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To test the theory, Tewksbury wanted to compare spicy and mild chilies from the same species, if only he could find some. He contacted Paul Bosland, of the Chile Pepper Institute at New Mexico State University, who maintains a huge collection of chili seeds. Bosland told Tewksbury that he had tasted an unusual chili in his greenhouse one day in 1996. "I took a bite of it just to see what it tasted like and I said ‘hmm' that fruit doesn't seem to have any heat," he recalls. "So, I took another one and I said ‘hmm' that one doesn't either." The chili had come from seeds collected in Bolivia 37 years earlier. Bosland took note of it, wrote it off as a mutant and placed the seeds back in the freezer. But after Tewksbury called, he pulled them out again.
Tewksbury used the seeds to grow chiles for his experiments. When he offered the fruits of those labors to laboratory packrats and cactus mice, the rodents ate the mild chilies but avoided the hot ones. Such studies convinced him "that capsaicin is all about parental care," Tewksbury says. "It's all about plants caring for their offspring," the fruits. He later found that capsaicin also has the strange effect of slowing birds' digestive systems, which helps some seeds germinate, possibly by softening the seed coat. (Birds don't mind eating capsaicin; in fact, some backyard birdwatchers spike their birdseed with chili powder to stop squirrels from raiding feeders.) Even so, Tewksbury didn't believe that deterring rodents and slowing bird digestion were enough to explain why spiciness evolved in the first place. Instead, he has come to think that a chili's heat protects it from much smaller foes.
In Bolivia, fungal rot is a more pervasive threat than rodents. More than 90 percent of ripe wild chili fruits contain signs of fungal infection; it is the primary reason seeds die prior to being dispersed. Back in the lab in Seattle, Machnicki has found that just one fungus—from the Fusarium genus, light pink in color—is the main culprit regardless of the chili species. "It's not a random fungus," says Machnicki. "It's strongly associated with these chili peppers."
In looking at pepper populations that contain both spicy and mild plants, Tewksbury and Machnicki have found that the more capsaicin, the less fungal infection. Furthermore, the fungus thrives in humid environments, and Tewksbury and colleagues have found that chilies in Bolivia seem to adjust accordingly: the moister the climate, the spicier the chilies. In the lab, fungus raised from mild peppers is easily inhibited by a little spiciness, whereas fungus from spicier pepper populations can withstand more heat.
"Capsaicin demonstrates the incredible elegance of evolution," says Tewksbury. The specialized chemical deters microbes—humans harness this ability when they use chilies to preserve food—but capsaicin doesn't deter birds from eating chili fruits and spreading seeds. "Once in a while, the complex, often conflicting demands that natural selection places on complex traits results in a truly elegant solution. This is one of those times."
William Foley, a nutritional ecologist at the Australian National University in Canberra, says Tewksbury is "working on the right system to answer tricky ecological questions people have been asking for a long time." Denise Dearing, an ecologist at the University of Utah, calls Tewksbury's research "the most in-depth work on a plant-frugivore [fruit eater] interaction." Tewksbury's success comes in part from his fearless exploration of the chili's motherland. Adds Foley: "You can't expect to understand complex interactions between plants and animals unless you're actually in the field."
It takes a special kind of perseverance to conduct fieldwork in the Gran Chaco, a dry forest wilderness that covers 500,000 square miles in Paraguay, Argentina, Brazil and Bolivia. In Bolivia, only 6 percent of the roads are paved and gasoline and accurate maps are hard to come by. Weather fluctuates between oppressive heat and torrential rain—turning roads into mud wallows. The researchers' truck is outfitted with two spare tires, but it was once stopped by a third flat. In the course of their research, the scientists have lost a wheel (loose lug nuts), snapped an axle (inexperienced driver) and cracked the engine block (river crossing). Their sponsoring organization, the Fundación Amigos de la Naturaleza, had to replace the entire vehicle when it was stolen in 2003.
Tewksbury says his fieldwork runs on three compounds: coca, caffeine and capsaicin. But his fascination with natural products and his seeming indefatigability may have deeper roots. His father, Peter Tewksbury, was the director of the 1950s TV sitcoms "My Three Sons" and "Father Knows Best" and the short-lived but acclaimed series "It's a Man's World," which featured Josh's mother, Cielle, acting under the name Ann Schuyler. Peter would eventually direct Elvis Presley in Stay Away, Joe and The Trouble With Girls and worked briefly with J. D. Salinger in a failed attempt to bring one of his short stories to the screen. Eventually fed up with the constraints of Hollywood, Peter came home one day in the 1970s, pulled his Emmy Award from the closet and chucked it into the trash can. "It was one of his bitter moments," Cielle recalls. "He had an incredible sense of morality and ethics, and it just didn't match with a Hollywood career." As Peter himself would later tell the New York Times, "Peter Tewksbury the director is dead."
Related topics: Taste Earth Science Food and Drink Bolivia Rain Forests
Additional Sources
"Directed deterrence by capsaicin in chillies," Joshua J. Tewksbury and Gary P. Nabhan, Nature, July 26, 2001.
"Evolutionary ecology of pungency in wild chilies," Joshua J. Tewksbury et al., PNAS, August 19, 2008.


Comments
Sometime ago when I was in bangalore, India I read a very interesting article related to the subject. It was titled 'SOME LIKE IT HOT' and was in the Times of India. This little cameo talks of the lethal potency of the chilli pepper in a humurous way. Readers may like to look at this article by Janardhan Roye.
Posted by Sybil Sluzman on March 27,2009 | 12:03PM
Here is the link to the humurous take on the 'hottest chillies in the world': 21. Some like it Hot The Times of India, Editorial/Spice Out, Friday August 15, 2008 http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/Editorial/Some_Like_It_Hot/articleshow/3366649.cms
Posted by Sybil Sluzman on March 27,2009 | 12:10PM
Here's a great video that explains the secret behind the heat. http://tinyurl.com/3pcvf3
Posted by Ryan Pitcheraale on March 30,2009 | 10:59AM
Hi Brendan
I loved your article being an avid chillihead like myself...However I just wanted to mention about the hottest chili that you mention being the Naga Jolokia? Hmmm well this is incorrrect unfortunately. I hope you don't mind me saying, but in fact it happens to be the Bhut Jolokia! If you follow the link below, you will find an article on Dave Dewitt's site, a good friend of mine. Not only does it make good reading, but also explains the story behind the hottest chili pepper battle.
Hot Regards
Blaise Lawrence "Chillihead"
P.s My article is on the fllowing link too
http://www.fiery-foods.com/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=1926:the-portuguese-piri-piri-expedition&catid=77:europe&Itemid=150
Link for the Hottest Chili in the world
http://www.fiery-foods.com/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=2363:saga-jolokia&catid=127:other-stories-about-growing-chile-peppers&Itemid=147
Posted by Blaise Lawrence on April 2,2009 | 03:53AM
Hi Blaise,
The Naga Jolokia and Bhut Jolokia are two names for the same pepper. Whatever it’s called we don’t recommend eating it whole. But you might try out the recipe for Bhut Jolokia Chocolate Brownies (in Can You Handle the Heat of Chili Peppers?, link above), which we got from Chile Pepper Institute director Paul Bosland.
Posted by The Editors on April 3,2009 | 02:39PM
This article states that Bolivia is the capital of chilis. However, way before Bolivia became Bolivia and was liberated by Simon Bolivar, it was part of Peru - called Alto Peru and the chilis or "aji" were originally from Peru.
Posted by Terry del Pomar on April 9,2009 | 12:23PM
It has become common knowledge in my circle of chili lovers that man is the only animal that seeks out chilis to eat. This bit of "wisdom," which has even made it onto the Snapple bottle cap, is disproved by Mr. Borrell's article, when he notes that birds have no trouble eating them. Does anyone know other nonhuman animals that eat chilis?
Posted by Barry Kramer on April 9,2009 | 02:49PM
So Terry, from your words it seems that Bolivia was liberated from Peru (?!?)
It is quite interesting that every time something, anything like the hot chilis and pepers are documented as originally from Bolivia, a peruvian always jumps to claim credit too and most of the time using silly arguments. Terry, in some twisted logic seems also to believe that what it is today Bolivia was a chili-free land and that the great and increasing variety of chilis we have found and documented in our tropical forests, ranges and low lands, have been first "imported" from Peru. Yea right!
Last time I checked people form both then-not-yet-but-soon-to-be countries fought together against Spain for their independence at the beginnings of the 1800s and got it almost at the same time. There was one part of Bolivia (the highlands –where chilis usually are not original) that was Alto Peru when Peru was not even an independent country. But Bolivia is not only highlands and the rich varieties of hot chilies and pepers being found, researched and documented belong to the east part of the country -much beyond the highlands and the border with Peru.
As suggested in this article and elsewhere, Bolivia is definitively a good candidate to be the world capital of hot chilis and pepers-- a title in dispute with Mexico and India.
Posted by Olivia on April 13,2009 | 07:13AM
Barry Kramer, birds have no trouble eating peppers because birds can not taste the capsaicin found in the fruit or the seeds. They just do not have any reaction to capsaicin at all. Birds seem to just like seeds whether they are from a commercial bird mix or from (hot) peppers.
Posted by Alex on April 14,2009 | 04:54PM
Does anyone know other nonhuman animals that eat chilis? Hornworms Pepper Le Pew
Posted by Pepper Le Pew aka Gordon Bishoff on April 17,2009 | 07:11PM
Has anyone tried the wild peppers from Fiji? My wife's family brought them to the states when they emegrated a few years ago. These are great and so hot. I wonder how I can get a scovile scale rating www.hotwildpepper.com
Posted by Rod on May 7,2009 | 08:27PM
Is it true that if insects cross-pollinate a hot pepper with a sweet pepper, that the sweet one will be hotter than usual? If that is true, wouldn't that further complicate his research?
Posted by Katie on May 8,2009 | 10:14AM
awsome!
Posted by cyrus on October 6,2009 | 09:34AM