ბოტანიკა / Botanica
Iceland moss

Iceland moss

Cetraria islandica

Other names: Iceland lichen, Lichen islandicus

Edible plant
European

Photo credit: Franz Eugen Köhler / Wikimedia Commons

Safety information

Safety information

Toxicity: low - generally well tolerated; rare GI upset/nausea. Usnic acid is a known hepatotoxin at high/isolated doses, but at traditional thallus exposures liver injury is not characteristic.

Contraindications: pregnancy/breastfeeding (insufficient data - caution); known lichen allergy; peptic ulcer (bitter use).

Interactions: mucilage may delay/reduce absorption of co-administered oral drugs (separate dosing); limited other data.

Pregnancy & breastfeeding: caution in pregnancy/breastfeeding (insufficient data)

Evidence level

Traditional (systematized)

Documented in systematic traditional medicine literature.

Preparations

infusion · whole thallus

Part used: whole thallus

Traditional use: dry irritating cough, mouth/throat mucosa irritation, loss of appetite

Proposed mechanism: water-soluble mucilage (lichenin/isolichenin) demulcent

Evidence:Traditional (systematized)

General preparation guide →

Associated conditions

Edibility

Edible parts: marginal - historically used as famine food (debittered/boiled to remove bitter lichen acids); not a routine food

Toxic lookalike warning

harvest only correctly identified lichen; some lichens contain high usnic acid / are unsuitable

Nutritional notes

polysaccharide mucilage (lichenin) - primarily demulcent rather than nutritive; minor

Healing traditions

European
Sources (3)

  1. EMA: Lichen islandicus (EMA/HMPC)
  2. EU herbal monograph on Cetraria islandica (EMA/HMPC)
  3. Iceland moss - Herbal Reality profile

All sources →

Not medical advice. Consult a qualified healthcare professional before using any plant or preparation.