Ethnolichenology is the study of the relationship between lichens and people. Lichens have and are being used for many different purposes by human cultures on every continent, with the possible exception of Australia. The most common human use of lichens is for dye, but they are also frequently used for medicine and food. Different human cultures across the world have also found many other more novel uses for lichens.
In North America the most significant lichen dye is Letharia vuplina. Indigenous people through most of this lichen's range in North America traditionally make a yellow dye from this lichen by boiling it in water.
Historically, traditional dyes in Scotland were very important. Brown lichen dyes (called crottle) and red lichen dyes (called corkir) were used extensively to produce tartans.
Purple dyes from lichens were historically very important throughout Europe from the 15th to 17th centuries. They were generally extracted from Roccella spp. lichens imported from the Canary Islands, Cape Verde Islands, Madagascar, or India. These lichens, and the dye extracted from them, are called orchil (variants archil, orchilla). The same dye was also produced from Ochrolechia spp. lichens in Britain and was called cudbear. Both Roccela spp. and Ochrolechia spp. contain the lichen substance orcin, which converts into the purple dye orcein in the ammonia fermentation process.
In the past Iceland moss was an important human food in northern Europe and Scandanavia, and was cooked in many different ways, such as bread, porridge, pudding, soup, or salad. Bryoria fremonii was an important food in parts of North America, where it was usually pitcooked. It is even featured in a Secwepemc story. Cladina rangiferina, or reindeer lichen, is a staple food reindeer and caribou in the arctic. Northern peoples in North America and Siberia traditionally eat the partially digested lichen after they remove it from the rumen of caribou that have been killed. It is often called 'stomach icecream'. Rock tripe is a lichen that has frequently been used as an emergency food in North America.
Anthropology | Botany | Biology | Ethnobiology | Lichens | Symbiosis | Mycology | cryptogams
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