Abstract

Ethnopharmacological relevanceHerbal medicine value chains have generally been overlooked compared with food commodities. Not surprisingly, revenue generation tends to be weighted towards the end of the chain and consequently the farmers and producers are the lowest paid beneficiaries. Value chains have an impact both on the livelihood of producers and on the composition and quality of products commonly sold locally and globally and consequently on the consumers. In order to understand the impact of value chains on the composition of products, we studied the production conditions for turmeric (Curcuma longa) and the metabolomic composition of products derived from it. We aimed at integrating these two components in order to gain a better understanding of the effect of different value chains on the livelihoods of some producers. Materials and methodsThis interdisciplinary project uses a mixed methods approach. Case studies were undertaken on two separate sites in India. Data was initially gathered on herbal medicine value chains by means of semi-structured interviews and non-participant observations. Samples were collected from locations in India, Europe and the USA and analysed using 1H NMR spectroscopy coupled with multivariate analysis software and with high performance thin layer chromatography (HPTLC). ResultsWe investigate medicinal plant value chains and interpret the impact different value chains have on some aspects of the livelihoods of producers in India and, for the first time, analytically assess the chemical variability and quality implications that different value chains may have on the products available to end users in Europe. There are benefits to farmers that belonged to an integrated chain and the resulting products were subject to a higher standard of processing and storage.By using analytical methods, including HPTLC and 1H NMR spectroscopy, it has been possible to correlate some variations in product composition for selected producers and identify strengths and weaknesses of some types of value chains. The two analytical techniques provide different and complementary data and together they can be used to effectively differentiate between a wide variety of crude drug powders and herbal medicinal products. ConclusionsThis project demonstrates that there is a need to study the links between producers and consumers of commodities produced in so-called ‘provider countries’ and that metabolomics offer a novel way of assessing the chemical variability along a value chain. This also has implications for understanding the impact this has on the livelihood of those along the value chain.

Highlights

  • Ethnopharmacological research has generally focused on herbal starting materials and their composition and effects, or on the final products available to the consumer

  • In order to understand the impact of value chains on the composition of products, we studied the production conditions for turmeric (Curcuma longa) and the metabolomic composition of products derived from it

  • In this study we used two analytical tools, 1H nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy and high performance thin layer chromatography (HPTLC), in order to understand the composition and quality of herbal medicinal products along value chains. Both methods provide different and complementary data and together they can be used as tools to differentiate between a wide variety of crude drug powders and herbal medicinal products. 1H NMR spectroscopy coupled with multivariate analysis provides a quick method of separating different samples but is sometimes fooled by multi-component products or by the addition of excipients

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Summary

Introduction

Ethnopharmacological research has generally focused on herbal starting materials and their composition and effects, or on the final products available to the consumer. Agricultural production is generally in developing countries, while the consumption is both in developing and developed countries Such a usage impacts on public health, potentially in a beneficial and detrimental way and it has a direct relevance in the context of ethnopharmacology. It is an important area for research since the production of high value products is an emerging but poorly understood economic activity within many developing countries, and within India and China, both with a long history of trading in such commodities. According to the World Health Organisation (WHO), world trade in herbal medicine was estimated at $83 Billion in 2008 (Robinson and Zhang, 2012)

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