Indian breadroot Culturally Significant Plant - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 1
About This Presentation
Title:

Indian breadroot Culturally Significant Plant

Description:

A tea was used to treat sore throats, chest problems and gastroenteritis. ... Dried roots, a winter food supply, were often pounded into a starchy meal. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:60
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 2
Provided by: PatBr
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Indian breadroot Culturally Significant Plant


1
large Indian breadrootPediomelum esculentum
(Pursh) Rydb. Synonym Psolera esculeuta
Pursh.Other common names Indian breadroot,
breadroot, prairie turnip, prairie potato,
prairie apple, wild turnip, pomme blanche,
pommede prairie, tipsin, tipsinna.
  • Medicinally
  • The roots and leaves have a mild, stimulating,
    bitter taste. A tea was used to treat sore
    throats, chest problems and gastroenteritis.
  • A chewed root was applied to fractures, sprains
    and earaches.
  • It was often used to treat equine ailments.

Photo courtesy of Bonnie Heidel, DOI, USGS.
Prairie Wildflowers and Grasses of North Dakota.
Northern Prairie Wildlife Research Center.
  • Food
  • This plant was an important food. The root forms
    an enlargement, or turnip, several inches below
    the soil surface. It is about the size of an
    egg. The Indians dug the roots up in June or
    July. The harvest had to occur after the
    vegetative tops dried down but before they could
    be blown loose. Digging beneath the hard prairie
    soil without a shovel was not easy. The roots
    were peeled and eaten raw or were cooked by
    boiling or roasting. Dried roots, a winter food
    supply, were often pounded into a starchy meal.
    The Lewis and Clark expedition documented buying
    breadroot frequently on the journey to the
    Pacific coast. Settlers traveling west with
    wagon trains would often barter for this plant
    with the tribes. Although this was a common
    plant on the prairie and easily identifiable the
    homesteaders did not know what it looked like and
    would drive right over it.

Slide developed by Pat Broyles, Soil
Conservationist, Manhattan, KS. PMC. USDA is an
equal opportunity employer.
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com