Researchers,
plant scientists and horticulturists from the University of Missouri showcased
their work on a little berry that is making big news among health researchers
during the first International Elderberry Symposium held recently in Columbia.
At
the six-day event, symposium participants got a peek into what the ancient
Greek physician Hippocrates called his “medicine chest of the country people.”
Folk healers have used the berry’s products to treat colds, flu, arthritis and
other diseases since 400 B.C.
MU
researchers are looking at it to prevent and treat prostate cancer and
Alzheimer’s disease. High in antioxidants, potassium and vitamins A, B and C,
the purple juice has been touted to reduce cholesterol levels and boost the
immune system.
The
group visited Eridu Farms in addition to MU research centers, the Missouri
Botanical Garden in St. Louis, and Nature’s Organic Haven and Stone Hill
Winery, both of Hermann, as part of the event.
In
conjunction with MU Extension and USDA, Eridu Farms owner Terry Durham works
with about 100 other elderberry producers across the Midwest to produce and
market juice, jelly and other products. The berry is used in wine, dietary
supplements and food products such as pies and muffins.
Due
to research and grower initiatives, Missouri is emerging as a national leader
in elderberry development and production, Durham said, noting that in the last
three years the largest acreage of improved elderberry has been developed here
in the state.
The
elderberry plant is a perennial with showy flat cymes of white, fragrant
flowers that usually bloom in June. The flowers turn to umbrella-like clusters
of tiny purple to black berries in late summer. The leaves are toxic. Durham’s
bushes grow 4 feet apart in drip-irrigated sunny areas.
The
berries must be handpicked and the labor-intensive process generally limits
acreages to small plots.
Durham
has grown elderberries since 2004 on 37 acres at Eridu Farms and 15 acres on
the adjacent Waters Farm. There are about 200 acres of land planted in
elderberry in the state, and Durham sees that number increasing as more farmers
turn to growing the National Herb Society’s 2013 Plant of the Year.
Symposium
coordinator Andrew Thomas, research assistant professor of plant sciences, has
been cultivating elderberries at the MU Southwest Research
Center for 14 years.
“Elderberry
is an understudied and neglected crop,” Thomas said. “When you look at its
antioxidant content it’s nearly off the charts.” He said the elderberry
symposium brought together scientists and growers from across the world.
Dennis Lubahn, professor of biochemistry and director of
the MU
Center for Botanical Interaction Studies, is investigating the elderberry’s
potential to fight prostate cancer. Presenting his most recent research at the
symposium, Lubahn said preliminary tests show promise that elderberry in high
concentrations can inhibit hedgehog signaling, a biochemical process linked to
cancer.
Britta
Bush of Italy’s Berry Pharma was one of the many international attendees at the
symposium. She said she was impressed by MU’s research and development on the
elderberry. She said commercial development of the elderberry in Europe is
comparable to the U.S.’s strawberry and blueberry marketing. She said Europe
serves the food and medical markets on a much higher level than the U.S., which
is just beginning to develop its markets.
James
Quinn, MU Extension regional horticulturist, said the international interest in
elderberries brought European and U.S. growers together to discuss the
similarities and differences between the markets. He said the wine industry has
an increasing demand for elderberries that is currently not being met.
The
National Institutes of Health provides MU with a grant to research the medicinal
benefits of the elderberry.
(by Linda Geist, MU Writer)
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