Allen M. Young
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Young provides an overview of the fascinating natural
and human history of one of the world’s most intriguing
commodities: chocolate. Cultivated for over 1,000 years
in Latin America and the starting point for millions of
tons of chocolate annually consumed worldwide, cacao
beans have been used for beverages, as currency, and for
regional trade. After the Spanish brought the delectable
secret of the cacao tree back to Europe in the late 16th
century, its seeds created and fed an insatiable
worldwide appetite for chocolate.
The Chocolate Tree chronicles the natural and
cultural history of Theobroma cacao and explores
its ecological niche. Tracing cacao’s journey out of the
rain forest, into pre-Columbian gardens, and then onto
plantations adjacent to rain forests, Young describes
the production of this essential crop, the environmental
price of Europeanized cultivation, and ways that current
reclamation efforts for New World rain forests can
improve the natural ecology of the cacao tree. Amid
encounters with sloths, toucans, butterflies, giant
tarantula hawk wasps, and other creatures found in cacao
groves, Young identifies a tiny fly that provides a
vital link between the chocolate tree and its original
rain forest habitat. This discovery leads him to
conclude that cacao trees in cultivation today may have
lost their original insect pollinators due to the
plant’s long history of agricultural manipulation.
In addition to basic natural history of the cacao tree
and the relationship between cacao production systems
and the preservation of the rain forest, Young also
presents a history of the use of cacao, from the
archaeological evidence of Mesoamerica to contemporary
evidence of the relationship between chocolate
consumption and mental and physical health.
A rich concoction of cultural and natural history,
archaeological evidence, botanical research,
environmental activism, and lush descriptions of a
contemporary adventurer’s encounters with tropical
wonders, The Chocolate Tree offers an
appreciation of the plant and the environment that
provide us with this Mayan “food of the gods.”
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