Saving Hoodia 

my blog on this sensitive topic

Saving Hoodia sp. the famous plant used in safe weight loss from being exploited in their natural habitat.  This is a concern for many people.  Plants that grow in very dry or desert areas are scarce, they have a tough time to survive.   Harvesting Hoodia from nature is obviously going to do a lot of  harm.

The truth is that it is not practical to harvest Hoodia direct from the habitat.  There is not enough plants and the infrastructure like roads and accommodations  are not  very convenient either.

The amateurs who float dreaming of  a quick buck in harvesting Hoodia from the wild, will land very hard on their heads with empty pockets.  There is no shortcut to riches here.

The effects that cultivating Hoodia might have on Hoodia in nature

I can not resist the cliche "opinion is like a belly button, everybody has one" and that goes for the opinions that people have on the effect that cultivating Hoodia might have on the Hoodia plants in nature  

Hoodia  must be grown commercially  for commercial purposes, there is no way that enough plants can be harvested out of the wild habitat.  A few plants may have been removed, but the cultivation of Hoodia by tissue culture and seeds has made the harvesting of wild plants unpractical.. 

The objection stated that the cultivated plants might influence the wild plants cross pollinating with them to produce weaker plants.  This is far fetched. Tissue culture is used to cultivate the plants so the genes are not changed and apart from that how will the commercial plants come in contact with the wild plants that grow  with vast distances between them. Even if a Namibian farmer looses his mind and brings his wife a Hoodia plant in a pot for a present. (poor guy) That plant's pollen will find it difficult to find  wild plants to fertilize and  if it does pollinate one wild plant that happened to grow near the farm nothing will come of it if the cultivated strain should weaken the plants. 

As said these wild plants are scarce and grow far apart.  So interference from hybrids pollinating wild plants in the vast desert space that Hoodia grows in can not cause much of a problem.  Hoodia has been cultivated as a succulent garden  plant for many years and no mention of wild hybrids have been made to my knowledge.

In my opinion,  the plants of the genus Hoodia will  not be threatened any more than it was before the discovery that Hoodia is a safe appetite depressant  became  public. 

For more information on saving Hoodia click here

 

 

 

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