Botanical Profile
Erodium cicutarium (L.) L'Hér. — Aerial parts (leaf, stem, flower — used fresh or dried); Root (traditional). Native to the Mediterranean region and western Asia; one of the earliest Eurasian plants to naturalize in the Americas following European colonization; now ubiquitous across North America including Zone 9a SE Texas as a winter annual weed
Fresh leaf: mild, slightly astringent, faintly acidic, green and slightly earthy; edible raw or cooked. Dried aerial parts: grassy-green aroma; mild astringency. No strongly distinctive taste unlike many medicinal herbs. Young leaves are mild and pleasant; older leaves become more astringent and fibrous. Flowers are delicate, mildly sweet.
Erodium cicutarium is the most common and widely distributed Erodium species in North America; approximately 60 species exist in the genus globally. E. moschatum (muscat stork's bill, musk heron's bill) is similar and sometimes used interchangeably. All common North American Erodium species are non-toxic and edible.
Active Compound Profile
Fresh leaf as food (optimal for vitamin C): Fresh consumption preserves intact vitamin C; tannins act locally for GI astringent effect; flavonoids absorbed systemically from fresh or cooked material
Mechanism of Action
What It Moves in Your Labs
| Biomarker | Direction | Target | Mechanism |
|---|---|---|---|
| N/A — primary Meridian Medica role is wild food, topical first aid, and minor GI support | N/A | N/A | Stork's bill's contribution is primarily through diverse wild food consumption (microbiome diversity support, cumulative antioxidant), topical wound care, and minor GI astringent applications rather than targeted biomarker modification |
Extraction & Preparation
Fresh leaf (raw in salad): 100% flavonoids; full vitamin C; intact tannins for GI action; volatile oils
Dosing Framework
Wild food use: harvest and consume October through April in Zone 9a; make salads, cooked greens, or add to soups and eggs.
Synergy Partners
THE ZONE 9A WINTER WILD FOOD QUARTET
Components: Stork's Bill (Erodium cicutarium) + Chickweed (Stellaria media) + Dandelion (Taraxacum officinale) + Cleavers (Galium aparine) · All four are freely wildcraftable in Zone 9a SE Texas from October through April. All four grow simultaneously in the same yard/garden environments. Combined nutritional and phytochemical profile covers astringent tannins (stork's bill), mucilaginous demulcent (chickweed), bitter liver tonic (dandelion), and lymphatic-urinary tonic (cleavers). · This quartet represents the zero-cost foundation of the Meridian Medica wild food medicine protocol. Learning to identify and use these four winter weeds transforms an ignored 'lawn problem' into a free pharmacy, providing antioxidants, minerals, prebiotic fibers, and diverse medicinal phytochemicals throughout the cool season. · Practical integration: Make the Wild Greens Mix salad 2–3 times weekly during the winter season; brew tea from any combination of these four for daily wellness support; use as an educational foundation for Zone 9a wild plant literacy.
Contraindications & Interactions
Evidence Base
Evidence Gaps
The highest-value research gap for Meridian Medica: no pharmacological characterization of Erodium cicutarium tannin content (gallotannin vs. ellagitannin profile) has been published to validate the specific astringent and antioxidant mechanisms attributed to this species. A basic phytochemical analysis followed by comparison with other astringent herbs (geranium, cranesbill, white oak bark) would establish E. cicutarium's relative potency and optimal preparation method for the tannin-astringent application.
Stork's bill has minimal commercial adulteration risk due to its low market value. Primary concerns are wildcrafting-related:
Protocol Integration
Layer 1: Hypothalamic / Autonomic — HPA axis, circadian rhythm, stress response
Layer 2: Systemic Nutritional Repletion — Micronutrient optimization, antioxidant defense
Layer 3: Gut Permeability / Microbiome — Tight junction repair, motility, SIBO management
Stork's Bill appears in the following Meridian Medica protocol contexts: