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    INTRODUCTION 
       
           Fiddleheads are  the edible young fern fronds (crosiers) that rise from the plant each year in  the spring.  They are called fiddleheads  because they are usually tightly coiled and resemble the head of a fiddle.  Three edible fiddlehead species grow in the  United States. Ostrich Fern, Matteuccia  struthiopteris, is  the species most commonly harvested and commercially marketed, but it does not  grow in the Pacific Northwest.   Bracken fern, Pteridium aquilinum, and lady fern, Athyrium filix-femina are the two edible  fiddlehead species in the Pacific Northwest. The fiddlehead is and has been  an important food and medicine for Native Americans, Asians, and many other  people throughout the world.  Other parts  of these ferns, such as the rhizome are also edible, and the mature fronds can  also be used in many ways.   
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    ECOLOGY 
       
           Bracken fern is the world’s most widespread  fern, growing in meadows, roadsides, clearings, sterile sandy soils, burns,  avalanche tracks, dry to wet forests, acid sites such as lake-shores and bogs  (Pojar and MacKinnon, 1994).  It grows in  most parts of the world except at high altitudes and very dry and cold places  (Taylor, 1970).  Bracken is a hardy  plant, and considered invasive in some parts, like England, where measures are  being taken to eradicate it.  The plant  takes over burn areas, agricultural fields, and grazing lands and once it is  established, it is difficult to get rid of.   This is a major problem in many parts of the world that rely on grazing  lands because bracken contains harmful secondary compounds that poison  livestock (Smith 1985).  
             Bracken is characterized by its triangular  blades, two to three times pinnate, which stem from slender, straw-colored  stipes.  Thomas Taylor (2006) describes  the rhizomes as slender, wide-creeping, sparsely scaly and very dark.  In the Pacific Northwest, the bracken fern  prefers sunlit areas and open fields.  It  grows well in burned areas and meadows of the forest.  | 
   
  
      
      HISTORY 
       
           Native Americans have eaten the fiddleheads and  rhizomes of bracken fern.  The mealy  centers of bracken rhizomes were eaten for their starch by many Western  Washington tribes—Chehalis, Cowlitz, Green River, Klallam, Lummi, Makah,  Quileute, Quinault, Skagit, Skokomish, Snohomish, Squaxin, Swinomish and Lower  Chinook, who prepared the rhizomes by roasted them in ashes and peeling the  skins. The Carrier of Northern B.C. steamed the roots in a roasting pit with  alder branches for flavor, and ate them with meat or fish (Leidl and Sheck,  ND).  The Cowlitz  also eat the crosiers of young plants raw.   This is interesting because most of the current literature, including  edible plant field guides, consider raw bracken crosiers to be carcinogenic  (Gunther, 1945).  Edibility on a whole  for these fiddleheads is debatable, ranging from being useful only as a famine  or survival plant, to being desirable by various Asian populations.  Bracken is popular in Japan.  As of 1986, the city of Tokyo alone was  consuming over 300,000 kg of bracken fiddlehead per year.  The demand was so high that bracken had to be  imported from Siberia (Smith, 1986).   In  China and Japan, bracken fiddleheads are canned and eaten in soups as sawarbi, and they are also popular in  Korea (North Woods, 2006).  They have  also been used to brew beer in Scandinavia (Camus et al, 1991).  
       
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    ECONOMICS 
                 Harvesting  techniques have varied among Native American peoples in the Paciific  Northwest.  The Quinault were digging bracken rhizomes in August, Lummi and Skokomish  of Washington dug rhizomes after weather turned cold.  Skagit dug ferns at Birdsview, only selecting  those that ooze juice (Gunther, 1945).   The Carrier of Northern B.C, on the other hand, harvested in early  spring when the plant was beginning to sprout (Leidl and Sheck, ND).   
       
             Information  concerning the current commercial harvest of fiddleheads in the Pacific  Northwest is vague.  Lady Fern  fiddleheads are distributed by Mycological to stores and restaurants in the  Willamette Valley as harvesters bring them along with their mushrooms, but as  the number of permits issued for commercial harvesting in the Willamette  National Forest reflects, commercial harvesting in Oregon is not a large  economic endeavor. Although Sunrise Asian Market in Eugene carries packaged dry  and fresh bracken fiddleheads, the store has never carried locally gathered  fiddleheads.  They are imported from  China.  This implies that there is a demand for bracken fern, but the commercial aspect of  harvesting them either is not significant, or is not important enough to  harvesters near Eugene.  Rob Ginn from  the Sweet Home district of the Willamette National Forest (2006) mentioned that  the only two permits for fiddleheads he has written in the last few years have  been for Asian women, who do not gather enough to warrant a commercial  permit.  
      MANAGEMENT 
     
          Policy surrounding  fiddlehead gathering reflects the small amount of harvesters in the Pacific  Northwest, however, in some places, permits are issued. Only the Middle Fork and Sweet Home districts  require permits to harvest fiddleheads.   The Detroit and Mckenzie districts require permits only for harvesting  whole plants.  The permit fee for  fiddleheads in the Sweet Home district is $20, and they can sell no more than  $300 worth of permits.  The fee for  fiddleheads in the Middle Fork district varies with how much a person will  gather.  There is a $250 at minimum fine  for removing a nontimber forest product without a permit, but this is more of a  problem with other products like beargrass and moss that have high commercial  value.  
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         As Rob Ginn mentioned in an  interview (comm.. 2006), the higher the price, the more likely a product will  be stolen.    Ginn also said that it takes   aggressive action to damage the bracken population.  This is why management in the Willamette  National Forest contrasts greatly with the San Bernardino National Forest where  in 1997, 16,520 pounds of bracken were removed from the forest and 381 permits  were issued, and harvesting is more strictly regulated (Anderson et al, 2000).  Contrast these numbers with the two to three  permits issued for fiddleheads in the Middle Fork district and two permits per  year in the Sweet Home district.  John  and Rob Ginn noted in our conversations that these numbers don’t necessarily  reflect the extent of harvesting though.   The Willamette National Forest’s budget is constantly being reduced;  they suffer from lack of personnel, and it is difficult to keep track of what  is happening on Forest Service land. 
      *Compiled from a paper by Sarah Farnsworth   | 
   
 
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