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NM Experts Hope To Cultivate Southwest Herb

By Melanie Dabovich
Associated Press
      The plant has been described by local residents as magical and its qualities are said to be almost mythical.
    The native herb yerba mansa, translated from Spanish as the "calming herb," has been used medicinally for centuries throughout the Southwest by American Indians and Hispanics to treat ailments from toothaches to sinus infections.
    Though the herb is relatively unknown outside the Southwest, experts in the medicinal herb industry say yerba mansa could become as popular as other medicinal herbs, such as goldenseal and Echinacea.
    But before the ancient medicinal herb can get its day in the sun, researchers must find a way to protect the ecologically threatened plant from depletion due to habitat loss and urban development.
    Charles Martin, assistant professor and researcher at New Mexico State University's Sustainable Agriculture Science Center in Alcalde has found a solution. He has made yerba mansa a viable agricultural crop for New Mexico's small farmers.
    "As far as I know, our center is the only place in the U.S. conducting production research (on yerba mansa)," Martin said. "We targeted native herbs in an effort to find alternative crops for small farmers that are drought tolerant and have a built-in pest resistance, and yerba mansa is an ideal plant that meets that criteria."
    With anti-bacterial and antimicrobial properties, yerba mansa contains a bounty of purported health benefits passed down from generation to generation.
    Also called yerba del manso, lizard tail or swamp root, the small plant with large white flower spikes is a perennial native to riverbanks and wetlands in the Southwest and northern Mexico.
    In New Mexico, the plant is primarily found along the Rio Grande.
    The effort to grow yerba mansa for commercial cultivation benefits farmers, but it is also an effort to protect the plant's future.
    The herb is on the "to-watch" list by United Plant Savers, a Vermont-based organization dedicated to protecting native medicinal plants of the U.S. and Canada.
    Martin said it's hard to quantify how much yerba mansa, or Anemopsis californica, is still in the wild since a directed study hasn't been conducted.
    Instead, researchers look to the plant's shrinking habitat as an indicator of its well-being.
    In New Mexico, riverside acreage along the Rio Grande continues to be swallowed by homes and development. Irrigated agricultural land once dominated, but now it has been reduced to less than 1 percent of the state's entire land base.
    Martin and his staff established a small demonstration plot at the Alcalde center that has grown due to the plant's prolific spreading abilities. This feature could help farmers in keeping an established stand growing indefinitely, he said.
    The only limiting factor in growing yerba mansa is water, Martin said.
    "It will grow in a wide variety of conditions and soils, including alkaline-encrusted soil and in all degrees of sunlight," he said. "Once established, it doesn't need any more water than a typical crop, than say alfalfa."
    As commercial demand for medicinal herbs increases, some plants run the risk of being overharvested.
    In 2007, U.S. sales of herb and botanical dietary supplements totaled $4.8 billion, a 4.3 percent increase over 2006 sales, according to the Nutrition Business Journal.
    Yerba mansa is gaining attention as a goldenseal substitute, said Michael Moore, director of the Southwest School of Botanical Medicine in Bisbee, Ariz. If yerba mansa becomes widely used, cultivation is the only way to ensure a steady supply.
    "There are a lot of plants that have almost been picked to extinction," including goldenseal and American ginseng, Moore said. "A hundred years ago, American ginseng could be found in 22 states and now it's only found in a few."
    Martin's research in New Mexico could expand into other regions that already grow yerba mansa on a large scale. Several nurseries in California grow yerba mansa for ecological restoration projects.
    "We could easily go into cropping. It could be a branch of what we're doing already," said Jeff Nighman, vice president of Santa Barbara Natives Inc. in Gaviota, California.
    The nursery grows yerba mansa and other native plants as part of restoration and mitigation projects for Santa Barbara County, Nighman said.
    In addition to Martin's research, Bill Quiroga, president of Native American Botanics and Yaquis tribe member in Tucson, Ariz., has tested different growing techniques for yerba mansa using aeroponics.
    Aeroponics is a form of hydroponics that uses a water-and-fertilizer solution to grow root crops instead of soil.
    Though the research has been halted due to lack of funding, Quiroga said his goal is to get American Indian farmers to grow the herb using aeroponic technology to supply his wholesale company.
    But as his state's population swells and creeks dry up, Quiroga worries some native plants like yerba mansa could be lost.
    "We have to find ways to grow it so that we keep the herb for later generations," he said.


Copyright ©2008 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.



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