Lenno,
I think that is an entirely pragmatic and reasonable position to hold. After all, why does that one genetic marker really matter if we are not interested in preserving ginseng in the first place. If that is our goal, planting seed and re-establishing wild populations (which anyone with a wild sim patch can see happening after about 6 years), then I fail to see the the greater good created by depressing the planting of seeds so as not to change the 'wild' genetic marker. As I noted before, why not keep these strains pure for research purposes in our nation's parks where harvesting is no longer permitted?
Remember too, if the issue is to allow nature to remain pure, we must realize that in nature, things change and are never ever protected. Just watch one of the late night/early morning documentary shows on what adult lions do to cubs when they move into the pride. In nature, ginseng will-out cross if the opportunity exists. This is a natural way, but the 'selfing' as it has come to be called, is an ability which ginseng and some other plants have to enable them to survive in very small, isolated populations. If we consider the potential (and I"ll speak more on this when I can run down the source...I can't remember right now who it was) that the wild ginseng populations we now have are the remnants of a once huge and expansive single population, all of the various genetic markers were present in that large population. Therefore, how can reintroducing those genetics back into the isolated populations be an artificial or a bad thing?