many people can collect enough in a month or two to support themselves for the rest of the year. However, production is already on the decline due to intensive harvesting—and warming winters may exacerbate the trend.

Easy money

In a region where average winter temperatures in some places have already increased by as much as 4 degrees Celsius since 1979—”an enormous amount of warming,” Lambin says—the researchers found that every degree of winter warming makes it harder for the fungus to thrive.

As permafrost disappears from lower elevations, the fungus can adapt by shifting to colder upslope habitats only if its caterpillar hosts—and the vegetation and seasonal patterns on which they depend—shift upward, too.

In the long term, if income from caterpillar fungus can be sustained, the study suggests, it could provide an important financial cushion for those whose livelihoods herding livestock on high-altitude grasslands face mounting threats from climate change.

“Caterpillar fungus collection has emerged as a way for people in these areas to make relatively easy money,” Hopping says, “and in some cases to really raise their standard of living.”

However, if demand continues to grow as supplies decrease, it could aggravate tensions over who has access to harvesting areas, Hopping says. “Communities in areas where it’s still growing will need to remain vigilant about potential conflicts and poaching as people seek to harvest this increasingly rare and valuable species.”

Hopping is now an assistant professor at Boise State University College of Innovation and Design. Coauthor Stephen Chignell is now a PhD student at the University of British Columbia.

Source: Stanford University

The post Absurdly expensive ‘Himalayan Viagra’ faces extinction appeared first on Futurity.

More from Futurity

Futurity3 min read
Intervention Could Help Young Women Avoid Criminal Justice System
Adolescence is the prime time to help young women who’ve had repeated run-ins with the US juvenile justice system find a different path, a new study shows. In one of the longest ongoing intervention studies focused on delinquency in women, researcher
Futurity3 min readDiet & Nutrition
Diet Quality Goes Up When Kids Eat School Lunches
A new study found that children improved their diet quality when they ate school-prepared lunches following the Healthy, Hunger-Free Kids Act nutritional guidelines instead of home-prepared lunches. Lower-income and non-Hispanic Black students saw th
Futurity3 min read
Team Solves Mystery Of How Phages Disarm Bacteria
New research that clarifies how bacteria-infecting viruses disarm pathogens could lead to new treatment methods for bacterial infections. Bacterial infections pose significant challenges to agriculture and medicine, especially as cases of antibiotic-

Related Books & Audiobooks