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Chapter One: Introduction

in "Kava-the Pacific Elixir: The Definitive Guide to its Ethnobotany, History, and Chemistry"
by Vincent Lebot, Mark Merlin, and Lamont Lindstrom
Reproduced with the permission of the Publisher

[Table of Contents][Kava Library & Bookstore]

To help you navigate through this chapter click on one of the following topics:

Background

Scientific Observation

The Prehistory Ethnobotanical Pursuit
Spiritual Beliefs

Wide-Based Interest

Economic Importance
 

Kava (Piper methysticum Forst. f. ), a member of the pepper family Piperaceae, is an outstanding ethnopharmacological species. The drug is, or once was, consumed in a wide range of Pacific Ocean societies, from coastal areas on the large Melanesian island of New Guinea in the west to isolated Polynesian Hawai'i, 7000 kilometers distant to the northeast. Kava is a handsome shrub that is propagated vegetatively, as are most of the Pacific's major traditional crops. Its active principles, a series of kavalactones, are concentrated in the rootstock and roots. Islanders ingest these psychoactive chemicals by drinking cold-water infusions of chewed, ground, pounded, or otherwise macerated kava stumps and roots.

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One concern of this book is to pinpoint the place in the Pacific region where kava was first domesticated. Of the Pacific's two main traditional drug plants, kava is the indigenous species. The other, a palm (Areca catechu), whose fruit is commonly called betel or betelnut, appears to have been domesticated in the vicinity of the Malay Peninsula and is used today throughout much of mainland and island Southeast Asia (Marshall 1987).

When European explorers first landed on remote Pacific islands, they encountered societies in which kava drinking was an integral part of religious, political, and economic life (figures 1. 1, 1. 2, and 1.3). Although cultivation and use of the plant has virtually disappeared from eastern Polynesia and Kosrae Island (previously Kusaie) in Micronesia, kava remains an important psychoactive drug in much of Melanesia, in most of the islands of western Polynesia (including Samoa and Tonga), and on Pohnpei Island in Micronesia (see appendix A).

Scientific observation of the use of kava dates to the earliest European voyages of exploration (figure 1.4). The eighteenth-century British explorer James Cook noted in his log that venturesome members of his crew who sampled heavy doses of the drug seemed to experience symptoms similar to those induced by opium. Cook's comparison was inaccurate, for kava is neither a hallucinogen nor a stupefacient. Rather, the drug is a mild narcotic, a soporific, a diuretic, and a major muscle relaxant.

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Given the plant's complex and subtle psychoactivity, it is difficult to categorize in the terms of common drug classification schemes. Schultes and Hoffman (1979) follow Lewin (1924) and typify kava as both a narcotic and a hypnotic.

Siegel (1989) describes the plant as a sedative hypnotic. The psychoactive potency of the drug can vary considerably, from very weak to quite strong. Kava may induce sociability, feelings of peace and harmony, and, in large doses, sleep, or it may fail to produce relaxation and provoke nausea. Typically, however, kava evokes an atmosphere of relaxation and easy sociability among drinkers. Although we use the terms intoxication, drunkenness, and inebriation to describe human physiological reaction to the plant, the state differs from that induced by ethanol or other familiar drugs found in the Western world.

Kava has a strong but not unpleasant smell. Its taste, which can be acrid and astringent, has been characterized as earthy (or "like dirt" by less friendly drinkers). The botanist J. G. Forster (1777), who sailed with Cook on his first exploratory voyage, described kava infusions he sampled in Polynesia as either tasteless or mildly peppery. (We may assume that his sample was watered down; the flavor of kava is normally strong.) Like tobacco and coffee, kava for most people is an acquired taste.

The most reliable evidence suggests that cultivated kava derives from a wild progenitor, Piper wichmannii C. DC., a fertile Piper indigenous to New Guinea, the Solomon Islands, and Vanuatu (previously the New Hebrides). Although many Western botanists distinguish P. wichmannii from P. methysticum, we argue that there now exist convincing morphological, chemical, and genetic grounds for considering these two taxa of Piper to be wild and cultivated forms of the same species. Piper methysticum consists of sterile cultivars cloned ultimately from P. wichmannii in an ongoing selection process. When we speak of kava, or the kava drink, therefore, we refer in the main to what botanists know as P. methysticum, although Pacific Islanders also cultivate and use as kava several varieties of the plant that botanists label P, wichmannii. We also use the word kava synonymously, as do Pacific Islanders, to refer to both the plant itself and the psychoactive beverage made from its rootstock.

Today P. methysticum is a cultivated plant comprising many different cultivars grown widely throughout the insular tropical Pacific region. Each cultivar has specific requirements and a much more restricted range of distribution than P, methysticum as a whole. A remarkable variability in cultivar characters has developed over many generations of human selection of clones best adapted to the diverse local climates and soils.

The prehistory of the discovery and settlement of the remote tropical Pacific Islands has been a popular object of speculation and debate since the 1700s. It now is clear that Pacific Island peoples, along with most of their domesticated plant and animal assemblages, originated in Southeast Asia. Humans first colonized Sahul, the large land area of New Guinea and Australia (then connected by a land bridge), at least 40,000 years ago (Bellwood 1978). They reached the nearby islands of western Melanesia somewhat later (e.g., New Ireland circa 32,000 B.P.), and the western Solomon Islands circa 29,000 B.P.; Allen, Gosden, and White 1988). Until about 4000 years B.P., human settlement in the Pacific was restricted to these westernmost islands of Melanesia. Since then migrants in sailing canoes have located and populated all of the remaining inhabitable tropical and subtropical islands of the central and eastern Pacific.

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The first settlers of Sahul foraged for food and other useful resources among the native plants and animals of newly occupied territories. Some of these people adopted agriculture at an early date. Archaeologists have found evidence of intensive agriculture in the highlands of New Guinea dating perhaps as far back as 9000 B.P. and certainly to 6000-5500 B.P. (Bellwood 1979; Golson 1985). Some prehistorians argue for an independent development of agriculture in New Guinea perhaps even predating the emergence of agriculture in neighboring Southeast Asia. Others suggest, rather, that agriculture emerged simultaneously and independently in Southeast Asia and New Guinea.

Although some Pacific cultivars, such as fruited Pandanus, sugarcane, and the Australimusa banana, have been identified as New Guinea domesticates (Barrau 1965; Yen 1985, 1991), the major Pacific staple root crops, such as yams (Dioscorea spp.) and taros (Colocasia esculenta, Cyrtospenna chamissonis, and Alocasia macrorrhyza), appear to have been first cultivated farther to the west and traded or carried to New Guinea and the rest of the Pacific by migrant groups. As noted above, the reca catechu palm, the other major Pacific drug plant, also probably has Southeast sian origins and an easterly pattern of diffusion into the Pacific Islands region.

Not all of the Pacific's traditional crops trace back to Southeast Asian or New uinean roots. Yen provides numerous examples of species he believes were ornesticated or selected by central Pacific farmers (Yen 1985, 1991). He suggests at "the Oceanians retained (or reinvented) the ethnobotanical concepts of domestication throughout their geographical spread and individual paths of developent" (1985). We argue that kava, too, is a Pacific domesticate that originated outside Southeast Asia and New Guinea. We suggest that farmers in the northern lands of Vanuatu were the first to select and develop the species as a vegetatively produced root crop. Given the archaeological evidence of the relatively recent rival of humans in eastern Melanesia, a Vanuatu origin for kava suggests that P. methysticum is a fairly young domesticate-perhaps less than 3000 years old. From Vanuatu, kava was carried eastward into Fiji and Polynesia and westward into attered areas of New Guinea and into two islands of central Micronesia. We dispute some recent speculation that kava may first have been domesticated in the neiighborhood of the Bismarck Archipelago off northeastern New Guinea (Brunn 1989; cf. Yen 1991). The botanical, genetic, and chemical evidence that upports our assertion of kava's Vanuatu origins and its westward diffusion to New uinea, Pohnpei, and Kosrae is provided in chapters 2, 3, and 4 of this book.

Few human cultures are unacquainted with psychoactive drugs of some sort. Reflecting on the consumption of self-administered drugs by laboratory animals, some pharmacologists have concluded that "animal data strongly suggest that from biological viewpoint drug-seeking behavior is normal" (Schuster, Renault, and laine 1979). Jaffe similarly has noted that "drugs themselves are powerful reinforcers, even in the absence of physical dependence" (1985). According to Siegel 1989), "there is a natural force that motivates the pursuit of intoxication. This force has found expression throughout history... It has led to the discovery of many intoxicants, natural and artificial, and to demonstrations of its repressible drive" (see also Weil 1972).

If humans are biologically attracted to psychoactive chemicals, one might easily imagine members of isolated Pacific island communities having the desire and curiosity to experiment with locally available flora. If the people who undertook remarkable voyages of discovery to the far-flung island groups of the Pacific neglected to bring along in their canoes any previously known psychoactive species, they may have been particularly motivated to seek out and experience alternatives, such as P. wichmannii, from available native flora.

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In addition to the ordinary human proclivities toward drug use and the self reinforcing character of psychoactive chemicals themselves, a cultural rationale for the ethnobotanical pursuit and domestication of drug species has been identified by the anthropologist W. La Barre. Most traditional religions worldwide-with the exceptions of the great monotheistic religions based on well-established written traditions, such as as Judaism, Christianity, and Islam-rely on revelation and inspiration for the production of religious knowledge and experience. Drugs are frequently an integral means to achieve psychic states amenable to religious inspiration. Referring to New World peoples, La Barre (1970) writes, "Whether shaman alone, or shaman and communicants, or communicants alone imbibe or ingest the Ilex black drink, datura infusions, tobacco in whatever forms, native beers and wines, peyote cactus, ololiu seeds, mushrooms, narcotic mint leaves or coca, the ayahausca (Banisteiiopsis caapi) or 'death vine'-or any of the vast array of Amercan Indian psychedelics- the principle is the same. These plants contain spirit power." Given the common importance of revelatory religious experience, humans can be culturally programmed, as well as naturally inclined, to search for and experiment with mind-altering plants to gain insight into human existence. Drugs provide a means by which people can establish and maintain communication with their ancestors and deities. Harrier (1973), following La Barre, notes: "We of a literate civilization may get both our religion and our religious proofs from books; persons in non-literate societies often rely upon direct confrontation with the supernatural for evidence for religious reality. Such divine communication may be induced by fasting, flagellation, sensory deprivation, yogic exercises, meditation, or ritual dancing or drumming; but predominantly it is induced through the consumption of psychoactive drug-plants."

Kava acts to transport imbibers to the realm of ancestors and gods. Although the relative importance of kava's religious and secular functions varies from island to island within Polynesia, Melanesia, and Micronesia, everywhere the drug serves (or served) as a means of religious inspiration. Kava drinking is "an important kind of ritual, usually involving the invocation of ancestral spirits" (Kirch 1984). Kava can thus be compared with many other psychoactive plants utilized by people around the world to transcend normal consciousness and experience and to reinforce and validate spiritual beliefs (see Schultes and Hofmann 1979; Wasson 1980).

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We can surmise that the prehistoric peoples who first colonized the tropical Pacific Islands had powerful religious and biological motivations to investigate the mind-altering potentials of the plants native to their new island homes. The floral and faunal inventory of remote Pacific landfalls, however, is notably depauperate. The floral assemblages of even the higher, larger, and more ecologically diverse volcanic islands lack the typical variety of most tropical continental ecosystems because of the great dispersal barrier of the Pacific Ocean. Settlers in Vanuatu, for example, were confronted by as few as 1500 plant species (Cabalion and Morat, 1983). In spite of this limited botanical biodiversity, they succeeded in locating, selecting, and domesticating a valuable ethnopharmacological species with prized psychoactive effects.

It is possible that humans were initially attracted to wild P. wichmannii because its therapeutic effects. People from several northern Vanuatu islands still utilize is plant as a folk medicine. Significantly, a survey of folk medicines in Papua New uinea discovered no therapeutic uses of P. wichmannii in areas where it grows naturally today (Holdsworth 1977). A vastly larger and more westerly land mass an Vanuatu, New Guinea has a floral assemblage of 1465 genera in 246 families Van Balgooy 1976), which is many times greater than that of Vanuatu. It may be at the relative impoverishment of the Vanuatu flora both required and enabled ttlers to scrutinize the therapeutic and psychoactive potential of local species ore intensively. In New Guinea, if residents overlooked the potentials of P. wichmannii, they did discover a spectrum of other psychoactive species. These include fungi (e.g., Boletus spp., Heimiella spp., Russula spp.), wild gingers (Alpinia p., Hornstedtia spp., Zingiber spp.), and a variety of other potent tree leaves, barks, and saps, many of which do not occur on the more remote Pacific islands (see Schultes and Hofmann 1979; Marshall 1987).

Following its initial discovery, domestication, and diffusion throughout the astern and central Pacific, kava became an integral part of island religious, economic, political, and social life. In the Pacific today, although some Islanders have abandoned its use, its traditional functions are being maintained and it is being developed into an important cash crop. The plant attracts a wide range of contemporary interest. For prehistorians and linguists, its distribution provides traces of the migrations of Oceanic peoples. For anthropologists and sociologists, the drug facilitates social interaction. For theologians, kava consumption is a religious act. For political scientists, kava ritual today symbolizes new national identities and unity within postcolounial Pacific states. Botanists are intrigued by the problems of defining the species and by the sterility of its cultivars. Geneticists have begun to survey its zymotypes and chemotypes. Agronomists view the plant as an increasingly valuable cash crop suited to the traditional agricultural practices of subsistence farmers. National development officials in some Melanesian countries suggest that investments in kava cultivation may generate desperately needed export earnings for newly independent Pacific Island nations. Pharmacologists search rain forests and folk medicinal systems for useful new therapies. And kava drinkers themselves may want to know more about their daily dose.

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In the following chapters we discuss all these aspects of the Pacific drug. Chapter 2 addresses botanical aspects of wild and cultivated kavas, including geographic range, morphology, reproductive biology, and genetic fingerprinting. Nomenclatural and taxonomic problems are also discussed, including the question of whether P. methysticum is a separate species or a series of sterile cloned cultivars derived from P. wichmannii. Morphological and zymotypic data, along with chemotypic evidence discussed in the succeeding chapter, point toward kava's origins in northern Vanuatu.

Kava's physiological effects on drinkers and the chemistry of its major psychoactive ingredients, the kavalactones, are described in chapter 3. The molecular structure of kavalactones and their physiological activity are discussed, and research that identifies nine chemotype groups of P. methysticum and P. wichmannii is presented. The chapter also addresses the geographic distribution, variable psychoactivity, and social uses of different kava chemotypes.

Chapter 4 describes ethnobotanical aspects of kava, including its cultivation, folk classifications of cultivars, and methods of preparation and consumption. The chapter reviews kava's importance in folk medicine, providing examples of its traditional use to treat various island illnesses.

The anthropology of kava use is summarized in chapter 5, particularly its mythic origins, its symbolic association with drunkenness and death, its relation to sexuality, and its impact on sociability. The religious importance of altered states produced by kava drinking and the use of the drug as a means of inspiration are also discussed. The chapter concludes with several vignettes (or perhaps we might call these "kavettes") of kava use in the contemporary Pacific.

Chapter 6 deals with the economic importance of kava today. The growing of kava as a cash crop in Fiji, Tonga, and especially Vanuatu is described, along with the production, trade, and sale of kava products in both the regional beverage and the export pharmacological markets. We also note the plant's further export potential.

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The final chapter summarizes our position on the origins of kava, its history and dispersal, its traditional cultural role, its contemporary economic importance, and the innovative and creative ways Pacific Islanders and other communities continue to use the drug. We suggest that in the future kava, if taken up by international pharmacological and recreational drug markets and used in a variety of novel social contexts, may spread beyond its regional base. As kava is internationalized, the Pacific drug is becoming a world drug.

 

Chapter 3 Chemistry: Active Principles and Their Effects

Chapter 4 Ethnobotany: Cultivation, Classification, Preparation, and Medicinal Use

Chapter 7 Kava: A World Drug?

Bibliography

Pictorial Presentation of Kava




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