As she explained, it was the bark of this rare tree that gave the world quinine, the world’s first anti-malarial drug. Today, Canales is a biologist at the Natural History Museum of Denmark who is tracing the genetic history of cinchona. “Yet, a compound extracted from this plant has saved millions of lives in human history.” “This may not be a well-known tree,” said Nataly Canales, who grew up in the Peruvian Amazonian region of Madre de Dios. But the flowering plant, which is native to the Andean foothills, has inspired many myths and shaped human history for centuries. To the untrained eye, the thin, 15m-tall tree may blend into the thicketed maze. Unfurling in a carpet of green where the Andes and Amazon basin meet in south-western Peru, Manú National Park is one of the most biodiverse corners of the planet: a lush, 1.5-million hectare Unesco-inscribed nature reserve wrapped in mist, covered in a chaos of vines and largely untouched by humans.īut if you hack your way through the rainforest’s dense jungle, cross its rushing rivers and avoid the jaguars and pumas, you may see one of the few remaining specimens of the endangered cinchona officinalis tree.
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