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Health benefits of Chinese Wolfberry

Chinese Wolfberry Quick Facts
Name: Chinese Wolfberry
Scientific Name: Lycium chinense
Origin China, Taiwan and Japan and widely cultivated in South east and north Asia
Colors Red or orange-red
Shapes Ovoid or ellipsoid berry, 0.7–1.5 cm × 5–8 mm
Flesh colors Reddish
Taste Sweet, Pungent, Astringent
Health benefits Boosts the Immune System, Heart Health, Increases Testosterone, Protect from Cancer, Restores Glutathione, Detoxifies Your Body, Improve Mood, Promotes Skin Health, Helps Weight Loss, Liver Health, Anti-aging, Improves Vision, Cooling properties
Lycium chinense commonly known as Chinese wolfberry is a major Chinese tonic herb, first mentioned in the Divine Husbandman’s Classic, written in the 1st century AD. It is one of two species of boxthorn shrub in the family Solanaceae. Along with Lycium barbarum, it produces the goji berry (wolfberry). Two varieties are recognized, L. chinense var. chinense and L. chinense var. potaninii. The plant is native to China (Anhui, Fujian, Gansu, Guangdong, Guangxi, Guizhou, Hainan, Hebei, Heilongjiang, Henan, Hubei, Hunan, Jiangsu, Jiangxi, Jilin, Liaoning, Nei Mongol, Ningxia, Qinghai, Shaanxi, Shanxi, Sichuan, Yunnan, Zhejiang), Taiwan and Japan and widely cultivated in South east and north Asia. Wolfberry is also naturalized in Europe, eastern United States, Japan, Korea, Mongolia, Nepal, Pakistan and south-west Asia. Apart from Chinese wolfberry it is popularly known as common boxthorn, chinese boxthorn, Chinese desert-thorn, Chinese Tea Plant, Chinese Wolfberry, Duke Of Argyll Tea Tree, Goji Berry, Go Qi Zi, Gow Kee, Matrimony Vine, Wolfberry, Daun koki, Gau gei choi, Gouqi, Gugijanamu, Holly Willow, Kaokichai, Kaukichai, Kaukichoy and Kei-chi.

Genus name comes from the Greek name for a thorny tree from Lycia, a south-west region of Asia Minor that was used medicinally. Specific epithet means Chinese. Traditionally it is supposed to promote long life —a Chinese herbalist said to have lived for 252 years ascribed his longevity to tonic herbs, including lycium. Today both the berries and the root have a wide range of medicinal uses. The root can be unearthed at any time of the year but is most commonly harvested in spring. The berries are picked in late summer or early autumn.

Chinese Wolfberry Facts

Name Chinese Wolfberry
Scientific Name Lycium chinense
Native China (Anhui, Fujian, Gansu, Guangdong, Guangxi, Guizhou, Hainan,
Hebei, Heilongjiang, Henan, Hubei, Hunan, Jiangsu, Jiangxi, Jilin, Liaoning, Nei Mongol, Ningxia, Qinghai, Shaanxi, Shanxi, Sichuan, Yunnan, Zhejiang), Taiwan and Japan and widely cultivated in South east and north Asia. Wolfberry is also naturalized in Europe, eastern United States, Japan, Korea, Mongolia, Nepal, Pakistan and south-west Asia
Common Names Common Boxthorn, Chinese Boxthorn, Chinese Desert-Thorn, Chinese Tea Plant, Chinese Wolfberry, Duke Of Argyll Tea Tree, Goji Berry, Go Qi Zi, Gow Kee, Matrimony Vine, Wolfberry, Daun koki, Gau gei choi, Gouqi, Gugijanamu, Holly Willow, Kaokichai, Kaukichai, Kaukichoy, Kei-chi, Kou-chi, Kou-kay-choi, Kuko
Name in Other Languages Armenian: Hazaz ch’inakan (Հազազ չինական)
Chinese:  Gou qi (枸杞), Dì Gǔ Pí, Gǒuqǐ, Gǒu Qǐ Zǐ, Kei-Chi, Kau Kei
Croatian: Vučac
Czech: Kustovnice čínská, Kustovnica
Danish: Bredbladet bukketorn
Dutch: Gaugee, Daoon koki, Chinese boksdoorn
English: Chinese boxthorn, Chinese desert-thorn, Chinese matrimony-vine, Chinese tea plant, Chinese wolfberry, chinese tea-tree, wolfberry, gow kee
Finnish: Kiinanpukinpensas
French: Lyciet de Chine, Lyciet
German: Bocksdornbeere, Chinesischer Bocksdorn
Greek: Lýkeio to sinikó (Λύκιο το σινικό)
Hungarian: Kínai ördögcérna
Icelandic: Kinafletta
Indonesian: Daun koki
Italian: Spina santa cinese, licio della Cina
Japanese:  Kuko (クコ),  Kuko (くこ), Kuko no mi (クコの実) , Kuko no kajitsu (クコの果実), Kukoshi (クコ)
Korean: Gu gi ja (구기자), Gu gi ja na mu (구기자나무), Bulro Kugi, Kukija, Kujijanamu
Malay: Kaukichai, Kaukichoy, Keichi
Malayan: Kaukichai
Norwegian: Kinabukketorn
Persian: لیسیوم چینی
Polish: Kolcowój chiński
Portuguese: Cambroeira-da-china
Romanian: Goji
Russian: Dereza kitayskaya (Дереза китайская), Derezy plod (Дерезы плод),  Kitayskaya zamanikha (Китайская заманиха), Koz’ye moloko (Козье молоко), Volch’ya yagoda (Волчья ягода)
Slovak: Kustovnica čínska
Spanish: Cambrona de Ningxia, Cambronero chino
Swedish: Bredbladigt bocktörne
Thai: Keā kī c̄h̀ā y (เกากีฉ่าย) , Găo Gèe, Kaokichai, Kaochichai
Tibetan: Dretsherma, Dretshermǟ Dräwu
Turkish: Termiye çalısı
Vietnam : Cẩu Kỷ, Cẩu Kỷ Tử, Củ Khởi, Rau Khoi, Khu Khoi, Dia Coy Bi, Khoi Tu, Kỷ Tử, Phjac Khau Khi ( Tay )
Welsh: Ysbeinwydden Tsieina
Plant Growth Habit Much-branched, erect, sprawling, deciduous, woody perennial shrub
Growing Climates Slopes, wastelands, saline places, roadsides, near houses, thickets, river banks in lowland, thickets in lowland, house backyards, old homestead sites, areas along railroads and vacant lots
Soil Grow in moderately fertile, medium moisture, well-drained soils
Plant Size About 1–3 meters (3 ft. 3 in–9 ft. 10 in) high
Root Woody and branching
Stem Highly branched. Branches are pale gray, slender, curved or pendulous, with thorns 0.5–2 centimeters (0.20–0.79 in) long.
Leaf Leaves distichous, bright green, with a short petiole; leaf-blade lanceolate to ovate, 1-14 cm × 0.5-6 cm, usually widest below the middle, the lower ones largest, margin entire.
Flowering season June to August
Flower Solitary or in few-flowered racemes, erect; calyx campanulate, 5-toothed, 3 mm long; corolla funnel-shaped, 5-lobed, 10-15 mm long, tube narrowly cylindrical at the base for 1.5 mm, lobes 5-8 mm long, red-purple with yellowish throat
Fruit Shape & Size Ellipsoid berry, about 1 cm × 0.5-0.75 cm, red, many-seeded.
Fruit Color Red or orange-red
Flesh Color Reddish
Plant Parts Used Ripe fruit, bark, leaves, flowers, Root bark
Seed Seeds numerous, yellow, 2.5–3 mm with curved embryo
Taste Sweet, Pungent, Astringent
Propagation By seed or vegetatively propagated by hardwood cuttings
Lifespan About 10 years
Season August – November
Health Benefits
  • Boosts the Immune System
  • Heart Health
  • Increases Testosterone
  • Protect from Cancer
  • Restores Glutathione
  • Detoxifies Your Body
  • Improve Mood
  • Promotes Skin Health
  • Helps Weight Loss
  • Liver Health
  • Anti-aging
  • Improves Vision
  • Cooling properties

Plant Description

Chinese wolfberry is a much-branched, erect, sprawling, deciduous, woody perennial shrub that normally grows about 1–3 meters (3 ft. 3 in–9 ft. 10 in) high. The plant is found growing in slopes, wastelands, saline places, roadsides, near houses, thickets, river banks in lowland, thickets in lowland, house backyards, old homestead sites, areas along railroads and vacant lots. The plant grows in moderately fertile, medium moisture and well-drained soils. Roots are woody and branching.  Root is known to stimulate the parasympathetic nervous system, which controls involuntary bodily functions. It also relaxes the artery muscles, thus lowering blood pressure. Chinese research has shown the root to have a prominent ability to reduce fever, and in one clinical trial it had a significant effect in reducing fever in malaria.

Stem

Woody stems and shoots are ascending, arching, or sprawling, and they occasionally climb over nearby vegetation and objects like a vine. Older woody stems tend to be brown, terete, and thorny, while younger woody stems are light brown with whitish streaks, terete or 4-angled, and either thorn less or thorny. Thorns are up to ½ inch long or slightly longer. Young green shoots are light green, terete or 4-angled, hairless, and usually thorn less. Leaves occur along the young shoots or young woody stems; primary leaves are alternate, but secondary leaves occur in clusters from the axils of older primary leaves.

Leaves

Leaves form on the shoot either solitary in an alternating arrangement or in bundles of 2 to 4. Leaves may be ovate, rombic, lanceolate, or linear-lanceolate and toothless along their margins. They are usually 1.5–5 centimetres (0.59–1.97 in) long and 0.5–2.5 centimetres (0.20–0.98 in) wide (but up to 10 centimetres (3.9 in) long and 4 centimetres (1.6 in) wide in cultivated plants). Tips of these leaves are acute or blunt, while their bottoms taper into short petioles that are partially winged. Upper leaf surface is grayish green or medium green and hairless, while the lower leaf surface is pale grayish green or pale green and hairless.

Flower

Solitary or clusters of 2–3 flowers occur from the axils of leaves on hairless light green petioles 1–2 centimeters (0.39–0.79 in) long. Each flower is about ¾ inches long and similarly across, consisting of a bell-shaped (campanulate) light green calyx with 3–5 teeth, a lavender corolla with 5 spreading rounded lobes, 5 exserted stamens with brownish anthers, and an ovary with a single exserted white style that terminates in a swollen light green stigma. The base of each corolla is short tubular-funnel form; it is about the same length or a little shorter than its spreading lobes. The throat of the corolla and the interior of its lobes have dark pinnate and radiating veins, and sometimes the area around these veins is pale with light brown, yellowish, or greenish tints. Flowering normally takes place from June to August.

Fruit

If a shrub is fertile, the majority of the flowers will be replaced by orange-red to red berries that are 7–15 millimetres (0.28–0.59 in) long and 5 to 8 mm wide (but up to 22 millimetres (0.87 in) long and 10 millimetres (0.39 in) wide in cultivation). Fruits are long, ovoid or oblong in shape, hairless, and shiny. The interior of these berries is reddish and juicy. Each berry consists of about 10–20 seeds, however their number may varies widely based on cultivar and fruit size, from 10 to 60.  Individual seeds are about 2.5 to 3 mm wide, orbicular-coiled in shape, somewhat flattened, and brownish yellow. The berries ripen from July to October in the Northern Hemisphere.

Berries (fresh or dried), young shoots and leaves are used in oriental cooking. Berries are used to make an herbal tea. Berries are dried for herbal use (China reportedly produces over 5 million kilograms of dried fruit per year). This is a long time medicinal plant (leaves, roots and berries) in China.

Health benefits of Chinese Wolfberry

Listed below are some of the popular health benefits of using Chinese wolfberry

1. Boosts the Immune System

Chinese wolfberry tea is considered a wonderful immune booster because it consists of fructose, which is good sugar. Since white sugar is bad for us fructose helps the function of our immune system and helps to keep our bodies strong and healthy, and fights off disease. Apart from that fructose found in goji berry tea also boosts our energy and helps us be more productive and perform better athletically.

2. Heart Health

Smoking, high cholesterol, high blood pressure, high levels of sugar in the blood, and blood vessel inflammation are the main causes of heart disease. Chinese wolfberry tea has the ability to lower cholesterol up to 70% and also reduces triglycerides. It protects against LDL, bad cholesterol, and prevents it from oxidizing. Drinking wolfberry tea can also reduce blood sugar levels and because it has anti-inflammatory properties, it can also reduce inflammation. All of that significantly lowers the risk of heart disease, making wolfberry tea an amazing natural medicine.

3. Increases Testosterone

Testosterone is a male sex hormone which has an important role in the male reproductive system. Chinese wolfberry tea helps to increases the levels of testosterone in a man’s body and thus increases the sperm count. It can also be very simulative for sexual desire and increases sexual performance. Chinese berries are a known aphrodisiac and have been used for hundreds of years in China. (+)

4. Protect from Cancer

Chinese wolfberry tea can protect you from cancer in several ways. First of all, wolfberry tea is an anti-oxidant which means it can prevent the oxidation of cells and decrease the risk of cancer. It also fights free radicals and prevents DNA damage that can be caused by them. And as it has already been said, wolfberry tea boosts the immune system which can also help to keep cancer away. (+)

5. Restores Glutathione

Glutathione is produced naturally by our liver and it is very important for our health. It is used for treating and preventing alcoholism, liver disease, heart disease, high cholesterol, among many others, and it also boosts the immune system. Chinese wolfberry tea can restore glutathione and keep the liver healthy.

6. Detoxifies Your Body

Chinese wolfberry tea is wonderful for detoxification and it is recommended to drink it in order to get rid of all the dangerous toxins from your body. Liver plays the key role in detoxing and Chinese wolfberry tea can greatly help that process. Doing this kind of liver cleanse can be very beneficial for your health and the health of the liver.

7. Improve Mood

Wolfberry tea is known to considerably improve mood and increase the sense of wellbeing. Stress and anxiety are very detrimental for our mind and body, and can lead to depression and other dangerous conditions which prevent us from leading a normal, happy life. Drinking Chinese wolfberry tea gets rid of stress and anxiety and can also help with fatigue, giving you a needed energy boost.

8. Promotes Skin Health

Chinese wolfberry tea consists of wonderful amount of beta carotene. Beta carotene slows down the skin aging process and decreases skin damage from UV light. It also reduces sensitivity to the sun which is perfect for people who have sensitive skin and are susceptible to sunburns. Beta carotene creates a natural glow and thus makes your skin look more beautiful and younger. (+)

9. Helps Weight Loss

Chinese wolfberry tea is very high in dietary fibers that can make you feel full for a longer time after you’ve had a meal. As the result of that, you will eat less and lose weight quicker. Drinking wolfberry tea also aids in quicker digestion which also encourages weight loss and helps with any kind of indigestion problems.

10. Liver Health

Research has concluded that Chinese wolfberry juice may help protect the liver from oxidation — damaging effects of toxins and cellular waste products on DNA, lipids, proteins and other important components of cells. Chinese wolfberry also restored levels of antioxidant enzymes, prevented DNA damage and protected lipids from becoming oxidized.

11. Anti-aging

Wolfberry fruits consist of phytochemicals with antioxidant activity and could slow the ageing process. Research showed that wolfberry fruit phytochemicals help to prevent oxidation of DNA and helps to restore damaged DNA.

12. Improves Vision

Wolfberry fruits have traditionally been used in China to improve vision disorders such as cataracts, retinopathy and macular degeneration. Research have shown that Chinese wolfberry reduce dark adapting time and improve vision under subdued light. This action may be attributed to the phytochemicals lutein and zeaxanthin, which neutralizes the free radicals formed by sunlight.

13. Cooling properties

Lycium root is used in China to “cool the blood,” helping to reduce fever, sweating, irritability, and thirst. These cooling qualities also help to stop nosebleeds, reduce vomiting of blood, and soothe coughs and wheezing, whenever they are due to “patterns of excess heat.” Blood pressure As a result of recent research, lycium root is beginning to be used in China to treat people suffering from high blood pressure.

Traditional uses and benefits of Chinese Wolfberry

Ayurvedic Health benefits of Chinese wolfberry

Culinary Uses

Other Facts

Precautions

References:

https://www.itis.gov/servlet/SingleRpt/SingleRpt?search_topic=TSN&search_value=30538#null

http://www.hear.org/pier/species/lycium_chinense.htm

https://npgsweb.ars-grin.gov/gringlobal/taxonomydetail.aspx?id=22942

https://pfaf.org/user/Plant.aspx?LatinName=Lycium+chinense

http://www.missouribotanicalgarden.org/PlantFinder/PlantFinderDetails.aspx?kempercode=e352

https://plants.usda.gov/core/profile?symbol=LYCH

https://www.wikidata.org/wiki/Q141303

https://uses.plantnet-project.org/en/Lycium_chinense_(PROSEA)

http://tropical.theferns.info/viewtropical.php?id=Lycium+chinense

http://www.theplantlist.org/tpl1.1/record/kew-2496344

https://gd.eppo.int/taxon/LYUCN

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lycium_chinense

https://www.illinoiswildflowers.info/trees/plants/chinese_matrimony.html

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