The monotypic genus Anemopsis has only one species, Anemopsis californica, with the common names yerba mansa or lizard tail.
It is a perennial herb in the lizard tail family (Saururaceae) and prefers very wet soil or shallow water.[Flowering Plants of the Santa Monica Mountains, Nancy Dale, 2nd Ed., 2000, p. 175]
Range and habitat
It is native to southwestern
North America in northwest Mexico and the Southwestern United States from
California to
Oklahoma and
Texas to
Kansas to
Oregon. It grows in wet, alkaline marsh and creek edges.
Description
Leaves and stems
As it matures, the visible part of the plant develops red stains, eventually turning bright red in the fall.
[ Medicinal Plants of the SW - Anemopsis californica , retrieved on July 17, 2007.]
Inflorescence and fruit
Yerba mansa is showy in spring when in bloom. The iconic white "flowers" (actually reduced inflorescences, or
pseudanthium) are borne in early spring, and are surrounded by 4–9 large white
.
[
]
Similar to the family Asteraceae, what appears to be a single bloom is in reality a dense cluster of individually small flowers borne in an inflorescence. In this species the inflorescence is conical and has five to ten large white bracts beneath it, so that along with the tiny white florets, the whole structure is quite striking when it blooms in spring. The conical structure develops into a single, tough fruit that can be carried downstream to spread the tiny, pepper-like seeds.[http://ucjeps.berkeley.edu/cgi-bin/get_JM_treatment.pl?7085,7086,7087 Jepson Manual Treatment]
Common name
In her book on
herbs of the southwestern USA, Dr. Soule discusses the common name. "
Yerba mansa is one of those names which confounds linguists.
Yerba is Spanish for herb, and thus one would think that
mansa is also from Spanish as well, but all indications point to the fact that it is not.
Mansa means tame, peaceful, calm in Spanish, and the plant has no sedative effect, nor did local people ever use it as a calming agent. Its primary use is as an
antimicrobial,
antibacterial, and antifungal. The most likely explanation is that mansa is a Spanish alteration of the original native word for the plant, now lost in the depths of time."
[Quoted here by permission of the author: Soule, J. A. 2011. Father Kino's Herbs: Growing and Using Them Today. Tierra del Sol Press, Tucson, AZ.] Hartweg, who collected it at León, Guanajuato in 1837, recorded the local name as
yerba del manso.
[G. Bentham. Plantas Hartwegianas.(1839)p. 30] It is also known as
yerba del manso in northern Baja California. The word "manso" could be short for "remanso" (backwater) which would agree with the areas where the plant thrives.
Uses
Medicinal
Yerba mansa is used as an
antimicrobial, an
antibacterial, and to treat vaginal candidiasis.
[ Anemopsis californica - Plants For A Future database report, retrieved on July 17, 2007]
Yerba mansa is used to treat inflammation of the mucous membranes, swollen gums and sore throat. An infusion of can be taken as a diuretic to treat rheumatic diseases like gout by ridding the body of excess uric acid, which causes painful inflammation of the joints. Yerba mansa prevents the buildup of uric acid crystals in the kidneys which could cause kidney stones if left untreated. A powder of dried root can be sprinkled on infected areas to alleviate athlete's foot or diaper rash.[Kay, M.A. Healing with Plants in the American and Mexican West. University of Arizona Press, Tucson, AZ, 1996.][Sencoval, Annette. Home Grown Healing Traditional Home Remedies from Mexico. Berkley Books, New York, NY, 1998.]
Yerba mansa is versatile. It can be taken orally as a tea, tincture, infusion or dried in capsule form. It can be used externally for soaking inflamed or infected areas. It can be ground and used as a dusting powder. Some people in Las Cruces, New Mexico use the leaves to make a poultice to relieve muscle swelling and inflammation.[Moore, Michael. Medicinal Plants of the Desert and Canyon West. Museum of New Mexico Press, Santa Fe, NM, 1989.] The leaves and roots have also been used to heal and disinfect wounds and sores.
Yerba mansa is the midwife's panacea. The Good Book of Alice the Midwife enumerates the striking symmetry of benefits between this sub-tropic wetland plant in riparian ecology and microbiome diversity.
Crafts
-
Dried floral structures are used in dried arrangements.
[Soule, J. A. 2011. Father Kino's Herbs: Growing and Using Them Today. Tierra del Sol Press, Tucson, AZ.]
-
Dried plant parts (leaves, floral structure) emit a spicy fragrance and are used in potpourri.
Horticulture
-
In the deserts of California, yerba mansa is being used as sod in public parks and ground cover in gardens.
[Bakker, Elna. "Yerba Mansa as Ground Cover." Pacific Horticulture 49 (4): 47-49. Pacific Horticultural Foundation, San Francisco, CA, 1988.]
External links