Love morel mushrooms in your food? They are fast disappearing from Pakistan
The morel mushroom has been around for approximately 129 million years, growing in moist high altitude forests. It is unappreciated by most animals, except for humans, who enjoy the mushroom as an edible delicacy and for its medicinal properties.
So much so that it is one of the most expensive vegetables in the world. In the Hindu Kush Himalayas of India and Pakistan – where they are called gucchi – the mushroom is worth its weight in gold. Poor villagers earn extra income from gathering the rare and valuable resource.
Empty-handed mushroom collectors
Gulshoom Bibi, a 45-year-old mother of four, remembers the good old days when she would supplement the income of her family by picking mushrooms from the nearby forest. Her family lives near the National Ayubia Park in Abbottabad, northern Pakistan. Her husband, Muhammad Ashan, is a watchman, who earns Rs10,000 per month, so the extra income was much needed, but in the last few years the rare mushrooms, and Bibi’s extra income, have virtually disappeared.
“Every year in the month of March, my children and I collected between 10 to 15 kgs of morel mushrooms. This generated an additional income of about Rs50,000, depending on the market rate and quality. Unfortunately for the last four – five years I am only able to find 2 or 3 kgs of the mushrooms,” Gulshoom Bibi told thethirdpole.net.
Last year collectors like Bibi found very few mushrooms, and the prices skyrocketed. Gulshoom Bibi received Rs20,000 for the only kg of mushrooms. This is many times the price that she used to receive in 1999-2000, between Rs4,000 to Rs5,000.
According to Bibi, the prices have not risen suddenly, but slowly, as the mushrooms have slowly disappeared from the forests. Shazia Sajid, a 50-year-old mother of three, is another mushroom collector. She found none this year. The only things that she found were a few flowers of the mushrooms, nothing worth the while to sell.
The fluctuating weather and deforestation
According to Sabiha Zaman, who works with the World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF) in Pakistan, the mushrooms are victims of climate change. “In earlier years the collection season of the morel lasted for two months: March and April. Now the season has been reduced to a few days in March,” Sabiha Zaman told thethirdpole.net.
One of the reasons that morel mushrooms are so expensive is that they are hard to cultivate, and need precise conditions. “If in the month of December, January and February there is routine snowfall in the mountains,” Zaman said, “followed by routine rainfall in March, there is a good production of morel.”
Unfortunately climate change has brought with it inconsistent precipitation patterns in the region. The fluctuating patterns are having a seriously negative impact on everything from agriculture to apiculture.
Professor Juma Muhammad, head of the Department of Environmental Science at the Shaheed Benazir Bhutto University in Dir, Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa province, has been researching morel mushrooms for over a decade. He fears that if the weather situation persists, the mushrooms may disappear entirely. “The situation is worse than we thought,” he told thethirdpole.net. “I know many spots in Swat where the morel used to grow, but in the last 3 to 4 years they have completely disappeared.”