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The couple packed up the car and drove with their two children to Vermont, where they adopted the names Henry and Mary Jane. "Henry" became a renowned cheese expert and the author of The Cheeses of Vermont: A Gourmet Guide to Vermont's Artisanal Cheesemakers. They home-schooled Josh and his sister, Marintha, and moved among Vermont, Quebec, Oregon and a ranch in California. Peter Tewksbury died in 2003 at age 79. "When [Peter] would glom onto something he wanted to do, it was just [at] a dead run," says Cielle, 71, who teaches the Taoist philosophy tai chi and Chinese sword and saber techniques in Brattleboro, Vermont. "There's quite a bit of him in Josh: the excitement, the drive and the complete dedication and focus."
Indeed, some mornings in Bolivia, Josh Tewksbury was in such a rush to get out to the field that he'd put his shirt on inside out or backward. Talking about science, he would get a faraway look and say, "that would be slick." From the back of the truck one day, he yelled to colleagues riding in the cab about a new experiment he was contemplating. Carlos Manchego, a student at Bolivia's Natural History Museum, and Tomás Carlo, an ecologist at Pennsylvania State University, spent the next hour hashing it out with Tewksbury as they hung out the windows, clutching the roof rack.
His zeal can sometimes get the better of him. About eight years ago, he and Doug Levey of the University of Florida, an expert on plant and animal interactions, were visiting Ilha do Cardoso off the coast of Brazil. The duo became convinced they had uncovered a novelty: a fungus whose spores were dispersed by a bird. They spent several days frantically collecting samples with hopes of culturing the fungus back in the lab. They hoped to submit their findings to a prestigious journal. But when they finally examined the "fungus" under a microscope, they noticed it had legs—and there's nothing unusual about birds eating insects.
But Levey points out that even Tewksbury's misguided enthusiasms may prove fruitful: "There's a long history in science of the most important discoveries being made by accident or by following a whim."
"I think this is insane right now," says Machnicki as she plucks a huge spine out of the back of her knee. Her nylon quick-dry pants are no match for the Bolivian forest. At her feet, a snake-like cactus winds among thickets of spiny ground bromeliads ("my nemesis," she calls them), thorny shrubs and the bulbous stem of the devil nettle.
We had camped the night before on a low plateau overlooking the Paraguayan border. Our breakfast—and the last of our food supplies—consisted of a thimbleful of cold coffee, a boxed juice drink and a modest bag of trail mix. Instead of moving on as planned, Tewksbury's wandering legs took him to an unexpected patch of chilies. He was soon stringing a measuring tape through the woods to count every one of them in a plot some 200 yards on each side. After two years of laboratory work, Machnicki, a fungus expert, is finally getting a chance to see the natural habitat where her seed-killing fungus thrives. At the moment, though, she would rather be eating lunch. "Everything with him is by the seat of your pants," she would tell me later.
After Tewksbury paces off the census plot, the team spreads out and begins scouting chilies. Carlo points a laser rangefinder at Tewksbury, who is hovering over a chili plant, so that Carlo can add the plant to a map he's drawing. Tewksbury counts fruits, both ripe and unripe, and assesses their pungency, which is a bit like playing Russian roulette. "I think it's going to hurt," the human capsaicin meter says as he pops a fruit in his mouth. "Ah!" he yelps. (They will test samples more rigorously back in the lab in Seattle.)
Tewksbury scans the plants for fruit-sucking bugs, using his own nicknames. "Red-shouldered beetle mimic," Tewksbury yells, referring to a true bug (order Hemiptera) he once thought was a beetle (order Coleoptera) until an entomologist set him straight. "One, two, three—oh—and red butts!" he says, noticing another insect species that hangs out on the underside of the chili leaves.
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