Difference between revisions of "Coca" - New World Encyclopedia

From New World Encyclopedia
 
(90 intermediate revisions by 3 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
{{Ready}}
+
{{Images OK}}{{Approved}}{{Copyedited}}
 
{{Taxobox
 
{{Taxobox
 
| color = lightgreen
 
| color = lightgreen
Line 24: Line 24:
 
Coca is particularly renowned worldwide for its psychoactive [[alkaloid]], cocaine. While the alkaloid content of coca leaves is low, when the leaves are processed they can provide a concentrated source of cocaine. This purified form, which is used nasally, smoked, or injected, can be very addictive and have deleterious impacts on the [[brain]], [[heart]], [[respiratory system]], [[kidney]]s,  sexual system, and [[gastrointestinal tract]]. It can create a cycle where the user has difficulty experiencing pleasure without the drug.
 
Coca is particularly renowned worldwide for its psychoactive [[alkaloid]], cocaine. While the alkaloid content of coca leaves is low, when the leaves are processed they can provide a concentrated source of cocaine. This purified form, which is used nasally, smoked, or injected, can be very addictive and have deleterious impacts on the [[brain]], [[heart]], [[respiratory system]], [[kidney]]s,  sexual system, and [[gastrointestinal tract]]. It can create a cycle where the user has difficulty experiencing pleasure without the drug.
  
The coca leaves have been used unprocessed for thousands of years in South America for various [[religion|religious]], social, [[medicine|medicinal]], and [[nutrition|nutritional]] purposes, including to control hunger and combat the impacts of high altitudes. Unprocessed coca leaves are also commonly used in the Andean countries to make a [[herbal tea]] with mild [[stimulant]] effects. However, since the alkaloid cocaine is present in only trace amounts in the leaves, it does not cause the euphoric and psychoactive effects associated with use of the drug.
+
For the plant, cocaine seems to serve a valuable function as an effective insecticide, limiting damage from herbivorous insects.
 +
{{toc}}
 +
The coca leaves have been used unprocessed for thousands of years in South America for various [[religion|religious]], social, [[medicine|medicinal]], and [[nutrition|nutritional]] purposes, including to control hunger and combat the impacts of high altitudes. It has been called the "divine plant of the Incas." Unprocessed coca leaves are also commonly used in the Andean countries to make a [[herbal tea]] with mild [[stimulant]] effects. However, since the alkaloid cocaine is present in only trace amounts in the leaves, it does not cause the euphoric and psychoactive effects associated with use of the drug. Cocaine is available as a prescription for such purposes as external application to the [[skin]] to numb [[pain]].
  
The Coca-Cola company uses a cocaine-free coca extract. In the early days of the manufacture of Coca-Cola beverage, the formulation did contain some cocaine, although it may never have been more than trace amounts. Cocaine is available as a prescription for such purposes as external application to the [[skin]] to numb [[pain]].
+
The Coca-Cola company uses a cocaine-free coca extract. In the early days of the manufacture of Coca-Cola beverage, the formulation did contain some cocaine, although within a few years of its introduction it already was only trace amounts.  
  
 
==Species and varieties==
 
==Species and varieties==
[[File:Colcoca01.jpg|thumb|right|225px|Coca tree in Colombia]]
+
[[File:Colcoca01.jpg|thumb|right|225px|Coca shrub in Colombia]]
 
There are two species of cultivated coca, each with two varieties:
 
There are two species of cultivated coca, each with two varieties:
 
*''[[Erythroxylum coca]]''
 
*''[[Erythroxylum coca]]''
**''Erythroxylum coca'' var. ''coca'' (Bolivian or [[Huánuco]] Coca) - well adapted to the eastern [[Andes]] of Peru and Bolivia, an area of humid, tropical, [[montane forest]].
+
**''Erythroxylum coca'' var. ''coca'' (Bolivian or [[Huánuco]] coca) - well adapted to the eastern [[Andes]] of Peru and Bolivia, an area of humid, tropical, [[montane forest]].
**''Erythroxylum coca'' var. ''ipadu'' (Amazonian Coca) - cultivated in the lowland [[Amazon Basin]] in Peru and Colombia.
+
**''Erythroxylum coca'' var. ''ipadu'' (Amazonian coca) - cultivated in the lowland [[Amazon Basin]] in Peru and Colombia.
 
*''[[Erythroxylum novogranatense]]''
 
*''[[Erythroxylum novogranatense]]''
**''Erythroxylum novogranatense'' var. ''novogranatense'' (Colombian Coca) - a highland variety that is utilized in lowland areas. It is cultivated in drier regions found in Colombia. However, ''E. novogranatense'' is very adaptable to varying ecological conditions.  
+
**''Erythroxylum novogranatense'' var. ''novogranatense'' (Colombian coca) - a highland variety that is utilized in lowland areas. It is cultivated in drier regions found in Colombia. However, ''E. novogranatense'' is very adaptable to varying ecological conditions.  
**''Erythroxylum novogranatense'' var. ''truxillense'' ([[Trujillo Province, Peru|Trujillo]] Coca) - grown primarily in Peru and Colombia.  
+
**''Erythroxylum novogranatense'' var. ''truxillense'' ([[Trujillo Province, Peru|Trujillo]] coca) - grown primarily in Peru and Colombia.  
  
 
All four of the cultivated cocas were domesticated in pre-Columbian times and are more closely related to each other than to any other species (Plowman 1984).  ''E. novogranatense'' was historically seen as a variety or subspecies of ''E. coca'' (Royal Botanic Gardens 1985).  The two subspecies of ''[[Erythroxylum coca]]'' are almost indistinguishable phenotypically. ''[[Erythroxylum novogranatense]]'' var. ''novogranatense'' and ''[[Erythroxylum novogranatense]]'' var. ''truxillense'' are phenotypically similar, but morphologically distinguishable.  
 
All four of the cultivated cocas were domesticated in pre-Columbian times and are more closely related to each other than to any other species (Plowman 1984).  ''E. novogranatense'' was historically seen as a variety or subspecies of ''E. coca'' (Royal Botanic Gardens 1985).  The two subspecies of ''[[Erythroxylum coca]]'' are almost indistinguishable phenotypically. ''[[Erythroxylum novogranatense]]'' var. ''novogranatense'' and ''[[Erythroxylum novogranatense]]'' var. ''truxillense'' are phenotypically similar, but morphologically distinguishable.  
Line 45: Line 47:
  
 
==Description==
 
==Description==
[[Image:Colcoca03.jpg|right|thumb|225px|Leaves and branches of ''E. coca'']]
+
[[Image:Colcoca03.jpg|right|thumb|250px|Leaves and branches of ''E. coca'']]
 
Coca plants tend to be evergreen [[shrub]]s with straight, reddish branches. This later quality is reflected in the name of the [[genus]], ''Erythroxylum'', which is a combination of the [[Greek]] ''erythros'', meaning "red," and ''xylon'', meaning "wood" (Mazza 2013). The coca plants tend to have oval to elliptical green leaves tapering at the ends, small yellowish-green [[flower]]s with [[heart]]-shaped anthers, and [[fruit]]s in the form of red drupes with a single [[seed]].  
 
Coca plants tend to be evergreen [[shrub]]s with straight, reddish branches. This later quality is reflected in the name of the [[genus]], ''Erythroxylum'', which is a combination of the [[Greek]] ''erythros'', meaning "red," and ''xylon'', meaning "wood" (Mazza 2013). The coca plants tend to have oval to elliptical green leaves tapering at the ends, small yellowish-green [[flower]]s with [[heart]]-shaped anthers, and [[fruit]]s in the form of red drupes with a single [[seed]].  
  
Line 51: Line 53:
  
 
====''Erythroxylum coca''====
 
====''Erythroxylum coca''====
The wild ''E. coca'' commonly reaches a height of about 3 to 5.5 meters (12-18 ft), whereas the domestic plant is usually kept to about 6 meters. The stem reaches about 16 centimeters in diameter and has a whitish bark. The branches are reddish, straight, and alternate. There is perennial renewal of the branches in a geometrical progression after being cut (de Medeiros and Rahde 1989; Botany Central 2013).
+
The wild ''E. coca'' commonly reaches a height of about 3 to 5.5 meters (12-18 ft), whereas the domestic plant is usually kept to about 2 meters (6 ft). The stem reaches about 16 centimeters in diameter and has a whitish bark. The branches are reddish, straight, and alternate. There is perennial renewal of the branches in a geometrical progression after being cut (de Medeiros and Rahde 1989).
  
The leaves of ''E. coca'' are green or greenish brown, smooth, opaque, and oval or elliptical, and generally about 1.5 to 3 centimeters (0.6-1.2 inches) wide and reach to 11 centimeters (4.3 inches) long. A special feature of the leaf is that the areolate portion is bordered by two curved, longitudinal lines, with one on either side of the midrib and more pronounced on the underside of the leaf.  The small yellowish-green flowers give way to red berries, which are drupaceous and oblong, measuring about 1 centimeter (0.4 inches), and with only one seed (de Medeiros and Rahde 1989; Botany Central 2013).
+
The leaves of ''E. coca'' are green or greenish brown, smooth, opaque, and oval or elliptical, and generally about 1.5 to 3 centimeters (0.6-1.2 inches) wide and reach to 11 centimeters (4.3 inches) long. A special feature of the leaf is that the areolate portion is bordered by two curved, longitudinal lines, with one on either side of the midrib and more pronounced on the underside of the leaf.  The small yellowish-green flowers give way to red berries, which are drupaceous and oblong, measuring about 1 centimeter (0.4 inches), and with only one seed (de Medeiros and Rahde 1989).
  
 
While both ''E. coca'' var. ''coca'' and ''E. coca'' var. ''ipadu'' have leaves that are broadly elliptical, the ''ipadu'' variety tends to have a more rounded apex versus the more pointed variety ''coca'' (DEA 1993).
 
While both ''E. coca'' var. ''coca'' and ''E. coca'' var. ''ipadu'' have leaves that are broadly elliptical, the ''ipadu'' variety tends to have a more rounded apex versus the more pointed variety ''coca'' (DEA 1993).
  
 
====''Erythroxylum novogranatense''====
 
====''Erythroxylum novogranatense''====
[[Image:Erythroxylum novogranatense var. Novogranatense (retouched).jpg|right|thumb|225px|5-year-old ''E. novogranatense var novogranatense'']]
+
[[Image:Erythroxylum novogranatense var. Novogranatense (retouched).jpg|right|thumb|250px|5-year-old ''E. novogranatense var novogranatense'']]
 
''E. novogranatense'' grows to about 3 meters (10 feet), with leaves that are bright green, alternate, obovate or oblong-elliptic and on about a 0.5 centimeter (0.2 in) long petiole. The leaves are about 2 to 6 centimeters (0.8-2.4 in) long and 1 to 3 centimeters (0.4-1.2 in) broad. The flowers are hermaphrodite, solitary or grouped, axillary, and with five yellowish, white petals, about 0.4 centimeters (0.16 in) long and 0.2 centimeters (0.08 in) wide. The fruits are drupes, of oblong shape and red color, with only one oblong seed. They get to be about 0.8 centimeters (0.3 in) long and 0.3 centimeters (0.1 in) in diameter (Mazza 2013).  
 
''E. novogranatense'' grows to about 3 meters (10 feet), with leaves that are bright green, alternate, obovate or oblong-elliptic and on about a 0.5 centimeter (0.2 in) long petiole. The leaves are about 2 to 6 centimeters (0.8-2.4 in) long and 1 to 3 centimeters (0.4-1.2 in) broad. The flowers are hermaphrodite, solitary or grouped, axillary, and with five yellowish, white petals, about 0.4 centimeters (0.16 in) long and 0.2 centimeters (0.08 in) wide. The fruits are drupes, of oblong shape and red color, with only one oblong seed. They get to be about 0.8 centimeters (0.3 in) long and 0.3 centimeters (0.1 in) in diameter (Mazza 2013).  
  
 
The leaf of ''E. novogranatense'' var. ''novogranatense'' tends to have a paler green color, more rounded apex, and be somewhat thinner and narrower than the leaf of ''E. coca'' (DEA 1993).
 
The leaf of ''E. novogranatense'' var. ''novogranatense'' tends to have a paler green color, more rounded apex, and be somewhat thinner and narrower than the leaf of ''E. coca'' (DEA 1993).
  
''E. novogranatense'' var. ''truxillense'' is very similar to ''E. novogranatense'' var. ''novogranatense'' but differs in that the latter has longitudinal lines on either side of the central nervation (as with ''E. coca''), but this is lacking in the ''truxillense'' variety (Mazza 2013).
+
''E. novogranatense'' var. ''truxillense'' is very similar to ''E. novogranatense'' var. ''novogranatense'' but differs in that the latter has longitudinal lines on either side of the central nervation (as with ''E. coca'') while this is lacking in the ''truxillense'' variety (Mazza 2013).
  
 
The species name comes from ''novus, a, um'', meaning "new," and ''granatensis'', meaning "of Granada," from the name "Nueva Granada," the name that Colombia was called at the time of the Spanish conquest (Mazza 2013).
 
The species name comes from ''novus, a, um'', meaning "new," and ''granatensis'', meaning "of Granada," from the name "Nueva Granada," the name that Colombia was called at the time of the Spanish conquest (Mazza 2013).
Line 72: Line 74:
 
Among the  about 14 diverse alkaloids identified in the coca plant are [[ecgonine]], [[hygrine]], truxilline, benzoylecgonine, and tropacocaine. Coca leaves have been reported as having 0.5 to 1.5% alkaloids by dry weight (Royal Botanic Gardens 1985).
 
Among the  about 14 diverse alkaloids identified in the coca plant are [[ecgonine]], [[hygrine]], truxilline, benzoylecgonine, and tropacocaine. Coca leaves have been reported as having 0.5 to 1.5% alkaloids by dry weight (Royal Botanic Gardens 1985).
  
The most concentrated alkaloid is cocaine (cocaine (methyl benzoyl ecgonine or benzoylmethylecgonine). Concentrations vary by variety and region, but leaves have been reported variously as between 0.25% and 0.77% (Plowman and Rivier 1983) and as between 0.3% and 1.5% and averaging 0.8% in fresh leaves(Casale and Klein 1993). ''E. coca'' var. ''ipadu'' is not as concentrated in cocaine alkaloids as the other three varieties (DEA 1993).  
+
The most concentrated alkaloid is cocaine (cocaine (methyl benzoyl ecgonine or benzoylmethylecgonine). Concentrations vary by variety and region, but leaves have been reported variously as between 0.25% and 0.77% (Plowman and Rivier 1983), between 0.35% and 0.72% by dry weight (Nathanson et al. 1993), and between 0.3% and 1.5% and averaging 0.8% in fresh leaves (Casale and Klein 1993). ''E. coca'' var. ''ipadu'' is not as concentrated in cocaine alkaloids as the other three varieties (DEA 1993). Boucher (1991) reports that the coca leaves from Bolivia, while considered to be of higher quality by traditional users, have lower concentrations of cocaine than leaves from the Chapare Valley. He also reports those leaves with smaller amounts of cocaine have traditionally been preferred for chewing, being associated with a sweet or less bitter taste, while those preferred for the drug trade prefer those leaves with a greater alkaloid content.
 +
 
 +
For the plant, cocaine is believed to serve as a naturally occurring insecticide, with the alkaloid exerting such effects at concentrations normally found in the leaves (Nathanson et. al. 1993). It has been observed that compared to other tropical plants, coca seems to be relatively pest free, with little observed damage to the leaves and rare observations of herbivorous [[insect]]s on plants in the field (Nathanson et al. 1993).
  
 
==Cultivation==
 
==Cultivation==
[[Image:Colcoca02.jpg|right|thumb|200px|Leaves of ''E. coca'']]
+
[[Image:Colcoca02.jpg|right|thumb|250px|Leaves of ''E. coca'']]
[[Image:Colcoca04.jpg|right|thumb|200px|Leaves and fruit of ''E. coca'']]
+
[[Image:Colcoca04.jpg|right|thumb|250px|Leaves and fruit of ''E. coca'']]
  
Ninety-eight percent of the global land area plant with coca is in the three nations of [[Colombia]], [[Peru]], and [[Bolivia]] (Dion and Russler 2008). However, it also is grown in other nations, including [[Taiwan]], [[Indonesia]], and [[Formosa]] (Botany Central 2013).
+
Ninety-eight percent of the global land area plant with coca is in the three nations of [[Colombia]], [[Peru]], and [[Bolivia]] (Dion and Russler 2008). However, while it is, or has been grown, in other nations, including [[Taiwan]], [[Indonesia]], [[Formosa]], [[India]], [[Java]], [[Ivory Coast]], [[Ghana]], and [[Cameroon]], coca cultivation has largely been abandoned outside South America since the mid 1900s (Boucher, 1991; Royal Botanic Gardens 2013). The United Nations Office of Drugs and Crime estimated, in a 2011 report, that in 2008 Colombia was responsible for about half of global production of coca, while Peru contributed over one-third, and Bolivia the rest, although coca leaf production in Colombia has been declining over the past ten years while that of Peru has been increasing and by 2009 they may have reach similar output levels (UNODC 2011).  
  
''E. coca'' var. ''coca'' tends to be cultivated in Bolivia and Peru, while ''E. coca'' var. ''ipadu'' tends to be cultivated in Peru and Colombia. ''E. novogranatense'' var. ''novogranatense'' is traditionally cultivated in Colombia, while ''E. novogranatense'' var. ''truxillense'' is largely cultivated in Peru  and Colombia (DEA 1993).
+
''E. coca'' var. ''coca'' (Bolivian or [[Huánuco]] coca) is the most widely grown variety and is cultivated is the eastern slopes of the Andes, from Bolivia in the south through Peru to Ecuador in the north. It tends mostly to be cultivated in Bolivia and Peru, and largely between 500 meters to 1500 meters (1,650-4,950 feet).  ''E. coca'' var. ''ipadu'' (Amazonian coca) is found in the Amazon basin, in southern Colombia, northeastern Peru, and western [[Brazil]]. It tends mostly to be cultivated in Peru and Colombia. ''E. novogranatense'' var. ''novogranatense'' (Colombian coca) thrives in Colombia and is grown to some extent in Venezuela. ''E. novogranatense'' var. ''truxillense'' ([[Trujillo Province, Peru|Trujillo]] coca) is largely cultivated in Peru  and Colombia; this variety is grown to 1500 meters (DEA 1993).
  
''E. coca'' var. ''coca'' is the most widely grown variety, and is cultivated is the eastern slopes of the Andes, from Bolivia in the south through Peru to Ecuador in the north, largely between 500 meters to 1500 meters (1,650-4,950 feet)). ''E. coca'' var. ''ipadu'' if found in the Amazon basin, in southern Colombia, northeastern Peru and western Brazil. ''E. novogranatense'' var.''novogranatense'' thrives in Colombia and to some extent in Venezuela. The ''truxillense'' variety is grown to 1500 meters (DEA 1993).  
+
While locations that are hot, damp, and humid are particularly conducive to growth of coca plants, the leaves with the highest concentrations of cocaine tend to be found among those grown at higher, cooler, and somewhat drier altitudes.  
  
Coca plants are grown from [[seed]]s that are collected from the [[drupe]]s when ripe. The seeds are allowed to dry and then placed in seed beds, typically sheltered from the sun, and germinate in about 3 weeks. The plants are transplanted to prepared fields when they reach about 30 to 60 centimeters in height, which is about 2 months of age. Plants can be harvested 12 to 24 months after being transplanted. Although the plants grow to more than 3 meters, the cultivated coca plants are typically pruned to 1 to 2 meters to ease harvest. Likewise, although the plants can live up to 50 years, they often are uprooted or cut back to near ground level  after 5 to 10 years because of concern about decreasing cocaine content in the older shrubs (Botany Central 2013; Casale and Klein 1993; DEA 1993).
+
Coca plants are grown from [[seed]]s that are collected from the [[drupe]]s when ripe. The seeds are allowed to dry and then placed in seed beds, typically sheltered from the sun, and germinate in about 3 weeks. The plants are transplanted to prepared fields when they reach about 30 to 60 centimeters in height, which is about 2 months of age. Plants can be harvested 12 to 24 months after being transplanted (Casale and Klein 1993; DEA 1993).  
  
The plants thrive best in hot, damp, and humid locations, but the leaves most preferred are obtained in drier areas, on the hillsides. The highest cocaine concentrations have been reported in fresh leaves in plants grown at higher, cooler altitudes. The leaves are gathered from plants varying in age from one and a half to upwards of forty years, but only the new fresh growth is harvested. They are considered ready for plucking when they break on being bent. The first and most abundant harvest is in March after the rainy season, the second is at the end of June, and the third in October or November. The green leaves (''matu'') are spread in thin layers on coarse [[wool]]len cloths and dried in the sun; they are then packed in sacks, which must be kept dry in order to preserve the quality of the leaves. Leaves are harvested year round.
+
Although the plants grow to more than 3 meters, the cultivated coca plants are typically pruned to 1 to 2 meters to ease harvest. Likewise, although the plants can live up to 50 years, they often are uprooted or cut back to near ground level  after 5 to 10 years because of concern about decreasing cocaine content in the older shrubs (Casale and Klein 1993; DEA 1993).  
 +
 
 +
Leaves are harvested year round. Harvesting is mainly of new fresh growth. The leaves are dried in the sun and then packed for distribution; leaves are kept dry in order to preserve the leaf quality.
  
 
==History==
 
==History==
[[File:Arbeiders die cocabladeren fijnstampen op Java.jpg|thumb|Workers in [[Java]] prepared coca leaves. This product was mainly traded in [[Amsterdam]], and was further processed into cocaine. ([[Dutch East Indies]], before 1940.)]]
+
[[File:Arbeiders die cocabladeren fijnstampen op Java.jpg|thumb|250px|Workers in [[Java]] prepared coca leaves. This product was mainly traded in [[Amsterdam]], and was further processed into cocaine. ([[Dutch East Indies]], before 1940.)]]
Traces of coca have been found in [[mummies]] dating 3000 years back.<ref name="Rivera">{{cite journal
 
|coauthors=Rivera MA, Aufderheide AC, Cartmell LW, Torres CM, Langsjoen O
 
|title=Antiquity of coca-leaf chewing in the south central Andes: a 3,000 year archaeological record of coca-leaf chewing from northern Chile
 
|journal=Journal of Psychoactive Drugs|year=2005|month=12|volume=37(4)|pages=455–458}}</ref>  Other evidence dates the communal chewing of coca with lime 8000 years back.<ref>{{cite journal
 
|author=Dillehay et al|url=http://antiquity.ac.uk/ant/084/ant0840939.htm
 
|title=Early Holocene coca chewing in northern Peru
 
|journal=[[Antiquity (journal)|Antiquity]]|volume=84|issue=326|year=2010|pages=939–953}}</ref> Extensive archaeological evidence for the chewing of coca leaves dates back at least to the 6th century AD [[Moche (culture)|Moche]] period, and the subsequent [[Inca]] period, based on mummies found with a supply of coca leaves, pottery depicting the characteristic cheek bulge of a coca chewer, spatulas for extracting alkali and figured bags for coca leaves and lime made from precious metals, and gold representations of coca in special gardens of the Inca in [[Cuzco]].<ref name="Peterson">{{cite web
 
|title=NIDA research monograph #13: Cocaine 1977, Chapter I
 
|url=http://www.nida.nih.gov/pdf/monographs/13.pdf
 
|author=Robert C. Peterson, Ph.D.
 
|date=1977-05|accessdate=2007-05-26}}</ref><ref name="Carroll">{{cite web
 
|url=http://sad.health.org/pub/AD03991.pdf
 
|title=Coca: the plant and its use
 
|author=Eleanor Carroll, M.A.
 
|accessdate=2007-05-26}}</ref>
 
  
Coca chewing may originally have been limited to the eastern Andes before its introduction to the Incas. As the plant was viewed as having a divine origin, its cultivation became subject to a state monopoly and its use restricted to nobles and a few favored classes (court orators, couriers, favored public workers, and the army) by the rule of the [[Topa Inca]] (1471–1493). As the Incan empire declined, the leaf became more widely available. After some deliberation, [[Philip II of Spain]] issued a decree recognizing the drug as essential to the well-being of the Andean Indians but urging missionaries to end its religious use. The Spanish are believed to have effectively encouraged use of coca by an increasing majority of the population to increase their labor output and tolerance for starvation, but it is not clear that this was planned deliberately.{{Citation needed|date=May 2009}}
+
There is [[archaeology|archeological]] evidence that suggests the use of coca leaves 8000 years ago, with the finding of coca leaves of that date (6000 B.C.E.) in floors in [[Peru]], along with pieces of calcite (calcium carbonate), which is used by those chewing leaves to bring out the alkaloids by helping dissolve them into the saliva (Boucher 1991). Coca leaves also have been found in the Huaca Prieta settlement in northern Peru, dated from about 2500 to 1800 B.C.E. (Hurtado 1995). Traces of cocaine also have been in 3000-year-old mummies of the Alto Ramirez culture of Northern Chile, suggesting coca-leaf chewing dates to at least 1500 B.C.E. (Rivera et al. 2005). The remains of coca leaves not only have been found with ancient Peruvian mummies, but pottery from the time period depicts humans with bulged cheeks, indicating the presence of something on which they are chewing (Altman et al. 1985). It is the view of Boucher (1991) that the coca plant was domesticated by 1500 B.C.E..  
  
Coca was first introduced to Europe in the 16th century, but did not become popular until the mid-19th century, with the publication of an influential paper by Dr. [[Paolo Mantegazza]] praising its stimulating effects on cognition. This led to invention of [[coca wine]] and the first production of pure cocaine. Coca wine (of which [[Vin Mariani]] was the best-known brand) and other coca-containing preparations were widely sold as patent medicines and tonics, with claims of a wide variety of health benefits. The original version of [[Coca-Cola]] was among these. These products became illegal in most countries outside of South America in the early 20th century, after the addictive nature of cocaine was widely recognized. In 1859, [[Albert Niemann (chemist)|Albert Niemann]] of the [[University of Göttingen]] became the first person to isolate the chief alkaloid of coca, which he named "cocaine".<ref>{{Cite book
+
In the [[pre-Columbian era]], coca was a main part of the economic system and was exchanged for [[fruit]]s and [[fur]]s from the Amazon, [[potato]]es and [[grain]]s from the Andean highlands, and [[fish]] and shells from the Pacific (Boucher 1991). The use of coca for currency continued during the Colonial Period because it was considered even more valuable than silver or gold. Uses of coca in the early times include use for curing aliments, providing energy, making religious offerings, and forecasting of events (Hurtado 2010).  
  |last = Inciardi
+
{{readout||right|250px|The coca plant has been called the "divine plant of the [[Incas]]"}}
  |first = James A.
+
Coca chewing may originally have been limited to the eastern Andes before its introduction to the Incas. As the plant was viewed as having a divine origin, its cultivation became subject to a state monopoly and its use restricted to nobles and a few favored classes (court orators, couriers, favored public workers, and the army) by the rule of the [[Topa Inca]] (1471–1493). As the Incan empire declined, the leaf became more widely available. After some deliberation, [[Philip II of Spain]] issued a decree recognizing the drug as essential to the well-being of the Andean Indians but urging missionaries to end its religious use. The Spanish are believed to have effectively encouraged use of coca by an increasing majority of the population to increase their labor output and tolerance for starvation, but it is not clear that this was planned deliberately.
  |title = The War on Drugs II
 
  |publisher = Mayfield Publishing Company
 
  |year = 1992
 
  |page = 6
 
  |isbn = 1-55934-016-9}}</ref>
 
  
In the early 20th century, the Dutch colony of [[Java]] became a leading exporter of [[coca leaf]]. By 1912 shipments to Amsterdam, where the leaves were processed into cocaine, reached 1 million kg, overtaking the Peruvian export market. Apart from the years of the First World War, Java remained a greater exporter of coca than Peru until the end of the 1920s.<ref name=Musto>{{cite journal
+
Coca was first introduced to Europe in the sixteenth century. However, coca did not become popular until the mid-nineteenth century, with the publication of an influential paper by Dr. [[Paolo Mantegazza]] praising its stimulating effects on cognition. This led to invention of [[coca wine]] and the first production of pure cocaine.  
|last=Musto|first=DF
 
|title=International traffic in coca through the early 20th century
 
|journal=Drug and Alcohol Dependence|year=1998|volume=49 (2)|pages=145–156}}</ref>  Other colonial powers also tried to grow coca (including the British in India), but with the exception of the Japanese in [[Formosa]], these were relatively unsuccessful.<ref name=Musto/>
 
  
In recent times (2006), the governments of several South American countries, such as Peru, Bolivia and Venezuela, have defended and championed the traditional use of coca, as well as the modern uses of the leaf and its extracts in household products such as teas and toothpaste.
+
The cocaine alkaloid was first isolated by the German [[chemist]] [[Friedrich Gaedcke]] in 1855. Gaedcke named the alkaloid "erythroxyline", and published a description in the journal ''Archiv der Pharmazie'' (Gaedcke 1855). Cocaine also was isolated in 1859 by [[Albert Niemann (chemist)|Albert Niemann]] of the [[University of Göttingen]], using an improved purification process (Niemann 1860). It was Niemann who named coca's chief alkaloid "cocaine" (Inciardi 1992).  
===International prohibition of coca leaf===
 
[[File:KillingRainforest.jpg|thumb|right|225px|A Colombian National Police OV-10 plane sprays herbicides over a coca field in Colombia as part of [[Plan Colombia]]]]
 
Coca leaf is the raw material for the manufacture of the [[psychoactive drug|drug]] cocaine, a powerful stimulant and [[anaesthetic]] extracted chemically from large quantities of coca leaves. Today, since it has mostly been replaced as a medical anaesthetic by synthetic analogues such as [[procaine]], cocaine is best known as an illegal [[recreational drug]]. The cultivation, sale, and possession of unprocessed coca leaf (but not of any processed form of cocaine) is generally legal in the countries – such as Bolivia, Peru, Chile and Argentina – where traditional use is established, although cultivation is often restricted in an attempt to prevent the production of cocaine. In the case of Argentina, it is legal only in some northern provinces where the practice is so common that the state has accepted it.
 
  
The prohibition of the use of the coca leaf except for medical or scientific purposes was established by the United Nations in the 1961 [[Single Convention on Narcotic Drugs]]. The coca leaf is listed on [[Single Convention on Narcotic Drugs#Schedules of drugs|Schedule I]] of the 1961 Single Convention together with cocaine and heroin. The Convention determined that "The Parties shall so far as possible enforce the uprooting of all coca bushes which grow wild. They shall destroy the coca bushes if illegally cultivated" (Article 26), and that, "Coca leaf chewing must be abolished within twenty-five years from the coming into force of this Convention" (Article 49, 2.e).<ref name=single>[http://www.incb.org/pdf/e/conv/convention_1961_en.pdf Single Convention on Narcotic Drugs]</ref>
+
Coca wine (of which [[Vin Mariani]] was the best-known brand) and other coca-containing preparations were widely sold as patent medicines and tonics, with claims of a wide variety of health benefits. The original version of [[Coca-Cola]] was among these, although the amount in Coca-Cola may have been only trace amounts. Products with cocaine became illegal in most countries outside of South America in the early twentieth century, after the addictive nature of cocaine was widely recognized.  
  
The historic rationale for international prohibition of coca leaf in the 1961 Single Convention comes from "The Commission of Enquiry on the Coca Leaf study" published in 1950. It was requested of the United Nations by the permanent representative of Peru, and was prepared by a commission that visited Bolivia and Peru briefly in 1949 to "investigate the effects of chewing the coca leaf and the possibilities of limiting its production and controlling its distribution." It concluded that the effects of chewing coca leaves were negative, even though chewing coca was defined as a habit, not an addiction.<ref name=com>[http://www.undrugcontrol.info/en/issues/unscheduling-the-coca-leaf/item/995-report-of-the-commission-of-enquiry-on-the-coca-leaf Commission of Enquiry on the Coca Leaf], UNGASS 10-year review website, Transnational Institute</ref><ref name=bul>[http://www.unodc.org/unodc/en/data-and-analysis/bulletin/bulletin_1949-01-01_1_page006.html The Commission of Enquiry on the Coca Leaf], Bulletin on Narcotics - 1949 Issue 1</ref>
+
In the early twentieth century, the Dutch colony of [[Java]] became a leading exporter of [[coca leaf]]. By 1912, shipments to Amsterdam, where the leaves were processed into cocaine, reached 1 million kg, overtaking the Peruvian export market. Apart from the years of the First World War, Java remained a greater exporter of coca than Peru until the end of the 1920s (Musto 1998). As noted above, since the mid-1900s, coca cultivation outside South America has virtually been abandoned.
  
The report was sharply criticised for its arbitrariness, lack of precision and racist connotations.<ref name="ReferenceB"/> The team members' professional qualifications and parallel interests were also criticised, as were the methodology used and the incomplete selection and use of existing scientific literature on the coca leaf. Questions have been raised as to whether a similar study today would pass the scrutiny and critical review to which scientific studies are routinely subjected.<ref name=cocayes>[http://www.tni.org/reports/drugs/debate13.pdf Coca Yes, Cocaine No? Legal Options for the Coca Leaf], Transnational Institute, Drugs & Conflict Debate Paper 13, May 2006</ref>
+
===International prohibition of coca leaf===
 +
As the raw material for the manufacture of the recreational [[psychoactive drug|drug]] cocaine, the coca leaf has been the target of international efforts to restrict its cultivation in an attempt to prevent the production of cocaine. While the cultivation, sale, and possession of unprocessed coca leaf (but not of any processed form of cocaine) is generally legal in the countries where traditional use is established&mdash;such as Bolivia, Peru, Chile, and Argentina&mdash;cultivation even in these countries is often restricted. In the case of Argentina, it is legal only in some northern provinces where the practice is so common that the state has accepted it.
  
Despite the legal restriction among countries party to the international treaty, coca chewing and drinking of coca tea is carried out daily by millions of people in the Andes as well as considered sacred within indigenous cultures. Coca consumers claim that most of the information provided about the traditional use of the coca leaf and its modern adaptations are erroneous.<ref name="ReferenceB"/> This has made it impossible to shed light on the plant's positive aspects and its potential benefits for the physical, mental and social health of the people who consume and cultivate it.<ref name="ReferenceB"/><ref name=cocayes/>
+
The prohibition of the use of the coca leaf except for medical or scientific purposes was established by the [[United Nations]] in the 1961 [[Single Convention on Narcotic Drugs]]. The coca leaf is listed on [[Single Convention on Narcotic Drugs#Schedules of drugs|Schedule I]] of the 1961 Single Convention together with cocaine and heroin. The Convention determined that "The Parties shall so far as possible enforce the uprooting of all coca bushes which grow wild. They shall destroy the coca bushes if illegally cultivated" (Article 26), and that "coca leaf chewing must be abolished within twenty-five years from the coming into force of this Convention" (Article 49, 2.e). The Convention recognized as an acceptable use of the coca leaves for preparing a flavoring agent without the alkaloids, and import, export, trade, and possession of the leaves for such purpose. However, the Convention also noted that whenever prevailing conditions render prohibition of cultivation the most suitable measure for preventing diversion of the crop into the illicit drug trade and for protection of health and general welfare, then the nation "shall prohibit cultivation" (UN 1961).
  
In an attempt to obtain international acceptance for the legal recognition of traditional use of coca in their respective countries, Peru and Bolivia successfully led an amendment, paragraph 2 of Article 14 into the 1988 [[United Nations Convention Against Illicit Traffic in Narcotic Drugs and Psychotropic Substances]], stipulating that measures to eradicate illicit cultivation and to eliminate illicit demand "should take due account of traditional licit use, where there is historic evidence of such use."<ref name=ambi>[http://www.undrugcontrol.info/en/issues/unscheduling-the-coca-leaf/item/1005-the-resolution-of-ambiguities-regarding-coca The resolution of ambiguities regarding coca], Transnational Institute, March 2008</ref> Bolivia also made a formal reservation to the 1988 Convention, which required countries to adopt measures to establish the use, consumption, possession, purchase or cultivation of the coca leaf for personal consumption as a criminal offence. Bolivia stated that "the coca leaf is not, in and of itself, a narcotic drug or psychotropic substance" and stressed that its "legal system recognizes the ancestral nature of the licit use of the coca leaf, which, for much of Bolivia's population, dates back over centuries."<ref name=ambi/><ref>[http://untreaty.un.org/ENGLISH/bible/englishinternetbible/partI/chapterVI/treaty25.asp Status of treaty adherence], United Nations Convention against Illicit Traffic in Narcotic Drugs and Psychotropic Substances</ref>
+
Despite the legal restriction among countries party to the international treaty, coca chewing and drinking of coca tea is carried out daily by millions of people in the Andes as well as considered sacred within indigenous cultures. In recent times, the governments of several South American countries, such as Peru, Bolivia and Venezuela, have defended and championed the traditional use of coca, as well as the modern uses of the leaf and its extracts in household products such as teas and toothpaste.
  
However, the [[International Narcotics Control Board]] (INCB) – the independent and [[quasi-judicial]] control organ for the implementation of the United Nations drug conventions – denied the validity of article 14 in the 1988 Convention over the requirements of the 1961 Convention, or any reservation made by parties, since it does not "absolve a party of its rights and obligations under the other international drug control treaties."<ref>[http://www.incb.org/pdf/annual-report/2007/en/annual-report-2007.pdf Report of the International Narcotics Control Board for 2007], paragraph 220</ref>
+
In an attempt to obtain international acceptance for the legal recognition of traditional use of coca in their respective countries, Peru and Bolivia successfully led an amendment, paragraph 2 of Article 14 into the 1988 [[United Nations Convention Against Illicit Traffic in Narcotic Drugs and Psychotropic Substances]], stipulating that measures to eradicate illicit cultivation and to eliminate illicit demand "should take due account of traditional licit use, where there is historic evidence of such use" (UNDC 2008).  
  
The INCB stated in its 1994 Annual Report that "mate de coca, which is considered harmless and legal in several countries in South America, is an illegal activity under the provisions of both the 1961 Convention and the 1988 Convention, though that was not the intention of the plenipotentiary conferences that adopted those conventions."<ref>[http://www.incb.org/pdf/e/ar/incb_report_1994_supplement_en_3.pdf Evaluation of the effectiveness of the international drug control treaties], Supplement to the INCB Annual Report for 1994 (Part 3)</ref> It implicitly also dismissed the original report of the Commission of Enquiry on the Coca Leaf by recognizing that "there is a need to undertake a scientific review to assess the coca-chewing habit and the drinking of coca tea."<ref>[http://www.incb.org/pdf/e/ar/incb_report_1994_supplement_en_1.pdf Evaluation of the effectiveness of the international drug control treaties], Supplement to the INCB Annual Report for 1994 (Part 1)</ref>
+
Bolivia also made a formal reservation to the 1988 Convention. This convention required countries to adopt measures to establish the use, consumption, possession, purchase or cultivation of the coca leaf for personal consumption as a criminal offense. Bolivia stated that "the coca leaf is not, in and of itself, a narcotic drug or psychotropic substance" and stressed that its "legal system recognizes the ancestral nature of the licit use of the coca leaf, which, for much of Bolivia's population, dates back over centuries" (UNDC 2008).
  
Nevertheless, the INCB on other occasions did not show signs of an increased sensitivity towards the Bolivian claim on the rights of their indigenous population, and the general public, to consume the coca leaf in a traditional manner by chewing the leaf, and drinking coca tea, as "not in line with the provisions of the 1961 Convention."<ref>[http://www.incb.org/pdf/annual-report/2007/en/annual-report-2007.pdf Report of the International Narcotics Control Board for 2007], paragraph 217</ref><ref name=idpc>[http://www.idpc.info/php-bin/documents/IDPC_Response2INCB_AnnRpt07_EN.pdf Response to the 2007 Annual Report of the International Narcotics Control Board], International Drug Policy Consortium (IDPC), March 2008</ref> The Board considered Bolivia, Peru and a few other countries that allow such practises to be in breach with their treaty obligations, and insisted that "each party to the Convention should establish as a criminal offence, when committed intentionally, the possession and purchase of coca leaf for personal consumption."<ref>[http://www.incb.org/pdf/annual-report/2007/en/annual-report-2007.pdf Report of the International Narcotics Control Board for 2007], paragraph 219</ref>
+
However, the [[International Narcotics Control Board]] (INCB)&mdash;the independent and [[quasi-judicial]] control organ for the implementation of the United Nations drug conventions&mdash;denied the validity of article 14 in the 1988 Convention over the requirements of the 1961 Convention, or any reservation made by parties, since it does not "absolve a party of its rights and obligations under the other international drug control treaties" (UNDC 2008; INCB 2007). The INCB considered Bolivia, Peru, and a few other countries that allow such practices as coca-chewing and drinking of coca tea to be in breach with their treaty obligations, and insisted that "each party to the Convention should establish as a criminal offence, when committed intentionally, the possession and purchase of coca leaf for personal consumption" (INCB 2007). The INCB noted in its 1994 Annual Report that "mate de coca, which is considered harmless and legal in several countries in South America, is an illegal activity under the provisions of both the 1961 Convention and the 1988 Convention, though that was not the intention of the plenipotentiary conferences that adopted those conventions." The INCB also implicitly dismissed the original report of the Commission of Enquiry on the Coca Leaf by recognizing that "there is a need to undertake a scientific review to assess the coca-chewing habit and the drinking of coca tea."(INCB 1994).
  
In reaction to the 2007 Annual Report of the INCB, the Bolivian government announced that it would formally issue a request to the United Nations to unschedule the coca leaf of List 1 of the 1961 UN Single Convention.<ref>[http://www.undrugcontrol.info/en/issues/unscheduling-the-coca-leaf/item/2623-letter-evo-morales-to-un-secretary-general-ban-ki-moon Letter Evo Morales to UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon], March 8, 2008</ref> Bolivia led a diplomatic effort to do so beginning in March 2009, but eighteen countries out of a total of 184,those 18 being listed as followed (chronologically: the United States, Sweden, United Kingdom, Latvia, Japan, Canada, France, Germany, Bulgaria, Slovakia, Denmark, Estonia, Italy, Mexico, Russian Federation, Malaysia, Singapore, and Ukraine) objected to the change before the January 2011 deadline. A single objection would have been sufficient to block the modification. The legally unnecessary step of supporting the change was taken formally by Spain, Ecuador, Venezuela, and Costa Rica.<ref>{{cite web
+
In reaction to the 2007 Annual Report of the INCB, the Bolivian government announced that it would formally issue a request to the United Nations to unschedule the coca leaf of List 1 of the 1961 UN Single Convention. Bolivia led a diplomatic effort to do so beginning in March 2009. In that month, the Bolivian President, Evo Morales, went before the United Nations and relayed the history of coa use for such purposes as medicinal, nutritional, social, and spiritual, and he at that time put a leaf in his mouth (Cortes 2013). However, Bolivia's effort to have the coca leaf removed from the List 1 of the 1960 UN Single Convention was unsuccessful, when eighteen countries objected to the change before the January 2011 deadline. A single objection would have been sufficient to block the modification. The legally unnecessary step of supporting the change was taken formally by Spain, Ecuador, Venezuela, and Costa Rica.  
|title=Objections and support for Bolivia's coca amendment
 
|url=http://www.druglawreform.info/index.php?option=com_flexicontent&view=items&cid=96:unscheduling-the-coca-leaf&id=1184:objections-and-support-for-bolivias-coca-amendment&Itemid=33
 
|publisher=Transnational Institute}}</ref> In June 2011, Bolivia moved to denounce the 1961 Convention over the prohibition of the coca leaf.<ref>{{Cite news | title = Aprueban denuncia contra la Convención de Viena | work = Los Tiempos | accessdate = 2011-06-23 | date = 2011-06-23 | url = http://www.lostiempos.com/diario/actualidad/nacional/20110623/aprueban-denuncia-contra-la-convencion-de-viena_130978_265038.html }}</ref>
 
  
{{Unreferenced section|date=July 2011}}
+
In June 2011, Bolivia moved to denounce the 1961 Convention over the prohibition of the coca leaf.
Since the 1980s, the countries in which coca is grown have come under political and economic pressure from the United States to restrict the cultivation of the crop in order to reduce the supply of cocaine on the international market.<ref name="ReferenceB"/>
 
  
[[Wikisource:Single Convention on Narcotic Drugs#Article 26: THE COCA BUSH AND COCA LEAVES|Article 26]] of the [[Single Convention on Narcotic Drugs]] requires nations that allow the cultivation of coca to designate an agency to regulate said cultivation and take physical possession of the crops as soon as possible after harvest, and to destroy all coca which grows wild or is illegally cultivated. The effort to enforce these provisions, referred to as [[coca eradication]], has involved many strategies, ranging from aerial spraying of [[herbicide]]s on coca crops to assistance and incentives to encourage farmers to grow alternate crops.<ref name="Coca Myths 2009">Transnational Institute - Coca Myths, 2009.</ref>
+
On January 1, 2012 Bolivia's withdrawal from the Single Convention on Narcotic Drugs came into effect. However, Bolivia took steps to again become a party to the 1961 Single Convention conditional on the acceptance of a reservation on the chewing of coca leaf. For this reservation not to pass, one-third of the 183 States party to this convention would have had to object within one year after the proposed reservation was submitted. This deadline expired on January 10, 2013, with only 15 countries objecting to Bolivia's reservation, thus permitting the reservation, and Bolivia's re-accession to the Convention came into force on January 10, 2013 (UNODC 2013).  
  
This effort has been politically controversial,<ref name="economist.com">[http://www.economist.com/node/13237193 Failed States and failed policies: how to stop the drug wars]. ''The Economist'', May 2009</ref> with proponents claiming{{Citation needed|date=July 2011}} that the production of cocaine is several times the amount needed to satisfy legal demand and inferring that the vast majority of the coca crop is destined for the illegal market. As per the proclaimed view, this would not only contributes to the major social problem of drug abuse but also financially supports insurgent groups that collaborate with drug traffickers in some cocaine-producing territories. Critics of the effort claim<ref name="ReferenceB"/> that it creates hardship primarily for the coca growers, many of whom are poor and have no viable alternative way to make a living, causes environmental problems, that it is not effective in reducing the supply of cocaine, in part because cultivation can move to other areas, and that any social harm created by drug abuse is only made worse by the [[War on Drugs]].<ref name="ReferenceB"/> The environmental problems include "ecocide", where vast tracts of land and forest are sprayed with glyphosate or Roundup, with the intention of eradicating the coca plant.<ref name="ReferenceB"/> However, the incidental environmental damage is severe, because many plant species are wiped out in the process.<ref name="ReferenceB"/>
+
Currently, outside of South America, most countries' laws make no distinction between the coca leaf and any other substance containing cocaine, so the possession of coca leaf is prohibited. In South America, coca leaf is illegal in both Paraguay and Brazil.
 
 
Coca has been reintroduced to the United States as a flavoring agent in the herbal liqueur [[Agwa de Bolivia (liqueur)|Agwa de Bolivia]].{{Citation needed|date=June 2013}}
 
 
 
Boliviana negra, a genetically engineered type of coca, resists glyphosate herbicides and increases yields.
 
 
 
===Legal status by country===
 
{{see also|Coca in Bolivia}}
 
Outside of South America, most countries' laws make no distinction between the coca leaf and any other substance containing cocaine, so the possession of coca leaf is prohibited. In South America coca leaf is illegal in both Paraguay and Brazil.
 
  
 
In the Netherlands, coca leaf is legally in the same category as cocaine, both are List I drugs of the [[Opium Law]]. The Opium Law specifically mentions the leafs of the plants of the genus ''Erythroxylon''. However, the possession of living plants of the genus ''Erythroxylon'' are not actively prosecuted, even though they are legally forbidden.
 
In the Netherlands, coca leaf is legally in the same category as cocaine, both are List I drugs of the [[Opium Law]]. The Opium Law specifically mentions the leafs of the plants of the genus ''Erythroxylon''. However, the possession of living plants of the genus ''Erythroxylon'' are not actively prosecuted, even though they are legally forbidden.
  
In the United States, a [[Stepan Company]] plant in [[Maywood, New Jersey]] is a registered importer of coca leaf. The company manufactures pure cocaine for medical use and also produces a cocaine-free extract of the coca leaf, which is used as a flavoring ingredient in Coca-Cola. Other companies have registrations with the DEA to import coca leaf according to 2011 Federal Register Notices for Importers,<ref>{{cite web
+
In the United States, a [[Stepan Company]] plant in [[Maywood, New Jersey]] is a registered importer of coca leaf. The company manufactures pure cocaine for medical use and also produces a cocaine-free extract of the coca leaf, which is used as a flavoring ingredient in Coca-Cola. Other companies have registrations with the DEA to import coca leaf according to 2011 Federal Register Notices for Importers (ODC 2011), including Johnson Matthey, Inc, Pharmaceutical Materials; Mallinckrodt Inc; Penick Corporation; and the Research Triangle Institute.
|url=http://www.deaDiversion.usdoj.gov/fed_regs/imprt/reg/2011/
 
|title=Importers Notice of Registration - 2011 |publisher=deaDiversion.usdoj.gov |date= |accessdate=2012-11-09}}</ref> including Johnson Matthey, Inc, Pharmaceutical Materials; Mallinckrodt Inc; Penick Corporation; and the Research Triangle Institute. According to the Bolivian press,{{Citation needed|date=January 2010}} Coca-Cola imported 204 tons of coca leaf in 1996.
 
 
 
 
 
  
 
==Uses==
 
==Uses==
[[File:Folha de coca.jpg|thumb|right|225px|Man holding coca leaf in Bolivia]]
+
[[File:Folha de coca.jpg|thumb|right|250px|Man holding coca leaf in Bolivia]]
  
===Medicine===
+
===Recreational psychoactive drug===
Traditional medical uses of coca are foremost as a stimulant to overcome fatigue, hunger, and thirst. It is considered particularly effective against [[altitude sickness]].<ref name="ReferenceB">Transnational Institute - Coca Myths, 2009</ref> It also is used as an [[anesthetic]] and analgesic to alleviate the pain of headache, [[rheumatism]], wounds and sores, etc. Before stronger anaesthetics were available, it also was used for broken bones, childbirth, and during [[trephining]] operations on the skull.<ref name="ReferenceB"/> The high calcium content in coca explains why people used it for bone fractures.<ref name="ReferenceB"/> Because coca constricts blood vessels, it also serves to oppose bleeding, and coca seeds were used for [[nosebleed]]s. Indigenous use of coca has also been reported as a treatment for [[malaria]], [[peptic ulcer|ulcer]]s, [[asthma]], to improve [[digestion]], to guard against bowel laxity, as an [[aphrodisiac]], and credited with improving [[longevity]]. Modern studies have supported a number of these medical applications.<ref name="Weil"/><ref name="ReferenceB"/>
+
{{main|cocaine}}
 +
Coca leaf is the raw material for the manufacture of the psychoactive drug cocaine, a powerful stimulant extracted chemically from large quantities of coca leaves. Cocaine is best known worldwide for such illegal use. This concentrated form of cocaine is used ''nasally'' (nasal insufflation is also known as "snorting," "sniffing," or "blowing" and involves absorption through the mucous membranes lining the sinuses), ''injected'' (the method that produces the highest blood levels in the shortest time), or ''smoked'' (notably the cheaper, more potent form called "crack").
  
===Nutrition===
+
Use of concentrated cocaine yields pleasure through its interference with [[neurotransmitter]]s, blocking the neurotransmitters, such as [[dopamine]], from being reabsorbed, and thus resulting in continual stimulation. However, such drug use can have deleterious impacts on the [[brain]], [[heart]], [[respiratory system]], [[kidney]]s, sexual system, and [[gastrointestinal tract]] (WebMD 2013a). For example, it can result in a heart attack or strokes, even in young people,and it can cause ulcers and sudden kidney failure, and it can impair sexual function (WebMD 2013a). It also can be highly addictive, creating intense cravings for the drug, and result in the cocaine user becoming "in a very real sense, unable to experience pleasure without the drug" (Marieb and Hoehn 2010).  
Raw coca leaves, chewed or consumed as tea or mate de coca, are rich in nutritional properties. Specifically, the coca plant contains essential minerals (calcium, potassium, phosphorus), vitamins (B1, B2, C, and E) and nutrients such as protein and fiber.<ref>James, A., Aulick, D., Plowman, T., 1975 "Nutritional Value of Coca", Botanical Museum Leaflets, Harvard University 24 (6): 113-119.</ref><ref>Harvard Study - Nutritional Value of Coca Leaf (Duke, Aulick, Plowman 1975)</ref>
 
  
 +
The United Nations Office of Drugs and Crime estimated that in 2009, the US cocaine market was $37 billion (and shrinking over the past ten years) and the West and Central European Cocaine market was US$ 33 billion (and increasing over the past ten years) (USODC 2011).
  
 +
The production, distribution and sale of cocaine products is restricted and/or illegal in most countries. Internationally, it is  regulated by the Single Convention on Narcotic Drugs, and the United Nations Convention Against Illicit Traffic in Narcotic Drugs and Psychotropic Substances. In the United States, the manufacture, importation, possession, and distribution of cocaine is additionally regulated by the 1970 Controlled Substances Act. Cocaine is generally treated as a 'hard drug', with severe penalties for possession and trafficking.
  
===Traditional preparation===
+
===Medicine===
Traditionally, coca leaves are prepared either to chew or as a tea<ref>{{cite web
+
Coca leaf traditionally has been used for a variety of medical purposes, including as a stimulant to overcome fatigue, hunger, and thirst. It has been said to reduce hunger pangs and add enhance physical performance, adding strength and endurance for work (Boucher 1991; WebMD 2013b). Coca leaf also has been used to overcome altitude sickness, and in the Andes tourists have been offered coca tea for this purpose (Cortes 2013).  
|url=http://www.tni.org/primer/coca-leaf-myths-and-reality |title=Drugs and Democracy &#124; Coca leaf: Myths and Reality
 
|publisher=Tni.org |date=2011-02-18 |accessdate=2012-11-09}}</ref> ([[coca tea|mate de coca]]).
 
  
====Chew====
+
In addition, coca extracts have been used as a muscle and cerebral stimulant to alleviate nausea, vomiting, and stomach pains without upsetting digestion (WebMD 2013b). Because coca constricts blood vessels, it also serves to oppose bleeding, and coca seeds were used for [[nosebleed]]s. Indigenous use of coca has also been reported as a treatment for [[malaria]], [[peptic ulcer|ulcer]]s, [[asthma]], to improve [[digestion]], to guard against bowel laxity, and as an [[aphrodisiac]].  
{{Refimprove section|date=July 2011}}
 
In Bolivia bags of coca leaves are sold in local markets and by street vendors. The activity of chewing coca is called ''mambear'', ''chacchar'' or ''acullicar'', borrowed from [[Quechua languages|Quechua]], ''coquear'' (northern Argentina), or in Bolivia, ''picchar'', derived from the [[Aymara language]]. The Spanish ''masticar'' is also frequently used, along with the slang term "bolear," derived from the word "bola" or ball of coca pouched in the cheek while chewing. Typical coca consumption is about 2 ounces (57 grams) per day,{{Citation needed|date=July 2011}} and contemporary methods are believed to be unchanged from ancient times.{{Citation needed|date=July 2011}} Coca is kept in a woven pouch (''chuspa'' or ''huallqui''). A few leaves are chosen to form a quid ''(acullico)'' held between the mouth and gums. Doing so may cause a tingling and numbing sensation in their mouths. (The formerly used dental anaesthetic [[procaine|Novocaine]] has a similar effect.) Chewing coca leaves is most common in indigenous communities across the central Andean region,<ref name="banrep.gov.co"/> particularly in places like the highlands of Colombia,  Bolivia and Peru, where the cultivation and consumption of coca is as much a part of the national culture similar to [[chicha]], like wine is to France or beer is to Germany.{{Citation needed|date=July 2011}} It also serves as a powerful symbol of indigenous cultural and religious identity, amongst a diversity of indigenous nations throughout South America.<ref name="banrep.gov.co"/>
 
  
Coca is still chewed in the traditional way, with a tiny quantity of ''ilucta'' (a preparation of the ashes of the [[quinoa]] plant) added to the coca leaves{{Contradiction-inline|about=previous paragraph - should this paragraph start with "In Bolivia..."?|date=July 2011}}; it softens their [[astringent]] flavor and activates the [[alkaloids]].{{Citation needed|date=July 2011}} Other names for this basifying substance are ''llipta'' in Peru and the Spanish word ''lejía'', ''lye'' in English. The consumer carefully uses a wooden stick (formerly often a spatula of precious metal) to transfer an alkaline component into the quid without touching his flesh with the corrosive substance. The alkali component, usually kept in a gourd (''ishcupuro'' or ''poporo''), can be made by burning [[limestone]] to form unslaked [[quicklime]], burning quinoa stalks, or the bark from certain trees, and may be called ''ilipta'', ''tocra'' or ''mambe'' depending on its composition.<ref name="Peterson" /><ref name="Carroll" /> Many of these materials are salty in flavor, but there are variations. The most common base{{Citation needed|date=July 2011}} in the [[La Paz]] area of Bolivia is a product known as ''lejía dulce'' (''sweet lye''), which is made from quinoa ashes mixed with [[aniseed]] and cane sugar, forming a soft black putty with a sweet and pleasing flavor. In some places, [[baking soda]] is used under the name ''bico''.
+
Another purpose for coca and coca extracts has been as an [[anesthetic]] and analgesic to alleviate the pain of headache, [[rheumatism]], wounds, sores, and so forth. In Southeast Asia, the plant leaves have been chewed in order to get a plug of the leaf into a decayed tooth to alleviate toothache (Royal Botanic Gardens 1985). Before stronger anesthetics were available, coca also was used for broken bones, childbirth, and during [[trephining]] operations on the skull.  Today, cocaine has mostly been replaced as a medical anesthetic by synthetic analogues such as [[procaine]].  
  
In the [[Sierra Nevada de Santa Marta]], on the Caribbean Coast of Colombia, coca is consumed<ref name="banrep.gov.co"/> by the [[Kogi people|Kogi]], [[Arhuaco]] and [[Wiwa]] by using a special device called [[poporo]].<ref name="banrep.gov.co"/> The poporo is the mark of manhood. It represents the womb and the stick is a phallic symbol. The movements of the stick in the poporo symbolize the sexual act. For a man the poporo is a good companion that means "food", "woman", "memory", and "meditation". It is important to stress that poporo is the symbol of manhood.{{Citation needed|date=July 2011}} But it is the woman who gives men their manhood. When the boy is ready to be married, his mother will initiate him in the use of the coca. This act of initiation is carefully supervised by the Mamo, a traditional priest-teacher-leader.{{Citation needed|date=July 2008}}
+
In the United States, cocaine remains an FDA-approved Schedule C-II drug, which can be prescribed by a healthcare provider, but is strictly regulated. A form of cocaine available by prescription is applied to the skin to numb eye, nose, and throat pain and narrow blood vessels (WebMD 2013b).
  
====Tea====
+
===Nutrition and use as a chew and beverage===
{{Refimprove section|date=July 2011}}
+
Raw coca leaves, chewed or consumed as tea or mate de coca, have a number of nutritional properties. Specifically, the coca plant contains essential minerals ([[calcium]], [[potassium]], [[phosphorus]]), [[vitamin]]s (B1, B2, C, and E) and nutrients such as [[protein]] and fiber (James et al. 1975).
[[File:Mate de coca Stevage.jpg|thumb|right|200px|A cup of ''[[mate de coca]]'' served in [[Villazón]], Bolivia.]]
 
{{Main|Coca tea}}
 
Although coca leaf chewing is common only among the indigenous populations,<ref name="ReferenceB"/> the consumption of coca tea (''[[Mate de coca]]'') is common among all sectors of society in the Andean countries, especially due to their high elevations from sea level,<ref name="ReferenceB"/> and is widely held to be beneficial to health, mood, and energy.<ref name="ReferenceB"/> Coca leaf is sold packaged into teabags in most grocery stores in the region, and establishments that cater to tourists generally feature coca tea.
 
  
===Religion===
+
Chewing of unadulterated coca leaves has been a tradition in the Andes for thousands of years and remains practiced by millions in South America today (Cortes 2013). Individuals may suck on wads of the leaves and keep them in their cheeks for hours at a time, often combining with chalk or ask to help dissolve the alkaloids into the saliva (Boucher 1991). While the cocaine in the plant has little effect on the unbroken skin, it does act on the mucous membranes of the mouth, as well as the membranes of the eye, nose, and stomach (Royal Botanic Gardens 1985).
Coca has also been a vital part of the religious cosmology of the Andean peoples of Peru, Bolivia, Ecuador, Colombia, northern Argentina, and Chile from the [[Pre-Inca cultures|pre-Inca period]] through the present. Coca leaves play a crucial part in offerings to the [[apus]] (mountains), [[Inti]] (the sun), or [[Pachamama]] (the earth). Coca leaves are also often read in a form of [[divination]] analogous to reading tea leaves in other cultures. As one example of the many traditional beliefs about coca, it is believed by the miners of [[Cerro de Pasco]] to soften the veins of [[ore]], if masticated (chewed) and thrown upon them (see '''Cocomama''' in [[Inca mythology]]).{{Citation needed|date=September 2008}} In addition, coca use in shamanic rituals is well documented wherever local native populations have cultivated the plant. For example, the Tayronas of Colombia's Sierra Nevada de Santa Marta used to chew the plant before engaging in extended meditation and prayer.<ref name="banrep.gov.co">{{cite web
 
|author=Museo del Oro, Banco de la Republica
 
|url=http://www.banrep.gov.co/museo/eng/expo_bogota3c.htm
 
|title=Museo del Oro, Colombia |language={{es icon}} |publisher=Banrep.gov.co |date= |accessdate=2012-11-09}}</ref>
 
  
 +
Coca leaves also can be boiled to provide a tea. Although coca leaf chewing is common mainly among the indigenous populations, the consumption of coca tea (''[[Mate de coca]]'') is common among all sectors of society in the Andean countries. Coca leaf is sold packaged into teabags in most grocery stores in the region, and establishments that cater to tourists generally feature coca tea.
  
===Pharmacological?  cocaine, drug ===
+
In the Andes commercially manufactured coca teas, granola bars, cookies, hard candies, etc. are available in most stores and supermarkets, including upscale suburban supermarkets.
 
 
==Evolution==
 
 
 
There are two main theories relating to the evolution of the cultivated cocas.  The first (put forth by [[Timothy Plowman|Plowman]]<ref name="Plowman1984">Plowman T.  "The Origin, Evolution, and Diffusion of Coca, Erythroxylum spp., in South and Central America."  In: Stone D, ed. ''Pre-Columbian Plant Migration''.  Papers of the Peabody Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology.  Harvard University. Vol 76.  Cambridge MA: Harvard University Press; 1984. p. 125-163.</ref> and Bohm <ref name="Bohm1982">{{cite journal
 
|last=Bohm|first=B|coauthors=Ganders F, Plowman T
 
|title=Biosystematics and Evolution of Cultivated Coca (Erythroxylaceae)
 
|journal=Systematic Botany|year=1982|volume=7(2)|pages=121–133}}</ref>) suggests that ''Erythroxylum coca'' var. ''coca'' is ancestral, while ''[[Erythroxylum novogranatense]]'' var. ''truxillense'' is derived from it to be drought tolerant, and ''Erythroxylum novogranatense'' var. ''novogranatense'' derived from ''Erythroxylum novogranatense'' var. ''truxillense''.
 
 
 
Recent research based on genetic evidence (Johnson et al. in 2005,<ref name="Johnson2005">{{cite journal
 
|last=Johnson|first=E|coauthors=Zhang D, Emche S
 
|title=Inter- and Intra-specific Variation among Five Erythroxylum Taxa Assessed by AFLP
 
|journal=Annals of Botany|year=2005|volume=95|pages=601–608}}</ref> Emche et al. in 2011,<ref name="Emche2011">{{cite journal
 
|last=Emche|first=S|coauthors=Zhang D, Islam M, Bailey B, Meinhardt L
 
|title=AFLP Phylogeny of 36 Erythroxylum Species Genetic Relationships Among Erythroxylum Species Inferred by AFLP Analysis
 
|journal=Tropical Plant Biology|year=2011|volume=4|pages=126–133}}</ref> and Islam 2011<ref name="Islam2011">Islam M.  [http://gradworks.umi.com/34/68/3468387.html Tracing the Evolutionary History of Coca (Erythroxylum)] [PhD thesis].  Boulder:  University of Colorado, Boulder; 2011</ref>) does not support this linear evolution and instead suggests a second domestication event as the origin of the ''[[Erythroxylum novogranatense]]'' varieties.  There may be a common, but undiscovered ancestor.<ref name="Emche2011"/>
 
  
 +
One beverage particularly tied to coca is Coca-Cola, a carbonated soft drink produced by the Coca-Cola Company. Production of Coca-Cola currently uses a coca extract with its cocaine removed as part of its "secret formula." Coca-Cola originally was introduced to the public in 1886 as a patent medicine. It is uncertain how much cocaine was in the original formulation, but it was stated that the founder, Pemberton, called for five ounces of coca leaf per gallon of syrup. However, by 1891, just five years later, the amount was significantly cut to only a trace amount&mdash;at least partly in response to concern about the negative aspects of cocaine. The ingredient was left in in order to protect the trade name of Coca-Cola (the Kola part comes from Kola nuts, which continue to serve for flavoring and the source of [[caffeine]]). By 1902, it was held that Coca-Cola contained a little as 1/400th of a grain of cocaine per ounce of syrup. In 1929, Coca-Cola became cocaine-free, but before then it was estimated that the amount of cocaine already was no more than one part in 50 million, such that is the entire year's supply (25-odd million gallons) of Coca-Cola syrup would yield but 6/100th of an ounce of cocaine (Mikkelson 2011; Liebowitz 1983; Cortes 2013).
  
 +
===Religion and culture===
 +
The coca plant has played an important role in religious, royal, and cultural occasions. Coca has been a vital part of the religious cosmology of the Andean peoples of Peru, Bolivia, Ecuador, Colombia, northern Argentina, and Chile from the [[Pre-Inca cultures|pre-Inca period]] through the present. Coca has been called the "divine plant of the Incas" (Mortimer 1974) and coca leaves play a crucial part in offerings to the [[apus]] (mountains), [[Inti]] (the sun), or [[Pachamama]] (the earth). Coca leaves are also often read in a form of [[divination]] analogous to reading tea leaves in other cultures.  In addition, coca use in shamanic rituals is well documented wherever local native populations have cultivated the plant.
  
 +
The coca plant also has been used in reciprocating manners in the Andrea culture, with cultural exchanges involving coca (Royal Botanic Gardens 1985). The plant has been offered by a prospective son-in-law to his girl's father, relatives may chew on coca leaves to celebrate a birth, a woman may use coca to hasten and ease the pain of labor, and coca leaves may be put in one's coffin before burial (Leffel).
  
 
==References==
 
==References==
{{Reflist|colwidth=30em}}
 
  
 +
* Altman, A. J., D. M. Albert, and G. A. Fournier. 1985. [http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/3885453 Cocaine's use in ophthalmology: Our 100-year heritage]. ''Surv Ophthalmol'' 29(4): 300–6. PMID 3885453. Retrieved June 3, 2019.
 
* Boucher, D. H. 1991. Cocaine and the coca plant. ''BioScience'' 41(2): 72-76.
 
* Boucher, D. H. 1991. Cocaine and the coca plant. ''BioScience'' 41(2): 72-76.
 +
* Casale, J. F., and R. F. X. Klein.  1993. [http://www.erowid.org/archive/rhodium/chemistry/cocaine.illicit.production.html Illicit production of cocaine]. ''Forensic Science Review'' 5: 95-107. Retrieved June 3, 2019.
 +
* Cortes, R. 2013. [http://www.nydailynews.com/opinion/condemned-coca-leaf-article-1.1238569 The condemned coca leaf]. ''NY Daily News'' January 13, 2013. Retrieved June 3, 2019.
 +
* de Medeiros, M. S. C., and A. Furtado Rahde. 1989. [http://www.inchem.org/documents/pims/plant/erythrox.htm#SectionTitle:3.1%20Description%20of%20the%20plant ''Erythroxylum coca Lam'']. ''inchem.org''. Retrieved June 3, 2019.
 +
* Dion, M. L., and C. Russler. 2008. [http://michelledion.com/files/2008-Dion%20and%20Russler-JLAS.pdf Eradication efforts, the state, displacement and poverty: Explaining coca cultivation In Colombia during Plan Colombia]. ''Journal of Latin American Studies'' 40: 399–421. Retrieved June 3, 2019.
 +
* Drug Enforcement Agency. 1993. [http://www.erowid.org/archive/rhodium/chemistry/coca2cocaine.html Coca cultivation and cocaine processing: An overview]. ''EROWID''. Retrieved June 3, 2019.
 +
* Gaedcke, F. 1855. [http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/ardp.18551320208/abstract;jsessionid=714476B632CFE3954D9571D4A9862AE7.d01t01 Ueber das Erythroxylin, dargestellt aus den Blättern des in Südamerika cultivirten Strauches ''Erythroxylon coca'' Lam]. ''Archiv der Pharmazie'' 132(2): 141-150. Retrieved June 3, 2019.
 +
* Hurtado, J. 1995. ''Cocaine the Legend: About Coca and Cocaine'' La Paz, Bolivia: Accion Andina, ICORI.
 +
* Inciardi,J. A. 1992. ''The War on Drugs II: The Continuing Epic of Heroin, Cocaine, Crack, Crime, AIDS, and Public Policy''. Mayfield. ISBN 1559340169.
 +
* International Narcotics Control Board. 1994. [https://www.incb.org/documents/Publications/AnnualReports/AR1994/E-INCB-1994-1-Supp-1-e.pdf Evaluation of the effectiveness of the international drug control treaties], Supplement to the INCB Annual Report for 1994 (Part 3). ''United Nations''. Retrieved June 3, 2019.
 +
* International Narcotics Control Board (INCB). 2007. [http://www.incb.org/documents/Publications/AnnualReports/AR2007/AR_07_English.pdf Report of the International Narcotics Control Board for 2007]. ''United Nations''. Retrieved June 3, 2019.
 +
* James, A., D. Aulick, and T. Plowman. 1975. ''Nutritional Value of Coca''. Botanical Museum Leaflets, Harvard University 24(6): 113-119.
 +
* Leffel, T. n.d. [http://www.transitionsabroad.com/publications/magazine/0605/the_coca_plant_paradox.shtml The coca plant paradox]. ''TransitionsAbroad''. Retrieved June 3, 2019.
 +
* Liebowitz, M. R. 1983. ''The Chemistry of Love''. Boston: Little, Brown, & Co. ISNB 0316524301.
 +
* Marieb, E. N. and K. Hoehn. 2010. Human Anatomy & Physiology, 8th edition. Benjamin Cummings. ISBN 9780805395693.
 +
* Mazza, G. 2013. [https://www.monaconatureencyclopedia.com/erythroxylum-novogranatense/ ''Erythroxylum novogranatense]. ''Photomazza.com''. Retrieved June 3, 2019.
 +
* Mikkelson, B. 2011. [http://www.snopes.com/cokelore/cocaine.asp Cocaine-Cola]. ''Snopes.com''. Retrieved June 3, 2019.
 +
* Mortimer, G. W. 1974. ''History of Coca: The Divine Plant of the Incas''. San Francisco: And Or Press.
 +
* Musto, D. F. 1998. International traffic in coca through the early 20th century. ''Drug and Alcohol Dependence'' 49(2): 145–156.
 +
* Nathanson, J. A., E. J. Hunnicutt, L. Kantham, and C. Scavone. 1993. [http://www.pnas.org/content/90/20/9645.full.pdf Cocaine as a naturally occurring insecticide]. ''Proc. Nat. Acad. Sci.'' 90: 9645-9648. Retrieved June 3, 2019.
 +
* Niemann, A. 1860. [http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/ardp.18601530202/abstract Ueber eine neue organische Base in den Cocablättern]. ''Archiv der Pharmazie'' 153(2): 129-256. Retrieved June 3, 2019.
 +
* Office of Diversion Control (ODC). 2011. [https://www.federalregister.gov/documents/2011/12/12/2011-31767/importer-of-controlled-substances-notice-of-registration Importers Notice of Registration - 2011]. ''Drug Enforcement Agency, U.S. Department of Justice''. Retrieved June 3, 2019.
 +
* Plowman T. 1984. The origin, evolution, and diffusion of coca, ''Erythroxylum spp.'', in South and Central America. Pages 125-163 in D. Stone, ''Pre-Columbian Plant Migration''.  Papers of the Peabody Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology, Harvard University, Vol 76.  Cambridge MA: Harvard University Press. ISBN 0873652029.
 +
* Plowman, T, and L. Rivier. 1983. Cocaine and Cinnamoylcocaine content of thirty-one species of ''Erythroxylum'' (Erythroxylaceae)". ''Annals of Botany'' 51: 641–659.
 +
* Rivera, M. A., A. C. Aufderheide, L. W. Cartmell, C. M. Torres, and O. Langsjoen. 2005. [http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/16480174 Antiquity of coca-leaf chewing in the south central Andes: A 3,000 year archaeological record of coca-leaf chewing from northern Chile.] ''Journal of Psychoactive Drugs'' 37(4): 455–458. Retrieved June 3, 2019.
 +
* Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew. 1985. [http://plants.jstor.org/upwta/2_42 Entry for ''Erythroxylum coca'' Lam. [family ERYTHROXYLACEAE]]. ''JSTOR''. Retrieved June 3, 2019.
 +
* Sulz, C. H. 1888. [http://chestofbooks.com/food/beverages/A-Treatise-On-Beverages/Coca-Plant.html#.UgBXU20phXF#ixzz2b9MIcIZW ''A Treatise On Beverages or The Complete Practical Bottler'']. Dick & Fitzgerald Publishers. Retrieved June 3, 2019.
 +
* Turner C. E., M. A. Elsohly, L. Hanuš L., and H. N. Elsohly. 1981. Isolation of dihydrocuscohygrine from Peruvian coca leaves. ''Phytochemistry'' 20(6): 1403-1405.
 +
* United Nations (UN). 1961. [http://www.unodc.org/unodc/en/treaties/single-convention.html Single Convention on Narcotic Drugs] ''United Nations Office of Drugs and Crime''. Retrieved June 3, 2019.
 +
*United Nations Drug Control (UNDC). 2008. [http://www.undrugcontrol.info/en/issues/unscheduling-the-coca-leaf/item/1005-the-resolution-of-ambiguities-regarding-coca The resolution of ambiguities regarding coca]. ''United Nations''. Retrieved June 3, 2019.
 +
* United Nations Office of Drugs and Crime (USODC). 2011. [http://www.unodc.org/documents/data-and-analysis/Studies/Transatlantic_cocaine_market.pdf The transatlantic cocaine market: Research paper]. ''United Nations''. Retrieved June 3, 2019.
 +
* United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC). 2013. [https://www.unodc.org/unodc/en/frontpage/2013/January/bolivia-to-re-accede-to-un-drug-convention-while-making-exception-on-coca-leaf-chewing.html Bolivia to re-accede to UN drug convention, while making exception on coca leaf chewing]. ''United Nations''. Retrieved June 3, 2019.
 +
* WebMD. 2013a. [https://www.webmd.com/mental-health/addiction/cocaine-use-and-its-effects#1 What Is Cocaine?]. ''WebMD''. Retrieved June 3, 2019.
 +
* WebMD. 2013b. [http://www.webmd.com/vitamins-supplements/ingredientmono-748-COCA.aspx?activeIngredientId=748&activeIngredientName=COCA Find a vitamin or supplement: Coca]. ''WebMD''. Retrieved June 3, 2019.
  
  
<ref name="Dion2008">{{cite journal
+
This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Chisholm, H. (Ed.) 1911. ''Encyclopædia Britannica'', 11th ed. Cambridge University Press.
|last=Dion|first=Michelle L|coauthors=Russler,Catherine
 
|title=Eradication Efforts, The State, Displacement And Poverty: Explaining Coca Cultivation In Colombia During Plan Colombia
 
|journal=Journal of Latin American Studies|year=2008|volume=40.3|pages=399–421|accessdate=15 June 2013}}</ref>
 
 
 
* Drug Enforcement Agency. 1993. [http://www.erowid.org/archive/rhodium/chemistry/coca2cocaine.html Coca cultivation and cocaine processing: An overview]. ''EROWID''. Retrieved August 8, 2013.
 
 
 
Plowman T.  "The Origin, Evolution, and Diffusion of Coca, Erythroxylum spp., in South and Central America."  In: Stone D, ed. ''Pre-Columbian Plant Migration''.  Papers of the Peabody Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology.  Harvard University. Vol 76.  Cambridge MA: Harvard University Press; 1984. p. 125-163.</ref>
 
 
 
Plowman, T; Rivier L (1983). "Cocaine and Cinnamoylcocaine content of thirty-one species of Erythroxylum (Erythroxylaceae)". Annals of Botany (London) 51: 641–659.
 
 
 
 
 
"Illicit Production of Cocaine - [www.rhodium.ws]". Erowid.org. Retrieved 2013-03-26.
 
Casale JF, Klein RFX
 
Forensic Science Review 5, 95-107 (1993)
 
http://www.erowid.org/archive/rhodium/chemistry/cocaine.illicit.production.html
 
 
 
* Mazza, G. 2013. [http://www.photomazza.com/?Erythroxylum-novogranatense ''Erythroxylum novogranatense]. ''Photomazza.com''. Retrieved August 6, 2013.
 
 
 
* Botany Central. 2013. [http://botanycentral.providence.wikispaces.net/Erythroxylum+coca Erythroxylum coca: The coca plant]. ''Botany Central''. Retrieved August 6, 2013.
 
 
 
* de Medeiros, M. S. C., and A. Furtado Rahde. 1989. [http://www.inchem.org/documents/pims/plant/erythrox.htm#SectionTitle:3.1%20Description%20of%20the%20plant ''Erythroxylum coca Lam'']. ''inchem.org''. Retrieved August 6, 2013.
 
 
 
* Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew. 1985. [http://plants.jstor.org/upwta/2_42 Entry for ''Erythroxylum coca'' Lam. [family ERYTHROXYLACEAE]]. ''JSTOR''. Retrieved August 6, 2013.
 
 
 
 
 
* Turner C. E., Elsohly M. A., Hanuš L., Elsohly H. N. Isolation of dihydrocuscohygrine from Peruvian coca leaves. ''Phytochemistry'' 20 (6), 1403-1405 (1981)
 
* ''History of Coca. The Divine Plant of the Incas'' by W. Golden Mortimer, M.D. 576 pp. And/Or Press San Francisco, 1974. This title has no ISBN.
 
{{1911}}
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
http://chestofbooks.com/food/beverages/A-Treatise-On-Beverages/Coca-Plant.html#.UgBXU20phXF#ixzz2b9MIcIZW
 
Title A Treatise On Beverages or The Complete Practical Bottler
 
Author Charles Herman Sulz
 
Publisher Dick & Fitzgerald Publishers
 
Year 1888
 
Copyright 1888, Charles Herman Sulz
 
Amazon A Treatise On Beverages
 
 
 
Read more: http://chestofbooks.com/food/beverages/A-Treatise-On-Beverages/index.html#.UgBXOm0phXE#ixzz2b9MB7GaN
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
==External links==
 
{{Commons|Erythroxylum coca}}
 
{{wikispecies|Erythroxylum coca}}
 
* [http://www.sharedresponsibility.gov.co Shared Responsibility]
 
* [http://www.undrugcontrol.info/en/issues/unscheduling-the-coca-leaf/item/262-coca-leaf-myths-and-reality Coca leaf: Myths and Reality] website of the Transnational Institute (TNI)
 
* [http://www.undrugcontrol.info/en/issues/unscheduling-the-coca-leaf Unscheduling the coca leaf], UN Drug Control website of the Transnational Institute (TNI)
 
* [http://historyofalcoholanddrugs.typepad.com/alcohol_and_drugs_history/coca_leaf/index.html Coca leaf news page]
 
 
 
{{ancient anaesthesia-footer}}
 
 
 
[[Category:Coca]]
 
[[Category:Flora of the Andes]]
 
[[Category:Flora of western South America]]
 
[[Category:Crops originating from the Americas]]
 
[[Category:Herbal and fungal stimulants]]
 
[[Category:Medicinal plants of South America]]
 
[[Category:Quechua words and phrases]]
 
[[Category:Entheogens]]
 
  
 
[[Category:Life sciences]]
 
[[Category:Life sciences]]

Latest revision as of 21:43, 4 June 2019

Coca
Koeh-204.jpg
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Plantae
Division: Magnoliophyta
Class: Magnoliopsida
Order: Malpighiales
Family: Erythroxylaceae
Genus: Erythroxylum
Species
  • Erythroxylum coca
    • E. coca var. coca
    • E. coca var. ipadu
  • Erythroxylum novogranatense
    • E. novogranatense var. novogranatense
    • E. novogranatense var. truxillense

Coca is the common name for four domesticated varieties of tropical plants belonging to the two species Erythroxylum coca and E. novogranatense, whose leaves are used for a variety of purposes, including serving as the source of the drug cocaine. The four varieties are E. coca var. coca (Bolivian or Huánuco coca), E. coca var. ipadu (Amazonian coca), E. novogranatense var. novogranatense (Colombian coca), and E. novogranatense var. truxillense (Trujillo coca). The plant, which is native to the Andes Mountains and Amazon of South America, now also is grown in limited quantities in other regions with tropical climates.

Coca is particularly renowned worldwide for its psychoactive alkaloid, cocaine. While the alkaloid content of coca leaves is low, when the leaves are processed they can provide a concentrated source of cocaine. This purified form, which is used nasally, smoked, or injected, can be very addictive and have deleterious impacts on the brain, heart, respiratory system, kidneys, sexual system, and gastrointestinal tract. It can create a cycle where the user has difficulty experiencing pleasure without the drug.

For the plant, cocaine seems to serve a valuable function as an effective insecticide, limiting damage from herbivorous insects.

The coca leaves have been used unprocessed for thousands of years in South America for various religious, social, medicinal, and nutritional purposes, including to control hunger and combat the impacts of high altitudes. It has been called the "divine plant of the Incas." Unprocessed coca leaves are also commonly used in the Andean countries to make a herbal tea with mild stimulant effects. However, since the alkaloid cocaine is present in only trace amounts in the leaves, it does not cause the euphoric and psychoactive effects associated with use of the drug. Cocaine is available as a prescription for such purposes as external application to the skin to numb pain.

The Coca-Cola company uses a cocaine-free coca extract. In the early days of the manufacture of Coca-Cola beverage, the formulation did contain some cocaine, although within a few years of its introduction it already was only trace amounts.

Species and varieties

Coca shrub in Colombia

There are two species of cultivated coca, each with two varieties:

  • Erythroxylum coca
    • Erythroxylum coca var. coca (Bolivian or Huánuco coca) - well adapted to the eastern Andes of Peru and Bolivia, an area of humid, tropical, montane forest.
    • Erythroxylum coca var. ipadu (Amazonian coca) - cultivated in the lowland Amazon Basin in Peru and Colombia.
  • Erythroxylum novogranatense
    • Erythroxylum novogranatense var. novogranatense (Colombian coca) - a highland variety that is utilized in lowland areas. It is cultivated in drier regions found in Colombia. However, E. novogranatense is very adaptable to varying ecological conditions.
    • Erythroxylum novogranatense var. truxillense (Trujillo coca) - grown primarily in Peru and Colombia.

All four of the cultivated cocas were domesticated in pre-Columbian times and are more closely related to each other than to any other species (Plowman 1984). E. novogranatense was historically seen as a variety or subspecies of E. coca (Royal Botanic Gardens 1985). The two subspecies of Erythroxylum coca are almost indistinguishable phenotypically. Erythroxylum novogranatense var. novogranatense and Erythroxylum novogranatense var. truxillense are phenotypically similar, but morphologically distinguishable.

Under the older Cronquist system of classifying flowering plants, coca was placed in an order Linales; more modern systems place it in the order Malpighiales.

Wild populations of Erythroxylum coca var. coca are found in the eastern Andes; the other 3 taxa are only known as cultivated plants.

Description

Leaves and branches of E. coca

Coca plants tend to be evergreen shrubs with straight, reddish branches. This later quality is reflected in the name of the genus, Erythroxylum, which is a combination of the Greek erythros, meaning "red," and xylon, meaning "wood" (Mazza 2013). The coca plants tend to have oval to elliptical green leaves tapering at the ends, small yellowish-green flowers with heart-shaped anthers, and fruits in the form of red drupes with a single seed.

The coca plant is largely an understory species, found in moist tropical forests. It is native to the eastern Andes slopes and the Amazon. It does well at high elevations, being cultivated in Bolivia at elevations of 1000 to 2000 meters, but it also is cultivated at lower elevations, including lowland rainforests (Boucher 1991).

Erythroxylum coca

The wild E. coca commonly reaches a height of about 3 to 5.5 meters (12-18 ft), whereas the domestic plant is usually kept to about 2 meters (6 ft). The stem reaches about 16 centimeters in diameter and has a whitish bark. The branches are reddish, straight, and alternate. There is perennial renewal of the branches in a geometrical progression after being cut (de Medeiros and Rahde 1989).

The leaves of E. coca are green or greenish brown, smooth, opaque, and oval or elliptical, and generally about 1.5 to 3 centimeters (0.6-1.2 inches) wide and reach to 11 centimeters (4.3 inches) long. A special feature of the leaf is that the areolate portion is bordered by two curved, longitudinal lines, with one on either side of the midrib and more pronounced on the underside of the leaf. The small yellowish-green flowers give way to red berries, which are drupaceous and oblong, measuring about 1 centimeter (0.4 inches), and with only one seed (de Medeiros and Rahde 1989).

While both E. coca var. coca and E. coca var. ipadu have leaves that are broadly elliptical, the ipadu variety tends to have a more rounded apex versus the more pointed variety coca (DEA 1993).

Erythroxylum novogranatense

5-year-old E. novogranatense var novogranatense

E. novogranatense grows to about 3 meters (10 feet), with leaves that are bright green, alternate, obovate or oblong-elliptic and on about a 0.5 centimeter (0.2 in) long petiole. The leaves are about 2 to 6 centimeters (0.8-2.4 in) long and 1 to 3 centimeters (0.4-1.2 in) broad. The flowers are hermaphrodite, solitary or grouped, axillary, and with five yellowish, white petals, about 0.4 centimeters (0.16 in) long and 0.2 centimeters (0.08 in) wide. The fruits are drupes, of oblong shape and red color, with only one oblong seed. They get to be about 0.8 centimeters (0.3 in) long and 0.3 centimeters (0.1 in) in diameter (Mazza 2013).

The leaf of E. novogranatense var. novogranatense tends to have a paler green color, more rounded apex, and be somewhat thinner and narrower than the leaf of E. coca (DEA 1993).

E. novogranatense var. truxillense is very similar to E. novogranatense var. novogranatense but differs in that the latter has longitudinal lines on either side of the central nervation (as with E. coca) while this is lacking in the truxillense variety (Mazza 2013).

The species name comes from novus, a, um, meaning "new," and granatensis, meaning "of Granada," from the name "Nueva Granada," the name that Colombia was called at the time of the Spanish conquest (Mazza 2013).

Cocaine and other alkaloids

The coca plant has many alkaloids, such as cocaine. Alkaloids are chemical compounds that are naturally occurring and contain mostly basic nitrogen atoms. Well-known alkaloids include caffeine found in the seed of the coffee plant and the leaves of the tea bush; nicotine found in the nightshade family of plants including the tobacco plant (Nicotiana tabacum); morphine found in poppies; and theobromine found in the cacao plant. Other well-known alkaloids include mescaline, strychnine, quinine, and codeine.

Among the about 14 diverse alkaloids identified in the coca plant are ecgonine, hygrine, truxilline, benzoylecgonine, and tropacocaine. Coca leaves have been reported as having 0.5 to 1.5% alkaloids by dry weight (Royal Botanic Gardens 1985).

The most concentrated alkaloid is cocaine (cocaine (methyl benzoyl ecgonine or benzoylmethylecgonine). Concentrations vary by variety and region, but leaves have been reported variously as between 0.25% and 0.77% (Plowman and Rivier 1983), between 0.35% and 0.72% by dry weight (Nathanson et al. 1993), and between 0.3% and 1.5% and averaging 0.8% in fresh leaves (Casale and Klein 1993). E. coca var. ipadu is not as concentrated in cocaine alkaloids as the other three varieties (DEA 1993). Boucher (1991) reports that the coca leaves from Bolivia, while considered to be of higher quality by traditional users, have lower concentrations of cocaine than leaves from the Chapare Valley. He also reports those leaves with smaller amounts of cocaine have traditionally been preferred for chewing, being associated with a sweet or less bitter taste, while those preferred for the drug trade prefer those leaves with a greater alkaloid content.

For the plant, cocaine is believed to serve as a naturally occurring insecticide, with the alkaloid exerting such effects at concentrations normally found in the leaves (Nathanson et. al. 1993). It has been observed that compared to other tropical plants, coca seems to be relatively pest free, with little observed damage to the leaves and rare observations of herbivorous insects on plants in the field (Nathanson et al. 1993).

Cultivation

Leaves of E. coca
Leaves and fruit of E. coca

Ninety-eight percent of the global land area plant with coca is in the three nations of Colombia, Peru, and Bolivia (Dion and Russler 2008). However, while it is, or has been grown, in other nations, including Taiwan, Indonesia, Formosa, India, Java, Ivory Coast, Ghana, and Cameroon, coca cultivation has largely been abandoned outside South America since the mid 1900s (Boucher, 1991; Royal Botanic Gardens 2013). The United Nations Office of Drugs and Crime estimated, in a 2011 report, that in 2008 Colombia was responsible for about half of global production of coca, while Peru contributed over one-third, and Bolivia the rest, although coca leaf production in Colombia has been declining over the past ten years while that of Peru has been increasing and by 2009 they may have reach similar output levels (UNODC 2011).

E. coca var. coca (Bolivian or Huánuco coca) is the most widely grown variety and is cultivated is the eastern slopes of the Andes, from Bolivia in the south through Peru to Ecuador in the north. It tends mostly to be cultivated in Bolivia and Peru, and largely between 500 meters to 1500 meters (1,650-4,950 feet). E. coca var. ipadu (Amazonian coca) is found in the Amazon basin, in southern Colombia, northeastern Peru, and western Brazil. It tends mostly to be cultivated in Peru and Colombia. E. novogranatense var. novogranatense (Colombian coca) thrives in Colombia and is grown to some extent in Venezuela. E. novogranatense var. truxillense (Trujillo coca) is largely cultivated in Peru and Colombia; this variety is grown to 1500 meters (DEA 1993).

While locations that are hot, damp, and humid are particularly conducive to growth of coca plants, the leaves with the highest concentrations of cocaine tend to be found among those grown at higher, cooler, and somewhat drier altitudes.

Coca plants are grown from seeds that are collected from the drupes when ripe. The seeds are allowed to dry and then placed in seed beds, typically sheltered from the sun, and germinate in about 3 weeks. The plants are transplanted to prepared fields when they reach about 30 to 60 centimeters in height, which is about 2 months of age. Plants can be harvested 12 to 24 months after being transplanted (Casale and Klein 1993; DEA 1993).

Although the plants grow to more than 3 meters, the cultivated coca plants are typically pruned to 1 to 2 meters to ease harvest. Likewise, although the plants can live up to 50 years, they often are uprooted or cut back to near ground level after 5 to 10 years because of concern about decreasing cocaine content in the older shrubs (Casale and Klein 1993; DEA 1993).

Leaves are harvested year round. Harvesting is mainly of new fresh growth. The leaves are dried in the sun and then packed for distribution; leaves are kept dry in order to preserve the leaf quality.

History

Workers in Java prepared coca leaves. This product was mainly traded in Amsterdam, and was further processed into cocaine. (Dutch East Indies, before 1940.)

There is archeological evidence that suggests the use of coca leaves 8000 years ago, with the finding of coca leaves of that date (6000 B.C.E.) in floors in Peru, along with pieces of calcite (calcium carbonate), which is used by those chewing leaves to bring out the alkaloids by helping dissolve them into the saliva (Boucher 1991). Coca leaves also have been found in the Huaca Prieta settlement in northern Peru, dated from about 2500 to 1800 B.C.E. (Hurtado 1995). Traces of cocaine also have been in 3000-year-old mummies of the Alto Ramirez culture of Northern Chile, suggesting coca-leaf chewing dates to at least 1500 B.C.E. (Rivera et al. 2005). The remains of coca leaves not only have been found with ancient Peruvian mummies, but pottery from the time period depicts humans with bulged cheeks, indicating the presence of something on which they are chewing (Altman et al. 1985). It is the view of Boucher (1991) that the coca plant was domesticated by 1500 B.C.E.

In the pre-Columbian era, coca was a main part of the economic system and was exchanged for fruits and furs from the Amazon, potatoes and grains from the Andean highlands, and fish and shells from the Pacific (Boucher 1991). The use of coca for currency continued during the Colonial Period because it was considered even more valuable than silver or gold. Uses of coca in the early times include use for curing aliments, providing energy, making religious offerings, and forecasting of events (Hurtado 2010).

Did you know?
The coca plant has been called the "divine plant of the Incas"

Coca chewing may originally have been limited to the eastern Andes before its introduction to the Incas. As the plant was viewed as having a divine origin, its cultivation became subject to a state monopoly and its use restricted to nobles and a few favored classes (court orators, couriers, favored public workers, and the army) by the rule of the Topa Inca (1471–1493). As the Incan empire declined, the leaf became more widely available. After some deliberation, Philip II of Spain issued a decree recognizing the drug as essential to the well-being of the Andean Indians but urging missionaries to end its religious use. The Spanish are believed to have effectively encouraged use of coca by an increasing majority of the population to increase their labor output and tolerance for starvation, but it is not clear that this was planned deliberately.

Coca was first introduced to Europe in the sixteenth century. However, coca did not become popular until the mid-nineteenth century, with the publication of an influential paper by Dr. Paolo Mantegazza praising its stimulating effects on cognition. This led to invention of coca wine and the first production of pure cocaine.

The cocaine alkaloid was first isolated by the German chemist Friedrich Gaedcke in 1855. Gaedcke named the alkaloid "erythroxyline", and published a description in the journal Archiv der Pharmazie (Gaedcke 1855). Cocaine also was isolated in 1859 by Albert Niemann of the University of Göttingen, using an improved purification process (Niemann 1860). It was Niemann who named coca's chief alkaloid "cocaine" (Inciardi 1992).

Coca wine (of which Vin Mariani was the best-known brand) and other coca-containing preparations were widely sold as patent medicines and tonics, with claims of a wide variety of health benefits. The original version of Coca-Cola was among these, although the amount in Coca-Cola may have been only trace amounts. Products with cocaine became illegal in most countries outside of South America in the early twentieth century, after the addictive nature of cocaine was widely recognized.

In the early twentieth century, the Dutch colony of Java became a leading exporter of coca leaf. By 1912, shipments to Amsterdam, where the leaves were processed into cocaine, reached 1 million kg, overtaking the Peruvian export market. Apart from the years of the First World War, Java remained a greater exporter of coca than Peru until the end of the 1920s (Musto 1998). As noted above, since the mid-1900s, coca cultivation outside South America has virtually been abandoned.

International prohibition of coca leaf

As the raw material for the manufacture of the recreational drug cocaine, the coca leaf has been the target of international efforts to restrict its cultivation in an attempt to prevent the production of cocaine. While the cultivation, sale, and possession of unprocessed coca leaf (but not of any processed form of cocaine) is generally legal in the countries where traditional use is established—such as Bolivia, Peru, Chile, and Argentina—cultivation even in these countries is often restricted. In the case of Argentina, it is legal only in some northern provinces where the practice is so common that the state has accepted it.

The prohibition of the use of the coca leaf except for medical or scientific purposes was established by the United Nations in the 1961 Single Convention on Narcotic Drugs. The coca leaf is listed on Schedule I of the 1961 Single Convention together with cocaine and heroin. The Convention determined that "The Parties shall so far as possible enforce the uprooting of all coca bushes which grow wild. They shall destroy the coca bushes if illegally cultivated" (Article 26), and that "coca leaf chewing must be abolished within twenty-five years from the coming into force of this Convention" (Article 49, 2.e). The Convention recognized as an acceptable use of the coca leaves for preparing a flavoring agent without the alkaloids, and import, export, trade, and possession of the leaves for such purpose. However, the Convention also noted that whenever prevailing conditions render prohibition of cultivation the most suitable measure for preventing diversion of the crop into the illicit drug trade and for protection of health and general welfare, then the nation "shall prohibit cultivation" (UN 1961).

Despite the legal restriction among countries party to the international treaty, coca chewing and drinking of coca tea is carried out daily by millions of people in the Andes as well as considered sacred within indigenous cultures. In recent times, the governments of several South American countries, such as Peru, Bolivia and Venezuela, have defended and championed the traditional use of coca, as well as the modern uses of the leaf and its extracts in household products such as teas and toothpaste.

In an attempt to obtain international acceptance for the legal recognition of traditional use of coca in their respective countries, Peru and Bolivia successfully led an amendment, paragraph 2 of Article 14 into the 1988 United Nations Convention Against Illicit Traffic in Narcotic Drugs and Psychotropic Substances, stipulating that measures to eradicate illicit cultivation and to eliminate illicit demand "should take due account of traditional licit use, where there is historic evidence of such use" (UNDC 2008).

Bolivia also made a formal reservation to the 1988 Convention. This convention required countries to adopt measures to establish the use, consumption, possession, purchase or cultivation of the coca leaf for personal consumption as a criminal offense. Bolivia stated that "the coca leaf is not, in and of itself, a narcotic drug or psychotropic substance" and stressed that its "legal system recognizes the ancestral nature of the licit use of the coca leaf, which, for much of Bolivia's population, dates back over centuries" (UNDC 2008).

However, the International Narcotics Control Board (INCB)—the independent and quasi-judicial control organ for the implementation of the United Nations drug conventions—denied the validity of article 14 in the 1988 Convention over the requirements of the 1961 Convention, or any reservation made by parties, since it does not "absolve a party of its rights and obligations under the other international drug control treaties" (UNDC 2008; INCB 2007). The INCB considered Bolivia, Peru, and a few other countries that allow such practices as coca-chewing and drinking of coca tea to be in breach with their treaty obligations, and insisted that "each party to the Convention should establish as a criminal offence, when committed intentionally, the possession and purchase of coca leaf for personal consumption" (INCB 2007). The INCB noted in its 1994 Annual Report that "mate de coca, which is considered harmless and legal in several countries in South America, is an illegal activity under the provisions of both the 1961 Convention and the 1988 Convention, though that was not the intention of the plenipotentiary conferences that adopted those conventions." The INCB also implicitly dismissed the original report of the Commission of Enquiry on the Coca Leaf by recognizing that "there is a need to undertake a scientific review to assess the coca-chewing habit and the drinking of coca tea."(INCB 1994).

In reaction to the 2007 Annual Report of the INCB, the Bolivian government announced that it would formally issue a request to the United Nations to unschedule the coca leaf of List 1 of the 1961 UN Single Convention. Bolivia led a diplomatic effort to do so beginning in March 2009. In that month, the Bolivian President, Evo Morales, went before the United Nations and relayed the history of coa use for such purposes as medicinal, nutritional, social, and spiritual, and he at that time put a leaf in his mouth (Cortes 2013). However, Bolivia's effort to have the coca leaf removed from the List 1 of the 1960 UN Single Convention was unsuccessful, when eighteen countries objected to the change before the January 2011 deadline. A single objection would have been sufficient to block the modification. The legally unnecessary step of supporting the change was taken formally by Spain, Ecuador, Venezuela, and Costa Rica.

In June 2011, Bolivia moved to denounce the 1961 Convention over the prohibition of the coca leaf.

On January 1, 2012 Bolivia's withdrawal from the Single Convention on Narcotic Drugs came into effect. However, Bolivia took steps to again become a party to the 1961 Single Convention conditional on the acceptance of a reservation on the chewing of coca leaf. For this reservation not to pass, one-third of the 183 States party to this convention would have had to object within one year after the proposed reservation was submitted. This deadline expired on January 10, 2013, with only 15 countries objecting to Bolivia's reservation, thus permitting the reservation, and Bolivia's re-accession to the Convention came into force on January 10, 2013 (UNODC 2013).

Currently, outside of South America, most countries' laws make no distinction between the coca leaf and any other substance containing cocaine, so the possession of coca leaf is prohibited. In South America, coca leaf is illegal in both Paraguay and Brazil.

In the Netherlands, coca leaf is legally in the same category as cocaine, both are List I drugs of the Opium Law. The Opium Law specifically mentions the leafs of the plants of the genus Erythroxylon. However, the possession of living plants of the genus Erythroxylon are not actively prosecuted, even though they are legally forbidden.

In the United States, a Stepan Company plant in Maywood, New Jersey is a registered importer of coca leaf. The company manufactures pure cocaine for medical use and also produces a cocaine-free extract of the coca leaf, which is used as a flavoring ingredient in Coca-Cola. Other companies have registrations with the DEA to import coca leaf according to 2011 Federal Register Notices for Importers (ODC 2011), including Johnson Matthey, Inc, Pharmaceutical Materials; Mallinckrodt Inc; Penick Corporation; and the Research Triangle Institute.

Uses

Man holding coca leaf in Bolivia

Recreational psychoactive drug

Main article: cocaine

Coca leaf is the raw material for the manufacture of the psychoactive drug cocaine, a powerful stimulant extracted chemically from large quantities of coca leaves. Cocaine is best known worldwide for such illegal use. This concentrated form of cocaine is used nasally (nasal insufflation is also known as "snorting," "sniffing," or "blowing" and involves absorption through the mucous membranes lining the sinuses), injected (the method that produces the highest blood levels in the shortest time), or smoked (notably the cheaper, more potent form called "crack").

Use of concentrated cocaine yields pleasure through its interference with neurotransmitters, blocking the neurotransmitters, such as dopamine, from being reabsorbed, and thus resulting in continual stimulation. However, such drug use can have deleterious impacts on the brain, heart, respiratory system, kidneys, sexual system, and gastrointestinal tract (WebMD 2013a). For example, it can result in a heart attack or strokes, even in young people,and it can cause ulcers and sudden kidney failure, and it can impair sexual function (WebMD 2013a). It also can be highly addictive, creating intense cravings for the drug, and result in the cocaine user becoming "in a very real sense, unable to experience pleasure without the drug" (Marieb and Hoehn 2010).

The United Nations Office of Drugs and Crime estimated that in 2009, the US cocaine market was $37 billion (and shrinking over the past ten years) and the West and Central European Cocaine market was US$ 33 billion (and increasing over the past ten years) (USODC 2011).

The production, distribution and sale of cocaine products is restricted and/or illegal in most countries. Internationally, it is regulated by the Single Convention on Narcotic Drugs, and the United Nations Convention Against Illicit Traffic in Narcotic Drugs and Psychotropic Substances. In the United States, the manufacture, importation, possession, and distribution of cocaine is additionally regulated by the 1970 Controlled Substances Act. Cocaine is generally treated as a 'hard drug', with severe penalties for possession and trafficking.

Medicine

Coca leaf traditionally has been used for a variety of medical purposes, including as a stimulant to overcome fatigue, hunger, and thirst. It has been said to reduce hunger pangs and add enhance physical performance, adding strength and endurance for work (Boucher 1991; WebMD 2013b). Coca leaf also has been used to overcome altitude sickness, and in the Andes tourists have been offered coca tea for this purpose (Cortes 2013).

In addition, coca extracts have been used as a muscle and cerebral stimulant to alleviate nausea, vomiting, and stomach pains without upsetting digestion (WebMD 2013b). Because coca constricts blood vessels, it also serves to oppose bleeding, and coca seeds were used for nosebleeds. Indigenous use of coca has also been reported as a treatment for malaria, ulcers, asthma, to improve digestion, to guard against bowel laxity, and as an aphrodisiac.

Another purpose for coca and coca extracts has been as an anesthetic and analgesic to alleviate the pain of headache, rheumatism, wounds, sores, and so forth. In Southeast Asia, the plant leaves have been chewed in order to get a plug of the leaf into a decayed tooth to alleviate toothache (Royal Botanic Gardens 1985). Before stronger anesthetics were available, coca also was used for broken bones, childbirth, and during trephining operations on the skull. Today, cocaine has mostly been replaced as a medical anesthetic by synthetic analogues such as procaine.

In the United States, cocaine remains an FDA-approved Schedule C-II drug, which can be prescribed by a healthcare provider, but is strictly regulated. A form of cocaine available by prescription is applied to the skin to numb eye, nose, and throat pain and narrow blood vessels (WebMD 2013b).

Nutrition and use as a chew and beverage

Raw coca leaves, chewed or consumed as tea or mate de coca, have a number of nutritional properties. Specifically, the coca plant contains essential minerals (calcium, potassium, phosphorus), vitamins (B1, B2, C, and E) and nutrients such as protein and fiber (James et al. 1975).

Chewing of unadulterated coca leaves has been a tradition in the Andes for thousands of years and remains practiced by millions in South America today (Cortes 2013). Individuals may suck on wads of the leaves and keep them in their cheeks for hours at a time, often combining with chalk or ask to help dissolve the alkaloids into the saliva (Boucher 1991). While the cocaine in the plant has little effect on the unbroken skin, it does act on the mucous membranes of the mouth, as well as the membranes of the eye, nose, and stomach (Royal Botanic Gardens 1985).

Coca leaves also can be boiled to provide a tea. Although coca leaf chewing is common mainly among the indigenous populations, the consumption of coca tea (Mate de coca) is common among all sectors of society in the Andean countries. Coca leaf is sold packaged into teabags in most grocery stores in the region, and establishments that cater to tourists generally feature coca tea.

In the Andes commercially manufactured coca teas, granola bars, cookies, hard candies, etc. are available in most stores and supermarkets, including upscale suburban supermarkets.

One beverage particularly tied to coca is Coca-Cola, a carbonated soft drink produced by the Coca-Cola Company. Production of Coca-Cola currently uses a coca extract with its cocaine removed as part of its "secret formula." Coca-Cola originally was introduced to the public in 1886 as a patent medicine. It is uncertain how much cocaine was in the original formulation, but it was stated that the founder, Pemberton, called for five ounces of coca leaf per gallon of syrup. However, by 1891, just five years later, the amount was significantly cut to only a trace amount—at least partly in response to concern about the negative aspects of cocaine. The ingredient was left in in order to protect the trade name of Coca-Cola (the Kola part comes from Kola nuts, which continue to serve for flavoring and the source of caffeine). By 1902, it was held that Coca-Cola contained a little as 1/400th of a grain of cocaine per ounce of syrup. In 1929, Coca-Cola became cocaine-free, but before then it was estimated that the amount of cocaine already was no more than one part in 50 million, such that is the entire year's supply (25-odd million gallons) of Coca-Cola syrup would yield but 6/100th of an ounce of cocaine (Mikkelson 2011; Liebowitz 1983; Cortes 2013).

Religion and culture

The coca plant has played an important role in religious, royal, and cultural occasions. Coca has been a vital part of the religious cosmology of the Andean peoples of Peru, Bolivia, Ecuador, Colombia, northern Argentina, and Chile from the pre-Inca period through the present. Coca has been called the "divine plant of the Incas" (Mortimer 1974) and coca leaves play a crucial part in offerings to the apus (mountains), Inti (the sun), or Pachamama (the earth). Coca leaves are also often read in a form of divination analogous to reading tea leaves in other cultures. In addition, coca use in shamanic rituals is well documented wherever local native populations have cultivated the plant.

The coca plant also has been used in reciprocating manners in the Andrea culture, with cultural exchanges involving coca (Royal Botanic Gardens 1985). The plant has been offered by a prospective son-in-law to his girl's father, relatives may chew on coca leaves to celebrate a birth, a woman may use coca to hasten and ease the pain of labor, and coca leaves may be put in one's coffin before burial (Leffel).

References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees


This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Chisholm, H. (Ed.) 1911. Encyclopædia Britannica, 11th ed. Cambridge University Press.

Credits

New World Encyclopedia writers and editors rewrote and completed the Wikipedia article in accordance with New World Encyclopedia standards. This article abides by terms of the Creative Commons CC-by-sa 3.0 License (CC-by-sa), which may be used and disseminated with proper attribution. Credit is due under the terms of this license that can reference both the New World Encyclopedia contributors and the selfless volunteer contributors of the Wikimedia Foundation. To cite this article click here for a list of acceptable citing formats.The history of earlier contributions by wikipedians is accessible to researchers here:

The history of this article since it was imported to New World Encyclopedia:

Note: Some restrictions may apply to use of individual images which are separately licensed.