MURFREESBORO — MTSU’s
Ginseng Initiative to grow and harvest the plant at the university’s
Experiential Learning and Research Center in Lascassas, Tenn., will boost state
revenue and potentially take years off the growing process, officials said
Wednesday.
Joined by state Sen. Bill Ketron, who suggested the
university grow ginseng at its 438-acre farm, MTSU President Sidney A. McPhee
announced the research partnership between a group led by Tennessee Center for
Botanical Medicine Research Director Elliot Altman, Farm Laboratories Director
Matthew Wade and School of Agribusiness and Agriscience Director Warren Gill.
“This is a great opportunity,” Ketron told the crowd
assembled near the student gardens. “… It is up to us to take it to the next
level. We can make this a statewide cash crop. There’s no reason we can’t make
it a cash crop and make this a world-class facility.”
Ginseng, which has a value of $500 to $800 or more, is used as a natural supplement or over-the-counter
remedy to stimulate the immune system. Primary users are people with colds or
flu and cancer patients and in these situations boosting the immune system
makes a lot of sense.
Jai Templeton, deputy commissioner for the Tennessee
Department of Agriculture, said just the fact research is getting underway adds
to its value for the state economy.
“We know the value,” Templeton said. “We’re always looking
for new ways to create revenue. This research plot here very well could be the
beginning of a high-dollar crop for Tennessee.
State Rep. Jeremy Faison, R-Cosby, delivered what he called
“high-dollar seeds” from East Tennessee that he handed to Ketron for planting.
McPhee said the partnership between MTSU and Guangxi
Botanical Garden of Medicinal Plants in Nanning, China, have yielded about 40
results “showing promise in treating cancer, viral infections and other
ailments.”
Biology professor Bruce Cahoon said plant tissue culture,
which is called micropropagation by scientists, “will allow us to produce hundreds of plants from a
single piece of tissue and is beneficial when attempting to propagate plants
that reproduce slowly, like ginseng.”
“We plan to take
cuttings from ginseng plants and treat them with a nutrient-rich broth and
hormones to encourage growth of undifferentiated cells,” Cahoon added. “These
cells will lose their identity and can become any type of plant tissue (leaves,
roots, stems or embryos). We will treat the undifferentiated tissue with
hormones to induce the production of ginseng embryos. Each embryo can then be
grown into a whole plant that can be cultivated at the Guy James Farm.”
Officials said
increased security measures will be implemented at the farm.
Farm
Laboratories Director Matthew Wade said several options are being considered
for tighter security measures to protect both the student gardens and ginseng
areas and the entire 438-acre farm. One involves knowing when students, faculty
and staff are present. The second involves physical security measures.
Earlier in the
afternoon, Altman led a group through the current research facilities in Davis
Science Building. College of Basic and Applied Sciences Dean Bud Fischer later
took them on a brief tour of the university’s new $147 million Science
Building, which is scheduled to open in early 2015.
Ginseng is found
only in the Northern Hemisphere, in North America and in eastern Asia, and
typically in cooler climates.
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