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Yartsa Gunbu ( Cordyceps sinensis ) and the Fungal Commodification of Tibet's Rural Economy
by
Winkler, Daniel
in
Asia
/ Biomedical and Life Sciences
/ Caterpillars
/ China
/ commercialization
/ Commodification
/ Cordyceps
/ Cordyceps sinensis
/ economic impact
/ Economics
/ Forest resources
/ Fungi
/ Grasses
/ Grasslands
/ herbal medicines
/ Households
/ Income
/ Larvae
/ Life Sciences
/ medicinal properties
/ Mushrooms
/ Oriental traditional medicine
/ Plant Anatomy/Development
/ Plant Ecology
/ Plant Physiology
/ Plant Sciences
/ Plant Systematics/Taxonomy/Biogeography
/ Prefectures
/ profitability
/ Rural areas
/ rural families
/ Special Mushroom Issue
/ Sustainable economies
/ Sustainable forest management
/ sustained yield management
2008
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Yartsa Gunbu ( Cordyceps sinensis ) and the Fungal Commodification of Tibet's Rural Economy
by
Winkler, Daniel
in
Asia
/ Biomedical and Life Sciences
/ Caterpillars
/ China
/ commercialization
/ Commodification
/ Cordyceps
/ Cordyceps sinensis
/ economic impact
/ Economics
/ Forest resources
/ Fungi
/ Grasses
/ Grasslands
/ herbal medicines
/ Households
/ Income
/ Larvae
/ Life Sciences
/ medicinal properties
/ Mushrooms
/ Oriental traditional medicine
/ Plant Anatomy/Development
/ Plant Ecology
/ Plant Physiology
/ Plant Sciences
/ Plant Systematics/Taxonomy/Biogeography
/ Prefectures
/ profitability
/ Rural areas
/ rural families
/ Special Mushroom Issue
/ Sustainable economies
/ Sustainable forest management
/ sustained yield management
2008
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Yartsa Gunbu ( Cordyceps sinensis ) and the Fungal Commodification of Tibet's Rural Economy
by
Winkler, Daniel
in
Asia
/ Biomedical and Life Sciences
/ Caterpillars
/ China
/ commercialization
/ Commodification
/ Cordyceps
/ Cordyceps sinensis
/ economic impact
/ Economics
/ Forest resources
/ Fungi
/ Grasses
/ Grasslands
/ herbal medicines
/ Households
/ Income
/ Larvae
/ Life Sciences
/ medicinal properties
/ Mushrooms
/ Oriental traditional medicine
/ Plant Anatomy/Development
/ Plant Ecology
/ Plant Physiology
/ Plant Sciences
/ Plant Systematics/Taxonomy/Biogeography
/ Prefectures
/ profitability
/ Rural areas
/ rural families
/ Special Mushroom Issue
/ Sustainable economies
/ Sustainable forest management
/ sustained yield management
2008
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Yartsa Gunbu ( Cordyceps sinensis ) and the Fungal Commodification of Tibet's Rural Economy
Journal Article
Yartsa Gunbu ( Cordyceps sinensis ) and the Fungal Commodification of Tibet's Rural Economy
2008
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Overview
Cordyceps sinensis is a mushroom that parasitizes larvae of Thitarodes (Hepialus) moths, which inhabit the alpine grasslands of the Tibetan Plateau. Tibetans have used the mushroom, which they call yartsa gunbu (\"summer-grass, winter-worm\") for many centuries, if not millennia. A 350% increase in the price paid to pickers between 1997 and 2004 has turned this tiny mushroom into the single most important source of cash for rural households in contemporary Tibet. On average, 40% of the rural cash income in the Tibet Autonomous Region is derived from its collection, which government statistics figured at 50,000 kg in 2004, contributing at least CNY (Chinese yuan) 1.8 billion (USD 225 million) to the Tibet Autonomous Region's GDP. A dramatic fungal commodification of the rural Tibetan economy is occurring, as the income from sale of Cordyceps often accounts for 70%-90% of a family's annual cash income in areas where it grows. The ever-increasing harvesting pressure raises the question of sustainability. The fact that Cordyceps has been collected for centuries and is still common argues for its resilience, but the lack of harvest studies for C sinensis precludes a definite answer as to whether the harvest can be sustained at its current level.
Publisher
Spring & The New York Botanical Garden Press,Springer-Verlag,Springer Nature B.V
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