American Ephedra, known as Mormon tea, squaw tea, Brigham tea, or desert tea, is
much milder than the Chinese variety and is used in many natural cold remedies.
Ephedra's active ingedients are ephedrine, pseudoephedrine, and norspeudoephedrine.
There are a number of species of the Ephedra genus growing in the
southwestern deserts of the United States, including E. trifurca, E. viridis,
E. torreyana, E. nevadensis and E. californica.
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The broom-like stems of the herb are harvested by the ton in China and
shipped to ports all over the world. They look like little more than
bundles of stems, since the leaves are very tiny and scalelike at the
nodes of the stems.
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The plants help hold down the soil, acting as an anchor for sand dunes in
the desert, and as a common growth on mountainsides.
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Ephedra trifurcaor, also know as longleaf Ephedra, covers much of the rocky
slopes of the U.T. El Paso campus. The green stems are edible and are
browsed by deer and cattle.
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This plant has an excellent view of the canyon!
More Pictures:
- Dried male plant. (34K)
- Elderly plant but still alive! (34K)
- A close-up photo with centimeter reference scale. (42K)
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