"Ruby-throated hummingbirds and insects pollinate the bright red to pinkish-red flowers from mid-spring to fall."
"Plants have been widely collected for Christmas decorations, and over collecting has impacted some local populations negatively.
American Indian women made a tea from the leaves and berries that was consumed during childbirth."
AKA Wahoo
The tree is occasionally considered a nuisance as it readily invades old fields, forest clearings, and rangelands, proving particularly difficult to eradicate with herbicides.
"Mayapple has been used by American Indians as an emetic (ie causes vomiting), cathartic (ie strong laxative), and antihelmintic agent.Anthelmintics are a group of antiparasitic drugs that expel parasitic worms and other internal parasites from the body by either stunning or killing them and without causing significant damage to the host. The rhizome of the mayapple has been used for a variety of medicinal purposes, originally by indigenous inhabitants and later by other settlers.
Mayapple can be also used topically for warts, and two of its derivatives, etoposide and teniposide, have shown promise in treating some cancers. Etoposide is among the World Health Organizations's list of essential medicines and it is derived from podophyllotoxin"
"All parts of the Sassafras albidum plant have been used for human purposes, including stems, leaves, bark, wood, roots, fruit, and flowers. In North America, it has particular culinary significance, being featured in distinct national foods such as traditional root beer, filé powder, and Louisiana Creole cuisine. Sassafras albidum was an important plant to many Native Americans of the southeastern United States and was used for many purposes, including culinary and medicinal purposes, before the European colonization of North America. Its significance for Native Americans is also magnified, as the European quest for sassafras as a commodity for export brought Europeans into closer contact with Native Americans during the early years of European settlement in the 16th and 17th centuries, in Florida, Virginia, and parts of the Northeast.
Some Native American tribes used the leaves of sassafras to treat wounds by rubbing the leaves directly into a wound, and used different parts of the plant for many medicinal purposes such as treating acne, urinary disorders, and sicknesses that increased body temperature, such as high fevers. They also used the bark as a dye, and as a flavoring.
Sassafras wood was also used by Native Americans in the southeastern United States as a fire-starter because of the flammability of its natural oils.
In cooking, sassafras was used by some Native Americans to flavor bear fat, and to cure meats.Sassafras is still used today to cure meats. Use of filé powder by the Choctaw in the Southern United States in cooking is linked to the development of gumbo, a signature dish of Louisiana Creole cuisine.
Sassafras albidum is used primarily in the United States as the key ingredient in home brewed root beer and as a thickener and flavouring in traditional Louisiana Creolegumbo.
Sassafras roots are used to make traditional root beer, although they were banned for commercially mass-produced foods and drugs by the FDA in 1960. Laboratory animals that were given oral doses of sassafras tea or sassafras oil that contained large doses of safrole developed permanent liver damage or various types of cancer. In humans, liver damage can take years to develop and it may not have obvious signs. Along with commercially available Sarsaparilla, sassafras remains an ingredient in use among hobby or microbrewenthusiasts. While sassafras is no longer used in commercially produced root beer and is sometimes substituted with artificial flavors, natural extracts with the safrole distilled and removed are available. Most commercial root beers have replaced the sassafras extract with methyl salicylate, the ester found in wintergreen and black birch (Betula lenta) bark.
Sassafras tea was also banned in the United States in 1977, but the ban was lifted with the passage of the Dietary Supplement Health and Education Act in 1994.
S. albidum is a host plant for the spicebush swallowtail.
Safrole distilled from Sassafras albidum has been used as a natural insect or pest deterrent.
Godfrey's Cordial, as well as other tonics given to children that consisted of opiates, used sassafras to disguise other strong smells and odours associated with the tonics. It was also used as an additional flavouring to mask the strong odours of homemade liquor in the United States.
Commercial "sassafras oil" generally is a byproduct of camphor production in Asiaor comes from related trees in Brazil. Safrole is a precursor for the manufacture of the drug MDMA, as well as the drug MDA (3-4 methylenedioxyamphetamine) and as such, its transport is monitored internationally.
Chemical structure of safrole, a constituent of sassafras essential oil.
The wood is dull orange brown, hard, and durable in contact with the soil; it was used in the past for posts and rails, small boats and ox-yokes, though scarcity and small size limits current use. Some is still used for making furniture."
"Protein extracts from A. platyneuron have been shown to deter insect predation on soybeans to a significant extent,[84] and the Missouri Botanical Garden describes it as lacking "serious insect or disease problems".[85] However, a population of several hundred individuals in Florida was reported to have been almost wiped out by insect activity.[86] It is susceptible to slugs.[85] The black fern aphid (Idiopterus nephrelepidis) has been reported to feed on it."