MURFREESBORO,
Tenn. — A special $148,000 U.S.
Department of Agriculture grant for Middle
Tennessee State University researchers to experiment with ginseng will
improve farmers’ income across the state and conserve wild ginseng, which is
considered an endangered species, in Tennessee.
The USDA has provided MTSU’s Tennessee
Center for Botanical Medicine Research with this
grant to demonstrate the viability of cultivated ginseng in Tennessee from
improved techniques reducing growing time, increasing propagation success and
determining ideal farming techniques, said associate professor Iris Gao, the project’s lead
researcher.
“This grant will not only determine best
practices, but will support planting of as many as 100 acres of ginseng in
Tennessee, depending on participation by growers. This could add $4 million in
farm profit annually once the harvest is normalized,” said Gao, who added
Tennessee farmers earn about $620 per acre from corn, but the same land yields
more than $40,000 per acre when planted with ginseng — the U.S.’s green gold.
Research will take place in MTSU laboratories and in a remote area
in Tennessee. Assisting Gao will be graduate student Shannon Smith, who started Oct. 1. Other undergraduate students may
also be involved.
Ginseng normally takes seven years to grow outdoors, but MTSU lab
research methods are effectively shortening the growth time by about two years,
said Gao, who is a School of Agribusiness and Agriscience faculty
member.
The program’s ginseng will be sourced from wild stock and maintain
the same potency and market price as wild-grown ginseng, which is much greater
than the field-cultivated roots, Gao said.
For those in Tennessee who want to grow wild-simulated ginseng, a
best-practices manual will be developed specifically for Tennessee ginseng
growers, along with bimonthly seminars and expert advice.
This program will also lead to a development of an added-value
certification to validate the medicinal
potency of harvested ginseng root.
Nineteen states can legally harvest and trade ginseng. The top three
are Kentucky, North Carolina and Tennessee.
In Tennessee, it can be harvested from Sept. 1 to Dec. 31 for resale
or to transport across state lines. The buying season for green roots is Sept.
1 to March 31 and Sept. 15 to March 31 for dry roots.
The Tennessee Department of
Environment and Conservation’s Ginseng Program office, has endorsed this
grant, and Andrea Bishop, who is a
recovery biologist, will monitor and assist in the dissemination of program
information.
Professor Elliot Altman
is director of the Tennessee Center for Botanical Medicine Research.
MTSU has more
than 240 combined undergraduate and graduate programs. The School of
Agribusiness and Agriscience is one of 11 College of Basic and Applied Sciences’
departments.
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