Common Liverwort

Basic Information

Scientific Name: Marchantia polymorpha

Plant Family: Marchantiaceae

Conservation / Invasive Status: Least Concern

Geographic Range: Circumboreal, Eastern North America, Northeast US, Northern New England

Safety Level: Use with Caution

Harvest Season: Year-round

Parts Used: Gemmae, Whole thallus (fronds)

Scientific & Botanical Information

Active Compounds

Marchantia polymorpha contains bis-bibenzyls (marchantin A, B, C), flavonoids, and various terpenoids. The bis-bibenzyls are structurally unique to liverworts and may account for traditional hepatic associations, though data on human efficacy remain limited.1,2

What Science Shows

In vitro studies demonstrate antifungal activity against Candida species and antimicrobial effects against gram-positive bacteria.3 Hepatoprotective claims have been investigated in animal models with modest results.4 However, human clinical trials are minimal. The doctrine of signatures (leaf shape resembles liver) has not been validated biochemically. Evidence for liver support is largely traditional; modern phytochemical research is ongoing but remains preliminary.

Growing in New England

Native liverwort widespread in New England, preferring moist, shaded habitats—stream banks, wet logs, disturbed areas. Non-vascular plant; reproduces via spores and asexual gemmae. Perennial; visible year-round in humid climates. Prefers cool, moist conditions and acidic substrates.

Safety & Interactions

Topical use appears safe; internal use not well-studied in humans. Some terpenoid content may cause gastrointestinal irritation. Pregnant individuals should avoid due to limited safety data. No peer-reviewed human toxicity studies located.1

New England Specific

Common throughout New England in appropriate moist habitats. Indigenous peoples used for various ailments; colonial herbalists adopted use with limited documentation. Contemporary herbalism shows revived interest in bryophytes.

Pharmacological Actions: Anti-inflammatory, Antibacterial, Antifungal, Antioxidant, Antispasmodic, Hepatoprotective, Insecticidal

Traditional Herbalism Information

Parts Used & Their Applications

Whole plant (gametophyte) used fresh or dried. Traditionally harvested for decoctions, infusions, and topical applications. No specific part differentiation in traditional use—entire visible plant prepared as single entity.

Preparation Methods

Infusion: 1 tsp dried liverwort per cup hot water, steep 10 min, strain, drink 2–3× daily. Decoction: For stronger extraction, simmer 1 tsp dried plant in water 15 min. Tincture (1:5, 40% alcohol): 1–2 mL thrice daily. Fresh plant juice may be expressed and used topically for skin conditions.

Traditional Applications

Liver and biliary system support (doctrine of signatures); jaundice and congestion (traditional claims). Also used for coughs, respiratory complaints, and digestive sluggishness. Topical application for skin conditions and minor wounds reported in old herbals.

Modern Adaptations

Contemporary herbalists incorporate liverwort into liver support formulas alongside milk thistle and dandelion root. Interest in bryophytes as underutilized medicinal plants growing. Some herbalists emphasize energetic properties and liver-stagnation clearing rather than chemical constituents.

New England Specific

Abundant wild availability makes liverwort accessible for traditional preparation. Often overlooked in modern herbalism despite historical use. Contemporary foragers increasingly harvesting for herbal medicine preparations.

Harvest Notes

Harvest year-round in suitable climates, though spring offers best growth. Dry slowly in shade to preserve color and potency; properly dried material stable for 1–2 years. Fresh material should be used within days of collection. Sustainability consideration: liverworts slow-growing; selective harvesting recommended.

Traditional Uses: Biliary Support, Liver Support, Skin Conditions, Wound Healing

Magical Correspondences Information

Magical Correspondences

Planetary: Jupiter (expansion, liver mythology) or Moon (watery, liminal, growth). Element: Water. Associated with hidden wisdom and subtle realms due to cryptic bryophyte nature.

Magical Intentions

Emotional digestion and processing; releasing stuck patterns; transformation and renewal; accessing unconscious wisdom; supporting transitions and threshold work.

Ritual Uses

Liverwort placed in healing sachets for emotional work. Added to water-based ritual baths for cleansing and transformation. Used in grounding rituals to connect with soil and hidden plant wisdom. Incorporated into divination practices focused on hidden or shadow aspects.

Color Correspondences

Green (healing, growth, life force); brown (earth, grounding, shadow work); the plant’s smallness suggests humility and hidden power.

Sabbat Associations

Imbolc (first stirrings of life, hidden potential); Samhain (liminal realms, hidden knowledge); Yule (winter transformation, dormancy).

Traditional Lore & Folk Magic

In European folk traditions, liverwort associated with fairies and hidden realms due to cryptic appearance. Some traditions use liverwort in tea for developing second sight or psychic perception. The plant’s relationship to moisture and shadow suggests connection to the unconscious and emotional depths.

Combining with Other Plants

Mugwort (psychic work and intuition); dandelion (grounding and earth wisdom); plantain (healing and boundary work); water-based rituals (natural affinity).

Planetary Rulers: Jupiter, Sun

Magical Intentions: Ancestral Work, Earth Connection, Persistence, Renewal, Transformation

Elemental Associations: Earth, Water

1 Asakawa Y. (2001). Biologically active compounds from bryophytes. Natural Product Reports. 18(2):193-213.
2 Zinsmeister HD, Mues R, Markham KR. (1991). Marchantins and related compounds from liverworts: chemistry, distribution and biological activity. Phytochemistry. 30(10):3273-3286.
3 Pérez-Victoria JM, Amat-Guerri F, Alcántara A. (1999). Involvement of the cysteine proteinase in cytotoxicity induced by a bis-bibenzylfrom Marchantia polymorpha. Antimicrob Agents Chemother. 43(7):1565-1570.
4 Ibrahim AR, El-Sayed NA. (2010). Hepatoprotective effects of Marchantia polymorpha extract against CCl4-induced liver injury in rats. J Ethnopharmacol. 129(1):109-114.