To expand on this, for the sake of anyone interested, I'll point out some more things that pertain to the 'fuzziness' of certainties regarding kava classifications, available chemotypes, and how the lines can sometimes be blurred between chemotype and which classification of kava it is associated with. For example, a single chemotype such as ~425 (or even something more bizarre or 'tudei-ish') can simultaneously be associated with noble, tudei, ceremonial, medicinal...according to tests Lebot and others have done.
Examples of this that I can point out are:
1) While Lebot says cultivar groups
G, H & I represent the most common daily drinking noble kavas, there appears to be occasional outlier chemotypes here and there, in both directions. As listed in the Pacific Elixir book, in Group G, which includes common nobles such as, Borogu, Ahouia & Puariki there also sits
Pirimerei with a 254631 Chemotype, right alongside them. We'd typically consider this a tudei chemotype, yet here it sits with the nobles. The same group also shows
264xxx, 265xxx, 245XXX chemotypes among them
.
2) Group E, which is
not part of the common noble groups and even has a couple
"wild" kavas in it, as well as a cultivar named "Tudey"...yet in that group there are a few examples of chemotypes like
246xxx & 245xxx which are typically considered noble or medicinal. One of which is Pohnpei's Rahmwahnger which is usually classified as noble, but appears to be grouped otherwise here.
3) Group F, which includes common Tudei's, such as Isa and 'Iwi, also includes a variety named "Ewo" with a chemotype of
245631 and another known tudei named "Yevoet" with a 264531, a chemotype which can also be found among the noble group. It looks like some chemotypes, like
245xxx and maybe a couple others, can appear in just about every group except the full-on 'wild kava' groups.
So I guess we can we can say it's clear that a 245 chemotype is not only for nobles, but it's also not only for medicinal or tudei's either. Without truly knowing what cultivar it came from, we can't claim what it is with certainty, because it appears in almost all classes. We can only make our best guess, based our subjective effects.
(Note: no single test result can be considered eternally accurate, whether it be done by Lebot or shown on CoA. There are many variables which can alter the exact numbers. Take for example Group I, above, which consists largely of Fijian and Samoan cultivars with Methysticin being the lead kavalactone, yet all current tests we've seen of these same cultivars rarely show "6" get higher than 3rd or 2nd place)
4) I've seen Tanna's "Marang-Marang" classified as both Ceremonial & Medicinal, such as on
this table from the FAO, but people also tend to consider it noble, and it was widely available online prior to Cylone Pam. As per Deleted User's testing, he considered it noble and showed it to have a
245 chemotype.
(Also, recall in my previous post that when Deleted User tested my kava(not Marang-Marang) it was deemed "245 - Medicinal".)
Andrew Procyk, who used to be a vendor of Marang-Marang kava also got it tested, with a result of
452631.
Andrew Procyk said:
"Marang-Marang
- 452631, 7.188% - This one has a huge amount of DHM, over 2.5%.
Relaxes the body as well as the mind."
Another thing to point out here, for those who don't know this, or those who do know but forget to consider it, is that different testings of the same kava can sometimes flip-flop two numbers in the chemotype that are next to each. Occasionally the percentage of one kavalactone is so similar to the one to it's left or right, that multiple testings can produce slightly different line ups...such as 245 ~ 452.
5) In the case of Koniak, it was shown to have a 245 & 254 chemotype. Judd acknowledged these numbers both before the tudei controversy and after. He also noticed it's ability to flip-flop from 245 to 254 on different tests. Deleted User observed the flip-flop in his own testing as well:
Koniak also produced orange acetone tests, pretty much guaranteeing it was tudei and hence being another example of
245xxx chemotype not being
solely associated with noble kava.
In my attempt to figure out if the classifications we hear about are determined scientifically or traditionally (probably a mix of both these days), I found this passage in The Pacific Elixir that really exemplifies how localized the classifications can be and how arbitrary the classification can be in some cases, since different tribes in different areas would come up with their own distinctions that aren't necessarily agreed up as whole:
...just some food for thought.