What's So Hot About Chili Peppers?
An American ecologist travels through the Bolivian forest to answer burning questions about the spice
- By Brendan Borrell
- Smithsonian magazine, April 2009, Subscribe
(Page 5 of 5)
During a previous expedition, Levey realized that such bugs may be spreading the seed-killing fungus from chili plant to chili plant. While the rest of the team was out sampling chilies, Levey was stuck in camp, recovering from a bout of intestinal distress. As a distraction, he says, he spent a lot of time examining chilies with a magnifying glass, "and I discovered that a lot of them were pitted with holes from these bugs. When I opened them, I could see traces of fungal infection on the seeds themselves." This fungus was either hitchhiking from fruit to fruit on the proboscis of these bugs, or else the bugs' piercings were simply making it easier for the fungus to infiltrate the flesh.
In any event, the critical test of the theory that capsaicin is an adaptation to fight fungus would come from growing pungent and nonpungent chilies next to each other in the wild to find out if one type does better than the other. Last field season, Tewksbury had hired a man named Don Odon to tend a thousand chili plants at his remote ranch in preparation for the test. But only three plants survived. The rest may have fallen victim to Don Odon's enthusiastic watering regime. If Tewksbury was discouraged when we visited the ranch, he didn't show it.
As we traced our zigzag path southward, he found a huge crop of young wild plants with mild chilies in the town of Yuqueriti. Then we drove on for hours. But when the team woke up the next morning in Charagua, Tewksbury had a "slick" idea. We could race back to Yuqueriti, dig up the mild chili seedlings and haul them several hundred miles to a ranch in the Andean foothills where the plants are all spicy, to learn which are hardier. Tewksbury's enthusiasm can be hard to argue with, and six hours later I would find myself bouncing along in the back of the truck, trying to keep myself and 89 uprooted chili plants from being crushed under a pile of luggage.
Two days later, when we arrive at the ranch in the foothills, Tewksbury observes that the native chili peppers have been "hammered" by drought and cattle grazing. He doesn't think his experimental seedlings would survive in these conditions. He finds another ranch where the owner will allow the team to plant the seedlings on the edge of a cornfield. For a small fee, the owner agrees to tend them. Tewksbury is in high spirits as the team plants each mild chili next to a wild spicy one. When the plants begin fruiting next year, they'll see how many fruits survive and how much fungus they have. Ideally, the team would also dig up spicy plants in the foothills and transplant them near mild plants in Yuqueriti. But this is seat-of-your-pants science, and Tewksbury will have to wait a year to get a more substantial experiment going. "I hope to be working on this system for another 10 to 20 years," he says as he pats soil around the last chili plant. "I can't see myself running out of questions in less than that."
Brendan Borrell wrote about cassowaries in the October, 2008 issue of Smithsonian. He lives in Brooklyn, New York.
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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 (17)
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Um, right now, the Trinidad Butch T Scorpion is the hottest pepper...I know cuz I'm doing peppers as my science fair project. (no I'm not nerdy enough to actually look at that for fun)
Posted by kimi on November 15,2011 | 05:47 PM
The Guam "boonie peppers" are hot. A traveling Guam native priest is said to have traveled with them as samples of hell. There are a number of varieties.
From the following, I wonder if chile beat the Spanish to Guam or was there another punget herb. A large part of the vocabulary of the native language is derived from Mexican Spanish. Strangly, the native name for the "boonie peper" is "doni," not derived from the Mexican "chile."
Posted by Peter C. Mayer on December 4,2010 | 06:34 AM
Hi There Editors
Thanks for your reply to my posting...
I agree to a point about your claim that the Naga Jolokia and Bhut Jolokia are one and the same chili pepper, but if we are being pedantic then the Bhut Jolokia is the officially recognized world record holder. I understand the different names are used to identify the same chili throughout the region and the name varies from place to place, but as you may know the chili varies in shape and size throughout the region, as well as heat levels.
The conclusive scientific results revealed the Bhut Jolokia to be the hottest chili in the world to date...
Hot Regards
Blaise
Posted by Blaise on November 26,2009 | 04:22 AM
awsome!
Posted by cyrus on October 6,2009 | 12:34 PM
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 | 01:14 PM
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 | 11:27 PM
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 | 10:11 PM
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 | 07:54 PM
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 | 10:13 AM
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 | 05:49 PM
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 | 03:23 PM
Not only are Bhut Jolkia and Naga Jolokia the same, they are very much present in 'the world's hottest chicken curry' served at The Cinnamon Club, London. The potent dish requires diners to take insurance before hitting it! And to think us Andhra's have been eating that stuff day in and day out without the grace of cover, wow. I guess ending meals with dollops of yoghurt (curds) helps -- to limit hypersecretion and gastric related disorders. As some one has kindly pointed out my article, Some like it hot in the Times of India, may be a fun read, even it the underlying lust for fiery stuff may not be all that funny to most food connosiers.2
Posted by Janardhan Roy on April 6,2009 | 10:05 AM
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 | 05:39 PM
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 | 06:53 AM
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