TXT.⠀⠀⠀⠀ⵙ⠀ᔓᔕ✤ᑎИN⠀ⵙ⠀ꗳⓄ⠀ⵙ⠀✻Ⓞ8ᗝИNᗩ옷⠀ⵙ⠀⠀⊚⠀⠀ⵙ⠀◌⠀ⵙ⠀⠀⊚⠀⠀ⵙ⠀◌⠀ⵙ⠀⠀⠀⠀◯⠀⠀⠀⠀ⵙ⠀⠀⠀⠀◯⠀⠀⠀⠀ⵙ⠀◌⠀ⵙ⠀⠀⊚⠀⠀ⵙ⠀◌⠀ⵙ⠀⠀⊚⠀⠀ⵙ⠀옷ᗩИNᗝ8Ⓞ✻⠀ⵙ⠀Ⓞꗳ⠀ⵙ⠀ИNᑎ✤ᔓᔕ⠀ⵙ⠀⠀⠀⠀.TXT 1.1MB

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  1. Handbook of
  2. Nuts
  3. James A. Duke, Ph.D .
  4. 0
  5. CRC Press
  6. Boca Raton London New York Washington, D.C.
  7. Cover image courtesy of
  8. T. Michael Kengla
  9. GrassRoots Productions
  10. Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
  11. Duke, James A., 1929-
  12. Handbook of nuts / author, James A. Duke.
  13. p. cm .- (Herbal reference library series)
  14. Rev. ed. of: CRC handbook of nuts, c l 989.
  15. Includes bibliographical references (p. ).
  16. ISBN 0-8493-3637-6 (alk. paper)
  17. 1. Nuts-Handbooks, manuals, etc. I. Duke, James A., 1929- CRC handbook of nuts.
  18. II. Title. III. Series.
  19. SB401.A4 D84 2000
  20. 634'.5—<lc21 00-049361
  21. This book contains information obtained from authentic and highly regarded sources. Reprinted material is quoted with
  22. permission, and sources are indicated. A wide variety of references are listed. Reasonable efforts have been made to publish
  23. reliable data and information, but the author and the publisher cannot assume responsibility for the validity of all materials
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  33. 1989
  34. First published by CRC Press LLC <1
  35. © 2001 by CRC Press LLC
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  39. Transferred to Digital Printing 2010
  40. Herbal Reference Library edition
  41. No claim to original U.S. Government works
  42. International Standard Book Number 0-8493-3637-6
  43. Library of Congress Card Number 00-049361
  44. Publisher’s Note
  45. The publisher has gone to great lengths to ensure the quality o f this reprint
  46. but points out that some imperfections in the original may be apparent.
  47. INTRODUCTION*
  48. Appropriately, one might commence a Handbook of Nuts with a definition of nut. But,
  49. if you’ll pardon the jargon, that’s a “ tough nut to crack.’’ To drive home my definition.
  50. I’ll here recount an anecdote. For several years I was peripherally embroiled in a controversy
  51. over that definition. Various people interested in the jojoba (Simmondsia chinensis) would
  52. call or write, hoping my definition would support their contention that the jojoba was or
  53. was not a nut.
  54. Finally, lawyers from the Internal Revenue Service (1RS) called and asked me to send
  55. my definition, in writing! I quote my cautious letter to the 1RS:
  56. I understand that the 1RS has special treatment for certain farmers raising fruits and nuts.
  57. I quote definitions from my favorite glossary, B. D. Jackson’s A Glossary of Botanic
  58. Terms, 4th ed., Hafner Publishing Company, New York, 1928, reprinted 1953:
  59. Nut: a hard indéhiscent one-seeded fruit.
  60. Fruit: (1) Strictly, the pericarp and its seeds, the fertilized and developed ovary.
  61. 1 think the jojoba “ beans” would qualify just as well as the pecan as both a nut and a
  62. fruit, botanically speaking. There are popular concepts of the fruit as fleshy and/or wet, the
  63. nut as nonfleshy and/or dry. Relatively speaking, the jojoba is as dry as a pecan and popularly
  64. considered a nut. But botanically, a nut is just one kind of fruit. Hence, I conclude the jojoba
  65. bean is both a nut and a fruit from a botanical point of view.
  66. Ironically, 1RS definitions may make or break a nut species. Vietmeyer^^^ shows how an
  67. 1RS ruling in 1969 withdrew a number of nut species, especially almond, from its list of
  68. speculative agricultural investments. “ Pistachios, however, remained an allowable tax write­
  69. off. Suddenly alone it became a hot investment.’’ Vietmeyer calls this the unexpected source
  70. for the real advance into commercialization; e.g., Getty Oil, Superior Oil, and Tenneco
  71. West then invested in pistachios. By 1984 we had some 20,000 hectares pistachios and
  72. pushed Turkey out of the number 2 production spot. In 1985, Vietmeyer went even farther
  73. with his NRC report on jojoba,perhaps giving the jojoba more momentum. Tax advantages
  74. to the jojoba may hinge on whether or not it is defined as a nut. Who knows? Perhaps the
  75. future of the jojoba as a new crop may hinge on its definition.
  76. In 1985, I received a hasty call from an official of the Jojoba Grower’s Association,
  77. distressed by the 1RS interpretation of my letter quoted previously. The official enticed me
  78. to agree that, in common, if not botanical parlance, the words fruit and nut implied edibility.
  79. Here I quote the letter drafted (but never typed) to that official. Following conversations
  80. with other jojoba fans in the government, I feared the last half of the letter might jeopardize
  81. the future of the jojoba as a “ new crop’’. So few “ new crops’’ break through the economic
  82. catch 22 here in the U.S.! The farmer won’t grow it until industry provides a guaranteed
  83. market, and industry won’t generate a market until there’s a guaranteed source (the farmer).
  84. Enclosed is a copy of my letter of July 5, 1983 to the 1RS re jojoba. When asked by legal
  85. types how to define something, I like to quote published definitions, rather than inventing
  86. my own. Trained as a taxonomist, I resorted to Jackson’s glossary.H orticulturists might
  87. resort to other sources.
  88. It is true that the popular concepts of fruits and nuts with most people may imply edibility.
  89. Few, if any, modem Americans eat jojoba “ nuts.” I would have to agree with you. Dr. M.
  90. Faust, of USDA, and J. Janick, of Purdue University, that, if edibility is a prerequisite part
  91. of the definition of fruit or nut, jojoba is best not considered a nut.
  92. Expanded from talks presented at the Agricultural Marketing Workshop for the Caribbean Basin, Miami,
  93. Florida, September 24-27, 1984; and New Orleans, Louisiana, September 16-20, 1985.
  94. I realize that paragraph two is what you wanted to hear. Hence, I separate it from the
  95. following paragraph which, being something you may not wish to hear, can be extricated
  96. from the rest of my letter.
  97. Two books which I procured in preparing a draft Handbook of Nuts are Rosengarten’s The
  98. Book of Edible Nuts (Walker and Company, New York, 1984),^*^ and Menninger’s Edible
  99. Nuts of the World (Horticultural Books, Inc., Stuart, Florida, Menninger, who
  100. defines nut as “ any hardshelled fruit or seed of which the kernel is eaten by mankind” ,
  101. treats the jojoba as an edible nut, noting the Indian consumption and the vulgar names “ goat
  102. nut” and “ deer nut.” Rosengarten employs the word “ nut” “ in the broad and popular
  103. sense, covering a wide variety of fruits or seeds, some of which would not be classified as
  104. nuts according to strict botanical definition.” He groups jojoba among “ Thirty Other Edible
  105. Nuts” , adding as common names “ sheep nut” and “ pignut” . He says “ Its fruits and leaves
  106. are devoured with avidity by goats, sheep, and deer. Indians of the desert Southwest gathered
  107. jojoba nuts and ate them, raw or roasted; their flavor is reminisent of the hazelnut, but more
  108. bitter . . . Today the use ofjojoba nuts for human consumption is mainly of historic interest.”
  109. This paragraph of my letter reinforces my reluctance to disqualify jojoba, even in the popular
  110. concept “ nut.” I have tasted them raw, and find them about as unappealing as most acorns
  111. I have tried.
  112. Those seeking to exclude jojoba from the staid society of nuts might say that jojoba, an
  113. American species, is, with good reason, excluded from Woodruff’s Tree Nuts (2 vols., AVI
  114. Publishing Company, Westport, Connecticut, 1967^'^' and Jaynes Handbook of North Amer­
  115. ican Nut Trees (NNGA, Knoxville, Tennessee, 1969).*'** My superficial examination of these
  116. revealed no definition of nut.
  117. For the record, I did send the following letter and poem that encapsulated my seedy
  118. feelings.
  119. Thanks for your letter of April 25, re the jojoba.
  120. While not fully understanding the tax implication of the Jackson (botanical) interpretation
  121. of the word “ nut” and “ fruit” , I surely agree with you that in common, rather than botanical
  122. parlance, the words fruit and nut imply edibility. Hence, the common parlance for an orchard
  123. of nuts would be a cultivated grove of trees or shrubs for their edible nuts. I don’t frankly
  124. believe that jojoba falls into that common concept.
  125. Hence, the botanical definition of nut is at variance with the popular definition of nut. I
  126. think jojoba is a fruit and/or nut according to Jackson’s technical definition, but not according
  127. to common parlance.
  128. Not a Nut?
  129. (The incredible inedible nut!!!)
  130. The Jojoba Growers’ Association
  131. Wishes, to my consternation.
  132. That I’d retract a note.
  133. That long ago I wrote
  134. For 1RS edification.
  135. I sent Jackson’s definition
  136. To the 1RS Commission
  137. I resorted to quote, but.
  138. Jojoba’s both fruit and nut.
  139. Which promotes the Growers’ dissension.
  140. I find it perfectly credible
  141. To define a “ nut” as an edible.
  142. But even that caveat
  143. Won’t change the fact that
  144. Its edible uses are negligible.
  145. Poets sometimes get in a rut,
  146. Nonpoetic lines, dry and cut.
  147. No amount of stink
  148. Will lead me to think
  149. The jojoba nut’s not a nut.
  150. My interpretation of the facts is
  151. Jojoba’s not good for the gut.
  152. And when you tally your taxes.
  153. The jojoba nut’s not a nut.
  154. Anonpoet
  155. April 29, 1985
  156. I have included in this book many species which are not true nuts. Unlike a one-seeded
  157. peanut, a peanut with two or three seeds in the indéhiscent pod is disqualified because it
  158. has more than one seed. But I excluded many nuts treated in my Handbook of Legumes of
  159. World Economic Im p o rta n c e There are many seeds in the Brazil nut pod, which rules
  160. them out (as one-seeded fruits). Similarly, there are many “ nuts” in the colas, included in
  161. this book, and many “ beans” in the cacao pod of the same family. Cacao is no further
  162. from the definition of nut than is cola. Cacao will be considered in the volume on Money
  163. Crops. As a matter of fact, nearly half the species in this book are not nuts in the narrowest
  164. sense: “ one-seeded indéhiscent fruits, the kernels of which are edible.”
  165. In 1984, I addressed the Agricultural Marketing Workshop (Miami) on subtropical and
  166. tropical nuts. The feedback I got from that first meeting suggested that I may have overdosed
  167. the audience with suggestions of nuts that might be grown in the tropics. There are hundreds
  168. of species that can be called nuts, by any of several possible definitions. And due to the
  169. overall higher species diversity in the tropics, there is a concomitant higher number of nut
  170. species available for consideration in the tropical environments with which we were con­
  171. cerned.
  172. During that same year, CRC Press published Martin’s Handbook of Tropical Food Crops^^^
  173. just before I attended the Miami conference that presaged the New Orleans conference of
  174. the Agricultural Marketing Workshop. Carl Campbell’s^ excellent chapter on Fruits and
  175. Nuts gave a good overview of the cultivation of fruits and nuts, and included short treatises
  176. on the cashew, pili nut, brazil nut, breadfruit, coconut, oil palm, and lychee (really a fruit).
  177. In a summary table, he listed a few others, the monkey pot {Lecythis elliptica), the paradise
  178. nut {Lecythis zabucajo), the jackfruit {Artocarpus heterophylla), the salak {Salacca edulis),
  179. the peach palm {Bactris gasipaes), the macadamia {Macadamia integrifolia), and the jujube
  180. (Ziziphus mauritiana). Certain virtues were suggested for nut trees:
  181. Dietary diversity
  182. High oil content
  183. Luxury long-distance commercial markets
  184. Important to subsistence farmers
  185. Everbearing
  186. Low maintenance
  187. Intercropping potential
  188. Wood as byproduct
  189. Land stabilization
  190. Following my presentations, CRC advised me that they would publish this Handbook of
  191. Nuts. It was designed to contain information summaries on about 100 nut species, in the
  192. same format as my Plenum Handbook of Legumes of World Economic Importance (Plenum
  193. Press^^) with succinct paragraphs on Uses, Folk Medicine, Chemistry, Description, Germ-
  194. plasm, Distribution, Ecology, Cultivation, Harvesting, Yields and Economics, Energy, Biotic
  195. Factors.
  196. The following recommendations seem germaine to potential nut producers.
  197. 1. Understand the crop and its requirements — take the principles of production and do
  198. good, replicated, semi-commercial research to adapt the crop to your own situations.
  199. 2. Select growing areas where good production of a crop can be concentrated — secure
  200. large quantities of nuts to make an impact on the export market.
  201. 3. Develop or choose the best varieties and disease-free planting stocks.
  202. 4. Concentrate on producing high quality produce to ensure repeat sales.
  203. 5. Time production so that it will not overlap competitor production, if any.
  204. 6. Practice insect, disease, and pest control — consider quarantine and import regulations
  205. for the crop.
  206. 7. Develop attractive and protective packaging that is distinctive and makes your product
  207. recognizable.
  208. 8. Do not plant a tree until you’ve tentatively contracted a market. Many advanced
  209. technological studies concern temperate nuts and oil seeds.
  210. Chemical Business (CB) ran an article on Oleochemicals (Research Sparks Oleochemical
  211. Hopes).Oleochemicals are defined as the industrial products based on animal fats and
  212. vegetable oils, a $1.2 billion segment of the U.S. chemical industry (cf. nut imports worth
  213. ca. $300 million, 200 in brazil nuts, 50 in cashews).
  214. Unlike nuts, oleochemicals find their way into:
  215. 1. The personal care product market (20%)
  216. 2. Industrial lubricants and related products (14%)
  217. 3. Coatings (10%)
  218. 4. Detergent intermediates (10%)
  219. 5. Plastics, alkyds, urethanes, cellophane, cleaners, detergents (18%)
  220. 6. Textiles, emulsion, polymerization, rubber, asphalt, mining, miscellaneous
  221. In this handbook I treat both kinds of nuts, (1) the familiar nuts that we eat and (2) a few
  222. oleochemical or chemurgic nuts. Some of the chemurgic nuts of the tropics are tung and its
  223. relatives, purging nut, marking nut, jojoba, and some even more obscure species. I suspect
  224. more technological advances are emerging with oil palms than with edible nuts.
  225. Laurie acid is now obtained mainly from coconut oil and secondarily from palm kernel
  226. oil. Finding an alternative source of lauric acid has sparked much industry interest. Henkel
  227. Corporation is betting on palm kernel oil in the short run, “ in about 5 years, lauric acid
  228. from palm kernel oil will add about 75% to current s u p p lie s .W e use about 2 billion
  229. pounds of oleochemicals, which include fatty acids, surfactants, and other esters, amines,
  230. natural glycerins, natural alkanoamides, and primary amides and bisamides, at only $0.60
  231. per pound = 1% of U.S. Chemical Revenues.
  232. Exciting new technologies are being explored in the search for alternative sources of lauric
  233. acid. In the continental U.S., the technologies are directed more to temperate annuals than
  234. to tropical perennials, but potential is probably greater among tropical perennials which need
  235. not contend with winter. Some of the technologies do relate to tropical nuts. The kernel of
  236. the oil palm is a nut. Britain’s Unilever, and others, are propagating high-yielding oil palms
  237. and these are showing up in palm plantations. Such palms can produce more than ten times
  238. as much oil as the temperate soybean. Elsewhere I have speculated that 2 billion ha oilpalm
  239. yielding 25 barrels oil/ha could, with transesterification, support the world’s requirements
  240. for 50 billion barrels oil.^^®
  241. Meanwhile, back in the temperate zone, Calgene^^® is looking at Cuphea, an oilseed with
  242. low yields and other agronomic problems, but a crop which produces lauric acid, a short-
  243. chain fatty acid. “ Most oilseeds, including rapeseed, make long chain fatty acids (C-18 and
  244. up) . . . but . . . because the plants do not ‘know how’ to stop molecule chain growth,
  245. no midchain fatty acids, such as lauric acid, are produced by the plants . . . Some oilseed
  246. species such as cuphea do know how . . . Calgene scientists plan to isolate the gene or
  247. genes responsible and transfer them to rapeseed. Calgene has already overcome difficulties
  248. in introducing foreign genes into rapeseed and making the transformed rapeseed plants
  249. grow . . . Calgene researchers may be able to modify plants to produce whatever fatty acid
  250. is d esired.T hey “ expect to have a series of genes cloned and to be able to ‘mix-and-
  251. match’ genes in a low-cost production plant to produce custom-designed plants that produce
  252. specialty oils.’’ One potential of this research is the possibility of finding plant sources that
  253. can compete with petroleum feedstocks. Some Cuphea species synthesize the C-8 and C-
  254. 10 fatty acids that could potentially replace petroleum based C-7 and C-9 fatty acids.
  255. An Ohio subsidiary of Lubrizol has developed a high-oleic acid sunflower with 80% oleic
  256. acid, up from the traditional 40%. They put in a 20,000 hectare crop of high-oleic acid
  257. sunflowers. Perhaps those interested in tropical nuts should look more to the pataua, Jessenia
  258. bataua, a tropical perennial producing perhaps 3 to 6 MT of oil with 80% oleic acid according
  259. to some authors. This oil has been favorably compared with olive oil, at a much lower
  260. price.
  261. So much for the annual cupheas, brassicas, and sunflower, the latter treated as a nut by
  262. both Menninger^^ and Rosengarten.^®^ None of the biotechnologies mentioned are unique
  263. to annuals; they can apply just as well to perennials. But it is easier to keep an annual
  264. proprietary. Perennials, once given to the world, can usually be clonally reproduced ad
  265. infinitum. Hence, I speculate that the world at large, especially the tropical world, would
  266. fare better if the new technologies were developed for perennial species, while the seed
  267. salesmen and gene-grabbers might fare better with annuals.
  268. Whether annual or perennial, plant sources of oleochemicals, or proteins, or pesticides,
  269. or drugs, always seem to suffer from one valid criticism. As Tokay (1985) notes, “ . . . the
  270. use of natural raw materials that are often inconsistent in composition from batch to batch
  271. causes processing headaches. In addition, most fractionation processes produce many by­
  272. products and co-products, which are often difficult to sell.’’^^® Contrastingly, we read in
  273. Science, September 13, 1985, “ Whole plant utilization—extracting medicines, leaf proteins,
  274. vitamins, polyphenols, essential oils, and chemurgics, and using the residues for alcohol
  275. production for energy—could move us from the petrochemical to the phytochemical era,
  276. with the possible fringe benefits of slowing the ‘greenhouse effect’ and making us more
  277. self-sufficient.
  278. Balandrin and Klocke^^ indicate that much evidence shows that natural product research
  279. is still potentially less expensive and more fruitful (in terms of new prototype compounds
  280. discovered) than are large chemical synthesis programs.
  281. New technologies for better extraction of main products and co-products and by-products
  282. are rapidly coming on line. Work goes on with the transesterification of palm oil, which
  283. could effectively fuel the diesel needs of the world. In “ A Green World Instead of the
  284. Greenhouse’’,®^ one finds scores (yields in barrels oil equivalent per hectare) for several
  285. energy plants.
  286. Peachpalm 3 5 - 105
  287. Babassu 5-60
  288. Peanut 4,5,13
  289. Cassava 6,11,15— 45
  290. Castor 13 Purging nut 18
  291. Coconut 11,25 Rape 4,5
  292. Cottonseed 1 Sesame 8
  293. Date palm 10— 20 Soybean 2,2,6
  294. Eucalypt 76
  295. Sugarcane 13,15
  296. Melaleuca 76 Sunflower 4,6
  297. Nypa 30— 90
  298. Sweet potato 30— 90
  299. Oilpalm 24— 58 Tung 17
  300. Coconut is just one of the hundreds of palms which can be termed a nut. Oil-palms are
  301. also considered nuts, even by Menninger,^®^ if their seeds are edible. Botanically, many
  302. familiar palms might better be classified as drupes, but their energetic potential is noteworthy.
  303. In his survey of “ Amazonian Oil Palms of Promise” , Balick^^ notes that most oil palms
  304. have a high yield and produce one or both of the basic types of oil (kernel and pulp). These
  305. two types usually differ chemically. More importantly, “ Most of the palms would seem to
  306. be well adapted to underused agricultural lands in tropical areas, where climate or other
  307. factors preclude the cultivation of the more common oleaginous plants.
  308. The palms on people’s minds today include, besides the conventional coconut and oil
  309. palm, both sources of lauric acid, the babassu and the pataua. And then there’s another tree,
  310. the inche, not even a palm, attracting the attention of the oil-palm people.
  311. The jojoba, with which I opened my talk in 1984, is not even an oilseed, but a “ waxseed” .
  312. Since it is so important to my introduction, I have left it in this CRC Handbook of Nuts.
  313. Menninger, in his Edible Nuts of the WorlcP^ after noting that “ A thousand kinds of nuts
  314. in this world are hunted and eaten by hungry people” defines nut as “ any hard shelled fruit
  315. or seed of which the kernel is eaten by man-kind.” He purports to exclude those nuts that
  316. never see the interior of the human stomach in his chapter, “ Not Nuts.”
  317. Rosengarten, in The Book of Edible Nutsf^^ is more cautious, like me, mostly quoting
  318. other definitions. Then he selects twelve important edible nuts and discusses their relation
  319. to the various definitions. That discussion bears repeating:
  320. Few botanical terms are used more loosely than the word ‘nut’. Technically, according to
  321. Funk & Wagnalls Standard Encyclopedic College Dictionary (1968), a nut is ‘1. A dry fruit
  322. consisting of a kernel or seed enclosed in a woody shell; the kernel of such fruit, especially
  323. when edible, as of the peanut, walnut, or chestnut; Bot. A hard, indéhiscent, one-seeded
  324. pericarp generally resulting from a compound ovary, as the chestnut or acorn.’ (Indéhiscent
  325. means that the seedcase does not split open spontaneously when ripe.) The nut has also been
  326. described as a one-celled, one-seeded, dry fruit with a hard pericarp (shell); and, more
  327. simply, as the type of fruit that consists of one edible, hard seed covered with a dry, woody
  328. shell that does not split open at maturity. Only a fraction of so-called nuts— for example,
  329. chestnuts, filberts, and acorns— answer this description. The peanut is not really a nut; it is
  330. a legume or pod, like the split pea, lentil, or bean— ^but an indéhiscent one because the pod
  331. does not split open upon maturing. The shelled peanut is a seed or bean. The edible seeds
  332. of almonds, walnuts, pecans, pistachios, hickory nuts, and macadamia nuts are enclosed in
  333. the hard stones of a drupe— like the stones of peaches, cherries, or plums. A drupe is a soft,
  334. fleshy fruit with a spongy or fibrous husk, which may or may not split free from the inner
  335. hard-shelled stone containing the seed. In plums and peaches, we eat the fleshy parts and
  336. throw away the stones; but the fleshy part of the walnut, for example, is removed and
  337. discarded, while the kernel of the stone— the nut — is eaten. The shell of a drupe nut, like
  338. the walnut, corresponds to the hard, outer layer of the peach stone. The coconut is the seed
  339. of a fibrous drupe. The Brazil nut is a seed with a hard seed coat, as is the pinon nut. Another
  340. dry, indéhiscent fruit type is the achene— a small, thin shell containing one seed, attached
  341. to the outer layer at one point only— as in the dandelion and buttercup. The sunflower seed
  342. is an achene. A true nut resembles an achene, but it develops from more than one carpel
  343. (female reproductive structure), is usually larger and has a harder, woody wall; e.g ., the
  344. difference between the filbert nut and the sunflower achene.
  345. In 1983/84, the U.S. imported nuts worth $305 million per year, with $216 million in
  346. brazil nuts, and $55 million in cashews, cf. $233 with $159 and $46, respectively, in
  347. 1982/83"» (Table 1).
  348. Table 1
  349. DATA ON AN IMPORTANT DOZEN NUTS
  350. Import Per cap.
  351. u.s. costs
  352. consumption Price Oil
  353. production annual
  354. (shelled) per percentage
  355. 1980 1983—84
  356. I960—J 079 pound (APB)
  357. (1,000 tons)- (million $)^ ($)-
  358. (lbs)-
  359. Almonds 260
  360. 0.45 1.75 54.2
  361. Brazil nuts 216
  362. 1.65 66.9
  363. Cashew
  364. 55 2.15 45.7
  365. Chestnut
  366. 1.65 1.5
  367. Coconut
  368. 0.50 .65 35.3
  369. Filbert 15
  370. 0.08 1.40 62.4
  371. Macadamia 15
  372. 0.033 5.50 71.6
  373. Peanut
  374. 7.1 .65 47.5
  375. Pecan
  376. 92 0.30 2.75 71.2
  377. Pistachio
  378. 14 3.30 53.7
  379. Sunflower
  380. .55 47.3
  381. Walnut (Persian)
  382. 197 0.50 2.00 64.0
  383. “ Rosengarten.^*^
  384. Gyawa.**^
  385. In 1980, the U.S. produced on an in-shell basis, ca.260,(XX) tons almonds, 197,(X)0 tons
  386. walnuts, 92,(XX) tons pecans, 15,(X)0 tons filberts, 15,(X)0 tons macadamia, and 14 tons
  387. pistachios, for a total approximating 600,000 MT nuts production. Of these, it might be
  388. noted that only 92,OCX) (the pecans) were from a native American species.
  389. Here we see a parallel with the other major groups of crops; North America has not
  390. contributed much to America’s foodbasket. “ Of all the horticultural products given by our
  391. continent to civilization, none are of more importance than the pecan, nor destined to play
  392. a more vital role in our pomological future.’’ Moreover, a great slave, Antoine, of the Oak
  393. Valley Plantation, in Louisiana, is accredited with our most important contribution to the
  394. nut basket. “ The slave Antoine had thus laid the foundation upon which was to be erected
  395. a great industry . . .
  396. Mostly maturing in fall, the temperate zone nuts are extremely rich in calories. Rosengarten
  397. notes that one pound of nut kernels (assuming 3,000 calories of fuel value per pound) is
  398. equivalent in energy value to about 2.4 lbs breads, 3.2 lbs steak, 8 lbs potato, or 10.4 lbs
  399. apple.Oils of the temperate zone are higher in unsaturated fatty acids in general, than
  400. oils from the tropics like the palm oils, brazil nut, cashew, etc. It is rather well known that
  401. the unsaturated fats are more healthy than the saturated. It is not so well known that you
  402. could clone a pecan, grow it in a cold and a hot locale, and have a higher unsaturated profile
  403. at the colder locale. In other words, the oils from the tropics will, in general, be less healthy
  404. than those from the temperate zone. Perhaps we should raise our edible oils in the temperate
  405. zone and our fuel oils in the tropics. But save the pilis, cashews, and brazil nuts for the
  406. palates they please so well.
  407. Rosengarten adds that “ Most nuts are an excellent source of calcium, phosphorus, iron,
  408. potassium, and the B vitam ins.T his is true on an as-purchased basis, because nuts
  409. contain so little water. On a zero-moisture basis (Table 2), the nuts do not seem particularly
  410. outstanding with these nutrients. Some of the more familiar nuts are compared in Table 3.
  411. THE AUTHOR
  412. James A. “Jim” Duke, Ph.D. is a Phi Beta Kappa graduate of the University of North
  413. Carolina, where he received his Ph.D. in Botany. He then moved on to postdoctoral
  414. activities at Washington University and the Missouri Botanical Gardens in St. Louis,
  415. Missouri, where he assumed professor and curator duties, respectively. He retired from the
  416. United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) in 1995 after a 35-year career there and
  417. elsewhere as an economic botanist. Currently he is Senior Scientific Consultant to Nature’s
  418. Herbs (A Twin Labs subsidiary), and to an on-line company, ALLHERB.COM.
  419. Dr. Duke spends time exploring the ecology and culture of the Amazonian Rain Forest and
  420. sits on the board of directors and advisory councils of numerous organizations involved in
  421. plant medicine and the rainforest. He is updating several of his published books and refining
  422. his on-line database, http://www.ars-grin.gov/dukeA still maintained at the USDA. He is also
  423. expanding his private educational Green Farmacy Garden at his residence in Fulton,
  424. Maryland.
  425. ACKNOWLEDGMENTS (Conceptualization)
  426. Herb Strum, Agricultural Marketing Specialist, USDA, triggered all this when he called
  427. and asked if I knew anyone who could address his Agricultural Marketing Workshops on
  428. tropical nuts. The next thing you know, I became the speaker without portfolio. Since these
  429. nuts are high-priced, light-weight, often labor-intensive crops, it was only natural that I
  430. should view the nuts as possible alternative crops for narcotics. For their support in my
  431. alternative crops program, I am indebted to the USDA’s Dr. T. J. Army, Deputy Admin­
  432. istrator, National Program Staff, Beltsville, Maryland; Dr. W. A. Centner, Research Leader,
  433. Weed Science Laboratory, ARS, BARC, Beltsville, Maryland, and Quentin Jones, Assistant
  434. to Deputy Administrator for Germplasm (now retired). National Program Staff, Beltsville,
  435. Maryland.
  436. In the preparation for these talks, I called on those more knowledgeable to help me decide
  437. what should be discussed in papers on Tropical Nuts. I sent these fine correspondents the
  438. crude check list, as follows:
  439. TROPICAL NUTS
  440. Anacardium occidentale
  441. Cashew
  442. Artocarpus altilis (A. communis)
  443. Breadfruit
  444. Bauhinia esculenta (Tylosema esculentum)
  445. Marama nut or bean
  446. Bertholettia excelsa
  447. Brazil nut
  448. Buchanania latifolia (lanza)
  449. Cudapah almond or cuddapaha almond or Chironji nut
  450. Canarium indicum
  451. Java almond
  452. Caryocar nuciferum
  453. Suari nut
  454. Caryodendron
  455. Inchi nut
  456. Cordeauxia edulis
  457. Jeheb nut, ye-eb nut
  458. Irvingia gabonensis
  459. Dika nut
  460. Lecythis ollaria
  461. Sapucaja nut
  462. Lecythis minor
  463. Lecythis zabucajo
  464. Paradise nut
  465. Licania rigida
  466. Oiticica
  467. Macadamia spp.
  468. Macadamia nut
  469. Omphalea megacarpa
  470. Hunter’s nut
  471. Ongokea klaineana
  472. Isano nut
  473. Palaquium burukii
  474. Siak illipe nut
  475. Pangium edule
  476. Pangi nut
  477. Poga oleosa
  478. Oboga nut
  479. Ricinodendron heudelotii
  480. Essang nut
  481. Sclerocarya cajfra
  482. Manila nut
  483. Sterculia chicha
  484. Maranhao nut
  485. Terminaba catappa
  486. Indian almond
  487. Terminaba okara
  488. Okari nut
  489. Telfairia pedata
  490. Oyster nut
  491. Omit:
  492. Jojoba
  493. Coconut
  494. Chestnut, water
  495. Cola nut
  496. Chufa or Tiger nut
  497. Peanut
  498. Groundnut
  499. Litchi nut
  500. Frank Martin added the jackfruit {Artocarpus integer) and the champedak (Artocarpus
  501. heterophylla), emphasizing that they were distinct species. He also added Aleurites triloba
  502. Forst, one of the many candle nuts, stating that it is edible when roasted. Further, he added
  503. the palmyra palm {Borassus flabellifer L.), Gnetum gnemon (adding that it is excellent),
  504. and Telfairia occidentalism another oystemut. He challenged my exclusion of the coconut,
  505. and cautioned that Sterculia chicha contains a poisonous cyclopropenoid fatty acid.
  506. Gerardo Budowski, of CATIE, added Salacca edulis, which is very important in Indonesia,
  507. often served at receptions. After he consulted Menninger, he queried how worthwhile are
  508. some of the nuts. If you listen to Menninger, all kinds of things are nuts, and may be
  509. delicious — to some, such as a large group of palms.
  510. So I wrote to palm specialist Dennis Johnson, and sent him the list of the more than 50
  511. genera of palms that Menninger had included in this books. Dennis seemed comfortable
  512. with leaving these in a talk on nuts and added Areca, which Menninger excluded because
  513. it was not ingested, and the Pacific ivory nut, Coelococcus.
  514. Harold Winters, retired USDA author of Kennard and Winters, Some Fruits and Nuts for
  515. the T r o p ic s ,also added several species to my list.
  516. Bob Knight, of the USDA Station at Miami, reminded me of the double meaning of
  517. breadnut (1) as the nut of Brosimum alicastrum, also known as Maya Breadnut, and (2) as
  518. a seeded breadfruit. Bob also Aleurites moluccana as a chemurgic nut, and Castanopsis
  519. as an edible. He reminded me of the unfortunate consequences of overeating seleniferous
  520. species of the Lecithidaceae.
  521. Carl Campbell, also of Florida, added Brosimum too, with the Pili Nut (Canarium ovatum)
  522. and the Malabar chestnut (Pachira macrocarpa). He reminded me, as did Julia Morton and
  523. Bob Knight, that the pangi nut and the oiticica were “ toxic(?)” and “ hardly edible” ,
  524. respectively. They are right.
  525. Ernie Imle, retired USDA cacao specialist, sent literature ranking the pili nut, Canarium
  526. ovatum, up with the macadam and cashew. He mentioned that several lines of pili were
  527. established at La Zamorana, Honduras.
  528. Julia Morton added the jackfruit Artocarpus heterophylla, the breadnut, Brosimum ali­
  529. castrum, the quandong, Fusanus acuminatus, the Tahiti chestnut, I nocarpus edulis, and the
  530. Saba nut, or Pachira aquatica, and included data on these and other nut species which I
  531. have incorporated in my write-ups on these species. She also added her acuminate capsular
  532. reviews of Menninger’s and Rosengarten’s books and equally acuminate warnings on other
  533. of our nut species.
  534. I also acknowledge the help of Jayne Maclean, National Agricultural Library, who went
  535. through a list of tropical nuts to check how many citations there were in her computerized
  536. search. The tabulation which follows, with the number of “ hits” , might suggest the relative
  537. importance of the tropical nuts in the literature:
  538. 162 Anacardium occidentale 0 Omphalea megacarpa
  539. 22 Artocarpus altilis or communis 0 Ongokea klaineana ( = O. gore)
  540. 2 Bauhinia esculenta 1 Palaquium
  541. 24 Bertholettia excelsa 0 Pangium edule
  542. 2 Buchanania latifolia 0 Pogo oleosa
  543. 2 Licania rigida
  544. 0 Canarium indicum
  545. 0 Ricinodendron sp.
  546. 0 Caryocar nuciferum
  547. 0 Sclerocarya caffra
  548. 0 Caryodendron sp.
  549. 1 Sterculia chicha
  550. 1 Irvingia gabonensis
  551. 8 Terminalia catappa
  552. 3 Cordeauxia edulis
  553. 0 Telfairia pedata
  554. 0 Lecithis ollaria
  555. 0 Lecithis zabucajo
  556. My wife, Peggy, has helped in gathering and touching up illustrations, some in the public
  557. domain, some being redrawn and reproduced here with the permission of the artist and/or
  558. publishers. She has gone to the libraries and herbaria around Washington to seek out illus­
  559. trations, or specimens with which to improve on the quality of the illustrations herein. She
  560. is responsible for those drawings bearing her name. Last and most, my thanks go to my
  561. program assistant, Judy duCellier, who helped compile information into format from several
  562. disparate sources. Not only has she learned to read my handwritten annotations and seek
  563. out data from obscure sources, she has been good enough to type the manuscript as well.
  564. In the civil service system, the very fact that she types the data she helped gather may
  565. jeopardize her promotion potential. Take this as my letter of recommendation.
  566. ACKNOWLEDGMENTS (Procedure and format)
  567. For conventional nut species, I was immensely aided by a USDA contract with Dr. C.
  568. F. Reed,^^® who prepared rough drafts on description, uses, varieties, distribution, ecology,
  569. cultivation, economics, yields, and biotic factors of 1000 economic species. I was responsible
  570. for the drafts of the nonconventional species reviewed herein as nuts, and Judy duCellier
  571. and I edited, updated, and augmented the Reed drafts on the conventional species. Certain
  572. major sources constituted the major documentation for Dr. Reed’s early drafts and my final
  573. drafts.
  574. For the Use paragraph, the major references were Bailey,Bogdan,^^ Brown,Brown
  575. and Merrill,Burkill,^^ C.S.I.R.,"^® Dalziel,^^ Hortus MacMillan,Martin
  576. and Ruberte,^®^ Uphof,^^"^ and many others. Often in this or other paragraphs I have internally
  577. cited the Chemical Marketing Reporter,a weekly tabloid with much useful information.
  578. For the Folk Medicine paragraphs, primary resources were Boulos,"^^ C.S.I.R.,"^® Duke,®®
  579. Duke and Ayensu,^ Duke and Wain,^^ Hartwell,Kirtikar and Basu,^^^ List and Horham-
  580. mer,^®^ M o rto n ,P e rry ,a n d Watt and Breyer-Brandwijk.^^^
  581. For the Chemistry paragraph, the major references were C.S.I.R.,^® Duke,®^ Duke and
  582. Atchley,®^ Gibbs,Gohl,^^® Leung et al.,^®^ List and Horhammer,^®^ and Morton.
  583. For the Description paragraph, various floras were consulted in addition to the prime
  584. references, Kirtikar and Basu,^^^ Little,^®® Ochse,^^® Radford, Ahles, and Bell,^^^ and Reed.^^®
  585. For the Germplasm paragraph, the major references were Duke,®^ Reed,^^® and Zeven
  586. and Zhukhovsky;^^® for the Distribution paragraph, various floras. Holm et al.,^^'^ Little,^®®
  587. and for the Ecology paragraph, C.S.I.R.,^® Duke,®^ Holm et al.,^^^ Little,^®® and
  588. (While ecological amplitudes were available for many of these nuts from Duke,®^^
  589. in other cases I amplified the Duke data from other sources. For yet other species with no
  590. hard data, I estimated ecological magnitudes.)
  591. For the Cultivation and Harvesting paragraphs, C.S.I.R.,^® Purseglove,^^^
  592. Reed^® were consulted; for the Yields and Economics paragraph, Bogdan,"^^ Duke,®^ FAO,^®
  593. and Reed;^® for the Energy paragraph, Channel,^^ Duke,®^ NAS,^^^ and Westlake;^^"^ for the
  594. Biotic Factors paragraph, Browne,^^ and Agriculture Handbook No. IbS,"* were the primary
  595. references. Dr. C. F. Reed went through some USDA mycology files^®^ for those on which
  596. he cooperated. These names have not all been verified. In the Biotic Factor or Cultivation
  597. paragraph, there may be bibliographic mention of pesticides. In no way do I imply acceptance
  598. or rejection of a pesticide by inclusion or omission. I have merely recited items that may
  599. be of interest to those seeking information on pesticides.
  600. I have omitted several “ nuts” included in my Handbook of Legumes of World Economic
  601. Importances^ I have added other legumes, e.g., the groundnut, Apios (not really a nut, but
  602. a root), and the yeheb, the tallownut, which were not covered in the handbook. I rank Apios
  603. with the promising, yet still undeveloped, new crops of the New World.
  604. Warning — Although I have compiled from the literature folk medicinal applications for
  605. some of these nut species, neither I nor my publishers endorse or even suggest self diagnosis
  606. or herbal medication. The folk medicinal information was compiled from open literature,
  607. and I cannot vouch for its safety nor efficacy. As a matter of fact, I suspect some folk
  608. medicinal applications are both dangerous and inefficacious.
  609. TABLE OF CONTENTS
  610. Acrocomia sclerocarpa............................. 1 Corylus maxima...................................... 130
  611. Coula edulis.............................................131
  612. Acrocomia total..........................................3
  613. Cycas circinalis...................................... 133
  614. Adhatoda vasica........................................5
  615. Cycas revoluta........................................135
  616. Aleurites fordii........................................... 8
  617. Cycas rumphii......................................... 137
  618. Aleurites moluccana..................................12
  619. Cyperus esculentus................................. 139
  620. Aleurites montana.....................................14
  621. Cyperus rotundas.....................................142
  622. Amphicarpaea bracteata........................... 16
  623. Detarium senegalense.............................145
  624. Anacardium occidentale........................... 19
  625. Elaeis guineensis.....................................147
  626. Apios americana...................................... 22
  627. Elaeis oleifera......................................... 152
  628. Areca catechu...........................................26
  629. Eleocharis dulcís.....................................154
  630. Arenga pinnata......................................... 30
  631. Fagus grandifolia...................................157
  632. Artocarpus altilis...................................... 34
  633. Fagus sylvatica........................................160
  634. Artocarpus heterophyllus......................... 37
  635. Ginkgo biloba......................................... 163
  636. Balanites aegyptiaca................................40
  637. Gnetum gnemon...................................... 166
  638. Barringtonia procera................................43
  639. Helianthus annuus...................................168
  640. Bertholletia excelsa...................................44
  641. Hyphaene thebaica................................. 173
  642. Borassus flabellifer...................................47
  643. Inocar pus edulis...................................... 175
  644. Brosimum alicastrum................................50
  645. Jatropha curcas...................................... i l l
  646. Brosimum utile......................................... 53
  647. Jessenia bataua...................................... 180
  648. Bruguiera gymnorrhiza.............................55
  649. Juglans ailanthifolia................................184
  650. Buchanania lanzan...................................57
  651. Juglans cinerea........................................186
  652. Butyrospermum paradoxum.....................59
  653. Juglans hindsii........................................189
  654. Calamus rotang........................................62
  655. Juglans nigra...........................................190
  656. Canarium indicum.....................................65
  657. Juglans regia...........................................194
  658. Canarium ovatum.....................................67
  659. Lecythis minor......................................... 198
  660. Carya illinoiensis...................................... 69
  661. Lecythis ollaria....................................... 200
  662. Caryocar amygdaliferum......................... 73
  663. Lecythis pisonis......................................202
  664. Caryocar nuciferum................................. 74
  665. Licania rigida.........................................204
  666. Caryocar spp.............................................75
  667. Macadamia spp....................................... 207
  668. Caryodendron orinocense........................78
  669. Madhuca longifolia................................. 210
  670. Castanea crenata...................................... 80
  671. Moringa oleifera.................................... 214
  672. Castanea dentata...................................... 82
  673. Nelumbo nucífera...................................218
  674. Castanea mollissima................................. 85
  675. Nypa fruticans......................................... 222
  676. Castanea pum ila...................................... 88
  677. Orbignya cohune.................................... 224
  678. Castanea sativa........................................90
  679. Orbignya spp...........................................225
  680. Castanospermum australe........................93
  681. Pachira aquatica.................................... 229
  682. Ceiba pentandra........................................96
  683. Paullinia cupana.................................... 231
  684. Cocos nucífera........................................100
  685. Phytelephas macrocarpa....................... 234
  686. Cola acuminata......................................107
  687. Pinus edulis............................................ 236
  688. Cola nitida..............................................110
  689. P inus quadrifolia.................................... 238
  690. Cola verticillata...................................... 113
  691. Pistacia vera...........................................240
  692. Cordeauxia edulis...................................114
  693. Pittosporum resiniferum.........................244
  694. Corylus americana................................. 116
  695. Platonia esculenta...................................247
  696. Corylus avellana.................................... 119
  697. Prunus dulcis...........................................249
  698. Corylus chinensis.................................... 123
  699. Quercus súber.........................................253
  700. Corylus colurna...................................... 124
  701. Ricinodendron heudelotii....................... 256
  702. Corylus cornuta...................................... 126
  703. Ricinodendron rautanenii....................... 258
  704. Corylus ferox...........................................128
  705. Santalum acuminatum............................ 260
  706. Corylus heterophylla.............................. 129
  707. ..262 Trapa spp............................................... 284
  708. Treculia africana................... ................287
  709. ..266
  710. Virola sebifera...................... .............. 290
  711. ..269
  712. ..272 Virola surinamensis.............. .............. 292
  713. ..276 References.............................. ................293
  714. Figure Credits....................................... 307
  715. ..278
  716. .............. 311
  717. Index ......................................
  718. ..281
  719. 1
  720. ACROCOMIA SCLEROCARPA Mart. (ARCEACEAE) — Gru-Gru Nut, Coco de Catarro,
  721. Macauba, Mucaja
  722. Syn.: Acrocomia aculeata (Jacq.) Lodd.
  723. P D»-».We,
  724. Uses — The slimy, soft external tissue (mesocarp) and the seed yield oil. The mesocarp
  725. oil can be used as cooking oil, without refining, if extracted from fresh or properly stored
  726. fruits. The mesocarp oil is also used for soaps. The kernel oil, with a sweet taste like coconut
  727. oil, is used as an edible oil, e.g., in the preparation of margarine.
  728. Folk medicine — Sometimes used as a purgative and vermifuge.
  729. Chemistry — Seed contains 60% fat with 17% saturated fatty acids (74.6% oleic acid
  730. and 8% linoleic acid). Fruit contains 4.58 mg carotene per 100 g fresh weight. Flowers
  731. contain 2.1% gallic acid and tannin.According to Balick,^^ air-dried kernels yield 53 to
  732. 65 (to 69.4%), pulp up to 63.7% fat. The yellow pulp oil is softer and has a higher iodine
  733. value than palm oil, but, unfortunately, hydrolyzes rapidly after harvested, especially if
  734. damaged, like the oil palm. Johnson^^^ says that fresh fruits contain 35% moisture; dry fruit
  735. mesocarp yields 33% oil, the kernel 53.75%.
  736. Description — Armed palm to 11 m tall. Leaves pinnate, armed, like the trunk. Inflo­
  737. rescence with very sharp fine spines. Fruit a reddish-yellow edible drupe surrounded by a
  738. tough woody kernel. Dry fruits weigh about 18 g, with 19.8% outer shell, 41.1% mesocarp
  739. pulp, 29.0% inner shell, and 10.1% kernel.
  740. Germplasm — Reported from the South American Center of Diversity, gru-gru is reported
  741. to tolerate drought.
  742. Distribution — Widely dispersed in Brazil, especially in Minas Gerais, where it grows
  743. in dense groves. Ranging into Paraguay.
  744. Ecology — Estimated to range from Tropical Wet to Dry through Subtropical Wet to Dry
  745. Forest Life Zones, gru-gru nut is estimated to tolerate annual precipitation of 10 to 40 dm.
  746. Handbook of Nuts
  747. annual temperature of 22 to 28°C, and pH of 6 to 8. Sometimes gregarious in dense groves.
  748. In Johnson,Balick notes this palm occurs in drier regions than most palms, and therefore
  749. might be a useful economic plant in the dry areas.
  750. Cultivation — Usually not cultivated.
  751. Harvesting — Balick^^ notes the following, for oil palms in general, not necessarily for
  752. this species. “ In commercial production, palm fruits first are harvested and removed from
  753. the panicles upon which they are formed. Sterilization is next, to inactivate the enzymes
  754. present in the mesocarp. These enzymes can cause deterioration of the oil through lipolysis,
  755. an increase of the free fatty acid content known commercially as rancidity. A so-called
  756. “ hard oil” , with up to 94.5% free fatty acids, is made by fermenting rather than sterilizing
  757. the ripe palm fruits. Sterilization also stops oxidation, which lowers the bleachability of the
  758. oil and makes it less valuable for commercial use. The fruits are then macerated to separate
  759. the oily pulp from the kernels. In small-scale, local production, natives may pound the fruits
  760. with a log or stone to release the pulp. On a large plantation, special machinery is used.
  761. To release the oil, this pulpy mass is pressed with a hand press, if primitively processed,
  762. or with heavy mechanical presses if on an industrial scale. Clarification follows: in a small
  763. operation, the oil is allowed to rise through a layer of boiling water and is then skimmed
  764. off. Large processing factories use a settling and centrifuge process. For commercial use,
  765. the oil is usually bleached, removing certain natural red or green pigments. These colors
  766. may lower the monetary value of the oil.
  767. Kernels of some species of palms are often saved for their oil as a by-product of primitive
  768. fruit processing. These are then shipped to mills located in central areas, where heavier
  769. equipment is used for extraction. Natives in the past and today extract palm kernel oil by
  770. baking the kernels in an oven and pounding them in hollow logs. The resulting mash is
  771. boiled in pots with water, and the oil is collected as it rises to the top. Palm kernel cake,
  772. a product of the extraction, is a good protein source and may be used for either human
  773. consumption or as an animal feed.^^
  774. Yields and economics — Small local Brazilian establishments develop the oils, which
  775. are little known in the world market. Brazil produced small quantities of the oil before and
  776. during World War II. In 1980, Brazilian production was limited to three States: Maranhao,
  777. Ceara, and Minas Gerais, producing only 190 tons.^^^
  778. Energy — The oil could be used like that of other oil palms for energy, the press-cake
  779. for alcohol production or animal feed. An 18 g fruit would yield ca. 2.4 g mesocarp oil and
  780. 1 g kernel oil.^^^
  781. Biotic factors — No data available.
  782. ACROCOMIA TOTAI Mart. (ARECACEAE) — Gru-Gru Nut, Paraguay Coco-Palm, Mbocaya
  783. Uses — Since pre-Colombian times, this palm has, with Copernicia australis (most
  784. abundant palm in Paraguay), supplied food, shelter, and the raw material for fabrication of
  785. soaps, hats, ropes, baskets, bags, hammocks, and mats. In Argentina, it is regarded as an
  786. ornamental palm with edible nuts. Leaves are sometimes lopped for fodder in the dry season.
  787. The “ cabbage” and base of the involucral leaves are eaten in salads. Ripe fruits are edible
  788. and tasty. Five industrially useful products are obtainable: pulp oil, kernel oil, kernel meal,
  789. kernel cake, and extracted pulp. The kernel oil is most valuable and abundant, usable for
  790. soap and food.^^
  791. Folk medicine — No data available.
  792. Chemistry — Per 100 g, the mesocarp is reported to contain 4.3 g H2O, 4.2 g protein,
  793. 27.9 g fat, 4.8 g total sugars, 8.8 g fiber, 10.32 g ash, 90 mg Ca, 120 mg P, and 2,180
  794. mg K. Other data are tabulated in Markley.^^^ (See Tables 1 and 2).
  795. Description — Monoecious palm to 15 (to 20) m tall, the stipe provided with stout spines,
  796. some 7.5 to 12.5 (to 17) cm long. Leaves pinnate, 2 to 3 m long, individual leaflets 50 to
  797. 70 cm long; petiole with spines on the dorsal surface. Spadix interfoliar, 1 m long, like the
  798. inner spathe densely spinose. Fruits yellow, rounded, ca. 3 to 4 cm diam. with dark orange
  799. oily pulp, rich in carotene.
  800. Germplasm — Reported from the South American (Paraguayan) Center of Diversity,
  801. mbocaya, or cvs thereof, is reported to tolerate savannas. Some trees are almost devoid of
  802. spines, except just below the crown.
  803. Distribution — Higher altitude savannas in Argentina and Paraguay.
  804. Ecology — Estimated to range from Tropical Very Dry to Wet through Subtropical Wet
  805. to Dry Forest Life Zones, mbocaya is estimated to tolerate annual precipitation of 8 to 35
  806. dm, annual temperature of 22 to 28°C, and pH of 6 to 8.
  807. Cultivation — Markley^^^ calculates yield, at 10 x 4 m spacing (250 trees/ha) at 640
  808. kg oil/ha, at 10 X 6 (166 trees) at 424 kg/ha, at 10 x 8 (125 trees) at 320 kg/ha, and at
  809. 10 X 10 (100 trees/ha) at 256 kg oil/ha. Markley’s information suggests that the seeds
  810. might be as recalcitrant as those of oil palms.
  811. Harvesting — Humans usually eat only the pulp of freshly fallen fruits owing to the
  812. difficulty of extracting the kernels. Nature (decay and/or defecation, followed by rains) often
  813. leaves clean nuts lying on the ground, to be harvested by humans. Leaves are sometimes
  814. lopped to leave only two in the dry season.
  815. Yields and Economics — The mbocaya palm is of greater economic importance to
  816. Paraguay than any other indigenous palm. Between 1940 and 1951, Paraguay produced 883
  817. to 2,849 MT of kernel oil annually, exporting 13 to 2,588, and 170 to 1,125 MT pulp oil,
  818. exporting 109 to 2,074 MT. In 1971, Paraguay exported 7,400 MT, up from 2300 tons in
  819. 1964.^^^ Commenting on comparative yields of oil per ha, Markley^^ shows only 96 to 640
  820. kg/ha for this species, compared to 2,790 for oil palm, 818 for coconut, 420 for sesame,
  821. 392 for rapeseed, 308 for sunflower, 230 for peanuts, 193 for flaxseeds, and 190 for soybeans.
  822. Energy — The oil could be used like that of other oil palms for energy, the press-cake
  823. for alcohol production or animal feed. Brazil is now studying this plant as a renewable
  824. source of fuel oil.^^^
  825. Biotic factors — A highly destructive stem borer or snout beetle (Rhyna barbirostris)
  826. attacks the palm. Larvae may devour the whole interior, except for the long cellulose fiber.
  827. A fungus, probably Phaecophora acrocomiac, may cause yellow blotches with black centers
  828. on the leaves. Ruminants may eat the whole fruit, regurgitating or even defecating entire
  829. kernels (“ nuts” ). Seedlings may be devoured by insects, birds, or other animals, as well
  830. as attacked by microorganisms.
  831. Handbook of Nuts
  832. Table 1
  833. COMPOSITION (%) OF COMMERCIAL SAMPLES OF A.
  834. TOTAI PRODUCTS'”
  835. Outer Pulp, Kernel,
  836. hull Pulp expeller Shell expeller
  837. Constituent (epicarp) (mesocarp) cake (endocarp) Kernel cake
  838. Moisture (H2O) 6.65 4.31 5.26 6.84 3.17 7.44
  839. Lipides (oil) 3.88 27.94 6.26 2.46 66.75 7.22
  840. Nitrogen 0.74 0.67 0.98 0.31 2.02 5.50
  841. Protein {N x 6.25) 4.62 4.18 6.12 1.94 12.62 34.38
  842. Crude fiber 36.00 8.82 6.83 49.69 8.60 11.65
  843. Sugars (total) 4.85 5.16 — 1.28 2.80
  844. 5.82
  845. Ash 10.32 9.16 3.26 1.98 5.37
  846. Potassium 2.18 2.18 2.75 1.02 1.36 1.55
  847. Phosphorus 0.10 0.12 0.16 0.04 0.42 1.14
  848. Calcium 0.07 0.09 0.10 0.04 0.08 0.27
  849. Table 2
  850. CHARACTERISTICS AND COMPOSITION OF THE PULP OILS
  851. OF A. TOTAI AND E. GUINEENSIS^^
  852. Characteristic A. A.
  853. E. guineensis
  854. Specific gravity (40°C) 0.9240 0.898—0.901
  855. Refractive index (40°C) 1.4615 1.4582— 1.4607 1.453— 1.456
  856. Titer value (°C) 26.1— 33.2 4 0 - ^ 7
  857. Iodine value
  858. 68.4 54.5— 66.7 44— 58
  859. Unsaponifiable matter (%) 0.81 0.27— 0.55 < 0 .8
  860. Saponification value 197.0 200— 209 195— 205
  861. Free fatty acids (% palmitic) 41.2 1— ?
  862. Total fatty acids
  863. Iodine value — —
  864. 69.7
  865. Thiocyanogen value
  866. 66.6 — —
  867. Saturated (%) 20.0 — 39— 50
  868. Oleic (%) —
  869. 80.0 38— 52
  870. Linoleic (%) —
  871. 0.0 6— 10
  872. ADHATODA VASICA (L.) Nees (ACANTHACEAE) — Malabar Nut, Adotodai, Pavettia,
  873. Wanepala, Basak
  874. Syn.: Justicia adhatoda L.
  875. Uses — Plants grown for reclaiming waste lands. Because of its fetid scent, it is not eaten
  876. by cattle and goats. Leaves and twigs commonly used in Sri Lanka as green manure for
  877. field crops, and elsewhere in rice fields. Leaves, on boiling in water, give durable yellow
  878. dye used for coarse cloth and skins; in combination with indigo, cloth takes a greenish-blue
  879. to dark green color. Also used to impart black color to pottery. Stems and twigs used as
  880. supports for mud-walls. Wood makes good charcoal for gunpowder, and used as fuel for
  881. brick-making. Ashes used in place of crude carbonate of soda for washing clothes. In Bengal,
  882. statue heads are carved from the wood. Leaves also used in agriculture as a weedicide,
  883. insecticide, and fungicide, as they contain the alkaloid, vasicine. As a weedicide, it is used
  884. against aquatic weeds in rice-fields; as insecticide, used in same way tobacco leaves; as
  885. fungicide, they prevent growth of fungi on fruits which are covered with vasica leaves.
  886. Market gardeners place layers of leaves over fruit, like mangoes, plantains, and custard-
  887. apples, which have been picked in immature state to hasten ripening and to ensure devel­
  888. opment of natural color in these fruits without spoilage.®^
  889. Folk medicine — Plant has many medicinal uses. Whole plant used in Sri Lanka for
  890. treatment of excessive phlegm, and in menorrhagia. Leaves are source of an expectorant
  891. drug used to relieve coughs. Plants are used in folk remedies for glandular tumors in India.
  892. Leaf used for asthma, bronchitis, consumption, cough, fever, jaundice, tuberculosis; smoked
  893. for asthma; prescribed as a mucolytic, antitussive, antispasmodic, expectorant. Ayurvedics^^^
  894. use the root for hematuria, leucorrhea, parturition, and strangury, the plant for asthma,
  895. blood impurities, bronchitis, consumption, fever, heart disease, jaundice, leucoderma, loss
  896. of memory (amnesia), stomatosis, thirst, tumors, and vomiting. Yunani use the fruit for
  897. bronchitis, the flowers for jaundice, poor circulation, and strangury; the emmenagogue leaves
  898. in gonorrhea, and the diuretic root in asthma, bilious nausea, bronchitis, fever, gonorrhea,
  899. and sore eyes.^^
  900. Chemistry — Used in Indian medicine for more than 2000 years, adhatoda now has a
  901. whole book dedicated to only one of its active alkaloids.In addition to antiseptic and
  902. Handbook of Nuts
  903. insecticidal properties, vasicine produces a slight fall of blood pressure, followed by rise to
  904. the original level, and an increase in the amplitude of heart beats and a slowing of the
  905. rhythm. It has a slight but persistent bronchodilator effect. With a long history as an
  906. expectorant in India, vasicine has recently been modified to form the derivative bromhexine,
  907. a mucolytic inhalant agent, which increases respiratory fluid volume, diluting the mucus,
  908. and reduces its viscosity. Fluid extract of leaves liquifies sputum, relieving coughs and
  909. bronchial spasms. The plant also contains an unidentified principle agent active against the
  910. tubercular bacillus. Adhatodine, anisotinine, betaine, vasakin, vasicine, vasicinine, vasici-
  911. nol, vasicinone, vasicoline, vasicolinone, are reported. Deoxyvasicine is a highly effective
  912. antifeedant followed by vasicinol and vasicine. These plant products as antifeedants could
  913. be safely used for controlling pests on vegetable crops. AtaP devoted a whole book
  914. to the chemistry and pharmacology of Vasicine-A. At the Regional Research Laboratory
  915. (RRL), in Jammu, vasicine showed a definite bronchodilatory effect, comparable to that of
  916. theophylline, as well as hypotensive, respiratory stimulant, and uterotonic activities.The
  917. total alkaloid content is up to 0.4%, of which 85 to 90% is vasicine.
  918. Toxicity — Vasicine is toxic to cold-blooded creatures (including fish) but not to mam­
  919. mals. Although it is not listed in many poisonous plant books, the fact that it is not grazed
  920. suggests that it could well be poisonous.Vasicine and vasicinol exhibit potential to reduce
  921. fertility in insects. “ Vasicine is also likely to replace the abortifacient drugs in current use
  922. as its abortifacient activity is comparable to prostaglandins.“ ^^ In large doses the leaves
  923. cause diarrhea and nausea.®^
  924. Description — A gregarious, evergreen, densely branched shrub 1.5 to 3 (to 6) m tall;
  925. bark smooth, ash-colored; branches softly hairy, intemodes short; leaves opposite, elliptic,
  926. ovate or elliptic-lanceolate, pointed at both ends, acuminate, entire, minutely pubescent,
  927. 12.5 to 20 cm. long, 8 cm. broad; flowers white with red, pink, or white spots or streaks,
  928. in dense axillary, stalked, bracteate spikes 2.5 to 7.5 cm long; bracts conspicuously leafy,
  929. 1-flowered; calyx deeply divided into 5 lobes, pubescent; corolla 2-lipped, pubescent outside;
  930. upper lip notched, curved, lower lip 3-lobed; capsules 2.5 cm or more long, 0.8 cm broad,
  931. clavate, pubescent, 4-seeded; seeds suborbicular, rugose. Flowers and fruit December to
  932. April; in some areas flowers May—June also.^^®
  933. Germplasm — Reported from the Indochina-Indonesia Centers of Diversity, Malabar
  934. Nut or CVS thereof is reported to tolerate fungus, insects, mycobacteria, and weeds.
  935. Distribution — Common to tropical India from Punjab to southern India, Sri Lanka, N.
  936. Burma, Pakistan (Karachi, Sind, Khyber, Wazir, Kurram, Dir); Hong Kong, China, Yunnan,
  937. where common.
  938. Ecology — Abundant and gregarious in many areas of China and India, growing in full
  939. sun, at edges of forests, in hilly regions often as the co-dominant shrub with Capparis
  940. sepiaria L. Also grows in full sun on flood plains and in meadows. In Curacao, it grows
  941. well on weathered diabase, in south Florida on oolitic limestone. In Sub-Himalayan region
  942. ascends to 1,300 m altitude, more frequent at altitudes about 200 to 300 m. Requires a
  943. subtropical to tropical climate with moderate precipitation. Though killed to the ground by
  944. brief frosts, it recovers rapidly. Ranging from Warm Temperate Dry through Tropical Very
  945. Dry Forest Life Zones, Malabar nut is reported to tolerate annual precipitation of 5 to 42
  946. dm (mean of 5 cases = 22), annual temperature of 15 to 2TC (mean of 5 cases = 24),
  947. and pH of 4.5 to 7.5 (mean of 4 cases = 6.1).^^’^^®
  948. Cultivation — As plants are quite common, often abundant, and gregarious in regions
  949. of adaptation and where people use the plant, the plant is cultivated mainly in areas of
  950. habitation, as hedges, wind-breaks, and for reclaiming soil. Propagation is by seeds broadcast
  951. in areas of need, or in waste areas about areas of cultivation. Any forest edge is a likely
  952. place to seed, so that the leaves or branches will be handy for use on other cultivated plants.
  953. No particular care is taken, as the plants thrive on any tropical soil that is well-drained and
  954. has sufficient precipitation. The plants, also propagated readily from cuttings, are said to
  955. coppice well.^^^
  956. Harvesting — Harvesting leaves and branches varies according to the needs of the local
  957. farmer, for green manure, covering fruits or protection, etc. As plants are evergreen, leaves
  958. are available year-round.
  959. Yields and economics — No data available. However, plants are plentiful, and supply
  960. all the leaves and twigs needed by those who use them. An important plant for reclaiming
  961. waste land in areas of adaptation, as in India and Sri Lanka. Also used as weedicide,
  962. insecticide, and fungicide in tropical areas. Mainly used in tropical Southeast Asia, S. China,
  963. India, and Sri Lanka. One ton of leaves can yield 2 kg vasicine equivalent to 2 million
  964. human doses.
  965. Energy — I was surprised to see this listed in a book on firewood trees.They note
  966. that it has a particularly desirable wood for quick, intense, long-lasting cooking fires, with
  967. little or no odor, smoke or sparks. The moderately hard wood has been used to manufacture
  968. gunpowder charcoal.If vasicine becomes commercialized, the biomass residues (>99%)
  969. following vasicine extraction could conceivably serve as a pesticidal mulch or for conversion
  970. to alcohol. Perhaps this should be viewed like the neem tree in the third world, stripping
  971. the leaves as a pesticidal mulch, using the woody “ skeleton” for firewood.
  972. Biotic factors — Fungi reported attacking this plant include the following species: Ae-
  973. cidium adhatodaCy Alternaría tenuissima, Cercospora adhatodar, Chnoospora butleri,
  974. Phomopsis acanthi (Phoma acanthi).^^^ Plants are parasitized by Cuscuta reflexa. Not browsed
  975. by goats or other animals. One source states that this plant “ is never attacked by any
  976. insect . . . even the voracious eater, Bihar Hairy Catterpillar (sic) {Dieresia obliqua) avoids
  977. this plant.
  978. 8 Handbook of Nuts
  979. ALEURITES FORDII Hemsl. (EUPHORBIACEAE) — Tung-Oil Tree
  980. Uses — Tung trees are cultivated for their seeds, the endosperm of which supplies a
  981. superior quick-drying oil, utilized in the manufacture of lacquers, varnishes, paints, linoleum,
  982. oilcloth, resins, artificial leather, felt-base floor coverings, and greases, brake-linings and
  983. in clearing and polishing compounds. Tung oil products are used to coat containers for food,
  984. beverages, and medicines; for insulating wires and other metallic surfaces, as in radios,
  985. radar, telephone, and telegraph instruments.
  986. Folk medicine — Reported to be emetic, hemostat, and poisonous, tung-oil tree is a folk
  987. remedy for bums, edema, ejaculation, masturbation, scabies, swelling, and trauma.
  988. Chemistry — The fmit contains 14 to 20%; the kernel, 53 to 60%; and the nut, 30 to
  989. 40% oil. The oil contains 75 to 80% alpha-elaeo stearic-, 15% oleic-, ca 4% palmitic-, and
  990. ca. 1% stearic acids. Tannins, phytosterols, and a poisonous saponin are also reported.
  991. Description — Trees up to 12 m tall and wide, bark smooth, wood soft; leaves dark
  992. green, up to 15 cm wide, heart-shaped, sometimes lobed, appearing usually just after, but
  993. sometimes just before flowering; flowers in clusters, whitish, rose-throated, produced in
  994. early spring from terminal buds of shoots of the previous season; monoecious, male and
  995. female flowers in same inflorescence, usually with the pistillate flowers surrounded by several
  996. staminate flowers; fruits spherical, pear-shaped or top shaped, green to purple at maturity,
  997. with 4 to 5 carpels each with one seed; seeds usually 4 to 5, but may vary from 1 to 15, 2
  998. to 3.2 cm long, 1.3 to 2.5 cm wide, consisting of a hard outer shell and a kernel from which
  999. the oil is obtained. Flowers February to March; fmits late September to early November.
  1000. Germplasm — Reported from the China-Japan and North American Centers of Diversity,
  1001. tung-oil tree, or cvs thereof, is reported to tolerate bacteria, disease, frost, insects, poor
  1002. soil, and slope.High-yielding cultivars continue to be developed. Some of the best cvs
  1003. released by the USDA for growing in the southern U.S. are the following:
  1004. • ‘Folsom’: low-heading, high productivity; fruits large, late maturing, turning purplish
  1005. when mature, containing 21% oil; highest resistance to low temperature in fall.
  1006. • ‘GahT: low-heading, productive; fruits large, 20% oil content; matures early, somewhat
  1007. resistant to cold in fall.
  1008. • ‘Isabel’: low-heading, highly productive; fruits large, maturing early, 22% oil content.
  1009. • ‘La Crosse’: High-heading, exceptional productivity; fruits small, late maturing, tend­
  1010. ing to break segments if not harvested promptly, 21 to 14% oil content; a very popular
  1011. cv.
  1012. • ‘Lampton’: out-yields all other varieties; very low-heading; fruits large, early maturing;
  1013. 22% oil content.
  1014. Several other species of Aleurites are used to produce tung-oil, usually of low quality:
  1015. Aleurites cordata, Japanese wood-oil tree; A. moluccana, Candlenut or lumbang tree; A.
  1016. trisperma. Soft Lumbang tree; none of which can be grown commercially in the U.S.
  1017. Aleurites montana. Mu-tree, is the prevailing commercial species in South China and could
  1018. be grown in F l o r i d a . ( z n = zz.)
  1019. Distribution — Native to central and western China, where seedlings have been planted
  1020. for thousands of years; planted in the southern U.S. from Florida to eastern Texas.
  1021. Ecology — Ranging from Warm Temperate Dry to Wet through Tropical Very Dry to
  1022. Moist Forest Life Zones, tung-oil tree is reported to tolerate annual precipitation of 6.4 to
  1023. 21.0 dm (mean of 22 cases = 14.0), temperature of 18.7 to 27.0°C (mean of 21 cases =
  1024. 24.0°C), pH of 5.4 to 7.1 (mean of 5 cases = 6.2).^^ Tung trees are very exacting in
  1025. climatic and soil requirements. They require long, hot summers with abundant moisture,
  1026. with usually at least 112 cm of rainfall rather evenly distributed through the year. Trees
  1027. require 350 to 400 hr in winter with temperatures 7.2°C or lower; without this cold require­
  1028. ment, trees tend to produce suckers from the main branches. Vigorous but not succulent
  1029. growth is most cold-resistant; trees are susceptible to cold injury when in active growth.
  1030. Production of tung is best where day and night temperatures are uniformly warm. Much
  1031. variation reduces tree growth and fruit size. Trees grow best if planted on hilltops or slopes,
  1032. as good air-drainage reduces losses from spring frosts. Contour-planting on high rolling land
  1033. escapes frost damage. Tung makes its best growth on virgin land. Soils must be well-drained,
  1034. deep aerated, and have a high moisture-holding capacity to be easily penetrated by the roots.
  1035. Green manure crops and fertilizers may be needed. Dolomitic lime may be used to correct
  1036. excessive acidity; pH 6.0 to 6.5 is best; liming is beneficial to most soils in the Tung Belt,
  1037. the more acid soils requiring greater amounts of lime.*^’^^*
  1038. Cultivation — Tung trees may be propagated by seed or by budding. Seedlings generally
  1039. vary considerably from parent plants in growth and fruiting characters. Seedlings which
  1040. have been self-pollinated for several generations give rather uniform plants. Only 1 out of
  1041. 100 selected “ mother” tung trees will produce seedlings sufficiently uniform for commercial
  1042. planting. However, a “ mother” tree proven worthy by progeny testing may be propagated
  1043. by budding. The budded trees, which are genetically identical with the original tree, will
  1044. provide an adequate supply of seed satisfactory for planting. Seedlings are used for the root
  1045. system for budded trees. Buds from “ mother” trees are inserted in stems of 1-year old
  1046. seedlings, 5 to 7.5 cm above the surface of the soil. Later, the original seedling top is cut
  1047. off and a new top grown for the transplanted bud, making the tops of budded trees parts of
  1048. the parent tree. Usually seedling trees outgrow budded trees, but budded trees produce larger
  1049. crops and are more uniform in production, oil content, and date of fruit maturity. Tung seed
  1050. are normally short-lived and must be planted during the season following harvest. Seeds are
  1051. best hulled before planting, as hulls retard germination. Hulled seed may be planted dry,
  1052. but soaking in water for 5 to 7 days hastens germination. Stratification, cold treatment or
  1053. chemical treatment of seeds brings about more rapid and uniform germination. Dry-stored
  1054. seed should be planted no later than February; stratified seed by mid-March; cold-treated
  1055. and chemical treated seed by early April. Seed may be planted either by hand or with a
  1056. modified corn-planter, the seed spaced 15 to 20 cm apart, about 5 cm, in rows 1.6 m apart,
  1057. depending on the equipment to be used for cultivation and for digging the trees. Seeds
  1058. germinate in 60 days or more; hence weed and grass control may be a serious problem. As
  1059. soon as seedlings emerge, a side-dressing of fertilizer (5-10-5) with commercial zinc sulfate
  1060. should be applied. Fertilizer is applied at rate of 600 kg/ha, in bands along each side of
  1061. row, 20 cm from seedlings and 5 to 7.5 cm deep. Other fertilizers may be needed, depending
  1062. on the soil. Most successful budding is done in late August, by the simple shield method,
  1063. requiring a piece of budstock bark, including a bud, that will fit into a cut in the rootstock
  1064. bar; a T-shaped cut is made in the bark of the rootstock at a point 5 to 7.5 cm above ground
  1065. level, the flaps of bark loosened, shield-bud slipped inside flaps, and the flaps tied tightly
  1066. over the transplanted bud with rubber budding stripe, 12 cm long, 0.6 cm wide, 0.002 thick.
  1067. After about 7 days, the rubber stripe is cut to prevent binding. As newly set buds are
  1068. susceptible to cold injury, soil is mounded over them for winter. When growth starts in
  1069. spring, soil is pulled back and each stock cut back to within 3.5 cm of the dormant bud.
  1070. Later, care consists of keeping all suckers removed and the trees well-cultivated. Trees are
  1071. transplanted to the orchard late the following winter. Spring budding is done only as a last
  1072. resort. Trees may be planted at 125 to 750/ha. When trees are small, close planting in rows
  1073. greatly increases the bearing surface, but at maturity the bearing surface of a crowded row
  1074. is about the same as that of a row with trees farther apart. However, it is well to leave
  1075. enough space between row for orchard operations. In contour-planting, distances between
  1076. rows and total number of trees per hectare vary; rows 10 to 12 m apart, trees spaced 3.3 to
  1077. 4 m apart in rows, 250 to 350 trees/ha. Tops of nursery trees must be pruned back to 20 to
  1078. 10 Handbook of Nuts
  1079. 25 cm at planting. As growth starts, all buds are rubbed off except the one strongest growing
  1080. and best placed on the tree. A bud 5 cm or more below the top of the stump is preferred
  1081. over one closer to top.^^^
  1082. Harvesting — Tung trees usually begin bearing fruit the third year after planting, and
  1083. are usually in commercial production by the fourth or fifth year, attaining maximum pro­
  1084. duction in 10 to 12 years. Average life of trees in the U.S. is 30 years. Fruits mature and
  1085. drop to ground in late September to early November. At this time they contain about 60%
  1086. moisture. Fruits must be dried to 15% moisture before processing. Fruits should be left on
  1087. the ground 3 to 4 weeks until hulls are dead and dry, and the moisture content has dropped
  1088. below 30%. Fruits are gathered by hand into baskets or sacks. Fruits do not deteriorate on
  1089. the ground until they germinate in spring.
  1090. Yields and economics — Trees yield 4.5 to 5 tons/ha. An average picker can gather 60
  1091. to 80 bushels of fruits per day, depending on conditions of the orchard. Fruits may be
  1092. gathered all through the winter season when other crops do not need care. Because all fruits
  1093. do not fall at the same time, 2 or more harvestings may be desirable to get the maximum
  1094. yield. Fruits are usually sacked, placed in the crotch of the tree and allowed to dry 2 to 3
  1095. weeks before delivery to the mill. Additional drying may be done at the mill, but wet fruits
  1096. contain less oil percentage-wise and prices will be lower. Prices for tung oil depend on price
  1097. supports, domestic production, imports, and industrial demands. World production in 1969
  1098. was 107,000 MT of tung nuts; in 1970, 143,000; and projected for 1980, 199,000. Wholesale
  1099. prices were about $0.276/kg; European import prices, $0.335/kg. Growers received about
  1100. $51.10/ton of fruit of 18.5% oil content to about $63.10/ton for fruits of 22% oil content.
  1101. Major producing countries are mainland China and South America (Argentina and Paraguay);
  1102. the U.S. and Africa produce much less. U.S. Bureau of Census figures 1,587,000 pounds
  1103. of tung oil were consumed during February of 1982, representing a 1,307,000 pound drop
  1104. from January. The largest application for the oil is paint and varnish, which accounted for
  1105. 566,000 pounds of total consumption in F e b r u a r y .D e a l e r s in tung oil include:^^^
  1106. Alnore Oil Co., Inc. Pacific Anchor Chemical Corp.
  1107. P.O. Box 699 6055 E. Washington Boulevard
  1108. Valley Stream, NY 11582 Los Angeles, CA 90040
  1109. Industrial Oil Products Corp. Welch, Holme, & Clark Co., Inc.
  1110. 375 N. Broadway 1000 S. 4th Street
  1111. Jericho, NY 11753 Harrison, NJ 07029
  1112. Kraft Chemical Co.
  1113. 1975 N. Hawthorene Avenue
  1114. Melrose Park, IL 60160
  1115. Energy — During World War II, the Chinese used tung oil for motor fuel. It tended to
  1116. gum up the engines, so they processed it to make it compatible with gasoline. The mixture
  1117. worked fine,^"^^ Gaydou et al.^®^ reported yields of 4 to 6 MT/ha, converting to 1,800 to
  1118. 2,700 € oil per ha, equivalent to 17,000 to 25,500 kWh/ha.
  1119. Biotic factors — Bees are needed to transfer pollen from anthers to pistil. When staminate
  1120. and pistillate flowers are on separate trees, 1 staminate tree for 20 pistillate trees should be
  1121. planted in the orchard. Pollination can occur over several days. Tung trees are relatively
  1122. free of insects and diseases, only a few causing losses serious enough to justify control
  1123. measures: e.g., Botroyosphaeria rihis, Clitocybe tabescens, Mycosphaerella aleuritidis.
  1124. Pellicularia koleroga, Physalospora rhodina and the bacterium. Pseudomonas aleuritidis.
  1125. Other bacteria and fungi reported on tung trees are Armillaria mellea, Botryodiplodia theo-
  1126. 11
  1127. bromae, Cephaleures virescens, Cercospora aleuritidis, Colletotrichum gloeosporioides,
  1128. Corticium koleroga, Fomes lamaoensis, F. lignosus, Fusarium heterosporum forma aleu­
  1129. ritidis, F. oxysporum, F. scirpi, F. solani, Ganoderma pseudoferreum, Coleosporium aleu-
  1130. riticum, Glomerella cingulata, Pestalotia dichaeta, Phyllosticta microspora, Phytomonas
  1131. syringae, Phytophthora omnivor a, Ph. cinnamomi, Poria hypolateritia, Pythium aphani-
  1132. dermatum, Rhizoctonia solani, Septobasidium aleuritidis, S. pseudopedicellatum, Sphae-
  1133. rostilbe repens, Uncinula miyabei var. aleuritis, Ustilina maxima, U. zonata. Insect pests
  1134. are not a serious problem, since fruit and leaves of tung trees are toxic to most animal life.
  1135. Nematodes Meloidogyne spp. have been reported.
  1136. 12 Handbook of Nuts
  1137. ALEURITES MOLUCCANA (L.) Willd. (EUPHORBIACEAE) — Candlenut Oil Tree, Can-
  1138. dleberry, Varnish Tree, Indian or Belgium Walnut, Lumbang Oil
  1139. Syn.: Aleurites triloba Forst., Croton moluccanus L.
  1140. Uses — Seed yields 57 to 80% of inedible, semi-drying oil, liquid at ordinary temperatures,
  1141. solidifying at - 15°C, and containing oleostearic acid. The oil is quicker drying than linseed
  1142. oil, and is used as a wood preservative, for varnishes and paint oil, also as an illuminant,
  1143. for soap-making, waterproofing paper, in India rubber substitutes and insulating masses.
  1144. Fruits said to be used as a fish poison. Seeds are moderately poisonous and press cake is
  1145. used as fertilizer. Kernels, when roasted and cooked are considered edible; may be strung
  1146. as candlenuts. Oil is painted on bottoms of small craft to protect against marine borers.
  1147. Tung oil, applied to cotton bolls, stops boll weevils from eating them; also prevents feeding
  1148. by striped cucumber beetle.
  1149. Folk medicine — Bark used on tumors in Japan. Reported to be aperient, aphrodisiac,
  1150. laxative, poison, purgative, stimulant, sudorific, candlenut oil tree is a folk remedy for
  1151. asthma, debility, sores, swelling, tumors, unconsciousness, womb ailments, and wounds.
  1152. The oil is purgative and sometimes used like castor oil. In China, it is applied to sciatica.
  1153. Kernels are laxative, stimulant, and sudorific. The irritant oil is rubbed on scalp as a hair
  1154. stimulant. In Sumatra, pounded seeds, burned with charcoal, are applied round the navel
  1155. for costiveness. Leaves are applied for rheumatism in the Philippines. In Malaya, the pulped
  1156. kernel enters poultices for headche, fevers, ulcers, and swollen joints. Boiled leaves are
  1157. applied to headache, scrofula, swollen joints, and ulcers. In Java, the bark is used for bloody
  1158. diarrhea or dysentery. Bark juice with coconut milk is used for sprue and thrush. Malayans
  1159. apply boiled leaves to the temples for headache, and to the pubes for gonnorhea.^^ In Yunani
  1160. medicine, the oil is considered anodyne, aphrodisiac, and cardiotonic, and the fruit is
  1161. recommended for the brain, bronchitis, bruises, heart, hydrophobia, liver, piles, ringworm,
  1162. and watery eyes. In Ayurvedic medicine, the fruit is considered apertif, aphrodisiac, anti-
  1163. bilious, cardiac, depurative, and refrigerant.
  1164. Chemistry — The oil cake, containing ca. 46.2% protein, 4.4% P2O5, and 2.0% K2O,
  1165. 13
  1166. is said to be poisonous. A toxalbumin and HCN have been suggested. Bark contains ca. 4
  1167. to 6% tannin. Oil also contains glycerides of linolenic, oleic and various linoleic acids. Per
  1168. 100 g, the seed is reported to contain 626 calories, 7.0 g H2O, 19.0 g protein, 63.0 g fat,
  1169. 8.0 g total carbohydrate, 3.0 g ash, 80 mg Ca, 200 mg P, 2.0 mg Fe, 0 mg beta-carotene
  1170. equivalent, 0.06 mg thiamine, and 0 mg ascorbic acid.^^
  1171. Description — Medium-sized tree, up to 20 m tall, ornamental, with spreading or pen­
  1172. dulous branches; leaves simple, variable in shape, young leaves large, up to 30 cm long,
  1173. palmate, with 3 to 7 acuminate lobes, shining, while leaves on mature trees are ovate, entire,
  1174. and acuminate, long-petioled, whitish above when young, becoming green with age, with
  1175. rusty stellate pubescence beneath when young, and persisting on veins and petiole; flowers
  1176. in rusty-pubescent panicled cymes 10 to 15 cm long; petals 5, dingy white or creamy,
  1177. oblong, up to 1.3 cm long; ovary 2-celled; fruit an indéhiscent drupe, roundish, 5 cm or
  1178. more in diameter, with thick rough hard shell making up 64 to 68% of fruit, difficult to
  1179. separate from kernels; containing 1 or 2 seeds. Flowers April to May (Sri Lanka).
  1180. Germpiasm — Reported from the Indochina-Indonesia Center of Diversity, Aleurites
  1181. moluccana, or cvs thereof, is reported to tolerate high pH, low pH, poor soil, and slope.
  1182. (2n = 44,22).
  1183. Distribution — Native to Malaysia, Polynesia, Malay Peninsula, Philippines, and South
  1184. Seas Islands; now widely distributed in tropics. Naturalized or cultivated in Malagasy, Sri
  1185. Lanka, southern India, Bangladesh, Brazil, West Indies, and the Gulf Coast of the U.S.^^®
  1186. Ecology — Candlenut trees thrive in moist tropical regions, up to 1,200 m altitude.
  1187. Ranging from Subtropical Dry to Wet through Tropical Very Dry to Wet Forest Life Zones,
  1188. Aleurites moluccana is reported to tolerate annual precipitation of 6.4 to 42.9 dm (mean of
  1189. 14 cases = 19.4) annual temperature of 18.7 to 27.4°C (mean of 14 cases = 24.6) and pH
  1190. of 5.0 to 8.0 (mean of 7 cases = 6.4).^^
  1191. Cultivation — Usually propagated from seed, requiring 3 to 4 months to germinate.
  1192. Seedlings planted 3(X)/ha. Once established, trees require little to no attention.
  1193. Harvesting — Bear two heavy crops each year. After harvesting mature fruits, it is
  1194. difficult to separate kernels from shell, as the kernels adhere to sides of shell.
  1195. Yields and economics — Asa plantation crop, tree yields are estimated at 5 to 20 tons/ha
  1196. of nuts, each tree producing 30 to 80 kg. Oil production varies from 15 to 20% of nut
  1197. weight. Most oil produced in India, Sri Lanka, and other tropical regions is used locally
  1198. and does not figure into international trade. In the past, oil has sold for 12 to 14 pounds
  1199. per ton in England. According to the Chemical Marketing Reporter,tung oil prices (then
  1200. ca. $.65/lb) are likely to rise in the near future if demand remains adequate and Argentinean
  1201. and Paraguayan suppliers pressure the U.S. market by charging high prices for replacement
  1202. oil. U.S. imports for the first quarter of 1981 were 58% higher than 1980, despite the absence
  1203. of Chinese tung from the market.
  1204. Energy — Nut yields are estimated at 80 kg/tree, which, spaced at 200 trees per hectare,
  1205. would suggest 16 MT/ha/yr, about 20% of which (3 MT) would be oil, suitable, with
  1206. modification, for diesel uses, the residues for conversion to alcohol or pyrolysis. Fruit yields
  1207. may range from 4 to 20 MT/ha/yr. Commercial production of oil yields 12 to 18% of the
  1208. weight of the dry unhulled fruits, the fruits being air-dried to ca. 12 to 15% moisture before
  1209. pressing. The pomace contains 4.5 to 5% oil. This suggests that the “ chaff factor” might
  1210. be ca 0.8. Oil yields as high as 3,100 kg/ha have been reported. As of June 15, 1981, tung
  1211. oil was $0.65/lb, compared to $0.38 for peanut oil, $1.39 for poppyseed oil, $0.33 for
  1212. linseed oil, $0.275 for coconut oil, $0.265 for cottonseed oil, $0.232 for com oil, and $0.21
  1213. for soybean oil.^^^ At $2.(X) per gallon, gasoline is roughly $0.25/lb.
  1214. Biotic factors — Following fungi are known to attack candlenut-oil tree: Cephalosporium
  1215. sp., Clitocybe tabescens, Fomes hawaiensis, Gloeosporium aleuriticum, Phasalospora rhod-
  1216. ina, Polyporus gilvus, Pythium ultimum, Sclerotium rolfsii, Sphaeronaema reinkingii, Tra-
  1217. metes corrugata, Xylaria curta, Ustulina deusta.^^^
  1218. 14 Handbook of Nuts
  1219. ALEURITES MONTANA (Lour.) Wils. (ANACARDIACEAE) — Wood-Oil Tree, Mu-Oil
  1220. Tree
  1221. Uses — Kernels yield a valuable drying oil, largely used in paints, varnishes, and lino­
  1222. leums. Also used locally for illumination and lacquer-work. Varnish made from this plant
  1223. possess a high degree of water-resistance, gloss, and durability. There are only slight dif­
  1224. ferences between the oils of A. montana and A. fordii}^^
  1225. Folk medicine — The oil is applied to furuncles and ulcers.
  1226. Chemistry — The oil content of the seed is ca. 50 to 60%. Oil consists chiefly of
  1227. glycerides of beta-elaeostearic and oleic acids, and probably a little linoleic acid. Oil cake
  1228. residue is poisonous and is only fit for manuring.
  1229. Description — A small tree about 5 m tall, much-branched, partially deciduous, dioecious.
  1230. Leaves simple, ovate or more or less cordate, apex cuspidate, about 12 cm long, 10 cm
  1231. broad, sometimes larger and 3-lobed; leaf-blade with 2 large, conspicuous glands at base,
  1232. petiole up to 24 cm long. Flowers monoecious, petals large, white, up to 3 cm long. Fruits
  1233. egg-shaped, 3-lobed, wrinkled, about 5 cm in diameter, pointed at summit, flattened at base,
  1234. generally with 3 or 4 one-seeded segments, the outer surface with wavy transverse ridges,
  1235. the pericarp thick, hard, and weedy. Flowers and fruits March.
  1236. Germplasm — Reported from the China-Japan Center of Diversity, mu-oil tree, or cvs
  1237. thereof, is reported to tolerate high pH, poor soil, and slope. (2n = 22.
  1238. Distribution — Native to South China and some of the S. Shan States (Burma). Introduced
  1239. and cultivated successfully in Indochina (where it has replaced A. fordii), Malawi, and in
  1240. cooler parts of Florida, and other tropical regions.
  1241. Ecology — Ranging from Warm Temperate Moist through Tropical Dry to Moist Forest
  1242. Life Zones, mu-oil tree is reported to tolerate annual precipitation of 6.7 to 20.2 dm (mean
  1243. of 8 cases = 13.6), annual temperature of 14.8 to 26.5°C (mean of 8 cases = 21.9°C),
  1244. and pH of 5.5 to 8.0 (mean of 6 cases = 6.2).®^ Adapted to subtropical regions and high
  1245. elevations with moderate rainfall. Mainly a hillside species, it can thrive in warmer climates
  1246. and will withstand heavier rainfall than A.fordii, provided the area is well-drained. Maximum
  1247. temperature 35.5°C, minimum temperature 6°C. It is frost-tender, and does not require a
  1248. low temperature (below 3°C) as tung-oil trees {A. fordii) do, so can be grown in warmer
  1249. regions. In Assam, grown where rainfall is 175 to 275 cm annually; in Mysore at elevations
  1250. of 800 to 1,000 m with annual rainfall of 150 cm. Grows well in alluvial soils and is not
  1251. very exacting in its soil requirements. In richer soils, the growth is more vigorous. A slightly
  1252. acid soil is preferable.
  1253. Cultivation — Trees are propagated from seeds or by budding. In Malawi, propagation
  1254. is by budding from high-yielding clones. Seeds are usually planted in a nursery and may
  1255. take from 2 to 3 months to germinate. When seedlings are about 1 year old, they are planted
  1256. out, spaced 6.6 x 6.6 m or more. Cultural practices are similar to those for A. fordii. As
  1257. soon as the seedlings emerge, a side-dressing of fertilizer (5-10-5) of nitrogen and phos­
  1258. phorus, along with commercial zinc sulfate, should be applied. Fertilizer is applied at rate
  1259. of 6(X) kg/ha, in bands along each side of row, 20 cm from seedlings and 5 to 7.5 cm deep.
  1260. Other fertilizers may be needed, depending on the soil. According to Spurling and Spurling,^’^
  1261. N is the most important nutrient for tung in Malawi, irrespective of climate or soil. Most
  1262. successful budding is done in late August, by the simple shield method, requiring a piece
  1263. of budstick bark, including a bud, that will fit into a cut in the rootstock bark. A T-shaped
  1264. cut is made in bark of rootstock at a point 5 to 7.5 cm above ground level, the flaps of bark
  1265. loosened, shield-bud slipped inside flaps, and the flaps tied tightly over the transplanted bud
  1266. with rubber budding strip 12 cm long and 0.6 cm wide. After about 7 days, the rubber strip
  1267. is cut to prevent binding. As newly set buds are susceptible to cold injury, soil is mounded
  1268. over them for winter. When growth starts in spring, soil is pulled back and each stock cut
  1269. 15
  1270. back to within 3.5 cm of the dormant bud. Later care consists of keeping all suckers removed
  1271. and the trees well-cultivated. Trees may be planted 125 to 750/ha. When trees are small,
  1272. close planting in rows greatly increases the bearing surface, but at maturity the bearing
  1273. surface of a crowded row is about the same as for a row with trees further apart. However,
  1274. it is well to leave enough space between rows for orchard operations. In contour-planting,
  1275. distances between rows and total number of trees per hectare vary; rows 10 to 12 m apart,
  1276. trees spaced 3.3 to 4 m apart in rows, 250 to 350 trees/ha. Tops of trees must be pruned
  1277. back to 20 to 25 cm at planting. As growth starts, all buds are rubbed off except the one
  1278. strongest growing and best placed on the tree. A bud 5 cm or more below the top of stump
  1279. is preferred over one closer to the top.^^^’^*^
  1280. Harvesting — Trees begin bearing 2 to 5 years after transplanting with maximum pro­
  1281. duction reached in 8 years and continuing for 40 years. In northern Burma, it has been
  1282. observed to be more vigorous and disease-resistant than A. fordii. In Indochina, it has been
  1283. successfully planted and its oil is now being produced on a commercial scale, replacing that
  1284. of A. fordii. Fruits mature and drop to ground in late September to early November. They
  1285. are gathered and dried to 15% moisture before processing. Fruits should be left on the ground
  1286. 3 to 4 weeks until hulls are dead and dry, and the moisture content has dropped below 30%;
  1287. fresh they are about 60% moisture. Fruits are gathered by hand into baskets or sacks.
  1288. Yields and economics — A. montana is reported to give much higher yields of fruits
  1289. than A. fordii. The percentage of kernels in the seeds is about 56%, and of oil in the kernels,
  1290. about 59.3%. Major producers of the oil from A. montana are Burma, Indochina (Vietnam,
  1291. Cambodia, Laos), Malawi, Congo, East Africa, South Africa, Malagasy Republic, India,
  1292. and U.S.S.R. It has been considered for introduction in Florida.
  1293. Energy — Yields of oil per tree in China is figured to be about 3.2 kg; in Florida, 4.5
  1294. to 9 kg. Trees yield about 45 to 68 kg nuts per year, these yielding about 35 to 40% oil.
  1295. In one Malawi trial, N treatments gave an increase of 519 kg/ha dry seed over a trial mean
  1296. of 1070 kg/ha. With tung cake and ammonium sulphate, air dry tung seed yields of 12 to
  1297. 17 year old trees was 2013 to 2367 kg/ha, of 6 to 9 year olds 766 to 1546 kg/ha.
  1298. Biotic factors — Fungi reported on A. montana include the following: Armillaria mellea,
  1299. Botryodiplodia theobromae, Botryosphaeria ribis, Cephaleuros mycoidea, C. virescens,
  1300. Cercospora aleuritidis, Colletotrichum gloeosporioides var. aleuritidis, Corticium koleroga,
  1301. C. solani (Rhizoctonia solani), Corynespora cassiicola, Diplodia theobromae, Fusarium
  1302. arthrosporioides, F. lateritium, Glomerella cingulata, Haplosporella aleurites, Mycospha-
  1303. erella aleuritidis, Periconia byssoides, Pestalotiopsis disseminata, P. glandicola, P. ja­
  1304. pónica, P. versicolor, Pestalotia dichaeta, Phyllosticta microspora, Pseudocampton
  1305. fasciculatum, Rhizoctonia lanellifera, Schizophyllum commune, Thyronectriapseudotrichia,
  1306. Trametes occidentalis, Ustulina zonata.^^^
  1307. 16 Handbook of Nuts
  1308. AMPHICARPAEA BRACTEATA (L.) Femald (FABACEAE) — Hog Peanut, Wild Peanut
  1309. Uses — Ojibwa Indians were said to eat both roots and seeds cooked. (There’s not much
  1310. to the roots.) Meskwaki (Fox) Indians learned that mice gathered the underground nuts and
  1311. laid them up in stores, which stores the Indians gathered for themselves (Dakota Indians
  1312. were said to leave com or other food in exchange). The subterranean seeds are more important
  1313. as food. They have been likened to garden-bean in flavor, the aerial seeds to soybeans. As
  1314. late as November in Maryland, the subterranean seeds may be tracked from the dying
  1315. yellow/brown tops. If eaten raw, seeds might be soaked in warm water or water with
  1316. hardwood ashes. In October, when both Amphicarpaea and Apios seeds are available, I find
  1317. both the aerial and subterranean seeds of the Amphicarpaea seeds much more pleasing to
  1318. the palate raw than the Apios seeds. Gallaher and Buhr^®^ speculate that the subterranean
  1319. seeds may “ have survival-potential under conditions of intense grazing.” I suggest that the
  1320. subterranean seeds might not set in tightly packed sod. Both aerial and subterranean seeds
  1321. are eaten by bear, chipmunk, deer, grouse, mice, pheasant, prairie chicken, quail, and wild
  1322. turkey. Vines are browsed by livestock and probably deer. Once cultivated in southern U.S.,
  1323. hog peanuts have been suggested for planting in poultry forage systems and for intercropping
  1324. with com and perhaps ginseng. All members of the genus can be important in soil improve­
  1325. ment, as soil cover, and in erosion control.®
  1326. Folk medicine — Chippewa drank the root with other roots as a general physic, while,
  1327. conversely, the Cherokee used it for diarrhea. Cherokee also blew the root tea onto snakebite
  1328. wounds."^
  1329. 17
  1330. Chemistry — Marshall'^^^ notes that the aerial seeds, with flavor similar to soybeans,
  1331. contain ca. 30% protein, 7 to 16% oil. The oil contains 10.3 to 10.4% palmitic-, 1.3 to
  1332. 1.6% stearic-, 24.9 to 26.7% oleic-, 54.8 to 58.5% linoleic-, and 6.5 to 7.6% linolenic-
  1333. acids. The cleistogamous, underground seeds, weighing as much as 1 g each, may contain
  1334. 50% water. Their oil content is lower, and the protein content may be only 14.3%, perhaps'^®'*
  1335. reflecting the higher water content.Lectins are also reported. Gallaher and Buhr^®^ analyzed
  1336. Tennessee fodder during early pod-fill stage, reporting for the whole plant ca. 89% organic
  1337. matter, 26.5 g/kg N, 2.4 g/kg P, 14.2 g/kg K, 17.3 g/kg Ca, 4.1 g/kg Mg, 20 ppm Cu, 40
  1338. ppm Zn, 120 ppm Mn, and 360 ppm Fe, averaging slightly lower than pegging peanut
  1339. forage, but higher in P, Ca, Mn, and Fe. Crude protein in the hog peanut forage was over
  1340. 16%, slightly below the peanut forage.
  1341. Description — Weak, twining, climbing annual (though often cited as perennial) to 2 m
  1342. long, the stems sparsely appressed short-pubescent to densely villous. Leaves 3-foliolate;
  1343. leaflets entire, ovate to rhombic-ovate, the laterals often asymmetrical, 2 to 10 cm long,
  1344. petiolulate, stipellate; usually pubescent. Axillary racemes of 1 to 17 petaliferous flowers,
  1345. on peduncles 1 to 6 cm long, the ovate bracts 2 to 5 mm long; pedicels 1.5 to 5 mm long;
  1346. racemes from lower axils slender, elongate, with cleistogamous, apetalous, inconspicuous
  1347. flowers. Calyx of petaliferous flowers narrowly campanulate; tube 4 to 6 mm long, ca. 2
  1348. mm in diameter; upper 2 lobes united, or nearly so, glabrous to densely appressed-pubescent;
  1349. petals pale purple or lilac to white, 9 to 16 mm long; stamens of the petaliferous flowers
  1350. diadelphous, 9 and 1; ovary stipitate, style not bearded. Legume from petaliferous flowers
  1351. flattened, oblong-linear, 1.5 to 4 cm long, 7-10 mm broad, often 3-seeded, valves laterally
  1352. twisting in dehiscence; fruit from cleistogamous flowers fleshy, often subterranean, usually
  1353. 1-seeded, indéhiscent, cryptocotylar.^^^ Duke"^®^ recognizes four different flower/fruit
  1354. combinations:
  1355. 1. Subterranean seed, whose cleistogamous flowers never left the soil (usually one or
  1356. two); the biggest, juiciest, softest, and most edible (15% protein). For propagation in
  1357. situ.
  1358. 2. Geotropic seed from cleistogamous flowers at the tip of branches originating in the
  1359. axils of the first simple aerial leaves. Usually solitary, soft, plump. For propagation
  1360. nearby.
  1361. 3. Aerial cleistogamous flowers, whose pods, and usually single hard seeds, develop
  1362. strictly above ground. For dispersal.
  1363. 4. Aerial chasmogamous flowers followed by pods with usually three small hard seeds
  1364. (the smallest, driest, hardest, and least edible, yet 30% protein). For longer distance
  1365. dispersal. The type 4 flower/fruits are said to occur mostly in sunny situations. If the
  1366. forest is cleared, the increased sunlight would trigger more dispersal seed, enhancing
  1367. the chances to move the plant back into the forest.
  1368. Germplasm — Reported from the North American Center of Diversity, hog peanut, or
  1369. CVS thereof, is reported to tolerate alluvium, muck, mulch, sand, shade, slope, and brief
  1370. waterlogging. A. bracteata is said to merge imperceptibly with var. comosa, which grows
  1371. on richer, often calcareous or alluvial soil. Turner and Fearing"^ concluded the genus
  1372. contained only three species, A. africana in the cool high mountains of Africa, A. edgeworthii
  1373. in the Himalayas and eastern Asia, and the American A. bracteata, the latter two nearly
  1374. indistinguishable. (2n = 20,40.)
  1375. Distribution — Native to damp shaded woodlands from Quebec to Manitoba and Montana,
  1376. south to Florida, Louisiana, and Texas.
  1377. Ecology — Estimated to range from Warm Temperate Moist to Wet through Cool Tem­
  1378. perate Dry to Wet Forest Life Zones, hog peanut is estimated to tolerate annual precipitation
  1379. 18 Handbook of Nuts
  1380. of 8 to 20 dm, annual temperature of 8 to 14°C, and pH of 5.5 to 7.5. Although native to
  1381. damp shaded forest, the plant can be cultivated in sandy, sunny situations. The underground
  1382. seed must have very different chemistry, ecology, and physiology, destined for immediate
  1383. survival and not dispersal, as contrasted to the aerial seed, destined for long-term dispersal.
  1384. Cultivation — Said to have been cultivated in the South, but few details are available.
  1385. W. G. Dore"*^^ sterilizes his soil, plants in the fall, and mulches with such things as sawdust,
  1386. peat moss, vermiculite, and/or organic muck. Gas-sterilization is all but imperative to control
  1387. weeds since the clambering habit of the vine precludes cultivation. In fertile soils in full
  1388. sun, the one-seeded beans grow large and succulent, comparable to peanuts, or even lima
  1389. beans. Frey'*^’ suggests intercropping the hog peanut with com.
  1390. Harvesting — The large seeds appear beneath the dead leaves, generally just under the
  1391. surface of the ground. In weed-free culture, the tangled vines can be raked off preparatory
  1392. to harvest in fall. In loose sandy soil, the seeds separate out easily with a quarter inch screen.
  1393. Harvested seed tend to germinate in the refrigerator, if not frozen.
  1394. Yields and economics — Unpublished research by W. G. Dore"^^ reported yields as high
  1395. as 1 kg seed per 10 m row. His seed were fall-planted about 10 cm apart in gas-sterilized
  1396. sandy loam.
  1397. Energy — Both biomass (ca. 5 g per plant) and oil yields are low. The biomass raked
  1398. up before harvesting could conceivably be converted to energy. The nitrogen fixed by the
  1399. plant could be energetically important, in pastures, forests, and in intercropping scenarios.
  1400. Biotic factors — Agriculture Handbook No. 165"^ lists the following as affecting Am-
  1401. phicarpaea bracteata: Cercospora monoica (leaf spot), and Erysiphe poly goni (powdery
  1402. mildew). Agriculture Handbook No. 165,"^ without reference to a specific species, also lists:
  1403. Colletotrichum sp. (leaf spot), Parodiella perisporioides (black mildew), Puccinia andrò-
  1404. pogonis var. onobrychidis (rust), and Synchytrium aecidioides (false mst, leaf gall). Allen
  1405. and Allen^ report that earlier studies showed a relative inability of the hog peanut Rhizobium
  1406. to nodulate legumes from 21 diverse genera. Later plant-infection studies discounted this
  1407. exclusiveness by showing plant-infection kinships within the cowpea miscellany. Larvae of
  1408. Rivella pallida Lowe, a common and widely distributed species of the dipteran family
  1409. Platystomatidae (and a potential pest of soybean), attack the N2-fixing root nodules of
  1410. Amphicarpaea. The nodular contents are completely destroyed, thus eliminating the nodule’s
  1411. ability to fix N2. Up to 25% of an individual’s nodules are damaged in northeastern Ohio.
  1412. There is one and perhaps a partial second generation per year in northern Ohio, with
  1413. overwintering occurring as mature larvae in diapause. Eight species of neartic Rivellia
  1414. (including R. flavimana Loew and R. metallica (Walp)) occur on Amphicarpaea bracteata
  1415. (L.).**®® Chasmogamous flowers are pollinated primarily by Bombus affinis."^
  1416. 19
  1417. ANACARDIUM OCCIDENTALE L. (ANACARDIACEAE) — Cashew
  1418. Uses — Many parts of the cashew plant are used. The cashew “ apple” , the enlarged
  1419. fully ripe fruit, may be eaten raw, or preserved as jams or sweetmeats. The juice is made
  1420. into a beverage (Brazil cajuado) or fermented into a wine. Seeds of the cashew are consumed
  1421. whole, roasted, shelled and salted, in Madeira wine, or mixed in chocolates. Shelling the
  1422. roasted seed yields the cashew nut of commerce. Seeds yield about 45% of a pale yellow,
  1423. bland, edible oil, resembling almond oil. From the shells or hulls is extracted a black, acrid,
  1424. powerful vesicant oil, used as a preservative and water-proofing agent in insulating varnishes,
  1425. in manufacture of typewriter rolls; in oil- and acid-proof cements and tiles, in brake-linings,
  1426. as an excellent lubricant in magneto armatures in airplanes, and for termite-proofing timbers.
  1427. Timber is used in furniture making, boat building, packing cases and in the production of
  1428. charcoal. Bark used in tanning. Stems exude a clear gum, Cashawa gum, used in phar­
  1429. maceuticals and as substitute for gum arabic. Juice turns black on exposure to air and
  1430. provides an indelible ink. Along the coast of Orissa, shelter belts and wind breaks, planted
  1431. to stabilize sand dunes and protect the adjacent fertile agricultural land from drifting sand,
  1432. have yielded economic cashew crops 5 years after planting.
  1433. Folk medicine — The fruit bark juice and the nut oil are both said to be folk remedies
  1434. for calluses, corns, and warts, cancerous ulcers, and even elephantiasis. Anacardol and
  1435. anacardic acid have shown some activity against Walker carcinosarcoma 256. Decoction of
  1436. the astringent bark given for severe diarrhea and thrush. Old leaves are applied to skin
  1437. afflictions and bums (tannin applied to bums is hepatocarcinogenic). Oily substance from
  1438. pericarp used for cracks on the feet. Cuna Indians used the bark in herb teas for asthma,
  1439. colds, and congestion. The seed oil is believed to be alexeritic and amebicidal; used to treat
  1440. gingivitis, malaria, and syphilitic ulcers. Ayurvedic medicine recommends the fmit for
  1441. anthelmintic, aphrodisiac, ascites, dysentery, fever, inappetence, leucoderma, piles, tumors,
  1442. and obstinate ulcers.In the Gold Coast, the bark and leaves are used for sore gums and
  1443. toothache. Juice of the fmit is used for hemoptysis. Sap discutient, fungicidal, repellent.
  1444. Leaf decoction gargled for sore throat. Cubans use the resin for cold treatments. The plant
  1445. exhibits hypoglycemic activity. In Malaya, the bark decoction is used for diarrhea. In
  1446. Indonesia, older leaves are poulticed onto bums and skin diseases. Juice from the apple is
  1447. used to treat quinsy in Indonesia, dysentery in the Philippines.
  1448. 20 Handbook of Nuts
  1449. Toxicity — He who cuts the wood or eats cashew nuts or stirs his drink with a cashew
  1450. swizzle stick is possibly subject to a dermatitis.
  1451. Chemistry — Per 100 g, the mature seed is reported to contain 542 calories, 7.6 g H2O,
  1452. 17.4 g protein, 43.4 g fat, 29.2 g total carbohydrate, 1.4 g fiber, 2.4 g ash, 76 mg Ca, 578
  1453. mg P, 18.0 mg Fe, 0.65 mg thiamine, 0.25 mg riboflavin, 1.6 mg niacin, and 7 mg ascorbic
  1454. acid. Per 100 g, the mature seed is reported to contain 561 calories, 5.2 g H2O, 17.2 g
  1455. protein, 45.7 g fat, 29.3 g total carbohydrate, 1.4 g fiber, 2.6 g ash, 38 mg Ca, 373 mg
  1456. P, 3.8 mg Fe, 15 mg Na, 464 mg K, 60 mg beta-carotene equivalent, 0.43 mg thiamine,
  1457. 0.25 mg riboflavin, and 1.8 mg niacin. Per 100 g, the mature seed is reported to contain
  1458. 533 calories, 2.7 g H2O, 15.2 g protein, 37.0 g fat, 42.0 g total carbohydrate, 1.4 g fiber,
  1459. 3.1 g ash, 24 mg Ca, 580 mg P, 1.8 mg Fe, 0.85 mg thiamine, 0.32 mg riboflavin, and
  1460. 2.1 mg niacin. The ‘’apples” (ca. 30 to 35 kg per tree per annum) yield each 20 to 25 cc
  1461. juice, which, rich in sugar, was once fermented in India for alcohol production. The apple
  1462. contains 87.9% water, 0.2% protein, 0.1% fat, 11.6% carbohydrate, 0.2% ash, 0.01% Ca,
  1463. 0.01% P, .002% Fe, 0.26% vitamin C, and 0.09% carotene. The testa contains alpha-
  1464. catechin, beta-sitosterol, and 1-epicatechin; also proanthocyanadine leucocyanadine, and
  1465. leucopelargonidine. The dark color of the nut is due to an iron-polyphenol complex. The
  1466. shell oil contains about 90% anacardic acid (C22H32O3) and 10% cardol (C32ri2704). It yields
  1467. glycerides, linoleic, palmitic, stearic, and lignoceric acids, and sitosterol. Examining 24
  1468. different cashews, Murthy and Yadava^^^ reported that the oil content of the shell ranged
  1469. from 16.6 to 32.9%, of the kernel from 34.5 to 46.8%. Reducing sugars ranged from 0.9
  1470. to 3.2%, nonreducing sugars, 1.3 to 5.8%, total sugars from 2.4 to 8.7%, starch from 4.7
  1471. to 11.2%. Gum exudates contain arabinose, galactose, rhamnose, and xylose.
  1472. Description — Spreading, evergreen, perennial tree to 12 m tall; leaves simple, alternate,
  1473. obovate, glabrous, penninerved, to 20 cm long, 15 cm wide, apically rounded or notched,
  1474. entire, short petiolate; flowers numerous in terminal panicles, 10 to 20 cm long, male or
  1475. female, green and reddish, radially symmetrical nearly; sepals 5; petals 5; stamens 10; ovary
  1476. one-locular, one-ovulate, style simple; fruit a reniform achene, about 3 cm long, 2.5 cm
  1477. wide, attached to the distal end of an enlarged pedicel and hypocarp, called the cashew-
  1478. apple. The fruit is shiny, red or yellowish, pear-shaped, soft, juicy, 10 to 20 cm long, 4 to
  1479. 8 cm broad; fruit is reniform, edible, with two large white cotyledons and a small embryo,
  1480. surrounded by a hard pericarp which is cellular and oily; the oil is poisonous, causing
  1481. allergenic reactions in some humans. Flowering variable.
  1482. Germplasm — Several varieties have been selected, based on yield and nut size. Reported
  1483. from the South America and Middle America Centers of Diversity, cashew or cvs thereof
  1484. is reported to tolerate aluminum, drought, fire, insects, laterite, low pH, poor soil, sand,
  1485. shade, slope, and savanna. (2n = 42.)^^
  1486. Distribution — Native to tropical America, from Mexico and West Indies to Brazil and
  1487. Peru. The cashew tree is pantropical, especially in coastal areas.
  1488. Ecology — Ranging from Warm Temperate Moist to Tropical Very Dry to Wet Forest
  1489. Life Zones, cashew is reported to tolerate annual precipitation of 7 to 42 dm (mean of 32
  1490. cases = 19.6), annual temperature of 21 to 28°C (mean of 31 cases = 25.2), and pH of
  1491. 4.3 to 8.7 (mean of 21 cases = 64). Grows on sterile, very shallow, and impervious savanna
  1492. soils, on which few other trees or crops will grow, but is less tolerant of saline soil than
  1493. most coastal plants. Does not tolerate any frost. In Brazil, Johnson*^® summarizes ‘‘optimal
  1494. ecological conditions” : annual rainfall 7 to 20 dm, minimum temperature 17°C, maximum
  1495. temperature 38°C; average annual temperature 24 to 28°C, relative humidity 65 to 80%;
  1496. insolation 1,500 to 2,(XX) hr/year, wind velocity 2.25 km/hr, and dry season 2 to 5 months
  1497. long. It is recommended that cultivation be limited to nearly level areas of red-yellow podzols,
  1498. quartziferous sands, and red-yellow latosols.®^’^^®
  1499. Cultivation — Cashew germinates slowly and poorly; several nuts are usually planted to
  1500. the hole and thinned later. Propagation is generally by seeds, but may be vegetative from
  1501. 21
  1502. grafting, air-layering or inarching. Planting should be done in situ as cashew seedlings do
  1503. not transplant easily. Recommended spacing is 10 x 10 m, thinned to 20 x 20 m after
  1504. about 10 years, with maximum planting of 250 trees per ha. Once established, the field
  1505. needs little care. Intercropping may be done the first few years, with cotton, peanut, or
  1506. yams. Fruits are produced after 3 years, during which lower branches and suckers are
  1507. removed. Full production is attained by the 10th year, and trees continue to bear until about
  1508. 30 years old. In dry areas, like Tanzania, flowering occurs in the dry season, and fruits
  1509. mature in 2 to 3 months. Flowers and fruits in various degrees of development are often
  1510. present in same panicle.
  1511. Harvesting — From flowering stage to ripe fruit requires about 3 months. Mature fruit
  1512. falls to the ground where the “ apple” dries away. In wet weather, they are gathered each
  1513. day and dried for 1 to 3 days. Mechanical means for shelling have been unsuccessful, so
  1514. hand labor is required. Cashews are usually roasted in the shell (to make it brittle and oil
  1515. less blistering), cracked, and nuts removed and vacuum packed. In India, part of the nuts
  1516. are harvested from wild trees by people who augment their meager income from other crops
  1517. grown on poor land. Kernels are extracted by people skilled in breaking open the shells
  1518. with wooden hammers without breaking the kernels. Nuts are separated from the fleshy
  1519. pedicel and receptacle, seed coat removed by hand, and nuts dried. Fresh green nuts from
  1520. Africa and the islands off southern India are shipped to processing plants in Western In­
  1521. dia.70.278
  1522. Yields and economics — Yields are said to range from 0 to 48 kg per tree per year, with
  1523. an average yield of 800 to 1,000 kg/ha. Heavy bearing trees often produce nuts considered
  1524. too small for the trade. Indian field trials showed that fertilizers could increase yields of 15-
  1525. year-old trees from less than 1 kg to tree to >4 and enabled 6-year-olds to average 5.7.
  1526. Regular applications of 250 g N, 150 g P2O5, and 150 g K2O per tree resulted in average
  1527. yield increases of 700 to 1600
  1528. kg/ha.In Pernambuco, trees produced 1.5 to 24.0 kg each
  1529. per year, averaging 10.3 kg per tree.’^® At Pacajus (Ceara, Brazil) trees average 17.4 kg/year
  1530. with one tree bearing 48 kg/year. Major producers of cashew nuts are India, Tanzania,
  1531. Mozambique, and Kenya. In 1968 India planted over 224,000 ha in cashews to supply over
  1532. 200 processing factories operating all year. In 1971 India produced 90,000 MT, the bulk
  1533. exported to the U.S. and the U.S.S.R. Export price at U.S. ports was $.33/kg. India imports
  1534. green nuts from the African countries and processes them for resale. Import price in 1971
  1535. in India was 1730 rupees/MT. Cashawa Gum is obtained from the West Indies, Portuguese
  1536. East Africa, Tanzania, and Kenya.
  1537. Energy — A perennial species, the cashew has already, in the past, yielded alcohol from
  1538. the “ apple” , oil from the nut, and charcoal from the wood. Prunings from the tree and the
  1539. leaf biomass could also be used as energy sources.
  1540. Biotic factors — The cashew tree has few serious diseases or pests. The following are
  1541. reported disease-causing agents, none of which are considered of economic importance:
  1542. Aspergillus chevalieri, A. niger, Atelosaccharomyces moachoi, Balladynastrum anacardii,
  1543. Botryodiplodia theobromae, Cassytha filiformis, Cephaleuros mycoides, Ceratocystis sp.,
  1544. Cercospora anacardii, Colletotrichum capsid, Cytonaema sp., Endomyces anacardii, Fu­
  1545. sarium decemcellulare, Gloeosporium sp., Glomerella cingulata, Meliola anacardii, Ne-
  1546. matospora corylii, Parasaccharomyces giganteus, Pestaliopsis disseminata, Phyllosticta
  1547. anacardicola, P. mortoni, Phytophthora palmivora, Pythium spinosum, Schizotrichum in-
  1548. dicum, Sclerotium rolfsii, Trichomerium psidii, Trichothecium roseum, Valsa eugeniae.
  1549. Cuscuta chinensis attacks the tree. Of insects, Helopeltis spp. have been reported in Tanzania.
  1550. In Brazil, high populations of the nematodes Criconemoides, Scutellonema, and Xiphinema
  1551. are reported around cashew roots. Four insects are considered major pests: the white fly
  1552. (Aleurodicus cocois), a caterpillar {Anthistarcha binoculares), a red beetle (Crimissa sp.),
  1553. and a thrip (Selenothripes rubrocinctus). Flowers are visited by flies, ants, and other insects,
  1554. which may serve as pollinators. Artificial pollination is practiced in some areas.
  1555. 22 Handbook of Nuts
  1556. APIOS AMERICANA Medik. (FABACEAE) — Groundnut
  1557. Uses — An attractively flowered plant, suggestive of Wisteria, Apios has been described
  1558. by the NAS^^* as a “ useful, sweet-scented ornamental” . I have enjoyed the tubers raw or
  1559. cooked. During the potato famine of 1845, Apios was introduced to Europe (but not for the
  1560. first time). Its cultivation there as a food crop was abandoned when potato growing again
  1561. became feasible. The plant was much esteemed by early American settlers, who ate them
  1562. boiled, fried, or roasted, calling them groundnuts, potato beans, or Indian potatoes. The
  1563. Pilgrims of New England survived their first few winters thanks to the groundnut. Blackmon"^
  1564. presents several groundnut recipes. Erichsen-Brown^ recounts many of the Indian uses.
  1565. Menominee preserved the roots by boiling them in maple syrup.Even bread was made
  1566. from the root. Indians were said to eat the seeds like lentils. I would like to join the ranks
  1567. of Bill Blackmon,"^ Ed Croom, Janet Seabrook,^^’^°° and Noel Vietmeyer, and advocate
  1568. more studies of the economic potential of this interesting tuber, harvestable all year round.
  1569. I agree with Blackmon and Reynolds,"^® who, after studying Apios intensively stated: “ the
  1570. prognosis for developing A. americana as a food crop looks outstanding.” Advocates should
  1571. be aware of its weed potential, at least among uncultivated perennials, e.g., cranberries and
  1572. azaleas.
  1573. Folk medicine — According to Hartwell,the tubers were used in folk remedies for
  1574. that cancerous condition known as “ Proud Flesh” in New England. Nuts were boiled and
  1575. made into a plaster: “ For to eat out the proud flesh they (Indians) take a kind of earth nut
  1576. boyled and stamped.
  1577. 23
  1578. Table 1
  1579. CHEMICAL COMPOSITION (PERCENT) OF APIOS SPECIES
  1580. Apios americana Apios fortunei Apios priceana
  1581. Fresh Dry Fresh Dry Fresh Dry
  1582. basis basis basis basis basis basis
  1583. Water 81.00 68.60 61.88
  1584. Fiber 5.20 27.37 1.20 3.82 4.95
  1585. 12.99
  1586. Crude protein 3.12 16.42 4.19 13.34 2.62 6.87
  1587. Nonprotein N 0.19 1.00 0.42 1.34 0.15
  1588. 0.39
  1589. Protein N 0.31 1.63 0.25 0.80 0.27
  1590. 0.69
  1591. Crude fat 0.67 3.53 0.19 0.61 0.82
  1592. 2.15
  1593. Ash 5.21 1.30 4.14
  1594. 0.99 2.67 7.00
  1595. Carbohydrate 9.02 47.47 24.52 78.09 27.06 70.97
  1596. Starch
  1597. 18.30 58.28 7.84 20.58
  1598. Alcohol-insol. solids 15.08 39.55
  1599. From Walter, W. M ., Croom, Jr., E. M ., Catignani, G. L., and Thresher, W. C.,
  1600. Compositional study of Apios priceana tubers, J. Agric. Food Chem., (Jan./Feb.), 39,
  1601. 1986. Copyright 1986, American Chemical Society. With permission.
  1602. Chemistry — Some describe the plant as having a milky juice. Seabrook^^^ suggests tha
  1603. the latex could be used commercially. According to the NAS, the only published analysis^"^-
  1604. records a remarkable protein content of 17.5%. Prompted by the inadequacy of analyses,
  1605. Duke arranged for new analytical investigations. Sanchez and Duke,^^^ based on these
  1606. analyses provided by Benito de Lumen, report (ZMB): 3.75 crude fat, 5.50% ash, 17.28%
  1607. crude protein, 28.84% neutral detergent fiber, 44.63% available carbohydrate, and 1.06
  1608. nonprotein nitrogen. Per g they report 71.76 mg free amino acids, 1.26 mg nitrate, and
  1609. 10.36 mg tannin. Subsequently, Walter et al.^^^ tabulated the differences in analyses between
  1610. fresh and dry tubers of A. americana, A. fortunei, and the endangered A. priceana (Table
  1611. 1). Saponins have been reported in the genus, and the absence of tannins,refuted above.
  1612. Whether or not the plant exports its fixed nitrogen as ureides (allantoin, allantoic acid) as
  1613. is typical of many of the subtropical Phaseoleae or as the more soluble amides (asparagine
  1614. and glutamine) as in such temperate legumes as Lupinus, Pisum, Trifolium, and Vida remains
  1615. to be seen. Because it is suggested to have a cowpea-type Rhizobium, I predict it will be
  1616. a ureide exporter. Some calculations suggest it takes ca. 2 1/2 times as much water (remember
  1617. this is an aquaphyte) to export N as ureides. But the ureides are more economical with a
  1618. C:N ratio ca. 1:1; cf. 1:1 for asparagine, 5:2 for glutamine.^*^ Many legume sprouts are rich
  1619. in allantoin, widely regarded as a vulnerary medicinal compound. According to the Merck
  1620. Index, allantoin is a product of purine metabolism in animals, while it is prepared synthet­
  1621. ically by the oxidation of uric acid with alkaline potassium permanganate. Medical and
  1622. veterinary use — “ Has been used topically in suppurating wounds, resistant ulcers, and to
  1623. stimulate growth of healthy tissue (Merck & Co.^‘°). Dorland’s Illustrated Medical Dictionary
  1624. puts it differently:
  1625. allantoin (ah-lan'to-in). Chemical name: 5-ureidohydantoin. A white crystallizable substance,
  1626. C4H6N4O3, the diureide of glyoxylic acid, found in allantoic fluid, fetal urine, and many
  1627. plants, and as a urinary excretion product of purine metabolism in most mammals but not
  1628. in man or the higher apes. It is produced synthetically by the oxidation of uric acid, and was
  1629. once used to encourage epithelial formation in wounds and ulcers and in osteomyelitis. It is
  1630. the active substance in maggot treatment, being secreted by the maggots as a product of
  1631. purine metabolism.
  1632. The direct role of allantoin in gout, if any, should be of great interest to those American
  1633. 24
  1634. Handbook of Nuts
  1635. males who have gout, especially if they ingest large quantities of legume sprouts or comfrey.
  1636. Apios produces a complex pterocarpan that appears structurally similar to glyceollin III, a
  1637. phytoalexin of the cultivated soybean.
  1638. Description — Twining, herbaceous vine, the stems short-pubescent to glabrate, 1 to 3
  1639. m long, the rhizomes moniliform, with numerous fleshy tubers 1 to 8 cm thick. (Some
  1640. plants have fleshy roots only, others both fleshy roots and tubers, and others only tubers.)
  1641. In winter, the stems have a distinctive brown color and are locally flattened, enabling the
  1642. experienced collector to distinguish it from honeysuckle. Leaves once-pinnate, 1 to 2 dm
  1643. long; leaflets 5 to 7, ovate or ovate-lanceolate to lanceolate, ca. 3 to 6 cm long, glabrous
  1644. to short-pubescent, obscurely stipellate; petioles mostly 2 to 7 cm long; stipules setaceous,
  1645. soon deciduous, 4 to 6 mm long. Inflorescence 5 to 15 cm long, nodes swollen, flowers 1
  1646. to 2 per node, subtended by linear-subulate bracts 2 to 2.5 mm long; pedicels 1 to 4 mm
  1647. long with 2 linear-subulate bractlets near apex. Calyx sparsely short-pubescent, broadly
  1648. campanulate, tube ca. 3 mm long; petals nearly white to brownish purple, the standard
  1649. obovate or orbicular to obcordate, reflexed, obscurely auricled, 9 to 13 mm long, the wings
  1650. shorter, slightly auricled, the keel strongly incurved; stamens diadelphous, 1 and 1. Legume
  1651. linear, 5 to 15 cm long, 4 to 7 mm broad, 2 to 12-seeded, dehiscing by 2 spirally twisted
  1652. valves.Germination cryptocotylar.^^^’^^^
  1653. Germplasm — Reported from the North American Center of Diversity, groundnut, or
  1654. CVS thereof, is reported to tolerate acid and bog soils, partial shade, slopes, and waterlogging.
  1655. In 1982, the Plant Introduction Officer of the USDA suggested to me the possibility of
  1656. mounting a germplasm expedition to collect germplasm of this species, and its endangered
  1657. relative, Apios priceana Robinson, which produces a single large tuber instead of a string
  1658. of small tubers. NAS^^‘ speculates that a bush-like mutant may be found in nature. Seedlings
  1659. from Tennessee had 22 chromosomes, while plants from the northern part of the range were
  1660. triploid. Blackmon^® and Reynolds^”^^ discuss the variation in germplasm they have already
  1661. assembled. (2n = 22.)
  1662. Distribution — Widely distributed in eastern Canada and the U.S. (often around ancient
  1663. Indian campsites) (Florida, Texas, to Nova Scotia, Minnesota, and Colorado). Usually in
  1664. low damp bottomland or riparian woods and thickets. Seems to be associated with Alnus in
  1665. Rocky Gorge Reservoir, Maryland, as well as on the eastern shore of Maryland. Unfortu­
  1666. nately, it can become a serious weed in cranberry plots. Uninfested bogs yielded nearly 14
  1667. MT/ha cranberries, whereas herbicide plots yielded only ca. 670 to 2,300 kg/ha cranberry.
  1668. Perhaps the cranberry salesmen could find a market for the groundnuts, since both are Native
  1669. American food plants.
  1670. Ecology — Ranging from Subtropical Dry through Cool Temperate Forest Life Zones,
  1671. groundnut is reported to tolerate annual precipitation of 9.7 to 11.7 dm (mean of 2 cases
  1672. = 10.7), annual temperature of 9.9 to 20.3°C (mean of 2 cases = 15.1), and pH of 4.5
  1673. to 7.0 (mean of 2 cases = 5.8). Produces well in South Florida and Louisiana. I have
  1674. successfully germinated fall harvested seed, after soaking in hot water, room temperature
  1675. water, or frozen water, seeds that sunk and seeds that floated after soaking. These took 4
  1676. months from harvest to germination, whereas their unsoaked counterparts had still not
  1677. germinated. Fall-harvested seed apparently exhibit no dormancy when planted in spring.
  1678. Cultivation — According to Vilmorin-Andrieux,^^^ since seed do not ripen in France, it
  1679. is multiplied by division in March and April, or in the latter part of summer. Divisions are
  1680. planted in good, light, well-drained soil 1 to 1.5 m apart in every direction. Reynolds^^^
  1681. spaced his seedlings at 2 x 3 feet, tubers at 3 x 3 feet. Stems should be supported by
  1682. poles or stakes. Ground should be kept free of weeds by an occasional hoeing. Cultivation,
  1683. if overdone, might discourage the rhizomes and their tubers. Seedlings require at least 2
  1684. years growth and a minimum photoperiod of 14 hr to induce flowering.Tuber dormancy
  1685. can be broken by chilling (several months at 35 to 40°F) or using ethylene.
  1686. 25
  1687. Harvesting — According to Vilmorin-Andrieux,^^^ the tubers are not large enough to be
  1688. gathered for use until the second or third year after planting. Blackman’s results in Louisiana
  1689. show this is not true where there is a long growing season. Once large enough, they can
  1690. be dug at any time of the year when the ground is not frozen. If carefully dug, strings of
  1691. four score tubers can be achieved.
  1692. Yields and economics — According to Elliott,Asa Gray once said that if advanced
  1693. civilization had started in North America instead of the Old World, the groundnut would
  1694. have been the first tuber to be developed and cultivated. Femald, Kinsey, and Rollins^^"^
  1695. recount an anecdote indicating the economic value of the groundnuts to the pilgrims, “ The
  1696. great value to the colonists of this ready food is furtlier indicated by a reputed town law,
  1697. which in 1654 ordered that, if an Indian dug Groundnuts on English land, he was to be set
  1698. in stocks, and for a second offence, to be whipped.’’ Yields of 30 MT per acre were
  1699. erroneously reported (should have been 30 MT/ha) for cranberry bog weed populations.
  1700. Reynolds has attained the equivalent of ca 40 MT/ha from tubers in 1-year studies in
  1701. Louisiana.Some of his plants yielded more than 3 kg tubers.
  1702. Energy — Currently, this looks like a poor prospect for biomass production. However,
  1703. one should at least consider the possibility of developing the crop for marginal habitat
  1704. (swamp), the tubers as the main crop; the aerial biomass, as residue, might be used for
  1705. production of rubber, leaf protein, and power alcohol. The nodulated roots fix nitrogen.
  1706. Around Rocky Gorge Reservoir, in Maryland, the plant is most commonly intertwined in
  1707. N-fixing
  1708. Alnus species. Nodules were recorded on A. americana, but root-nodule location
  1709. relative to tuber formation was not specified. Root hairs are said to be lacking on secondary
  1710. roots of mature plants. Four rhizobial strains isolated from A. americana nodules were not
  1711. tested on the host, but since they produced nodules on cowpea plants, the species was
  1712. considered a member of the cowpea miscellany. The rhizobia are described as monotrichously
  1713. flagellated rods with cowpea-type, slow cultural growth.® H. Keyser-^^ suggests conserva­
  1714. tively that Apios fixes > 1(X) kg N per ha. With no idea of the solubility of N fixed by the
  1715. groundnut, I recommend it be studied as a potential intercrop for marsh and aquatic plants,
  1716. especially rice and wild rice. It might also be considered for cultivation around the edges
  1717. of reservoirs used for irrigation, hence adding a small token of nitrogen to the irrigation
  1718. waters. Because of their tolerance to both acidity and waterlogging, they might be especially
  1719. advantageous around impoundments in strip-mine reclamations. Certainly the scorings by
  1720. Roth et al.^^*^ do not speak well for the energy potential of Apios. They give it a score of
  1721. 14, in a system whereby only species receiving scores of 11 or less were regarded as potential
  1722. renewable energy sources.
  1723. Biotic Factors — Agriculture Handbook No. 165"^ lists the following diseases affecting
  1724. this species: Alternaria sp. (leaf spot), Cercospora tuberosa (leaf spot), Erysiphe polygoni
  1725. (powdery mildew), Microsphaera dijfusa, Phymatotrichum omnivorum, and Puccinia an-
  1726. dropogonis var. onobrychidis (rust). Reynolds^^^ reported powdery mildew, virus, possibly
  1727. anthracnose, root-knot nematodes, mealy bugs, spider mites, aphids, white flies, leaf-eating
  1728. caterpillars, cucumber beetles, grasshoppers, stink bugs, and fire ants. In some cases, the
  1729. fire ants are responsible for mealy bug infestations. Although most Erythrinae are bird
  1730. pollinated, Apios seems to be mostly bee pollinated.
  1731. 26 Handbook of Nuts
  1732. ARECA CATECHU L. (ARECACEAE) — Betel-Nut Palm, Areca, Areca-Nut
  1733. Uses — Chief use of Betel-nut is as a breath sweetening masticatory, enjoyed for centuries
  1734. by about one-tenth the human population. Often slices of the nut, together with a little lime
  1735. and other ingredients (cardamom, camphor, cutch, clove, gambier, tobacco) according to
  1736. taste, are folded in a Betel Pepper leaf {Piper betel) and fastened with a clove. Sometimes
  1737. nuts are ground up with other materials and carried about in a pouch similar to a tobacco
  1738. pouch. Betel chewing is often considered as an after-dinner or social affair. Chewing colors
  1739. the saliva red and stains the teeth and gums black, eventually destroying the teeth, at least
  1740. according to one school of thought. Used in the tanning industry. An extraction of areca-
  1741. nuts makes black and red dyes. Dried nuts are said to sweeten the breath, strengthen the
  1742. gums, and improve the appetite and taste. Husks are the most important by-product, being
  1743. used for insulating wool, boards, and for manufacturing furfural. Innoculated with yeast
  1744. {Saccharomyces cervisiae), leaves used as fermentation stimulant in industrial alcohol pro­
  1745. duction. Large, tough, sheathing parts of leaf-bases, used as substitute for cardboard or
  1746. strawboard for protecting packages; also used in the Philippines for hats, inner soles for
  1747. slippers, book-covers, and makes an excellent paper pulp.®^
  1748. Folk medicine — The nut, in the form or ghees, powders, bolmes, or enemas, is said
  1749. to be a folk remedy for abdominal tumors,Reported to be astringent, carminative, deob­
  1750. struent, dentrifrice, detergent, diaphoretic, diuretic, intoxicant, laxative, masticatory, miotic,
  1751. panacea, poison, preventative (malaria; mephitis), stomachic, taeniacide, taenifuge, tonic,
  1752. and vermifuge, betel nut is a folk remedy for ascariasis, beriberi, cancer (esophagus), cholera,
  1753. circulation problems, colic, diarrhea, dropsy, dysentery, dyspepsia, eruption, fistula, im­
  1754. petigo, malaria, oliguria, rhagades, scabies, smallpox, sores, stomachache, syphilis, and
  1755. tumors (abdomen).^' Nuts are astringent, stimulant, and a powerful anthelmintic, especially
  1756. in veterinary practice. They are also considered digestive, emmenagogue, and are recom­
  1757. mended as cardiac, nervine tonic, and as an astringent lotion for eyes, causing dilation of
  1758. the pupil; once used for glaucoma. Externally, applied to ulcers, bleeding gums, and urinary
  1759. discharges. Burned and powdered nuts used as a dentifrice in Europe. Once used as antidote
  1760. to abrin poisoning. Mixed with sugar and coriander, the nuts are given to induce labor in
  1761. Iran.‘^® Unripe fruits are cooling, laxative, and carminative.®^
  1762. Chemistry — Nuts contain the alkaloids, arecoline, arecaine and arecolidine, isoguvacine,
  1763. guvacine, guvacoline; tannins (18%), fats (1417%), carbohydrates, and proteins, and some
  1764. Vitamin A.
  1765. 27
  1766. Toxicity — Per 100 g, the shoot is reported to contain 43 calories, 86.4 g H2O, 3.3 g
  1767. protein, 0.3 g fat, 9.0 g total carbohydrate, 1.0 g ash, 6 mg Ca, 89 mg P, and 2.0 mg Fe.
  1768. Per 100 g, the mature seed is reported to contain 394 calories, 12.3 g H2O, 6.0 g protein,
  1769. 10.8 g fat, 69.4 g total carbohydrate, 15.9 g fiber, 1.5 g ash, 542 mg Ca, 63 mg P, 5.7
  1770. mg Fe, 76 mg Na, 446 mg K, 0.17 mg thiamine, 0.69 mg riboflavin, 0.6 mg niacin, and
  1771. a trace of ascorbic acid. Classified by the FDA {Health Foods Business, June, 1978) as an
  1772. Herb of Undefined Safety. Excessive use of betel-nut causes loss of appetite, salivation,
  1773. and general degeneration of the body. Arecaine is poisonous and affects respiration and the
  1774. heart, increases peristalsis of intestines, and causes tetanic convulsions.^^’^^^
  1775. Description — Tall, slender-stemmed palm, up to 30 m, 30 to 45 cm in diameter; stem
  1776. smooth, whitish, surmounted by crown of pinnate leaves; leaves 0.9 to 1.5 m long, dark-
  1777. green, with the upper pinnae confluent; lower portion of petiole expanded into a broad,
  1778. tough, sheath-like structure; inflorescence a spadix encased in a spathe, rachis much-branched
  1779. bearing male and female flowers; male flowers small and numerous, female ones much
  1780. larger; fruit a nut, varying in shape from flat to conical or spherical, 5 to 6.5 cm long, 3.7
  1781. to 5 cm across, yellow, reddish-yellow to brilliant orange when ripe, size of a nutmeg and
  1782. with similar internal markings; pericarp hard and fibrous (husk), 65% of fruit mass; kernel
  1783. (areca-nut), 35% of fruit, grayish-brown, 2.5 to 3.7 cm in diameter, single per fruit, with
  1784. thin seed-coat and large ruminate endosperm. Flower and fruit seasons variable.
  1785. Germplasm — Reported from the Indochina-Indonesia Center of Diversity, the betel
  1786. palm, or cvs thereof, is reported to tolerate disease, insects, laterite, poor soil, shade, and
  1787. slope. Varieties are selected on basis of size and shape of fruits and nuts, hardness and
  1788. astringency of nuts, and various properties of the nuts. Some varieties have large, flat,
  1789. almost bitter nuts, while others are conical or spherical and so bland in taste as to be called
  1790. “ sweet areca-nuts” (A. catechu var. deliciosa). Areca catechu forma communis — fruits
  1791. orange-red, globose-ovoid, or ovoid-ellipsoid, 4 to 5 cm long, 3 to 4 cm broad; seed
  1792. subglobose, with a more or less flattish base. Areca catechu var. silvática — fruit ovoid-
  1793. ellipsoid, rather ventricose, smaller than usual, 4 cm long, 3 cm or less broad; seed globose-
  1794. form from which the commonly cultivated palm has been derived. Areca catechu var.
  1795. batanensis — stems shorter and thicker than in forma communis, spadix denser, with shorter
  1796. floriderous branches. Areca catechu var. longicarpa — fruit narrowly ellipsoid, 5.5 to 7
  1797. cm long, 2.5 cm broad; seed ovoid-conical, with blunt apex and flat base, slightly longer
  1798. than broad. Areca catechu var. semisilvatica, A. catechu var. alba and A. catechu var.
  1799. portoricensis are other varieties commonly cultivated. (2n = 32.).®^’^^*
  1800. Distribution — Areca-nut palm is considered native to Malaysia, where it is cultivated
  1801. extensively. It is also found throughout the East Indies and Philippines In India, Sri Lanka,
  1802. Assam, Burma, Madagascar, and East Africa, it is cultivated from the coastal areas up to
  1803. about 1,000 m. Plants are often spontaneous and occur in second-growth forests, but are
  1804. rarely found distant from cultivation.
  1805. Ecology — Ranging from Subtropical Dry to Wet through Tropical Very Dry to Wet
  1806. Forest Life Zones, betel nut is reported to tolerate annual precipitation of 6.4 to 42.9 dm
  1807. (mean of 13 cases = 20.6, annual temperature of 21.3 to 27.5°C (mean of 13 cases =
  1808. 25.9°C), and pH of 5.0 to 8.0 (mean of 10 cases = 6.4). It requires a moist tropical climate,
  1809. thriving best at low altitudes, but will tolerate moderate elevations on mountains. Grows in
  1810. areas with rainfall of 50 cm, if soil is well-drained, but will grow in drier areas with only
  1811. 5 dm annual rainfall, if suitably irrigated. Uniform distribution of rainfall is very important.
  1812. Grows in many types of soil varying in texture from laterite to loamy, provided soil has
  1813. thorough drainage, yet has the ability to retain optimum moisture required by the palm.
  1814. Light and sandy soils are unsuitable unless copiously irrigated and manured. Maximum
  1815. temperatures should not exceed 38°C, the optimum temperature for growth being a continuous
  1816. temperate range from 15.5 to 38°C. These palms are unable to withstand extreme temperatures
  1817. or a wide variance of daily temperature.
  1818. Handbook of Nuts
  1819. 28
  1820. Cultivation — Propagation is exclusively from seeds. In southern India and Malaysia,
  1821. fruits from carefully selected trees are gathered from 25- to 30-year-old trees. In Assam and
  1822. Bengal, no selection is made. In other areas the middle bunch of fruits is used for seed,
  1823. and in still other areas the last bunch of the season is preferred. In any case the ripe fruits
  1824. are gathered in November, dried in the sun for 1 to 2 days, or in shade for 3 to 7 days
  1825. before being sown. Drying the nuts does not increase germination of seeds. Well-tilled land
  1826. in a well-drained area in the garden or along an irrigation channel makes a good bed for
  1827. sowing seed. Seeds sown in rows 15 to 22 cm apart, or in groups of 20 to 50 seeds in pits,
  1828. or tied up in plantain leaves in rich moist soil to germinate; rarely planted in situ. However,
  1829. seeds may fall from tree and germinate in situ. Growth rate of seedling varies, and in about
  1830. 3 months to 2 years after planting, seedlings are ready to transplant to nursery beds; sometimes
  1831. up to 4 years may be needed for this stage. Areca-nut is a shade-loving plant and is usually
  1832. grown as a mixed crop with fruit trees, such as mango, guava, jackfruit, orange, plantain,
  1833. or coconut. Usually a shade crop, such as bananas, is planted first, spaced about 2.7 m
  1834. apart in a north-south direction, and allowed to become well-established before transplanting
  1835. the areca-nut seedlings. Young seedlings are planted in nursery beds 30 x 30 cm, with 3
  1836. rows per bed, about 1000 to 1500 trees per ha. After about 20 years, young seedlings are
  1837. planted between trees and between rows to replace older palms which have become unpro­
  1838. ductive. After seedlings are planted, the bed is mulched with green or dry leaves, cattle
  1839. dung, wood ashes, or groundnut cake. Beds are made only in the rainy season and are kept
  1840. well-irrigated in the summer. Hoeing, weeding and interculture may be practiced. Pepper
  1841. vines {Piper betel) and cardamon may be trained to the trees or grown between them.
  1842. Farmyard manure, groundnut cake, ammonium sulfate, superphosphate and potassium sulfate
  1843. have been found to be beneficial. Also leaf manure and green manure may be used.^^*
  1844. Harvesting — Palms begin to flower about the 7th year after sowing seed, and reach full
  1845. production in about 10 to 15 years. With best conditions, trees may begin flowering the 4th
  1846. year. A plantation may take 30 years to reach maturity. Fruiting life of a tree is between
  1847. 30 to 60 years after maturity, but trees may live for 60 to 100 years. Economical life span
  1848. in India is 45 to 70 years. In different regions there are well-defined seasons for flowering
  1849. and corresponding fruiting seasons. Because of the tall, slender nature of the palm, harvesting
  1850. the nuts requires skill and dexterity. Primitive methods are often employed. In India certain
  1851. classes of people who climb palms fast are employed. Sometimes bamboo poles with sickles
  1852. attached are used to cut the bunches. In Malaysia, trained monkeys are used. Leaves of the
  1853. palm (usually 4 to 7) begin to drop in December at intervals of 3 weeks, until June.
  1854. Inflorescences appear in the axils of such leaves, and although as many as five spadices
  1855. may appear, usually there are only 2 or 3 mature fruits. Spathes open soon after shedding
  1856. of leaves, and fruits ripen 8 to 11 months later. (Fruits take 6 to 8 months to ripen.) Nuts
  1857. harvested when bright red. Usually the shedding of a few nuts from a bunch is sufficient
  1858. indication to harvest the whole bunch. Harvesting season varies with 2 or 3 pickings made
  1859. in each season: Bombay and Sri Lanka, from August to March; Mysore, from August to
  1860. January; Bengal, from October to January. In India, areca-nuts are consumed raw or cured;
  1861. in other areas ripe nuts are masticated during the harvest season. Surplus nuts are stored in
  1862. pits in soil or water in earthenware jars for 5 to 7 months, and during the off-season are
  1863. taken out and chewed. Ripe nuts may also be dehusked, cut and dried, or just dried whole
  1864. in the sun for 6 to 7 weeks, or may be perfumed by smoke or benzoin. Nuts may be
  1865. processed, a costly and laborious operation on a commercial scale, to improve their color,
  1866. taste, palatability, and keeping quality. When properly cured and dried, nuts are dark-brown
  1867. with glossy finish.
  1868. Yields and economics — Each tree yields 2 to 3 bunches per year, containing 150 to
  1869. 250 fruits; varieties with larger fruits may have 50 to 100 fruits per bunch. Fruits weigh
  1870. from 1.4 to 2.2 kg per 100 fruits. Yield per hectare with 1,000 trees is 440,000 to 750,000
  1871. 29
  1872. fruits, or about 15 to 25 cwt of dried areca-nuts. Average yield of dried or cured nuts per
  1873. annum in Mysore is about 17.5 cwt/ha. India and Pakistan are the major producers of areca-
  1874. nuts, where most of the production is consumed domestically. It is also an item of internal
  1875. commerce in the Malay Archipelago and the Philippines. Nuts are exported in large quantities
  1876. from Java, Sumatra, Singapore, and other Malaysian regions to India. Sri Lanka exports to
  1877. India and the U.S. In 1969 to 1970 Pakistan grew about 1,000,000 acres of betel-nut,
  1878. producing about 26,500 long tons of nuts. Bavappa et al.^^ suggest that there are 184,000
  1879. ha cultivated to Areca, with production of ca. 191,000 MT/year with a value of 2,500 million
  1880. rupees. Improved cultural practices are leading to higher yields of nuts. Higher-yielding and
  1881. more disease-resistant plants are being developed through breeding.
  1882. Energy — Debris from the plants could serve as a crude energy source. With 2000 to
  1883. 3000 trees per hectare or more, there might be 8,000 to 21,000 leaves falling between June
  1884. and December.^® Fallen spathes and spadices might also be viewed as energy sources. Much
  1885. energy is consumed in the boiling and drying of this widely used narcotic. On top of this,
  1886. there might be 1,500 to 2,500 kg/ha dried nuts. In preparing the kernels for market, there
  1887. is much husk remaining as a by-product, containing nearly 50% cellulose. The wood of cull
  1888. trees may be used for firewood.
  1889. Biotic factors — The two most serious fungal diseases of this palm are Phytophthora
  1890. omnivorum var. arecae (Koleroga disease, a fruit rot) and Ganoderma lucidum (Foot rot).
  1891. Other fungal diseases include: Alternaría tenuis, Aspergillus niger arecae (causing a storage
  1892. disease), Botryodiplodia theobromae, Brachysporum arecae, Ceratostomella paradoza, Col­
  1893. letotrichum catechu (seedling blight), Coniothyrium arecae, Dendryphium catechu, Exo-
  1894. sporium arecae, Gloeosporium catechu, Lenzites striata, Lichenophoma arecae, Melanconium
  1895. palmarum, Montagnellina catechu, Mycosphaerella sp., Nigrospora sphaerica, Phyllosticta
  1896. arecae, Polyporus ostreiformis, P. zonalis, Stagonospora arecae, Thielaviopsis paradoxa
  1897. (causes length-wise splitting of stem), Torula herbarum, Ustulina zonata. Areca-nut is also
  1898. attacked by the bacterium Xanthosomas vasculorum. In Thailand, the following nematodes
  1899. are known to attack arecanut: Rotylenchulus sp., Tylenchorhynchus dactylurus, Tylenchus
  1900. sp., and Xiphinema insigne. In Mysore and Malaysia, the Rhinoceros beetle {Orcytes rhi­
  1901. noceros), leaf-eating caterpillar (Nephantis serinapa), borer {Arceerns fasciculatus), white
  1902. ants, and mites cause minor damage.
  1903. Handbook of Nuts
  1904. 30
  1905. ARENGA PINNATA (Wurmb) Merr. (ARECACEAE) — Sugar Palm, Kaong, Black Sugar
  1906. Palm
  1907. Syn.: Arenga saccharifera Labill.
  1908. - RDuHe^
  1909. Uses — Sugar palm is grown for its sugar, starch, and fiber. Sap contains 20 to 40%
  1910. more sucrose than average sugarcane. Juice of the outer covering of fruit is highly corrosive
  1911. and may cause pain and skin inflammation. Pith of the stem is source of sago starch. Sap
  1912. may be made into a refreshing fresh drink, or fermented into palm wine, upon distillation
  1913. yielding Arrack. Alcohol and vinegar may also be made from the sap. Terminal bud or
  1914. “ cabbage” is eaten in salads, raw or cooked. Etiolated leaves, petioles, and pith of young
  1915. stems eaten in soups or fried, or used as a pickled preserve. Half-ripe fruits are pruned to
  1916. remove irritating crystals in pericarp; seeds washed and seedcoat removed; endosperm is
  1917. soaked in lime water for several days and finally boiled in sugary or spicy solutions and
  1918. eaten as sweetmeats. Young leaf-sheaths produce a valuable fiber used in industrial work.
  1919. Leaves are used to thatch roofs and are quite durable; leaflets are used for rough brooms
  1920. and are sometimes woven into baskets. “ Wood” is used for water p i p e s .J u i c e of outer
  1921. fleshy covering of fruit is used as a fish poison.
  1922. Folk medicine — Reported to be intoxicant and piscicide.^^ Sap considered lactogenic
  1923. in Malaysia. Javanese use a root decoction for kidney stones. Fermented sap taken for
  1924. tuberculosis in the Philippines and Indonesia; for sprue, dysentery, constipation, and he­
  1925. morrhoids in Java. The felt-like tomentum at the leaf-base is used as a styptic.^ Roots used
  1926. to make a medicine for stone in the bladder in Java. The fresh, sweet toddy used for chronic
  1927. 31
  1928. constipation, phthisis, and dysentery; lactagogue. Applied to wounds as a hemostatic.
  1929. Diuretic and antithermic; fresh unfermented sap is a purgative and a remedy for sprue in
  1930. Indonesia. Juice of ripe fruit is poisonous. Roots are a treatment against bronchitis and
  1931. gravel.
  1932. Chemistry — Per 100 g, the shoot is reported to contain 19 calories, 94.7 g H2O, 0.1
  1933. g protein, 0.2 g fat, 4.9 g total carbohydrate, 0.5 g fiber, 0.1 g ash, 21 mg Ca, 3 mg P,
  1934. 00.5 mg Fe, 2 mg Na, 7 mg K, 0.01 mg riboflavin, and 0.1 mg niacin.*^
  1935. Description — Tall, stout palm, 8 to 15 m tall, bole solitary, straight, 40 to 50 cm in
  1936. diameter; old leaf-bases covering trunk with mat of tough, black fibers and long spines;
  1937. leaves ascending, pinnate, up to 9.1 m long, 3.1 m wide, with 100 or more pairs of linear
  1938. leaflets, leaflets whitish or scurfy beneath, dark-green above, 1 to 1.5 m long, 6 to 8 cm
  1939. (or more) wide, lobed or jagged at apex, auricled at base; petioles 1.5 to 2 m long, very
  1940. stout, base covered with black fibers and weak spines; plants monoecious, bearing very
  1941. large pendulous interfoliar inflorescences arising from leaf axils; female inflorescence usually
  1942. preceding male; male and female inflorescence, which eventually become 1 to 3.3 m long,
  1943. at first ensheathed in bud by 5 to 7 lanceolate oblong, imbricated, caducous bracts; inflo­
  1944. rescence emerging from spathes in 6 to 9 weeks; peduncle large; flowers opening first at
  1945. base of each branch and successively toward apex; flowers numerous, sessile, either male
  1946. or female; female flowers usually solitary, male solitary or paired, rarely in threes, occurring
  1947. in separate inflorescences; in bisexual flowers, stamens usually abortive; male flowers scent­
  1948. less, with 3 green imbricated, persistent sepals, one-fourth length of petals, apex broadly
  1949. acute, thin-margined; petals 3 to 4, navicular, valvate, 2.5 cm long, red-brown or red-purple
  1950. on outside, yellow on inside; stamens yellow, numerous, with elongated apiculate anthers,
  1951. borne on short filaments; no rudimentary ovary; female flowers scentless, 3 unequal green
  1952. imbricated orbicular sepals, one-third length of petals, persistent; petals coriaceous, 1.5 to
  1953. 2.5 cm long, light-green,ovate, or triangular, valvate, persistent with sepals as cupule at
  1954. base of fruit; staminodes absent, or if present, sometimes producing nectar; fruit obovoid
  1955. to subglobose, smooth, 5 to 6 cm in diameter, with depressed trigonous upper surface;
  1956. exocarp yellow or yellow-brown, coriaceous; mesocarp fleshy, whitish, gelatinous, very
  1957. acid due to stinging crystals; endocarp black, smooth, thin, stony; seeds 2 to 3 per fruit,
  1958. dull-metallic gray-brown, trigonous, oblong, 2.5 to 3.5 cm long, 2 to 2.5 cm wide, with
  1959. copious endosperm. Flowers and fruits year-round.
  1960. Germplasm — Reported from the Indochina-Indonesia and Hindustani Centers of Di­
  1961. versity, sugar palm, or cvs thereof, is reported to tolerate disease, drought, fungus, high
  1962. pH, insects, poor soil, shade, and slope.Several forms of the sugar palm exist in Malaya,
  1963. varying mainly in how long is required for plants to begin flowering.(2 n = 26,32.)
  1964. Distribution — Native from eastern India and Ceylon, through Bangladesh, Burma,
  1965. Thailand, southern China, Hainan, Malay Peninsula to New Guinea and Guam. Extensively
  1966. cultivated in India.
  1967. Ecology — Ranging from Subtropical Dry to Moist through Tropical Dry to Wet Forest
  1968. Life Zones, sugar palm is reported to tolerate annual precipitation of 7 to 40 dm (mean of
  1969. 8 cases = 19.1), annual temperature of 19 to 2TC (mean of 8 cases = 24.5), and pH of
  1970. 5.0 to 8.0 (mean of 5 cases = 6.4).®^ More or less a forest tree, but not restricted to jungles;
  1971. it can be grown on very poor rocky hillsides and in waste places. It flourishes best in humid
  1972. tropics in a rich moist soil, from sea-level to elevations of 1,200 m, being grown at higher
  1973. elevations than coconut. It is little subject to drought damage, typhoons, insect pests, or
  1974. fungal diseases. Trees are hardy, self-sustaining, growing readily in well-drained soil of
  1975. dark cool valleys, along banks of mountain streams, along forest margins and on partially
  1976. open hillsides. It develops more slowly in flat, exposed, or sunny habitats.
  1977. Cultivation — In forests of Indo-Malaysia, ripe fruits are distributed by various fruit
  1978. bats, civet cats, and wild swine. Trees are only in semi-cultivation, mainly since trees require
  1979. 32 Handbook of Nuts
  1980. many years to begin to be useful. When propagated, seed are used, but it has never been
  1981. scientifically cultivated. Growing it in plantations for its fiber is too costly.
  1982. Harvesting — Various products may be harvested from the sugar palm. Trees reach
  1983. maturity (flowering stage) in 6 to 12 years and continue to flower for about 15 years before
  1984. replanting. Flowering is quite irregular. From flowering to ripe fruit takes about 2 years,
  1985. so the harvest period for the fruit extends over the entire year. Most important industrial
  1986. product is the black, horsehair-like tough fiber, called gomuta, yunot, or cabo negro, pro­
  1987. duced at base of petioles in large quantities. It is used in manufacture of a very durable rope
  1988. used in fresh-and salt-water and for thatching houses; known to last 100 years in the Phil­
  1989. ippines. Fiber also widely used for filters and for caulking ships. Cost of fiber is high,
  1990. depending on grade and length of fiber, but is in demand in Europe for industrial purposes.
  1991. Stiffer fibers are used in Philippines to make floor and hair brushes, and brushes for grooming
  1992. horses. Thatch-like raincoats are sometimes made from it. Associated with the fibers at basal
  1993. parts of petiole is a soft, dry, light, punky substance, called barok, varying in color from
  1994. white to dark shades, used in caulking boats and as a tinder, made by soaking in juice of
  1995. banana or lye made from ashes of Vitex negundo and then dried; 60 to 75 tons of this
  1996. exported annually from Java to Singapore. Palms commonly tapped for the sweet sap used
  1997. for producing sugar, vinegar, wine, or alcohol. Trees for sugar production are selected and
  1998. the young inflorescences beaten with a stick or wooden mallet for a short time each day for
  1999. 2 to 3 weeks, thus producing wound tissue and stimulating the flow of sap to the injured
  2000. area. Starch in the trunks is converted into sugar and moves into the inflorescence when it
  2001. begins to develop. Thus by wounding young inflorescences, the flow of sugar to the wounded
  2002. tissue can be regulated. The stalk is then cut off at base of the inflorescence and the exuding
  2003. sap collected. A thin slice is removed from the wounded end of the stalk once or twice a
  2004. day during sap flow. Flow generally diminishes from 10 to 12 to 2 €/day after 2 1/2 months;
  2005. some plants yield about 2.8 €/day for about 2 years. Fresh sap is clear with pleasant taste
  2006. and makes a refreshing drink. Kept awhile, it becomes turbid and acid, and upon fermen­
  2007. tation, acquires an intoxicating quality. Flavored with bark of other trees, large quantities
  2008. of the liquor are consumed. Sap is allowed to ferment, producing “ tuba” , a palm wine, a
  2009. popular drink in Philippines; it is supposed to have curative properties. Fermentation begins
  2010. in the bamboo’s tubes in which sap is collected and is usually well-advanced when the
  2011. product is gathered. Much is converted into a good quality vinegar; alcohol is also distilled
  2012. from the “ tuba” . Sugar is made by boiling the sweet, unfermented sap, using a new bamboo
  2013. joint for the sap each day. To prevent fermentation in the tube, a little crushed ginger or
  2014. crushed chili-pepper fruit is added to the bamboo joint. Sometimes in Java, bamboo joints
  2015. are smoked first to reduce fermentation. Sugar is manufactured by boiling thickened juice
  2016. in an open kettle until the liquid solidifies when dropped on cold surface. Sugar in the
  2017. Philippines is brown and enters into local commerce in very limited quantities. Yield of
  2018. sugar is about 20 tons/ha, with 150 to 200 trees/ha. In Java and elsewhere, old trees no
  2019. longer productive of sugar are felled and cut up into short sections, or the pith is scooped
  2020. out of trunks cut lengthwise. Fibrous pith is pulverized and washed to remove fibrous material
  2021. and other impurities. Starch particles in suspension are drawn off and sago starch removed
  2022. and dried in sun. Starch is light gray-white. A type of tapioca may be prepared from this
  2023. starch by dropping wet pellets of it on hot plates. Debris, after starch is removed, is boiled
  2024. and used for hog feed. In Luzon, starch is obtained only from male or sterile trees. Yield
  2025. of sago meal is about 67.5 kg per tree. Yields of starch vary greatly, with an average yield
  2026. of 50 to 75 kg per tree.^^^
  2027. Yields and economics — Specific yields are stated above for each product. Products of
  2028. this palm are widely used in areas where it grows, but only the fibers are in international
  2029. commerce. Sugar and starch, and their by-products are consumed locally, and in very large
  2030. quantities.
  2031. 33
  2032. Energy — In Palms as Energy Sources, Duke^' reports that a single sugar palm can yield
  2033. 2.8 € (sugar content 5 to 8%) toddy per day over a period of about two months. Sugar
  2034. yields of 20 MT per ha are suggested, all of which could be converted to renewable alcohol.
  2035. Once flowering, male trees go on producing tappable spadices for 2 to 3 years, until the
  2036. lowest leaf axil is utilized and the tree is exhausted.^® A single tree, upon felling, can yield
  2037. up to 75 kg “ sago starch” (true sago may yield 5 times as much). Trees that have been
  2038. tapped for sugar yield little or no sago). Energy planners cannot then add the sugar and
  2039. starch, but plan for one or the other. The black reticulate leaf-sheaths have hair-like fibers
  2040. that are used for tinder.
  2041. Biotic factors — Flowers are presumably wild-pollinated. Sugar palm is virtually in­
  2042. sect-, pest-, and disease-free, one fungus attacking the palm being Ganoderma pseudofer-
  2043. reum. In the East Indies, leaves are damaged by the rhinoceros beetle {Orcytes rhinoceros),
  2044. and dead palms are reported to harbor these beetles, which cause serious damage to coconut
  2045. palms.
  2046. 34 Handbook of Nuts
  2047. Breadfruit, Breadnut, Pana
  2048. ARTOCARPUS ALTILIS (Parkins.) Fosb. (MORACEAE)
  2049. Syn.: Artocarpus communis Forst.
  2050. Uses — Cultivated extensively for its fruits and seeds, breadfruit is used as a staple food
  2051. with Polynesians, Micronesians, and Melanesians. When fruit is not fully ripe, being very
  2052. starchy, it is peeled, cut into sections, and baked or boiled, and seasoned with salt, pepper,
  2053. and butter. When fully ripe, the meat is soft and can be baked like sweet potato. Green
  2054. fruits are roasted, ground into a meal, and used to make breads. Breadfruit can also be used
  2055. in salads, made into soup, and, when ripe, made into a pulp (coconut milk and sugar being
  2056. added) and baked as a pudding. Seeds are eaten roasted or boiled. Bark cloth is made from
  2057. the bark. Leaves furnish fodder for livestock. Wood is used locally for house-building.
  2058. Latex from the trunk is used in native medicines, as bird lime and to caulk canoes.
  2059. Folk medicine — Fruits and leaves used as a cataplasm for tumors in Brazil.Powder
  2060. of roasted leaves applied for enlarged spleen; ashes of the leaves applied in herpes^^ (Am-
  2061. boina). Reported to be anodyne, laxative, and vermifuge, breadfruit is a folk remedy for
  2062. backache, blood disorders, boils, bums, diabetes, diarrhea, dysentery, eye ailments, fever,
  2063. fracture, gout, headache, hypertension, oliguria, rheumatism, sores, stomach-ache, swelling,
  2064. testicles, worms, and wounds.West Indians have great faith in the leaf decoction for high
  2065. blood pressure. Colombians cook the fmit with sugar for colic. Virgin Islanders take the
  2066. plant for coronary ailments, Jamaicans dress liver spots with the latex, Costa Ricans apply
  2067. it to w o u n d s .C h in e s e use the seeds to aid parturition and to treat typhoid and other
  2068. fevers. Indonesians use the bark in parturition, poulticing the leaves on splenomegaly. Heated
  2069. flowers, after cooling, are applied to the gums for toothache, fmits are used for cough, root-
  2070. bark for diarrhea and dysentery, seeds as an aphrodisiac. Philippinos use the bark decoction
  2071. for stomach-ache. New Guineans use the latex for dysentery.
  2072. Chemistry — Per 100 g, the mature fmit is reported to contain 103 calories, 70.8 g H2O,
  2073. 35
  2074. 1.7 g protein, 0.3 g fat, 26.2 g total carbohydrate, 1.2 g fiber, 1.0 g ash, 33 mg Ca, 32
  2075. mg P, 1.2 mg Fe, 15 mg Na, 439 mg K, 24 mg beta-carotene equivalent, 0.22 mg thiamine,
  2076. 0.03 mg riboflavin, 0.9 mg niacin, and 29 mg ascorbic acid. Per 100 g, the leaf is reported
  2077. to contain 75 calories, 75.5 g H2O, 5.0 g protein, 2.0 g total carbohydrate, 2.0 g ash, 2.0
  2078. mg Ca, 170 mg P, 60 mg Fe, 17.5 mg Na, 0.10 mg thiamine, and 70 mg ascorbic acid.
  2079. Per 100 g, the mature seed is reported to contain 434 calories, 20.2 g H2O, 15.1 g protein,
  2080. 29.0 g fat, 34.0 g total carbohydrate, 2.5 g fiber, 1.7 g ash, 66 mg Ca, 320 mg P, 6.7 mg
  2081. Fe, 41 mg Na, 380 mg K, 280 mg beta-carotene equivalent, 0.88 mg thiamine, 0.55 mg
  2082. riboflavin, 0.8 mg niacin, and 12 mg ascorbic acid. Quijano and Arango^^^ report wetter
  2083. seeds (56.3% moisture) with (ZMB): 3 to 4 g ash, 12.8 g fat, 16 g soluble carbohydrates,
  2084. 20 g total protein, and 3.9 g fiber. Of the protein (20%), 6.4 g was nonglobular protein,
  2085. 13.5 g globular (1.8 g albumins, 3.7 globulins, 3.3 prolamins, and 4.6 g glutelins). The
  2086. amino acids of the seeds contain 13.04 g/100 g leucine, 12.10 isoleucine, 5.28 g phenyl­
  2087. alanine, 15.90 g methionine, 7.24 g tyrosine, 3.62 g proline, 7.68 g alanine, 4.93 g glutamic
  2088. acid, 3.91 g threonine, 10.43 g serine, 4.78 g glycine, 3.33 g arginine, 4.56 g histidine,
  2089. and 3.12 g cystine per 100 g protein. Fruits contain papayotin and artocarpin.^®^ Leaves
  2090. contain quercetin and camphorol.^^"^ Some HCN is reported in the leaves, stem, and root,
  2091. cerotic acid in the latex.
  2092. Description — Handsome tree, 12 to 20 m tall; leaves large, ovate, leathery, rough,
  2093. glossy, most often lobate or incised, 30 to 90 cm long, 30 to 40 cm broad, dark-green;
  2094. flowers minute, male and female flowers in separate catkins on the same tree, in axils of
  2095. newly formed leaves; male inflorescences club-shaped, 15 to 30 cm long, dropping to the
  2096. ground in a few days; female inflorescences in globose heads about 5 cm in diameter,
  2097. developing into seedless fruits; some varieties of breadfruit have seeds in profusion; fruit
  2098. (syncarp) ovoid, spherical, or pear-shaped, 10 to 15 cm long, 10 to 15 cm in diameter,
  2099. weighing 1 to 4 kg, with white sticky latex, rind yellowish-green or brown, divided into a
  2100. series of low projections, bearing short spines in some varieties; pulp white or yellowish;
  2101. in breadnut, rind covered with fleshy spines, with brownish seeds 2.5 cm or more in length
  2102. and about 2.5 cm in diameter. Flowers and fruits at nearly all stages on the tree at the same
  2103. time, almost throughout the year.^^®
  2104. Germplasm — Reported from the Indochina-Indonesia Center of Diversity, breadfruit,
  2105. or CVS thereof, is reported to tolerate drought, high pH, heat, laterite, sodium or salt, slope,
  2106. and virus.Many cvs have developed wherever breadfruit has been long grown. Seeded
  2107. CVS are of little economic value but are eaten by natives; the seeds, when roasted, taste like
  2108. chestnuts. Most cvs are seedless. In Ponape, over 50 cvs are known; in Tahiti, about 30;
  2109. and in the South Pacific area, 165.^^* (2n = 56.)
  2110. Distribution — Probably originated in Indonesia and perhaps in New Guinea, where
  2111. large, spontaneous stands occur. Breadfruit is cultivated throughout the islands of the South
  2112. Seas. It has been introduced into many tropical areas of the world, including India, West
  2113. Indies, Mauritius, and southern Florida.
  2114. Ecology — Ranging fromWarm Temperate Dry (without frost) through Tropical Dry to
  2115. Wet Forest Life Zones, breadfruit is reported to tolerate annual precipitation of 7 to 40 dm
  2116. (mean of 19 cases = 23.0), annual temperature of 17 to 29°C (mean of 19 cases = 24.1),
  2117. and pH of 5.0 to 8.0 (mean of 14 cases = 6.2). Breadfruit thrives only in humid tropics,
  2118. where the temperature varies from 16 to 38°C with a humidity of 70 to 80%, and a well-
  2119. distributed annual rainfall of 250 to 275 cm. Climatic requirements vary according to cv.
  2120. In Indonesia, some cvs are adapted to moist climates; others endure 6 months of dry weather.
  2121. It is usually intolerant of climatic extremes in inland regions or high elevations, but grows
  2122. on high islands (up to 700 m in New Guinea) and on atolls throughout the Pacific. It does
  2123. not tolerate shade, and irrigation has been unsuccessful. It thrives on alluvial and coastal
  2124. soils, and can be grown and produced on coral soils of atolls. Some cvs (“ Maitarika” )
  2125. 36 Handbook of Nuts
  2126. grown on atolls such as Gilbert Islands are said to tolerate salinity. Wind easily breaks the
  2127. branches and may cause many flowers and young fruits to fall.^^’^^®
  2128. Cultivation — Seeded cvs are propagated from seed; however, seeds lose their viability
  2129. soon after fruit falls. For seedless varieties, if roots are bruised near soil surface, plants send
  2130. up root-suckers, which can be removed and planted in a permanent site. Root-cuttings 20
  2131. to 25 cm long and 12 to 60 mm in diameter may be laid horizontally in a 12-mm-deep
  2132. trench and watered daily. Remove and plant sprouts when 20 to 25 cm tall in rainy season.
  2133. Natural suckers can be air-layered for root initiation planted in a nursery for 2 to 3 months,
  2134. then transplanted to permanent site. At all times, trees should be spaced about 12 m each
  2135. way, or about 100 trees per hectare. Trees should be watered for first and second years,
  2136. given shallow intercultures, and generally no manuring. Some intercropping is practiced.
  2137. Harvesting — Trees start bearing in 5 to 6 years, when vegetatively propagated, 8 to 10
  2138. years from seed. Under good soil and climatic conditions they will continue to produce well
  2139. for 50 years. Time of harvest differs in various localities: in Caroline Islands, May to
  2140. September; Gilbert Islands, May to July; Society Islands, November to April and July to
  2141. August. For culinary purposes, harvest when still hard. Harvesting is done with a long pole,
  2142. having a hooked knife and basket at the end so fruits do not fall to ground. Fruits ripen in
  2143. 4 to 6 days.^^^
  2144. Yields and economics — Adult trees yield 50 to 150 fruits, each producing 23 to 45 kg.
  2145. An 8-year-old tree can bear 800 fruits over the three seasons of a year.*^^ A fruit may weigh
  2146. 1 to 3 kg. Breadfruits are gathered and sold locally where the trees are grown. They rarely
  2147. enter international trade.
  2148. Energy — If an adult tree bears 100 2-kg fruits, and if the fruits contain 70% water, that
  2149. is still 60 kg dry matter (DM) per tree per year. If one could crowd 100 such productive
  2150. trees into a hectare that indicates 6 MT DM in fruits alone, a reasonable renewable biomass
  2151. production. There is a sizable annual accumulation of leaves and limbs as well.
  2152. Biotic factors — Hand-pollinated fruits are twice the size of normally developing fruits.
  2153. The following fungi are known to attack breadfruit: Capnodium sp., Cercospora artocarpi,
  2154. Colletotrichum artocarpi, Cephaleuros virescens, Corticium salmonicolor, Gloeosporium
  2155. artocarpi, G. mangiferae, Orbilia epipora, Pestalotiopis versicolor, Phytophthora palmi-
  2156. vora, Phyllosticta artocarpi, P. artocarpicola, Mycosphaerella artocarpi, Rhizopus arto­
  2157. carpi, Sclerotium rolfsii, Uredo artocarpi, Zygosporium oscheoides. Nematodes infesting
  2158. the tree are Boledorus sp., Helicotylenchus concavus, H. cavenessi, H. dihystera, H. mi-
  2159. croc ephalus, H. pseudorobustus, Heterodera marioni, Meloidogyne incognita acrita, Ro-
  2160. tylenchulus reniformis, Scutellonema calthricaudatum, Tylenchorhynchus triglyphus, and
  2161. Xiphinema ifacola}^^'^^^
  2162. 37
  2163. ARTOCARPUS HETEROPHYLLUS Lam. (MORACEAE) — Jackfruit
  2164. Syn.: Artocarpus integra (Thunb.) M err., Artocarpus integrifolia L.f.
  2165. Uses — Few, if any, tropical fruits can excel the jackfruit in size and usefulness. Cultivated
  2166. for its multiple fruit, the pulp may be cooked or fried before ripening, or eaten raw when
  2167. ripe. Fruits I sampled in Brazil were quite adequate, right off the tree. Pulp is sometimes
  2168. boiled with milk, or made into preserves or curries. Leaves and bark contain a white latex.
  2169. Leaves are fed to sheep, goats, and cattle as fodder, especially in the dry season. Flower
  2170. clusters are eaten in Java with syrup and agar-agar or coconut milk. Young fruits may be
  2171. eaten in soups. When properly fermented, pulp produces a vinegar. Seeds are mealy and
  2172. are tasty when boiled or roasted. Half-ripe fruits are fed to pigs and used for fattening cattle
  2173. and sheep. Wood is bright yellow when fresh, darkening on exposure, used for furniture,
  2174. cabinet work, house-building, doors, window frames, and cart work. The wood chips are
  2175. distilled in Burma and Sri Lanka to produce the yellow dye used for Buddhist robes. Trees
  2176. are usually cut for lumber when upwards of 30 years old; wood takes a high polish and is
  2177. ornamental. Heartwood contains a brilliant yellow dye, similar to fustic. Cyanomaclurin is
  2178. also present, producing an olive-yellow with chromium, dull yellow with aluminum, and a
  2179. brighter yellow with tin mordant. Green and red dyes may also be prepared. Sawdust and
  2180. shavings of wood, when boiled in water, yield a yellow dye used for dying silk. Milky juice
  2181. is used in some countries as a bird-lime. Bark yields a
  2182. fiber.Shedding nearly 10 MT
  2183. leaves a year and bearing fruits weighing up to 11 kg each, this species deserves consideration
  2184. as a shade tree for cardamoms.
  2185. Folk medicine — According to Hartwell, the plant is used in folk remedies for tumors.
  2186. Reported to be astringent, demulcent, laxative, refrigerant, and tonic, jackfruit is a folk
  2187. remedy for alcoholism, carbuncles, caries, leprosy, puerperium, smallpox, sores, sterility,
  2188. stomach problems, toothache, and tumors.^' Burmese, Chinese, and Filipinos use the sap
  2189. to treat abscesses and ulcers, and the bark to poultice on such afflictions. Burmese also use
  2190. the roots for diarrhea and fever. Indochinese use the wood as a sedative in convulsion, the
  2191. boiled leaves as a lactagogue, the sap for syphilis and worms. Filipinos use the ashes of the
  2192. leaves to treat ulcers and wounds.Cambodians used the wood to calm the nerves. Munda
  2193. of India use the leaves for vomiting. Both Ayurvedics and Yunani consider the fruit and
  2194. seeds aphrodisiac. Ayurvedics use the ripe fruit for biliousness, leprosy, and ulcers. India
  2195. uses the roots for hydrocoele.*^^
  2196. Chemistry — Per 100 g, the leaves contain (ZMB) 18.5 g protein, 5.0 g fat, 66.3 g total
  2197. carbohydrate, 26.2 g fiber, 10.2 g ash, 2,000 mg Ca, and 110 mg P. Per 100 g, the fruits
  2198. (ZMB) contain 347 calories, 6.3 g protein, 1.1 g fat, 87.5 g total carbohydrate, 3.3 g fiber,
  2199. 5.2 g ash, 100 mg Ca, 140 mg P, 2.2 mg Fe, 7.4 mg Na, 1,502 mg K, 867 ug beta-carotene
  2200. equivalent, 0.33 mg thiamine, 0.41 mg riboflavin, 2.58 mg niacin, and 33 mg ascorbic
  2201. acid. Per 1(X) g, the seeds contain 51.6 g H2O, 6.6 g protein, 0.4 g fat, 38.4 g carbohydrate,
  2202. 1.5 g fiber, 1.5 g ash, 0.05% Ca, 0.13% P, and 1.2 mg Fe.^ The latex consists of 65.9 to
  2203. 76.0% moisture and water solubles and 2.3 to 2.9% caoutchouc. The coagulum contains 6
  2204. to 10% caoutchouc, 82.6 to 86.4% resins, and 3.9 to 8.1% insolubles. Dried latex contains
  2205. the steroketone artostenone C30H50O, which has been converted to artosterone, a compound
  2206. with highly androgenic properties. Seeds, though eaten, contain the hemagglutinin, con-
  2207. cavalin A. Hager’s Handbook gives structures for six flavones isolated therefrom: artacar-
  2208. panone, artocarpetin, artocarpin, cyanomaclurin, cycloartocarpin, and morin (Ci5Hio07).*®^
  2209. The wood contains a yellow pigment, morin, and cyanomaclurin; the bark has tannin, the
  2210. latex cerotic acid.^"^^
  2211. Description — Low or medium-sized evergreen tree, 10 to 25 m high, without buttresses,
  2212. with dense, rather regular crown. Branchlets terete, with scattered, retrose, crisped hairs,
  2213. becoming glabrous. Leaves alternate, shortly stalked, oblong or obovate, with cuneate or
  2214. 38 Handbook of Nuts
  2215. obtuse base, and obtuse or shortly acuminate apex, entire (lobed only on very young plants),
  2216. coriaceous, rough, glabrescent, shining dark-green above, pale-green beneath, 10 to 20 cm
  2217. long, 5 to 10 cm wide, with 5 to 8 pairs of lateral veins, petiole 2 to 4 cm long. Stipules
  2218. ovate-triangular, acute, hairy on the back, glabrous on the inner side, pale, 1 to 2 cm long,
  2219. on flowering branches much larger, up to 5 cm. Inflorescences peduncled, solitary in the
  2220. leaf-axils of short, thick branchlets which are placed on the trunk or on the main branches,
  2221. unisexual, 4 to 15 cm long; the male ones near the apex, fascicled in the higher axils,
  2222. oblong-clavate, rounded at both ends; the female ones in the lower axils, solitary or in pairs
  2223. on longer and thicker peduncles. Flowers very numerous, small, the male ones with a two-
  2224. lobed perianth and one stamen; the female ones cohering at the base, tubular, style obliquely
  2225. inserted, stigma clavate. Spurious fruits very large, oblong, glabrous, with short, 3 to 6
  2226. angular, conical acute spines.
  2227. Germplasm — Reported from the Hindustani Center of Diversity, jackfruit, or cvs thereof,
  2228. is reported to tolerate aluminum, latentes, limestone, low pH, and shade.Varieties such
  2229. as “ Soft” or “ Hard” , are selected mainly according to the thickness of the rind.
  2230. Distribution — Native to the Indian Archipelago, jackfruit is now widely cultivated
  2231. throughout the Old and New World tropics, being known in India, Burma, Bangladesh, Sri
  2232. Lanka, Java, and in South America from the Guianas as far south as Rio de Janeiro, in
  2233. Brazil, West Indies, and southern Florida.
  2234. Ecology — Ranging from Subtropical Dry to Moist through Tropical Very Dry to Wet
  2235. Forest Life Zones, jackfruit is reported to tolerate annual precipitation of 7 to 42 dm (mean
  2236. of 14 cases = 22.7), annual temperature of 19 to 29°C (mean of 14 cases = 24.8), and
  2237. pH of 4.3 to 8.0 (mean of 11 cases = 6.0).^^ As a tropical tree, jackfruit grows well in
  2238. most soils, but not in moist low places. Cultivated below 1,000 m altitudes, it grows best
  2239. in deep well-drained soil, but will grow slowly and not so tall in shallow limestone soil.
  2240. Sensitive to frost in its early stages, it cannot tolerate drought or “ wet feet” .^^^
  2241. Cultivation — Propagated by seeds (viable only 2 to 4 weeks), budding after the modified
  2242. Forkert method, inarching, air-layering, or grafting. Seeds retain viability for about 30 days
  2243. at room temperature; however, soaking them in water for 24 hr improves their longevity.
  2244. Budding with eyes of nonpetioled budwood on stocks from 8 to 11 months old gives best
  2245. results. The best stock is Artocarpus champeden, but A. rigida Bl. can also be used. Stock
  2246. should be slightly shaded. For grafting-tape, dry bark-fibers of Musa textilis are used.
  2247. Budding may be performed throughout the year, provided stocks are old enough. Can be
  2248. propagated through root shoots. Trees should be spaced 12 to 14 m apart each way. Cattle
  2249. manure is helpful.
  2250. Harvesting — Trees start bearing fruit when 4 to 14 years old; once established, they
  2251. continue to bear for several decades. Ripe fruits, available almost throughout the year, are
  2252. much relished. About 8 months is required from time the flowers begin to expand until fruit
  2253. matures.
  2254. Yields and economics — A tree may bear 150 to 250 fruits per year and fruits may weigh
  2255. 10 to 40 kg. Two hundred 20-kg fruits a tree indicate an incredible 4 tons per tree per year.
  2256. If 50 trees could bear at this rate, that would be 200 tons fruit per ha. But 75% of this is
  2257. water. Cultivation in Bangladesh in 1969 to 1970 amounted to 17,760 ha, because of greater
  2258. demand, producing 212,635 tons of fruit. Because of the fruit, it is marketed locally.
  2259. Energy — Grown as a shade tree for cardamom, jackfruit contributed annually 9,375
  2260. kg/ha leaf mulch.
  2261. Biotic factors — The following fungi are known to attack jackfruit: Ascochyta sp.,
  2262. Botryodiplodia theohromae, Capnodium sp., Cephaleuros sp., Circinotrichum sp., Corti-
  2263. cium salmonicolor (pink disease), Diplodia artocarpi, Ganoderma applanatum, Gloeos-
  2264. porium artocarpi, G. caressae, Kernia furcotricha, Marasmius scande ns, Marssonia indica,
  2265. Meliola artocarpi, Pestalotia elasticola, Phomopsis artocarpi, Phyllosticta artocarpi, P.
  2266. 39
  2267. artocarpina, Phytophthora palmivora, Rhizoctonia solani, Rhizopus artocarpi, R. stolonifer,
  2268. Rosellinia bunodes, Septoria artocarpi, Setella coracina, Torula herbarum, Uredo artocarpi.
  2269. Trees are also parasitized by Dendrophthoe falcata and Viscum album. Among the nematodes
  2270. known to infest jackfruit trees are Aphelechus avenae, Cr icone ma taylori, Criconemoides
  2271. birchfieldi, Helicotylenchus dihystera, Heterodera marioni, Hoplolaimus seinhorsti, Lep-
  2272. tonema thornei, Meloidogyne sp., Oostenbrinkella oostenbrinki, Peltamigratus sp., Praty-
  2273. lenchus zeae, Rotylenchulus reniformis, Trichodorus sp., Tylenchorhynchus acutus, T. mar­
  2274. tini, T. triglyphus, Xiphinema americanum, X. pratense, and X. setariae.^'^^'^^
  2275. 40 Handbook of Nuts
  2276. BALANITES AEGYPTIACA (L.) Delile (SIMARUBACEAE) — Desert Date, Soapberry
  2277. Tree, Jericho Balsam
  2278. Uses — Monks of Jericho regarded Balanites as the balm of the Biblical verse. An oily
  2279. gum made from the fruit is sold in tin cases to travelers as the balm of Gilead. Both Balanites
  2280. and Pistacia are common in old Palestine, and both are called balm. A desert-loving plant,
  2281. Balanites is also revered by the Mohammedans in western India.The wood is used for
  2282. axes, cudgels, Mohammedan writing boards, mortars and pestles, walking sticks, and wooden
  2283. bowls. Since it gives little smoke, it is a favorite firewood for burning indoors. Spiny
  2284. branches are used to pen up animals. The bark yields a strong fiber. The fruit is fermented
  2285. to make an intoxicating beverage. In West Africa and Chad, the seed is used for making
  2286. breadstuffs and soups, while the leaf is used as a vegetable, the pericarp is crushed and
  2287. eaten.Flowers are eaten in soups in West Africa. The comestible oil, which constitutes
  2288. 40% of the fruit, is used to make soap. African Arabs use the fruit as a detergent, the bark
  2289. to poison fish. The active principle, probably a saponin, is lethal to cercarla, fish, miracidia,
  2290. mollusks,^^ and tadpoles. One fruit weighing 25 g has enough active ingredient to kill the
  2291. bilharzial mollusks in 30 € water.^^^ The Douay Bible of 1609 renders Jeremiah 8:22 to
  2292. read, “ Is there no rosin in Gilead?“ , resulting in this edition being termed the Rosin Bible.
  2293. The Bishop’s Bible of 1568 reads, “ Is there no tryacle in Gilead?“ , and is termed the
  2294. Treacle Bible. The tree is recommended for arid zones by UNESCO because of its food
  2295. 41
  2296. value, fixed oil, and protein in the kernel (“nut”) and as a raw material for the steroid
  2297. industry.®^
  2298. Folk medicine — Fruits are pounded and boiled to extract the medicinal vulnerary oil.
  2299. The oil was poured over open wounds and apparently acted as an antiseptic and protective
  2300. covering against secondary infections. One Turkish surgeon regarded Inis as one of the best
  2301. stomachics, a most excellent remedy for curing wounds. In Ethiopia, the bark is used as an
  2302. antiseptic, the leaf to dress wounds, and the fruit as an anthelmintic laxative. In Palestine,
  2303. the oil is said to be used in folk medicine. Ghanans used the leaves as a vermifuge, whereas
  2304. Libyans use them to clean malignant wounds. Powdered root bark is used for herpes zoster
  2305. while the root extracts are suggested for malaria. Ghanans use the bark from the stem in
  2306. fumigation to heal the wounds of circumcision. Nigerians consider it abortifacient. The oil
  2307. from the fruits is applied to aching bones and swollen rheumatic joints by the Lebanese.
  2308. Extracts of the root have proven slightly effective in experimental malaria. The bark has
  2309. been used in treating syphilis. In Chad, the plant is used as a fumigant in liver disease, the
  2310. seed as a febrifuge, and the fruit for colds. Ugandans use the oil for sleeping sickness, but
  2311. the efficacy is questioned. Ayurvedics apply the fruit oil to ulcers, the fruit for other skin
  2312. ailments and rat bites, regarding the fruit as alexipharmic, alterative, analgesic, anthelmintic,
  2313. antidysenteric. Unanis use the fruit also for boils and leucoderma.^^’^^ ’^^
  2314. Chemistry — A chloroform fraction of the stem bark, chromatographed over a column
  2315. of silica gel, yielded beta-sitosterol, bergapten, marmesin, and beta-sitosterol glucoside.
  2316. None of these compounds were active in eight 9KB5 (in vitro) or P0388 (in vivo) systems.^®'
  2317. Per 100 g, the fruit (ZMB) is reported to contain 339 calories, 6.1 to 11.1 g protein, 0.0
  2318. to 1.7 g fat, 79.1 to 88.6 g total carbohydrate, 10.2 g fiber, 5.2 to 8.1 g ash, 130 to 380
  2319. mg Ca. 400 mg P, and 39 mg ascorbic acid. Shoots contain (ZMB): 27.5 g protein, 1.5 g
  2320. fat, 64.4 g total carbohydrate, 23.3 g fiber, 6.6 g ash, 480 mg Ca, and 380 mg P; leaves
  2321. contain 11.6 g protein 4.2 g fat, 71.5 g total carbohydrate, 13.6 g fiber, and 12.7 g ash.
  2322. Seeds or “ nuts” contain (ZMB): 21.9 g protein, 45.7 g fat, and 3.3 g ash (21). The fruit
  2323. flesh contains 1% saponin, 38 to 40% sugar. The saponin from the pericarp contains glucose
  2324. and rhamnose; from the seeds, glucose, rhamnose, xylose, and ribose. The seed kernel
  2325. yields the steroid balanitesin, identical with the sapogenin C27H42O3 called diosgenin. The
  2326. seed oil (30 to 55%), colored yellow with alpha-carotene has 19% palmitic-, 14%
  2327. stearic-, 27% oleic-, 40% linoleic-, and traces of arachidonic-acids. Traces of yamogenin,
  2328. 25-alpha-spirosta-3:5-diene and beta-sitosterol.'*^
  2329. Description — Savanna tree, 5 to 7 (to 21) m tall; bark gray to dark-brown, with thick
  2330. ragged scales and long vertical fissures in which new yellow bark is visible; branchlets
  2331. green, smooth, armed with green straight forward-directed supra-axillary spines to 8 cm
  2332. long; leaves gray-green, 2 foliolate; leaflets obovate to orbicular-rhomboid, usually 2.5 to
  2333. 5 cm long, 1.3 to 3 cm broad, flowers green to yellow-green, small, ca. 1.3 cm in diameter,
  2334. in supra-axillary clusters or rarely subracemose; fruit a plum-sized drupe, green at first,
  2335. turning yellow, broadly oblong-ellipsoid, with large, hard, pointed stone surrounded by
  2336. yellow-brown sticky edible flesh.
  2337. Germplasm — Reported from the Mediterranean Center of Diversity, desert date, or cvs
  2338. thereof, is reported to tolerate drought, high pH, insects, savanna, and waterlogging.*^
  2339. Distribution — Widespread across North Africa, south to Uganda, Ethiopia, Sudan,
  2340. Chad, Nigeria, Arabia, and Palestine.^^*
  2341. Ecology — Ranging from Subtropical Dry to Wet through Tropical Desert (with water)
  2342. to Dry Forest Life Zones, desert date is reported to tolerate annual precipitation of 1.5 to
  2343. 17 dm (mean of 9 cases = 10), annual temperature of 18.7 to 27.9°C (mean of 9 cases =
  2344. 24.3), and pH of 5.0 to 8.3 (mean of 6 cases = 6.9).*^ Commonly found in dry areas
  2345. occasionally subject to inundation. Sandy well-drained soil with slightly acid pH may be
  2346. most productive.*^
  2347. 42 Handbook of Nuts
  2348. Cultivation — Propagates widely by seeds naturally. Seeds germinate readily. Sometimes
  2349. planted in villages for the fruit and other parts.
  2350. Harvesting — Fruits are collected when ripe and spread out, often on roofs, to dry until
  2351. needed. Other parts of plants collected as needed. Available nearly year round.
  2352. Yields and economics — When steroid prices were volatile, this was viewed as an
  2353. alternative source. World consumption was expected to exceed 1000 MT diosgenin or
  2354. yamogenin by 1973 and 60 MT hecogenin. Seeds from Nigeria (42.8 to 48.4% oil) yielded
  2355. 1.11 to 1.74% total sapogenins; from Tanzania (43.1% oil) 0.95% sapogenins; and, from
  2356. India (50.3%) 0.74% total sapogenins.
  2357. Energy — Roots have been used for producing charcoal. The wood, burning with little
  2358. smoke, is used for fuel wood. The oil could be used for fuel, better transesterified.
  2359. Biotic factors: — Desert date trees are attacked by the following fungi: Phoma balanites,
  2360. Septoria balanites, Diplodiella balanites, Metasphaeria balanites, and Schizophyllum
  2361. commune.
  2362. 43
  2363. BARRINGTONIA PROCERA (Miers) Kunth (MYRTACEAE) — Nua Nut
  2364. Uses — While nuts of many species are said to be used as fish poisons {B. asiatica, B.
  2365. cylindrostachya, B. racemosa), others are used for food (B. butonica, B. careya, B. edulis,
  2366. B. excelsa, B. magnifica, B. niedenzuana, B. novae-hiberniae, B. procera). The nua nut
  2367. is a common component of native meals on Santa Cruz, also eaten in between-meal snacks.
  2368. Smoked whole fruits can be stored.
  2369. Folk medicine — No data available.
  2370. Chemistry — No data available.
  2371. Description — Tree, sparingly branched, to 5 m tall or taller, the broad shiny leaves
  2372. clustered near the ends of the branches. Flowers in long pendulous cylindrical racemes,
  2373. yellow. Fruit an ovoid drupe; seed and kernel also ovoid.
  2374. Germplasm — Reported from the New Guinea Center of Diversity. The fruit epidermis
  2375. may be green or purple, the seed coat white or pink. In the Solomon Islands, it is generally
  2376. believed that the kernels from Santa Cruz are bigger than those elsewhere (see Figures 6
  2377. and 7 in Yen^"^^). Other edible species known as cut-nuts in the Solomons are similar or
  2378. closely related.
  2379. Distribution — Limited to the Huon Peninsula of New Guinea, the New Guinea Islands,
  2380. the Solomons, and New Hebrides, grown as a village tree in Fiji.
  2381. Ecology — Estimated to range from Subtropical Moist to Rain through Tropical Moist
  2382. to Wet Forest Life Zones, nua nut is estimated to tolerate annual precipitation of 20 to 60
  2383. dm, annual temperature of 23 to 27°C, and pH of 6.0 to 8.4.
  2384. Cultivation — Propagated from seed or stem cutting. Seedling trees “ are said to reflect
  2385. the characteristics of the parental tree, as, of course, do cuttings, but the latter tend to grow
  2386. branched closer to the ground’’. ^
  2387. Harvesting — Seasons of production are indefinite and nuts are available all year round.
  2388. The growth rate of fruit after fertilization is fast. There are only 6 weeks between the
  2389. flowering time of the upper part of the inflorescences and the harvest of such fruits.
  2390. Yields and economics — No data available.
  2391. Energy — No data available.
  2392. Biotic factors — No data available.
  2393. 44 Handbook of Nuts
  2394. BERTHOLLETIA EXCELSA Humb. and Bonpl. (MYRTACEAE) — Brazil Nut, Para Nut,
  2395. Creme Nut, Castañas, Castanhado Para
  2396. Uses — Nutritious Brazil nuts are eaten raw, salted, or roasted. Seeds are consumed in
  2397. large quantities and are used in international trade. Kernels are the source of Brazil nut oil,
  2398. used for edible purposes and in the manufacture of soap. The wood is light pinkish-brown,
  2399. neither very hard nor heavy, and it is limited to cheap work.*^^^^^
  2400. Folk medicine — There has been a flurry of interest in one certain formula of one Dr.
  2401. Revici, the formula containing selenium and vegetable oils or natural fatty acids. This
  2402. combination has been tried with cancer patients and, according to one Washington physician,
  2403. in AIDS. I am frankly skeptical, but would not hesitate to increase my consumption of
  2404. Brazil nuts were I suffering AIDS or cancer.
  2405. Chemistry — Per 100 g, the mature seed is reported to contain 644 calories, 4.7 g H2O,
  2406. 17.4 g protein, 65.0 g fat, 9.6 g total carbohydrate, 3.9 g fiber, 3.3 g ash, 169 mg Ca, 620
  2407. mg P, 3.6 mg Fe, 2 mg Na, 5 mg beta-carotene equivalent, 0.20 mg thiamine, 0.69 mg
  2408. riboflavin, 0.20 mg niacin, and 2 mg ascorbic acid.^^ Hager’s Handbook notes ca. 1.8%
  2409. myristic, 13.5% palmitic, 2.5% stearic, 55.6% oleic, and 21.6% linoleic acid glycerides,
  2410. and 0.24 to 0.26% barium.Hilditch and Williams‘S® tabulate the component fatty acid
  2411. percentage as 13.8 to 16.2% palmitic, 2.7 to 10.4% stearic, 30.5 to 58.3% oleic, and 22.8
  2412. to ^4.9% linoleic acids. An analysis by Furr et al.‘^s reports the edible portion of the nuts
  2413. to contain 5.0 ppm Al, 0.02 As, 2.7 B, 1,764 Ba, 87 Br, 1,592 Ca, 0.03 Cd, 1.2 Ce, 246
  2414. Cl, 1.9 Co, 0.6 Cr, 1.3 Cs, 18 Cu, 0.1 Eu, 1.7 F, 93 Fe, 0.01 Hg, 0.2 I, 5,405 K, 0.1
  2415. La, 0.01 Lu, 3,370 Mg, 8.0 Mn, 7.2 Na, 5.8 Ni, 0.4 Pb, 103 Rb, 0.1 Sb, 0.02 Sc, 11 Se,
  2416. 1,770 Si, 0.04 Sm, 3.5 Sn, 77 Sr, 0.1 Ta, 6.1 Ti, 0.01 V, 0.1 W, 0.2 Yb, and 41 ppm
  2417. Zn dry weight. The normal concentration of some of these elements in land plants are 50
  2418. ppm B, 14 Ba, 15 Br, 2,000 Cl, 0.5 Co, 0.2 Cs, 14 Cu, 3.200 Mg, 630 Mn, 3 Ni, 20 Rb,
  2419. 3,400 S, 26 Sr, and 0.2 ppm Se dry weight. They were higher in barium, bromine, cerium,
  2420. cobalt, cesium, magnesium, nickle, rubidium, scandium, selenium, silicon, strontium, tin.
  2421. 45
  2422. titanium, and ytterbium, and equal to or higher in europium, lanthanum, and tantalum than
  2423. any of the 12 nut species studied by Furr et al.*°^ Of 529 nuts analyzed for Se, 6% contained
  2424. 100 ppm Se or more. The mean value for all nuts was 29.6 ppm, and the median value was
  2425. 13.4 ppm. Hexane-extracted high-Se Brazil nut meal in a corn-based diet fed to rats produced
  2426. toxicity similar to that obtained from seleniferous com, selenomethionine, or sodium selenite
  2427. as assessed by weight gain, visually scored liver damage and liver, kidney, and spleen
  2428. weights. The Se in Brazil nuts may be as biologically potent as that from other sources.
  2429. Other nuts in this family (Lecythidaceae) contain so much selenium that overingestion can
  2430. lead to hair loss. Apparently selenium, an anticancer element, is essential in traces, toxic
  2431. in excess. However, the homeostatic human may cope with moderate excesses. “ . . . an­
  2432. imals regulate their selenium content through excretion. When the element is in short supply,
  2433. excretory metabolite production is minimal. When the needs of the organism are being met,
  2434. excess selenium is eliminated by conversion to the excretory metabolites.” ^"^
  2435. Description — Large forest tree, up to 40 m tall; leaves alternate, short-petioled, leathery,
  2436. oblong, with wavy margin, 30 to 50 cm long, 7.5 to 15 cm broad; flowers in large erect
  2437. spike-like racemes, white to cream, sepals united but finally separating into two deciduous
  2438. sepals; fruit large, brown, woody, globose, 10 to 15 cm in diameter, weighing up to 2 kg,
  2439. with an aperture at one end which is closed by a woody plug and must be broken open to
  2440. extract the “ nuts” inside; fruit may remain on the trees several months after ripening; seeds
  2441. 12 to 24 per fruit, triangular, with a brown homy testa.
  2442. Germplasm — Reported from the South American Center of Diversity, Brazil nut, or
  2443. CVS thereof, is reported to tolerate lateritic soils.
  2444. Distribution — Native to the Amazon basin of Northern Brazil, Bolivia, Colombia, Pern,
  2445. Venezuela, and Guianas, mainly along banks of the Amazon and upper Orinoco Rivers and
  2446. their tributaries. Introduced into Sri Lanka in 1880 and Singapore in 1881.^^^
  2447. Ecology — Ranging from Subtropical Moist to Tropical Dry through Wet Forest Life
  2448. Zones, Brazil nut is reported to tolerate annual precipitation of 13.5 to 41.0 (mean of 7
  2449. cases = 29.3), annual temperature of 21.3 to 27.4°C (mean of 7 cases = 25.4), and pH
  2450. of 4.3 to 8.0 (mean of 6 cases = 5.8).®^ A tropical tree, sometimes gregarious, preferring
  2451. high land, beyond reach of periodical floods. Thrives best in rich alluvial soil, in a hot moist
  2452. climate.
  2453. Cultivation — Brazil nuts are collected from wild trees and are nowhere cultivated for
  2454. commercial production. Trees are propagated from seed or by layering. From 10 to 25 years
  2455. are required for fmiting to begin. Attempts to establish Brazil nut plantations have met with
  2456. mediocrity, at best.^^^
  2457. Harvesting — After fmits have fallen and are gathered, usually during the dry season,
  2458. the nuts are extracted and shipped to Manaos or Belem do Para, where they are graded and
  2459. exported to the U.S. and Europe.
  2460. Yields and economics — A good tree will yield 300 fruits at a time, ca. 15 months after
  2461. flowering. An adult tree may yield, in normal years, from 30 to 50 kg of fruits, but yields
  2462. of more than 2000 kg per tree are reported. Early in the 20th century, with the fall of
  2463. Brazilian rubber prices in 1910 due to Asian competition, Brazil nuts became a vital export.
  2464. The first U.S. customs entry recorded was 1873, when more than 1,800 MT unshelled nuts
  2465. entered at an average price less than $0.15/kg. By 1982, spot prices for unshelled nuts were
  2466. over $3.00/kg. By 1978, 15,472 MT of in-shell nuts were exported, contrasted to 5,367
  2467. shelled nuts. The U.S. is the largest importer, followed by the U.K., West Germany, Italy,
  2468. France, Australia, and the Netherlands. Brazilian output is predicted to remain steady at
  2469. around 40 to 60 thousand MT in shell-nuts for both internal and external consumption. The
  2470. principal producer of Brazil nuts is Brazil. In 1971, the Brazil nut crop in Brazil was 22,500
  2471. MT, and in 1970, 40,000 MT. Domestic consumption in Brazil is 1,000 to 2,000 MT per
  2472. year. Shelled assorted nuts commanded $0.55/lb; unshelled, dehydrated nuts $0.23/lb; and
  2473. natural unshelled nuts $0.18/lb.^^^’^^^
  2474. 46 Handbook of Nuts
  2475. Energy — Shells and spoiled kernels supplement firewood in the power plants providing
  2476. heat for the diy'ers. Imperfect nuts are used for oil extraction, the press-cake employed as
  2477. feed for animals, whose manure could be used to extend fuel.
  2478. Biotic factors — The following fungi are known to attack this tree: Actinomyces brasi-
  2479. liensis, Aspergillus flavus, Cephalosporium bertholletianum, Cercospora bertholletiae (Gray
  2480. spot), Cunninghamella bertholletiae, Fusarium sp., Myxosporium sp., Pellionella macros-
  2481. pora, Phytophthora heveaef Piptocephalus sphaerocephala, Phomopsis bertholletianum,
  2482. and Thamnidium elegans. Albuquerque et al.^ recommend Cuprosan copper oxychloride
  2483. or difolatan-80-captafol for control of Phytopthora leaf blight. The nematode, Meloidogyne
  2484. incognita, has been found causing heavy galling on the roots.
  2485. 47
  2486. BORASSUS FLABELLIFER L. (ARECACEAE) — Palmyra Palm, Brab Tree, Woman’s
  2487. Coconut
  2488. Syn.: Borassus flabelliformis Roxb. {l)Borassus aethiopum Mart.
  2489. Uses — Palmyra palm is grown for the juice or toddy, extracted from the inflorescence
  2490. from which sugar or jaggery is made. Tender fruits resembling pieces of translucent ice are
  2491. eaten during hot season. Seeds are eaten as well as fruits. Fleshy scales of young seedling
  2492. shoots are eaten as a delicacy, especially in northern Sri Lanka, or dried to make a starchy
  2493. powder (reported to contain a neurotoxin). Salt prepared from leaves. The inflorescence is
  2494. a source of sugar, wine, and vinegar. Five types of fiber are obtained from different parts
  2495. of the plant, used for hats, thatching houses, books, writing paper, mats, bags, and all types
  2496. of utensils for carrying or storing water and food. Timber is black, sometimes with yellow
  2497. grain, strong, splits easily; said to withstand a greater cross-strain than any other known
  2498. timber; used for boat making, rafters, water pipes, walking sticks, umbrella handles and
  2499. rulers. Tree also yields a black gum. A Tamil poem enumerates 801 ways to use this palm.
  2500. Sometimes planted as a windbreak.
  2501. Folk medicine — An emollient made from the root is said to be a folk remedy for
  2502. indurations. Flower or root is a folk remedy for tumors of the uterus (Cambodia). Sprouting
  2503. seed used as a diuretic and galactagogue. Petiole used as a vermifuge in Cambodia. Root
  2504. regarded as cooling. Ash of spathe given for enlarged spleens. Juice drunk before breakfast
  2505. has important medicinal properties, and is stimulant and antiphlegmatic. Juice is diuretic,
  2506. stimulant, antiphlegmatic, useful in inflammatory affections and dropsy; pulp is demulcent
  2507. and nutritive.^*
  2508. Chemistry — Per 100 g, the mature fruit is reported to contain 43 calories, 87.6 g H2O,
  2509. 0.8 g protein, 0.1 g fat, 10.9 g total carbohydrate, 2.0 g fiber, 0.6 g ash, 27 mg Ca, 30
  2510. mg P, 1.0 mg Fe, 0.04 mg thiamine, 0.02 mg riboflavin, 0.3 mg niacin, and 5 mg ascorbic
  2511. acid. Sap contains about 12% sugar. Spontaneous fermentation produces ca. 3% alcohol
  2512. and 0.1% acids during the first 6 to 8 hr. Beyond this, fermentation goes to 5%, but there
  2513. is too much butyric acid. A cheap source of vinegar. Accordingto the Wealth of India, the
  2514. nira (fresh sap) contains 85.9% moisture, 0.2% protein, 0.02% fat, 0.29 ash, 13.5% car­
  2515. bohydrates, 12.6% total sugar, and 5.7 mg Vitamin C per 1(X) g; the gur (boiled-down
  2516. molasses) contains 8.6% moisture, 1.7% protein, 0.08% fat, 1.8% ash, 88.5% carbohydrate.
  2517. 48 Handbook of Nuts
  2518. (84% total sugar); the seed pulp contains 92.6% moisture, 0.6% protein, 0.1% fat, 0.3%
  2519. ash, 6.3% carbohydrates, and 13.1 mg/100 g vitamin The mannocellulose of the
  2520. endosperm is transformed to glucose via mannose.
  2521. Toxicity — Fleshy scale leaves of the germinating seeds, eaten by humans, contain a
  2522. neurotoxin.
  2523. Description — Tall palm, 20 to 30 m high; trunk cylindrical, 30 to 35 cm in diameter,
  2524. very hard, black, mainly composed of stiff longitudinal fibers, central portion soft and
  2525. starchy, with crown of 30 to 40 fan-like leaves. Leaves glaucous, palmate, up to 3.3 m
  2526. wide, stiff, with numerous free pointed tips, petiole 11.3 m long, channeled above, with
  2527. hard saw-like teeth on margins. Inflorescence stalks among the leaves, long, much-branched;
  2528. male and female flowers on separate trees; male flowers borne on thick digitate processes,
  2529. female flowers appearing like small fruits. Fruit a large drupe, 15 to 20^ cm in diameter,
  2530. depressed-globular, brown; exterior smooth, enclosed in a tough matted fiber; interior very
  2531. fibrous, with 2 to 3 seeds; seeds rounded, but flattish, 3.7 to 5 cm across. Spathes begin
  2532. to appear in November or December, but flowers in March; fruits July-August.
  2533. Germplasm — Reported from the African and, secondarily, the Hindustani Centers of
  2534. Diversity, palmyra palm, or cvs thereof, is reported to tolerate disease, drought, fire, high
  2535. pH, salt, sand, slope, savannah, waterlogging, and wind. The genus Borassus is believed
  2536. to contain one or as many as eight species, depending on your taxonomic point of view.
  2537. Kovoor maintains that the African B. aethiopum is distinct from B. flabellifer. No dwarf
  2538. mutants have been reported. (2n = 36.)^^’^^^
  2539. Distribution — Said to be native to Africa, but also claimed to be indigenous to tropical
  2540. India and Malaysia, where it is both wild and cultivated, especially in coastal areas. Widely
  2541. cultivated throughout tropical Asia and Africa (Congo, Gabon, Gambia, Guinea, Guinea-
  2542. Bissau, Ivory Coast, Malagasy, Mali, Mauritania, Nigeria, Senegal, Sudan, Tanzania, Upper
  2543. Volta), with huge stands covering thousands of hectares. Grown in comparatively dry parts
  2544. of Burma, India, Sri Lanka, and Malaya.Kovoor^^^ estimates that there are 10,615,000
  2545. palmyra in Sri Lanka, 60 million in India, 2,350,000 in Burma, 1,800,000 in Kampuchea,
  2546. 5 million in east Java.
  2547. Ecology — Ranging from Subtropical Dry to Moist through Tropical Very Dry to Wet
  2548. Forest Life Zones, palmyra palm is reported to tolerate annual precipitation of 6.4 to 42.9
  2549. dm (mean of 11 cases = 18.8), annual temperature of 20.6 to 27.5°C (mean of 11 cases
  2550. = 24.3°C), and pH of 4.5 to 8.0 (mean of 7 cases = 6.4).^^ Palmyra palm is grown in
  2551. regions with a pronounced dry monsoon, being especially abundant in all sandy tracts near
  2552. the sea, on embankments, and in mixed coconut and date palm jungles of Bengal.Though
  2553. drought-tolerant, it suffers little from prolonged flooding. Kovoor^^^ suggests that “ its natural
  2554. preference is for rich alluvial soil” .
  2555. Cultivation — Plants develop from self-sown seed. Seeds germinate, producing a “ sinker” ,
  2556. which grows downward 1 m before producing growth at top. “ Once sprouted, the seedling
  2557. cannot be transported. Trees are slow-growing, taking 15 to 20 years before showing a
  2558. stem above ground; in the early stages only the underground portion of the stem increases
  2559. in thickness. Male and female trees cannot be distinguished until they flower. For food, the
  2560. seed-bed is prepared and nuts planted as close together as possible about June or July, about
  2561. 50 seeds to the square meter. In about 3 to 4 months the nuts are dug up, by which time
  2562. they have germinated, and the sprouts are eaten as a vegetable. Actually, the nut is broken
  2563. open and the embryo eaten dry or made into a flour, tasting similar to tapioca.
  2564. Harvesting — Trees begin to flower when 12 to 15 years old, depending on the region,
  2565. and continue to flower for about 50 years. Female trees yield about twice as much sap as
  2566. male trees. Fresh sap, called “ sweet toddy” or “ nira” , containing about 12% sucrose, is
  2567. obtained by tapping the flower stalk. Juice may be used fresh as a beverage, or, if not treated
  2568. promptly, begins to ferment into an intoxicating liquor. Fresh juice boiled down into a sugar
  2569. called jaggery or gur, with about 80% sucrose and 2.5% glucose, is an important sugar in
  2570. 49
  2571. southern India and Burma. Tapping does not injure the tree. However, every 3 years the
  2572. sap-drawing process is omitted; otherwise the tree would die. A toddy collector climbs the
  2573. tree, tightly binds the spathes with thongs to prevent further opening, and then thoroughly
  2574. bruises the embryo flower within to facilitate the exit of juice. This operation is repeated
  2575. for several days, and on each occasion a thin slice is removed from spathe to facilitate
  2576. running of sap and to prevent it bursting the bound spathe. In about 8 days, sap begins to
  2577. exude into an earthen pot placed for that purpose. Pots are emptied twice daily, the pots
  2578. coated with lime inside to prevent fermentation. In factories, raw gur is heaped on platforms
  2579. for about 2 months to drain away most of the molasses. Then it is dissolved in water and
  2580. refined in the usual manner to make crystalline sugar. Molasses obtained during crystalli­
  2581. zation is used for producing arrack. Five types of fibers may be obtained from the Palmyra
  2582. palm, each with specific characteristics and uses:
  2583. 1. Fibers about 60 cm long, separated from leafstalks, called “ Bassine” , are used for
  2584. making rope, twine, and sometimes paper.
  2585. 2. A loose fiber surrounds the base of the leafstalk.
  2586. 3. “ Tar” , prepared from the interior of stem without any spinning or twisting, is plaited
  2587. into fishtraps.
  2588. 4. A coir is derived from the pericarp.
  2589. 5. Fibrous materials of the leaves, are tom into strips, prepared, dyed, plaited into braids,
  2590. and worked up into basketware, fancy boxes, cigar cases and hats. In Bengal, long
  2591. strips of leaf are employed by children as washable slates.
  2592. Kovoor^^^ gives good details of various methods for tapping this and other palms.
  2593. Yields and economics — Trees yield 4 to 5 quarts of sap daily for 4 to 5 months; one
  2594. gallon of sap yields about 680 g jaggery sugar, which is about 80% saccharose or sucrose.
  2595. Joshi and Gopinathan‘^^ suggest that Asian Indians can more cheaply get nearly twice as
  2596. much sugar per hectare from palm as sugar cane, i.e., ca. 6,000 kg/ha vs. 3,500 kg/ha.
  2597. Comparing B orassus with other Indian sugar palms, they note that B orassus is longest lived
  2598. (90 to 120 years), and can be tapped more than twice as many years (70 to 95 years) as
  2599. others, yielding 20 to 70 kg tree, with 1,250 trees per hectare. At one time, one-fourth of
  2600. the inhabitants of northern Sri Lanka were dependent on this tree for subsistence; in India
  2601. many also depend on it. Most of the trade in Palmyra goes through the Port of Madras.
  2602. Energy — Ironically, the palmyra is better as a fire-breaker in arid regions of West
  2603. Africa prone to wild fires. Its timber bums very poorly as firewood, and young palms are
  2604. said to be more fire resistant than old ones. The relatively high yields of sugar could be
  2605. converted renewably to alcohol for energy purposes. Kovoor^^^ notes that low bearers may
  2606. produce only about 1 €, average ones 6 to 10 €, and exceptional trees 20 Í sap per day.
  2607. Natural fermentation can take these liters to 5 to 6% ethanol.
  2608. Biotic factors — The most serious fungus attacking palmyra palm is Pythium palm ivorum
  2609. (Bud-rot, which grows into the growing point and ultimately kills the tree). Other fungal
  2610. diseases include: C ladosporiu m bora ssii, C urvularia lunata, G raphiola boras si, M icroxy-
  2611. phium sp., P en icillopsis clavariaeform is, P estalotia palm arum , P hytophthora palm ivo ra ,
  2612. S phaerodothis b o ra ssi, R osellinia cocoes. Palmyra is attacked by insects which affect coconut
  2613. palm: Rhinoceros beetle (O ryctes rh in oceros)’, Black headed caterpillar {N ephantis serin o p a ),’
  2614. and Red palm weevil (R hynchophorus ferrugineus).^^^’^^^ Termites and grubs of the Rhi­
  2615. noceros beetle can be very destmctive to germinating seeds. In Guinea-Bissau, several insects
  2616. “ commence their destructive careers by turning saprophytic on dead palms” . The most
  2617. predominant of them is O ryctes g ig a s, whereas others like O. ow arien sis, O. m on oceros,
  2618. R h yn ch ophoru sph oen icis, P latygen ia barbata, and P achnoda m arginella are common. Still,
  2619. Kovoor^^^ concludes that the palm is extraordinarily disease-resistant. One study showed
  2620. that more than 2% of the trees were infested with scorpions or snakes.
  2621. 50 Handbook of Nuts
  2622. BROSIMUM ALICASTRUM Swartz (MORACEAE) — Breadnut, Ramon, Capomo, Masico
  2623. Uses — Branches and leaves used as an important cattle fodder, especially during the
  2624. drier months in regions where trees are plentiful. Lopped branches (ramón) are relished by
  2625. cattle; fallen leaves and nuts are also relished by cattle and pigs. Feeding ramón forage is
  2626. said to augment milk production 1 to 2 € a day in dairy cattle. The milky latex, which flows
  2627. freely when the trunk is cut, is mixed with chicle or drunk like cow’s milk. Sweet pericarp
  2628. of fruit eaten raw by humans. Fruits boiled and eaten in Costa Rica. The seeds, or breadnuts,
  2629. with chestnut-like flavor, are eaten raw, boiled, roasted, or reduced to a meal often mixed
  2630. with com meal for making tortillas, or baked with green plaintain. They are eaten alone or
  2631. with plantain, maize, or honey, or boiled in symp to make a sweetmeat. Seeds used as a
  2632. coffee substitute. Wood is hard, compact, white, grayish, or tinged with pink, easy to work
  2633. and used in carpentry, a valuable timber sometimes used in constmction, cabinet work, and
  2634. other purposes in Yucatan.
  2635. Folk medicine — According to Hartwell,the plant is used in folk remedies for cancer
  2636. of the utems. Reported to be lactagague and sedative, ramón is a folk remedy for asthma
  2637. (latex, leaves), bronchitis, and chest ailments.^’ Guatemalans drink the latex as a pectoral
  2638. for stomach disorders. Crushed seeds are taken in sweetened water as a lactagogue. The
  2639. bark shows CNS-depressant activity Leaf infusions are used in cough and kidney ailments.
  2640. The diluted latex is used to aid tooth extraction.
  2641. Chemistry — Per 1(X) g, the leaf is reported to contain 127 calories, 62.0 g H2O, 3.2 g
  2642. protein, 1.2 g fat, 30.6 g total carbohydrate, 8.9 g fiber, 3.0 g ash, 530 mg Ca, 68 mg P,
  2643. 5.4 mg Fe, 820 mg beta-carotene equivalent, 0.24 mg thiamine, 0.51 mg riboflavin, 1.4
  2644. mg niacin, and 55 mg ascorbic acid. Per 100 g, the fruit is reported to contain 56 calories,
  2645. 84.0 g H2O, 2.5 g protein, 0.5 g fat, 12.1 g total carbohydrate, 1.2 g fiber, 0.9 g ash, 45
  2646. 51
  2647. mg Ca, 36 mg P, 0.8 mg Fe, 840 mg beta-carotene equivalent, 0.5 mg thiamine, 1.52 mg
  2648. riboflavin, 0.8 mg niacin, and 28 mg ascorbic acid. Per 100 g, the seed is reported to contain
  2649. 363 calories, 6.5 g H2O, 11.4 g protein, 1.6 g fat, 76.1 g total carbohydrate, 6.2 g fiber,
  2650. 4.4 g ash, 211 mg Ca, 142 mg P, 4.6 mg Fe, 128 mg beta-carotene equivalent, 0.03 mg
  2651. thiamine, 0.14 mg riboflavin, and 2.1 mg niacin. Another seed analysis shows, per 100 g
  2652. (oven-dry basis), 361 calories, 40 to 50 g H2O, 12.8 g protein, 4.6 g fiber, 178 mg Ca,
  2653. 122 mg P, 3.8 mg Fe, KX) (xg beta-carotene equivalent, 0.1 mg thiamine, 0.1 mg riboflavin,
  2654. 1.6 mg niacin, and 50 mg ascorbic acid. Seed contains an essential oil, resin, wax, mucilage,
  2655. dextrin, and glucose. The crude protein content of the seeds in higher than com, the tryp­
  2656. tophan content is four times higher, significant among corn-fed L atins.P eters and Pardo-
  2657. Tejeda^^® report the seeds to contain 10.4% leucine, 9.7% valine, 3.3% isoleucine, 4.0%
  2658. phenylalanine, 2.3% lysine, 2.4% threonine, 2.3% tryptophan, 1.0% hisitidine, 0.7% me­
  2659. thionine, 5.1% arginine, 15.3% aspartic acid, 6.7% proline, 9.9% cystine, 2.9% serine,
  2660. 2.3% glycine, 3.7% tyrosine, and 2.5% alanine.
  2661. Description — Evergreen, dioecious, tropical tree, 20 to 35(to 40) m tall, trunk to 1 m
  2662. in diameter, sometimes with buttresses; latex white to yellow; leafy twigs 1 to 4 mm thick,
  2663. glabrous or sparsely pubemlent; leaves alternate, elliptic to oblong or lanceolate, slightly
  2664. inequilateral, often broadest above to below the middle, 4 to 28 cm long, 2 to 11 cm broad,
  2665. chartaceous to coriaceous, acuminate, nearly acute, also acute at the base, or obtuse, tmncate
  2666. or subcordate; margin entire, rarely denticulate; glabrous to sparsely pubemlent beneath,
  2667. and pubescent on the costa, 12 to 21 pairs of secondary veins, with or without some parallel
  2668. tertiary veins; petioles 2 to 14 mm long; stipules nearly fully amplexicaul, 5 to 15 mm long,
  2669. glabrous to pubescent; inflorescences solitary, in twos or several together, subglobose to
  2670. ellipsoid, subsessile or pedunculate, the peduncle up to 1.5 cm long; bracts 0.2 to 2 mm in
  2671. diameter, pubemlent, the basal ones sometimes basally attached; staminate influorescence
  2672. 3 to 8 mm in diameter, with one central abortive pistillate flower; staminate flowers nu­
  2673. merous, perianth absent or minute one, 1 stamen; pistillate inflorescence 2 to 4 mm in
  2674. diameter, with 1 or 2, occasionally many, abortive flowers, style 1.5 to 8.5 mm long,
  2675. stigmas 0.2 to 8 mm long; infmctescences subglobose, 1.5 to 2 cm in diameter, at maturity
  2676. yellow, brownish, or orange; seeds small, roundish, yellow or brownish, 1.3 cm or less in
  2677. diameter, borne singly or in twos, in a thin, paper-like, stout shell, surface of seed smooth
  2678. or somewhat granular. Flowers throughout the year.^^®
  2679. Germplasm — Reported from the Middle and South American Centers of Diversity,
  2680. ramón, or cvs thereof, is reported to tolerate drought, fungi, insects, limestone, slope, and
  2681. waterlogging.®^ Besides the typical form with the anthers peltate with fused thecae, found
  2682. in West Indies and Central America, there is a subsp. bolivarense (Pittier) Berg, called
  2683. Guaimoro (Colombia and Venezuela), and Tillo (Ecuador), in which thecae are free, growing
  2684. from Panama through the Andes to Guyana and in Brazil to Acre Territory.
  2685. Distribution — Native from the Pacific Coast of Mexico (Sinaloa) south through Central
  2686. America to Ecuador, Guyana, and parts of Brazil; also in the West Indies. Introduced and
  2687. planted in Singapore, Trinidad, and Florida.
  2688. Ecology — Ranging from Subtropical Dry to Moist through Tropical Dry to Wet Forest
  2689. Life Zones, ramón is reported to tolerate annual precipitation of 3 to 40 dm, annual tem­
  2690. perature of 19 to 26°C, and pH of 5.0 to 8.0. Nearly pure stands may occur on steep
  2691. calcareous slopes.®^ In evergreen, semi-evergreen or deciduous forests in tropical climates,
  2692. from 50 to 8(X) m (to 1,0(X) m) altitudes, sometimes in cloud-forests, regionally abundant,
  2693. but also planted. Trees are extremely tolerant of drought, and grow well in dry habitats as
  2694. well as in seasonally flooded places as along rivers and in swampy areas. Common on
  2695. limestone in Jamaica. Thrives on various types of soils in tropical regions.^^®
  2696. Cultivation — Propagated by seeds, cuttings, and air-layering. Seeds germinate readily.
  2697. After trees are established, they grow well without much care. Often form a large portion
  2698. of the forest tree population in some regions.^^®
  2699. 52 Handbook of Nuts
  2700. Harvesting — Branches are cut by men who climb the trees with machetes, and cut down
  2701. limbs for stock to browse upon. To increase the yield of fodder, it is suggested that close­
  2702. planting and regular coppicing may be tested. Nuts collected from the ground by natives
  2703. are used for food, or for making a black meal for making tortillas and other food-stuffs.
  2704. Timber is harvested from mature trees and used, especially in the Yucatan.
  2705. Yields and economics — Fodder yield of natural and coppiced trees is not known but
  2706. should be ascertained. There seems to be plenty of fodder material about when it is needed
  2707. during dry spells.Peters and Pardo-Tejeda^^® put yields at 50 to 75 kg fruit per female
  2708. tree per year. Based on a rough estimate of the distribution in Vera Cruz, Mexico, it is
  2709. estimated that 80,000 MT seed could be collected annually with an annual production of
  2710. 10,000 MT crude protein, leaving the trees standing strong against erosion. Yucatan plantings
  2711. are producing 10 to 15 MT forage per ha at each lopping. Thus ramón plantations produce
  2712. almost twice as much (lactogenic) forage as established pasture.O f great value since
  2713. ancient times in Central America, the West Indies, and northern tropical South America for
  2714. a fodder food for stock and as a source of seeds for meal, latex for food, and timber for
  2715. construction and other purposes. Not a commercial trade crop, but very important locally
  2716. for these many purposes.
  2717. Energy — Assuming that the 80,000 MT seed was gathered for the production of 10,000
  2718. MT crude protein, there would, of course, be a 70,000 MT biomass available for energy
  2719. production. I would estimate that litter-fall from this species might approach 5 to 10 MT/ha.
  2720. Although not a leader among firewoods, the wood could also be renewably gathered for
  2721. fuel wood. As Gomez-Pampa^'^ notes, “ With a year-round, food-producing plant, we can
  2722. liberate a good part of the energy that is currently spent on the production of grain for basic
  2723. food products in tropical regions,” where “ weakness of tropical soils for annual crops has
  2724. always been a limiting factor.”
  2725. Biotic Factors — Seeds stored when fresh are promptly infested by Aspergillus, some
  2726. of which contain toxic compounds.
  2727. 53
  2728. BROSIMUM UTILE (H.B.K.) Pitt. (MORACEAE) — Cow Tree, Palo de Vaca
  2729. Syn.: B rosiu m g alactoden dron D. Don in Sweet, G alactoden dron utile H.B.K.
  2730. Uses — Latex from trunk, considered to be highly nutritive, is used by natives as a milk­
  2731. like beverage, as a cream substitute in coffee, made into a kind of vegetable cheese, and
  2732. made into a dessert after being chilled, whipped, and flavored. Laborers soak their bread
  2733. in it. Used as a base for chewing gum. Bark used by Indians for making cloth, blankets,
  2734. and sails. Plants grown in tropical areas for fruit or nuts and for leaves used for fodder.
  2735. Fleshy outer layer of fruit eaten by parrots. Humans also eat the fruits, raw or cooked.^®
  2736. The soft, white wood, though not durable, has been used for concrete forms, boxes, and
  2737. sheathing.
  2738. Folk medicine — According to Hartw ell,a plaster of the milk is said to be a folk
  2739. remedy for swelling of the spleen and indolent tumors. Reported to be lactagague and
  2740. masticatory, cow tree is a folk remedy for asthma, inflammation, and tumors.^’ The latex
  2741. is taken for asthma in Venezuela, and as an astringent for diarrhea in Costa Rica.^^'^
  2742. Chemistry — The latex contains 3.8% wax, 0.4% fibrin, 4.7% sugar and gum, and
  2743. 31.4% resins.Garcia-Barriga*®^ states that the latex contains 57.3% water, 0.4% albumen,
  2744. 31.4% wax of the formula C35H66O3, 5.8% wax of the formula C35H58O7, and 4.7% gum
  2745. and sugars.
  2746. Description — Laticiferous tree, 20 to 25 m tall, with simple trunk 40 to 50 cm in
  2747. diameter at base, bark thick, grayish, smooth or verrucose, crown elongate; young brancelets
  2748. subangular, more or less pubescent; leaves coriaceous; petioles 0.5 to 1.5 cm long, thick,
  2749. canaliculate, sparsely pubescent; blades ovate, elliptic, rounded at base, abruptly acuminate
  2750. at apex in a drip tip, 10 to 25 cm long, 3.5 to 9.5 cm broad, glabrous on both surfaces,
  2751. green above, golden-brown beneath, margin entire, venation impressed on upper surface,
  2752. prominent and slightly pubescent on lower one; primary veins 27 to 30, parallel, straight,
  2753. almost transverse; stipules about 2 cm long, acute-lanceolate, silky pubescent, canducous,
  2754. leaving a circular scar at each node; receptacles globose with 1 female flower, solitary in
  2755. axils of leaves, long-pedunculate, about 7 mm in diameter in flowering stage; bractlet
  2756. orbicular, thick, sessile, pilose-pubescent; staminal bractlets short (0.5 mm long), broad and
  2757. ciliate; stamens 0.7 to 1.4 mm long, solitary, with smooth filaments, anthers ovate and 2-
  2758. celled; ovary inserted 2.5 to 3 mm deep in receptacle; fruit depressed-globose, 2 to 2.5 cm
  2759. in diameter, epicarp fleshy, 4 to 6 mm thick, yellow at maturity, mesocarp woody, rugose
  2760. on surface, entirely filled with a single almond-like, white seed. Flowers and fruits
  2761. September.
  2762. Germplasm — Reported from the Middle and South American Centers of Diversity, cow
  2763. tree, or cvs thereof, is reported to tolerate slope.
  2764. Distribution — Native to tropical America from Nicaragua and Costa Rica south into
  2765. northern South America, Colombia, and Venezuela, sometimes being the common tree in
  2766. upland forests.
  2767. Ecology — Ranging from Tropical Dry to Moist Forest Life Zones, cow tree is reported
  2768. to tolerate annual precipitation of 3 to 40 dm, annual temperature of 25 to 27°C, and pH
  2769. of 8.0.^^ Thrives in wet and subtropical climates, especially on hillsides bordering rivers.^^®
  2770. Cultivation — Propagation by cuttings over heat. When cuttings are rooted, they are
  2771. planted in the forest where they soon became established. Plants rarely cultivated as a pure
  2772. crop, because the trees freely propagate naturally in the forest.
  2773. Harvesting — Incisions are made in trunk of tree, after which there is a profuse flow of
  2774. gluey, thick milk, destitute of acridity and giving off a very agreeable balsamic odor. When
  2775. exposed to air, the fluid displays on its surface, probably by absorption of atmospheric
  2776. oxygen, membranes of a highly animal nature, yellowish and thready, like those of cheese.
  2777. These, when separated from the more watery liquid, are nearly as elastic as those of caoutch­
  2778. 54 Handbook of Nuts
  2779. ouc, but in time they exhibit the same tendency to purify as gelatin. The milk itself, kept
  2780. in a corked bottle, only deposits a small amount of coagulum and continues to give off the
  2781. balsamic scent. Large quantities of this vegetable milk are drunk by the natives and it has
  2782. been noted that workers gain weight during that time of year when the tree produces the
  2783. most milk.‘^ ’^^^
  2784. Yields and economics — No yield data available. Widely used in the areas where the
  2785. tree grows native, namely southern Central America and northern South America. Not known
  2786. to be of international commercial value.
  2787. Energy — The wood can serve as a fuel wood, said to bum green. Resin extracted from
  2788. the fmits is used to make candles. The latex is mixed with balsa charcoal and wrapped in
  2789. palm leaves to serve as a torch.
  2790. Biotic factors — I find no reports of pests or diseases on this tree.
  2791. 55
  2792. BRUGUIERA GYMNORRHIZA (L.) Savigny (RHIZOPHORACEAE) — Burma Mangrove
  2793. Syn.: B ru g u iera con ju gata Auct.
  2794. Uses — The heavy wood (sp. grav. 0.87 to 1.08) is durable, but hard to saw and work.
  2795. It is used for construction, furniture, house-posts, and pilings.Thousands of tons of
  2796. Bruguiera wood chips are exported annually from Indonesia, Sabah, and Sarawak for pulp
  2797. and for rayon manufacture.Fruits are eaten, but not when anything better is available.
  2798. More often, they are chewed as astringent with the betel quid. Since it is mostly the seed
  2799. or embryo of this one-seeded indéhiscent fruit that is eaten, this can be called a tropical
  2800. nut. Embryos of several species are eaten, usually after processing.Chinese in Java make
  2801. a sweetmeat therefrom. In the South Pacific, fruits are peeled, sliced, and soaked in water
  2802. for several hours, then steamed or boiled and eaten with coconut cream.Dutch Indians
  2803. use the bark to flavor raw fish. The leaves and peeled hypocotyls are eaten in the Moluccas
  2804. after soaking and boiling.In the Loyalty Islands, the embryo is kept for months after
  2805. sundrying.The phlobaphene coloring matter is used in China and Malaya for black dye.^^
  2806. In South Africa, the tree has been planted to stabilize dunes and in fresh-water swamps.
  2807. Folk medicine — Reported to be astringent,^* the bark is used for diarrhea and fever in
  2808. Indonesia.Cambodians use the astringent bark for malaria.
  2809. Chemistry — In Burma, leaves may contain 18.3% H2O, 13.5% tannin; outer cortex
  2810. (small trees) 14.6 and 7.9, outer cortex (large trees) 14.2 and 10.8; twig bark 13.1 and
  2811. 14.8, bole bark (small trees) 16.3 and 31.7; whereas the bole bark of large trees contains
  2812. 12.5% H2O, 42.3% tannin. Bark contains from ca.4 to 53.12% tannin, according to Watt
  2813. and Breyer-Brandwijk^^^ and The Wealth of India
  2814. Toxicity — Eating too much (bark) is dangerous.The skull and crossbones indicate
  2815. that Menninger^^ considers the “ nuts” to be poisonous.
  2816. Description — Evergreen tree 8 to 25(to 35) m high, with straight trunk 40 to 90 cm in
  2817. diameter, buttressed at base, and with many upright pneumatophores rising to 45 cm from
  2818. Handbook of Nuts
  2819. 56
  2820. long horizontal roots. Bark gray to blackish, smooth to roughly fissured, thick; inner bark
  2821. reddish. Leaves opposite, elliptical, 9 to 20 cm long, 5 to 7 cm wide, acute at both ends,
  2822. entire, without visible veins, thick, leathery, glabrous. Petioles 2 to 4.5 cm long. Flowers
  2823. single in leaf axils, 3 to 4 cm long, usually drooping on stalk of 1 to 2.5 cm, red to yellowish
  2824. or cream-colored, with red to pink-red bell-shaped hypanthium. Calyx with 10 to 14 very
  2825. narrow, leathery lobes. Petals 10 to 14, 13 to 15 mm long, white turning brown, each with
  2826. 2 narrow lobes ending in 3 to 4 bristles. Stamens 2, nearly hidden at base of each petal.
  2827. Pistil with inferior 3- to 4-celled ovary, each cell with 2 ovules; style slender; stigma with
  2828. 3 to 4 short forks. Berry drooping, ovoid or turbinate, 2 to 2.5 cm long. Seed 1, viviparous,
  2829. finally 1.5 to 2 cm in diameter.
  2830. Germplasm — Reported from the Hindustani, African, Australian, and Indonesian-In-
  2831. dochina Centers of Diversity, Burma mangrove, or cvs thereof, is reported to tolerate alkali,
  2832. disease, high pH, insects, pest, salt, shade, waterlogging.
  2833. Distribution — Tropical South and East Africa, Madagascar, Seychelles, Sri Lanka,
  2834. southeastern Asia, Ryukyu; throughout Malaysia to Philippines, Australia, Micronesia, and
  2835. Polynesia. Introduced into Hawaii.'**
  2836. Ecology — Estimated to range from Tropical Moist to Rain through Subtropical Moist
  2837. to Rain Forest Life Zones, Burma mangrove is reported to tolerate annual precipitation of
  2838. 10 to 80 dm, annual temperature of 20 to 26°C, and pH of 6.0 to 8.5. One of the largest
  2839. trees in the Malayan mangroves, usually on drier well-aerated soils toward the landward
  2840. side, often dominating with occasional stems >35 m tall. It is probably the longest-lived
  2841. of the mangroves. It can stand “ any amount of shade,M ostly on brackish or saline silts
  2842. of depositing shores and marshes.
  2843. Cultivation — According to the NAS,^^^ planting is usually not needed, because natural
  2844. regeneration is so successful. In Avicennia and Rhizophora, direct seeding results in ca.90%
  2845. survival.
  2846. Harvesting — Mostly harvested from natural stands. Species of Rhizophoraceae, growing
  2847. only from the tips of the branches, are often killed by indiscriminate lopping of branches.
  2848. After felling, its regeneration is often very scant and there is danger of overgrowth by
  2849. Acrostichum (but once seedlings have established themselves, the “ fern acts rather as a
  2850. nurse, forcing the seedling up.“ ).''^®
  2851. Yields and economics — A good mangrove stand can show annual productivity of 10
  2852. to 20(to 25) MT/ha/year, but for firewood purposes, I would reduce that to 10 to 20 (to 25)
  2853. m^/ha/year, figuring that as optimal rather than average. Litter-fall may account for 1/3 to
  2854. 1/2 of above-ground productivity. Because of the heaviness of the wood, a cubic meter of
  2855. mangrove wood is generally more valuable than the wood of other species.
  2856. Energy — Wood widely used for charcoal and fuel.'** For charcoal, the tree seems to
  2857. rank with Rhizophora, with an even higher calorific value. According to The Wealth of
  2858. Indiaf^ the calorific value of moisture-free sapwood is 5,169 cals, heartwood 5,019.
  2859. Biotic factors — No data available.
  2860. 57
  2861. BUCHANANIA LANZAN Spreng. (ANACARDIACEAE) Chirauli Nut, Cuddapah Almond,
  2862. Cheronjee, Chironjii, Almondette
  2863. Syn.: B. latifolia Roxb.
  2864. Uses — Cuddapah almond is cultivated for the fresh fruit, which has a very agreeable
  2865. flavor. The delicate nutty-flavored seed is very nutritious, especially when roasted. Seeds
  2866. are consumed by natives of India and Burma, roasted with milk or as sweetmeats. Seeds
  2867. are also the source of an excellent oil, which is light yellow, sweet, mild with pleasant
  2868. aroma, and used as a substitute for olive oil or almond oil in confectionery, and in medicinal
  2869. preparations — especially applied to glandular swellings of the neck. A gum (Chironji-
  2870. kigond) is sold at bazaars in India and has adhesive properties. Kernels are used as important
  2871. articles of trade, in exchange for salt, grain, and cloth. Leaves are used as fodder in Bombay
  2872. and Punjab. Bark and fruits furnish a natural varnish. A pellucid gum, obtained from wounds
  2873. on stems, is used in diarrhea. Used to tan leathers of dark reddish-brown color with a
  2874. somewhat stiff, harsh texture. Wood is light gray to grayish-brown, sometimes with a faint
  2875. yellow tinge, to dark-brown in heartwood of old trees, rough, very light, straight-grained,
  2876. coarse-textured, moderately strong, used for boxes, yokes, doors, cheap furniture, posts,
  2877. and bedsteads. Berar females use the pounded kernels to remove facial spots and
  2878. blemishes.
  2879. Folk medicine — Reported to be antidotal for fish poisoning and scorpion stings, al­
  2880. mondette is a folk remedy for asthma, bronchitis, bums, cholera, consumption, cough,
  2881. diarrhea, dysuria, fever, gingivitis, phthisis, and snakebite.Describing the genus Buck-
  2882. anania as therapeutically inert, Kirtikar and Basu^^^ go on to describe the almondette as
  2883. used in the Ayurvedic and Yunani systems of medicines. Ayurvedics use the roots for
  2884. biliousness and blood disorders; the fruits for blood diseases, fevers, impotence, thirst, and
  2885. ulcers; the aphrodisiac cardiotonic seeds for biliousness. Yunani consider the seed aphro­
  2886. disiac, expectorant, stomachic, and tonic. Useful in fever, gleet, and urinary concretions,
  2887. 58 Handbook of Nuts
  2888. it is believed to cause headache. Yunani regard the leaf juice as antibilious, aphrodisiac,
  2889. depurative, digestive, expectorant, purgative, and refrigerant. The seed oil is applied to
  2890. glandular swellings on the neck. It is also used for itch, pimples, and prickly heat. In Madras,
  2891. the gum is given with goat’s milk for intercostal pain. Hakims apply the fruit to inflamed
  2892. or indurate tongue.^'
  2893. Chemistry — Seeds contain 51.8% oil, 12.1% starch, 21.6% protein, 5% sugar;^^^ bark
  2894. contains 13.4% tannin.Kernels also contain 152 mg Ca and 499 mg P (per 1(X) g); deficient
  2895. in amino acids lysine and methionine.The fatty acid composition of B. lanzan seed oil,
  2896. determined by urea complex formation and GLC, was found to be: myristic, 0.6%, palmitic,
  2897. 33.4%, stearic, 6.3%, oleic, 53.7%, and linoleic, 6.0%. Triglyceride compositions of the
  2898. native seed oil were calculated from the fatty acid compositions of the triglycerides and of
  2899. the corresponding 2-monoglycerides produced by pancreatic lipase hydrolysis. The oil is
  2900. composed of 3.2, 35.8, 45.5, and 15.5% trisaturated, monounsaturated disaturated, diun-
  2901. saturated monosaturated, and triunsaturated glycerides, respectively. The special character­
  2902. istics of B. lanzan seed oil is its content of 22.7, 31.0, and 11.3% dipalmitoolein,
  2903. dioleopalmitin, and triolein, respectively. The percent trisaturated glyceride content of the
  2904. oil increased from 3.2 to 7.5 by the process of randomization. On directed interesterification,
  2905. the oil yielded a product with a slip-point of 41.5°C which may be suitable as a coating
  2906. material for delayed action tablets. The oil also appears to be a promising commercial source
  2907. of palmitic and oleic acids.
  2908. Description — Moderate-sized tree, up to 17 m tall and a girth of 1.3 m; young branches
  2909. pubescent; leaves alternate, simple, leathery, entire, 12 to 25 x 6 to 12.5 cm, petioled;
  2910. flowers small, sessile, white, monoecious, in terminal or axillary panicles, crowded; calyx
  2911. short, persistent, the lobes ciliate; petals 4 to 5, ca. 2.5 mm long, oblong, recurved; stamens
  2912. 8 to 10, free, inserted at base of disk; fruit black, single-seeded drupe, 1.3 cm in diameter,
  2913. with scanty flesh; stone crustaceous or bony, 2-valved; seeds (kernels) gibbous, acute at
  2914. one end, size of small cherries. Flowers spring; fruits summer.
  2915. Germplasm — Reported for the Hindustani Center of Diversity, almondette, or cvs
  2916. thereof, is reported to tolerate savanna, slope, and dry deciduous forests.
  2917. Distribution — Native to Southeast Asia, mostly India, Burma, and Indochina, especially
  2918. in mountainous regions, almondette is widely cultivated throughout India, ascending to 10(X)
  2919. m in northwestern India and Nepal, spreading towards Malaya, Thailand, and Yunan.^^^
  2920. Ecology — Ranging from Subtropical Moist to Tropical Dry through Wet Forest Life
  2921. Zones, almondette is reported to tolerate annual precipitation of 7 to 40 dm, annual tem­
  2922. perature of 23 to 25°C, and pH of 5.0 to 6.0. Trees are found in dry deciduous forests.
  2923. Within its natural habitat it is a useful tree for covering dry hillsides.
  2924. Cultivation — Propagated from seed; not formally cultivated.
  2925. Harvesting — Harvested from the wild.^®
  2926. Yields and Economics — In Madras, a tree will yield ca.0.4 kg gum/year. Wood is
  2927. rather cheap; in 1937, Bombay Rs 25 to 35 per ton, in Orissa, Rs 19 per ton. Fruits are
  2928. frequently sold at bazaars in India, at about 4 to 6 annas per It takes 36 kg nuts to
  2929. yield 10 kg oil as expressed in India.
  2930. Energy — In Tropical Dry Forest near Varanasi, Shorea robusta may be dominant,
  2931. followed by Buchanania lanzan, with standing biomass of 26.8 and 8.3 MT/ha and annual
  2932. net production of 2.21 and 0.79 MT/ha respectively. Litter amounts to 1.51 MT and 0.58
  2933. MT/ha respectively A seedling in its first year will produce only 0.19 g biomass, compared
  2934. to 5.98 g for Butea monosperma, 12.43 g for Areca catechu.^^^
  2935. Biotic factors — Tree attacked by the fungus Marasmius sp. and by the parasitic flowering
  2936. plant, Dendrophthoe falcata.^^^
  2937. 59
  2938. BUTYROSPERMUM PARADOXUM (Gaertn.f.) Hepper (SAPOTACEAE)
  2939. Shea Nut,
  2940. Butterseed
  2941. Inch: B, parkii
  2942. Uses — An important oil-producing tree, it is the source of shea butter, an edible fat or
  2943. vegetable butter extracted from the ripe seeds. Natives use shea butter as cooking fat, an
  2944. illuminant, a medicinal ointment, dressing for the hair, and for making soap. Shea nut meal
  2945. used for hog-feed, having 60% carbohydrate and 12% protein. Gutta-shea is a reddish
  2946. exudation obtained by tapping the tree with removal of pieces of bark with a narrow axe.
  2947. Latex is removed on the following day, boiled and cleaned of dirt and bark; it is a mixture
  2948. of resin and gutta, called “ balata” or “ Red Kano rubber’ Wood is dull red, very heavy,
  2949. termite-proof, difficult to work, but takes a good polish and is very durable. Used for wooden
  2950. bowls, mortars and pestles; used as firewood, producing great heat and making charcoal.
  2951. In Sierra Leone, used for ribs of boats and in marine workshops. Ashes from burning of
  2952. wood commonly used as the lye in indigo dyeing. Flowers provide bee nectar.
  2953. Folk medicine — Nakanis of West Africa use the bark decoction to bathe children and
  2954. as a medicine. On the Ivory Coast, it is used in baths and sitz-baths to facilitate delivery.
  2955. Lobis use the leaf decoction as an eye bath. Young leaves are used in steam vapors to
  2956. alleviate headache. Oil used as a topical emollient and vehicle for other pharmaceuticals.
  2957. Medicinally, butter used for rubbing on rheumatic pains or mixed with other medicines to
  2958. replace other oils. Also used both internally and externally on horses for galls and other
  2959. sores. Root-bark, boiled and pounded, applied to chronic sores in horses. Crushed bark used
  2960. as a remedy for leprosy. Latex is not poisonous, but a decoction of the bark is lethal. Root
  2961. mixed with scourings of tobacco as a poison.^’
  2962. Chemistry — Per 100 g, the seed (ZMB) is reported to contain 622 calories, 7.3 g protein,
  2963. 52.6 g fat, 38.2 g total carbohydrate, 5.6 g fiber, 1.8 g ash, 107 mg Ca, 43 mg P, 3.2 mg
  2964. 60 Handbook of Nuts
  2965. Fe, and 0.56 mg thiamine.®^ The fat contains 45.6% oleic acid, 44.3% stearic acid, 5.5%
  2966. linoleic acid. Of the 2 monoglycerides, 82.1% was oleates and 14% linoleates.^^^ Another
  2967. report puts it at 5.7% palmitic, 41.0% stearic, 49.0% oleic, and 4.3% linoleic. Allantoin
  2968. and its intermediary products constitute 24 to 28% of the total N of a water extract of defatted
  2969. shea kernel meal.^* Alpha- and beta-amyrin, basseol, parkeol, and lupeol are also reported.
  2970. According to Roche and Michel,the seed protein contains 8.2% arginine, 1.0% cystine,
  2971. 9.9% leucine, 2.9% phenylalanine, 1.1% tryptophane, and 1.4% valine.
  2972. Description — Stout, much-branched tree to 20 m tall; crown spreading, bark usually
  2973. gray or blackish, deeply fissured and splitting into squarish or rectangular corky scales;
  2974. short-shoots with conspicuous angular leaf-base scars; young shoots, petioles and flower
  2975. buds with rusty pubescence. Leaves oblong to ovate-oblong, 10 to 25 cm long, 4.5 to 14
  2976. cm broad, rounded at apex, base acute to broadly cuneate, margin undulate and thickened;
  2977. the petioles one-third to one-half the length of lamina; both surfaces either pubescent or
  2978. glabrescent, lateral veins 20 to 30 on each side, regularly and closely spaced, slightly arcuate;
  2979. leaves reddish when young flowers fragrant, in dense clusters, at tips of branchlets, above
  2980. leaves of previous year; pedicels up to 3 cm long, puberulous to densely pubescent; outer
  2981. sepals lanceolate, 9 to 14 mm long, 3.5 to 6 mm broad, pubescent or more or less floccose
  2982. externally; inner sepals slightly smaller; corolla creamy white, tube 2.5 to 4 mm long,
  2983. glabrous or pilose externally, lobes broadly ovate, 7 to 11 mm long, 4.5 to 7 mm broad;
  2984. filaments 7 to 12 mm long, anthers more or less lanceolate, up to 4.5 mm long; staminodes
  2985. up to 8 mm long; style 8 to 15 mm long. Fruit ellipsoid, greenish, up to 6.5 cm long, 4.5
  2986. cm in diameter, subglabrous or with pubescence persistent in patches, containing a sweet
  2987. pulp surrounding the seed. Seed up to 5 cm long, 3.5 cm in diameter, usually solitary,
  2988. sometimes up to 3 per fruit, shining dark-brown, with a large white scar on one side.
  2989. Germination cryptocotylar.^^®
  2990. Germplasm — Reported from the African Center of Diversity, shea nut, or cvs thereof,
  2991. is reported to tolerate drought, fire, grazing, laterite, savanna, and slope.Several mor­
  2992. phological and physiological forms differ in shape and size of fruits and seeds, and in
  2993. chemical analysis of kernels and fruit, thickness of pericarp, and early fruiting period. Besides
  2994. the common type, there are two recognized varieties or subspecies: subsp. parkii (G.Don)
  2995. Hepper {Butyrospermum parkii (G.Don) Kotschy, Brassia parkii G.Don) is less dense a
  2996. plant, with shorter indumentum, smaller flowers, and the style is 8 to 12 mm long; subsp.
  2997. niloticum (Kotschy) Hepper has densely ferrugineous parts, with a corolla tube pilose ex­
  2998. ternally, lobes 9.5 to 11 mm long, 6.5 to 7 mm broad, filaments 10 to 12 mm long, and
  2999. the style 12 to 15 mm long.^^®
  3000. Distribution — Widespread throughout tropical Africa from West Africa (Liberia, Gold
  3001. Coast, Nigeria, Togo, Dahomey, Senegal, Sierra Leone) to Sudan and Uganda, south to
  3002. eastern Congo.
  3003. Ecology — Ranging from Subtropical Dry to Wet through Tropical Dry to Moist Forest
  3004. Life Zones, shea nut is estimated to tolerate annual precipitation of 8 to 25 dm, annual
  3005. temperature of 23 to 2TC, and pH of 4.9 to 6.5.®^ Frequent in savanna regions or as scattered
  3006. trees in grasslands across central Africa from West Africa to East Africa. Often protected
  3007. and preserved in cultivated land. Common on dry laterite slopes, but not in alluvial hollows
  3008. or land subject to flooding. Grows from 950 to 1,500 m elevations.^^®
  3009. Cultivation — Seeds germinate readily on the ground under natural conditions. Fresh
  3010. seed is essential. Seedlings develop a very long taproot, making transplanting hazardous.
  3011. Trees grow very slowly from seed, bearing fruit in 12 to 15 years, taking up to 30 years to
  3012. reach maturity. Natural propagation is chiefly from root-suckers.^^®
  3013. Harvesting — Fruits mostly harvested at end of July, usually during the rainy season.
  3014. Shea oil is the native product expressed from kernels in Europe; shea butter is material
  3015. prepared by native methods. In West Africa, the preparation of shea butter is woman’s work.
  3016. 61
  3017. In Nigeria, nuts are collected by one tribe, sold to another, and the butter bartered back.
  3018. Preparation of shea butter consists of pounding usually roasted kernels in mortar to a coarse
  3019. pulp, and then grinding this into a fine oily paste with chocolate aroma. Tannin present
  3020. makes this form inedible. In some areas, this mass is further worked with a little water in
  3021. a large pot in the ground, followed by hand-kneading and washing in cold water. From this
  3022. the butter is extracted by boiling and skimming; then it is boiled again to purify further,
  3023. after which it is transferred to molds. Locally, nuts are boiled before cracking; extraction
  3024. is made from the sun-dried kernels. Ordinary oven-drying causes no loss of oil. Clean nuts
  3025. may be roasted until the latex coagulates and the dry nuts stored. In other areas, fruits are
  3026. spread in the sun until the pulp separates, or they are fermented by being kept moist for
  3027. weeks or months in earthenware jars, and then the nuts are subsequently roasted.
  3028. Yields and economics — Using native processing approaches, it takes about 4 kg kernels
  3029. to yield 1 kg butter. Thoroughly dried kernels represent about one-third the weight of the
  3030. fresh nuts. By native standards, a kerosene tin containing about 12.23 kg (27 lb) kernels
  3031. yield 3.17 kg (7 lb) shea butter. Kernels contain 45 to 55% by weight of fat, but may be
  3032. as high as 60%, and 9% proteins. The Giddanchi type of kernel averages 3.2 to 6 cm long,
  3033. yielding 52.4% of fat. The shea butter tree has economic importance as an oil-seed produced
  3034. under natural conditions in great abundance in regions where the oil palm does not grow
  3035. and in areas which are otherwise unproductive. A large volume of shea nuts is exported
  3036. annually from West Africa, mainly to Holland and Belgium, the chief importers. Belgium
  3037. imports most of the shea butter. In Uganda, a small local market developed during World
  3038. War 11.^^’^""’^"«
  3039. Energy — As fuel, the wood gives out great heat. Charcoal is prepared from it in some
  3040. districts.
  3041. Biotic factors — Where trees are subjected to annual grass-burning, they are frequently
  3042. stunted and twisted. The thick corky base gives some protection against fire. Trees are
  3043. frequently grazed by wild animals and the sugary pulp is eaten by them, but not the nut of
  3044. the fallen fruit. Unripe fruit exudes latex which remains in the ripe nut but disappears from
  3045. the ripe pulp. In Senegal, caterpillars of C irina butyrosperm i cause defoliation; dried, these
  3046. caterpillars have long been an article of food in Nigerian markets under the name of mone-
  3047. mone (Yoruba). Fungi attacking this tree include: A spergillu s fla vu s, A. niger, A. tam arii,
  3048. B otryodiplodia theobrom ae, C ephaleuros m y coidea, C ercospora butyrosperm i, F usicladium
  3049. butyrosperm i, M eliola butyrosperm i, H elm inthosporium cojfeae, O othyrium butyrosperm i,
  3050. and P estalotia h eterospora. Parasitic on the tree are L oranthus dodon aefoliu s, L. globiferus
  3051. var. salicifoliu s, and L. rufescens; and F icus may be epiphytic on the tree, causing reduction
  3052. in fruit yield.
  3053. 62 Handbook of Nuts
  3054. CALAMUS ROTAN G L. and other species (ARECACEAE) — Rattan Cane, Rotang Cane
  3055. Uses — Tender shoots and seed edible. The sweet pulp around the seeds is also edible.
  3056. Stems provide drinking water, especially in the rainy season.^'® Sturtevant^*^ describes the
  3057. fruit as roundish, large as a hazelnut, and covered with small, shining, imbriate scales.
  3058. Natives generally suck out the subacid pulp which surrounds the kernels to quench the thirst.
  3059. Sometimes the fruit is pickled with salt and eaten at tea time. Seeds are eaten by aborigines.
  3060. Stems and branches form rattan cane of commerce, used as props for crop plants, for
  3061. manufacture of furniture, baskets, wicker-work, umbrella ribs, cables, and ropes. Rattan
  3062. ropes are used for dragging heavy weights and for tethering wild animals. Cordage and
  3063. cables are made by twisting together two or more canes. Canes also are used for building
  3064. boats, suspension bridges, and as a substitute for whale-bone. Jungle experts make fire by
  3065. rubbing them backwards and forwards as fast as possible under a branch of dry soft wood
  3066. in which a hole has been scooped and lined with wooden dust.^^"^
  3067. Folk medicine — Used for abdominal tumors in India,Root given for chronic fevers,
  3068. and used as antidote to snake venom. Leaves used in diseases of blood and in biliousness.
  3069. Wood is a vermifuge.Serrano,"^*® without mentioning species, cited asthma, diarrhea,
  3070. enterosis, rheumatism, and snake-bite as ailments treated with rattan.
  3071. Chemistry — Per 100 g, the fruit of the figured species (C. ornatus) is reported to contain
  3072. 79 calories, 79.0 g H2O, 0.6 g protein, 1.2 g fat, 18.6 g total carbohydrate, 0.5 g fiber,
  3073. 0.6 g ash, 19 mg Ca, 10 mg P, 1.7 mg Fe, 0.06 mg thiamine, 0.01 mg riboflavin, 0.9 mg
  3074. niacin, and 5 mg ascorbic acid.®^
  3075. Toxicity — Scrapings from the bark of glossy-coated cane species may contain enough
  3076. silica to act as an irritant to the mucous membranes.
  3077. Description — Stems scandent or climbing, very slender; to as much as 200 m long.
  3078. 63
  3079. leaf-sheaths sparingly armed with short, flat spines, glabrous. Leaves 60 to 90 cm long, on
  3080. short petioles with small, straight or recurved spines; leaflets numerous, narrowly lanceolate,
  3081. 20 to 23 cm long, 1.3 to 2 cm broad, median costa unarmed on both surfaces, or armed
  3082. beneath only, lateral costa unarmed on both surfaces. Male spadix slender, very long,
  3083. branched, whip-like, sparingly spinous; female flowers scattered along slender branches of
  3084. spadix; spikelets 1.3 to 2.5 cm long, recurved. Fruit globose to subglobose, very pale, 1.6
  3085. to 1.8 cm in diameter; scales many, in vertical rows, straw-colored.
  3086. Germplasm — Reported to tolerate slope and shade, the rattan genus is from the Hin­
  3087. dustani and Indochina-Indonesia Center of Diversity. It contains ca.300 difficulty distin­
  3088. guishable species of the moister tropics of the Old World (Asia, Africa). Perhaps rattans,
  3089. climbing spiny palms, represent 600 species in ca.l5 genera, more used for furniture and
  3090. construction than for the nuts. Lapis"^“ discusses the 12 major Philippine species, illustrating
  3091. 3 species of Calamus.
  3092. Distribution — Native to India, Bengal, Assam, and Sri Lanka^^^ (Calamus rotang),
  3093. with other species, extending to Borneo, the Philippines.
  3094. Ecology — Ranging from Subtropical Moist to Tropical Moist through Wet Forest Life
  3095. Zones, rattan is reported from areas with annual precipitation of 17.3 to 42.9 dm (mean of
  3096. 4 cases = 32.1 dm), annual temperature of 23.5 to 27.4°C (mean of 4 cases = 25.7°C),
  3097. and pH of 4.5 to 5 (mean of 2 cases = 4.8). Once common in moist localities, in tropical
  3098. to subtropical climate, now locally overharvested. Does not tolerate any frost. Apparently
  3099. fares better in primary than secondary forest.Young plants thrive in soil containing a
  3100. large quantity of leaf mold. Older plants need soil of a more lasting nature.
  3101. Cultivation — A quantity of bonemeal and charcoal in the soil may be advantageous.“^
  3102. Young plants thrive in rooting media rich with leaf mold. Older trees need more substantial
  3103. soil with ground bone, charcoal nutrients, and plenty of water.Loams are best, clay loams
  3104. okay. For seed extraction, the fruits are peeled and fermented in water for ca.24 hr., then
  3105. squeezed, after which clean seeds settle to the bottom. These are then removed to dry in
  3106. the shade. Then they are stratified or mixed with moist sawdust for several days. To prevent
  3107. fungal infestation, seeds are treated with ca.0.5 lb sodium pentachloropentate, and dissolved
  3108. in 3 gallons distilled water. Germination starts after 68 to 85 days. Nursery-grown seedlings
  3109. or earthballed wild plants, as well as young suckers, can be used as planting stock. Seedlings
  3110. 15 cm tall are ready for planting, if they have 4 to 5 leaves. Two seedlings are placed in
  3111. each hole, 2m x 2m, at the beginning. Fertilization at 6 g per plant 20:10:5 is recom­
  3112. mended.During the first 2 to 3 years, humus mulching encourages growth. At this point,
  3113. more light is desirable. Some Borneo farmers, in abandoning their temporary forest food
  3114. plots, plant rattans, letting the forest reclaim the plot, returning 7 to 15 years later to harvest
  3115. rattan and begin food cropping again.
  3116. Harvesting — Some cultivated trees yield usable canes in 6 years. Full production occurs
  3117. in 15 years. At this age, canes average about 30 m long, 2.5 cm in diameter. Mature rattans
  3118. can be cut at the base and divided into sections 4 to 5 m long. Thereafter, canes can be cut
  3119. about every 4 years, from suckers. Canes should be harvested during the dry season, and
  3120. dried and processed promptly. Canes are scraped to remove the thin silicious coating, bringing
  3121. out its yellowish luster. Canes should then be dried to less than 20% moisture. Kilns at dry
  3122. bulb temperatures of ca.65°C, wet bulb temperatures of ca.45°C, will bring moisture contents
  3123. to 12 to 14% in ca.5 days. A dryer design is discussed by Serrano.Stain fungi may be
  3124. avoided by treatment of 7 pounds sodium pentachlorophenate in 100 gallons water, applied
  3125. the same day the canes are cut. Post-powder beetles may be prevented by soaking the poles
  3126. for 3 min in 0.5% aqueous solutions of Lindane or Dieldrin. The canes may also be steeped
  3127. in a mixture of diesel oil and coconut or palm oil prior to a final drying.
  3128. Yields and Economics — Rattan cane is important in India and elsewhere for the man­
  3129. ufacture of cane-bottom chairs, etc. Many species of the large genus are used in various
  3130. 64 Handbook of Nuts
  3131. parts of the world for similar purposes.In the Philippines, the rattan industry employs
  3132. 10,000 workers. One Philippine joumaP*^ suggested that, already, raw rattan was worth
  3133. $50 million (U.S.), with the finished manufactured rattan products worth $1.2 billion. In
  3134. the Philippines, in 1977, there was a report of nearly 66 tons split rattan and nearly 4,000,000
  3135. linear meters of unsplit rattan.B y 1983, it was closer to 5,000,000 linear meters."^'®
  3136. Among Tagbanua ethnics in the Philippines, rattan collecting returned ca. $1.00 to $5.00/day
  3137. whereas agriculture returned closer to $1.00/day."^’^ But in the 1950s and 1960s, a worker
  3138. could collect 200 5-m canes a day, while in 1981, 35 to 50 canes was par, each worth little
  3139. more than $0.05.
  3140. Energy — In Peninsular Malaysia, mean stem lengths of C alam us m anan was only 1.3
  3141. m after 6 years, but the longest stem was ca.l8 m. C alam us caesius can grow as much as
  3142. 5 to 6 m/year for the first 5 years of planting. In Sabah, the number of aerial stems doubled
  3143. each year for the first 3 years in C. caesius, first 4 years for C. t r a c h y l o p h e u s Trial
  3144. cultivation"^'^ of C alam us ornatus in the Philippines yielded canes less than 2 m long, not
  3145. suggesting much biomass potential. Rejects and prunings might be useful for fuel.
  3146. Biotic factors — Rattan plants are attacked by the fungi C atacaum ella calam icola,
  3147. D oratom yces tenuis, and Sphaerodothis coimbatorica,^^^ Undesirable stains are caused by
  3148. C eratocystis an d D iplodia.
  3149. 65
  3150. CANARIUM INDICUM L. (BURSERACEAE) — Java-Almond, Kanari, Kenari
  3151. Syn.: Canarium amboinense Hochr., Canarium commune L., Canarium mehenbeth-
  3152. ene Gaertn., Canarium moluccanum Bl., Canarium subtruncatum Engl., Can­
  3153. arium shortlandicum Rech., Canarium polyphyllum Krause, Canarium
  3154. grandistipulatum Lauterbach, and Canarium nungi Guillaumin.
  3155. Uses — Seeds are highly regarded in Melanesia as a food, a delicacy, and in pastries as
  3156. a substitute for almonds. Mature fruits, dried over fires, are an important stored food in the
  3157. Solomon Islands. Nuts are ground and added to grated taro and coconut c re a m .A n
  3158. emulsion of seeds is used in baby-foods. Oil from the seeds is used as a substitute for
  3159. coconut oil for cooking and illumination. Resin from the stems (Getah kanari) has the scent
  3160. of eugenol and is used in printing inks and varnishes. It is the source of a Manila elemi, a
  3161. resin, used as an incense and fixative in the perfume industry, and for varnishes. Oil derived
  3162. from the resin is also employed in soap and cosmetics. Old stems are used as fuel and when
  3163. burning lime. Wood may be used in canoe building and paddles are made from the buttresses.
  3164. Parts of the plant are used to make cloth and to make moth-repelling bookcases. The tree
  3165. is planted as a shade-tree in nutmeg plantations and as a road-side tree.^^®
  3166. Folk medicine — Resin is applied to indolent ulcers.The fruit is laxative. Medicinally
  3167. (in Java), it is used as an incense for sick persons to keep the atmosphere clean.
  3168. Chemistry — Seeds contain 3.8% moisture, 19.6% protein, 72.8% fat, and 3.8% ash.®^
  3169. The oil contains 10.2% stearic, 30.5% palmitic, 39.9% oleic, 18.7% linoleic, and 0.7%
  3170. linolenic acids. The oleoresin which oozes from the trunk contains 10.4% essential oil,
  3171. 81.8% resin, 3.7% water solubles, and 2.5% water. The essential oil contains ca. 34%
  3172. anethole and a small quantity of terpenes.^®’^*"*
  3173. Description — Tree grows up to 40 m, to 1 m in diameter, with buttresses; branchlets
  3174. 7 to 13 mm thick, glabrescent. Leaves are compound, 3-8 pairs of leaflets, glabrous, with
  3175. 66 Handbook of Nuts
  3176. persistent ovate to oblong stipules 1.5 to 2 cm long and 1.2 to 1.4 cm wide, pulverulent to
  3177. glabrous; leaflets oblong-obovate to oblong-lanceolate, 7 to 35 cm long and 3.5 to 16 cm
  3178. wide, on long slender petiolules (to 3 cm long); blades herbaceous to coriaceous, the base
  3179. oblique, rounded to broadly cuneate, the apex gradually to bluntly acuminate, margin entire;
  3180. inflorescences terminal, many-flowered, 15 to 40 cm long, minutely tomentose. Flowers
  3181. tomentose, male ones subsessile, about 1 cm long, females short-stalked, up to 1.5 cm long,
  3182. with a concave receptacle; calyx in male flowers 5 to 7 mm long, in females 7 to 10 mm;
  3183. stamens glabrous, in male flowers free; in females adnate to disk; pistil in male flowers
  3184. minute or none, in female glabrous; fruiting clusters with up to 30 fruits; fruits ovoid, round
  3185. to slightly triangular in cross-section, 3.5 to 6 cm long and 2 to 4 cm in diameter, glabrous;
  3186. pyrene rounded triangular in cross-section, smooth except the 3 more-or-less acute ribs at
  3187. base and apex; lids 3 to 4 mm thick; seeds usually 1, the sterile cells slightly reduced.
  3188. Flowers mainly October to December fruits July to December.
  3189. Germplasm — Reported from the Indochinese-Indonesian Center of Diversity, Java
  3190. almond, or cvs thereof, is reported to tolerate high pH.®^ Several races are cultivated in
  3191. Melanesia, varying in form and size of fruits. Two botanical varieties are recognized: (1)
  3192. var. indicum , with branchlets up to 13 mm thick; stipules up to 6 by 5 cm, dentate; leaves
  3193. up to 7 jugate; leaflets up to 28 by 11 cm, herbaceous; and fruits up to 6 x 3 cm. This is
  3194. the more widespread variety and the more cultivated form. (2) var. platycerioideu m Leen-
  3195. houts, with branchlets up to 2.5 cm thick; stipules sometimes inserted on the bases of the
  3196. petiole only; leaves 5 to 8 Jugate, 80 to 135 cm long; leaflets inequilateral, ovate, 25 to 35
  3197. X 13 to 16 cm; fruits 6 by 3.5 to 4 cm. Found only on New Guinea up to altitudes of 30
  3198. 178, 179,278
  3199. m.
  3200. Distribution — Native to Moluccas (Temate, Sula, Ceram, Ambon, Kai), the North
  3201. Celebes (where it may be naturalized), and Indonesia (New Guinea, New Britain, New
  3202. Ireland, Solomon Islands, and New Hebrides).
  3203. Ecology — Ranging from Subtropical Dry to Moist through Tropical Dry to Moist Forest
  3204. Life Zones, Java almond is reported to tolerate annual precipitation of 11 to 24 dm (mean
  3205. of cases = 18), annual temperature of 24 to 2 T C (mean of 3 cases = 25.5), and pH of
  3206. 5.3 to 8.1 (mean of 2 cases == 6.7).^^ Java almond is found in rain-forest at low altitudes,
  3207. rarely native above 250 m. However, it is planted up to 600 m or more.^^®
  3208. Cultivation — Sprouted seeds or larger seedlings are transplanted.
  3209. Harvesting — Fruiting peaks at August to October and February to April in Santa Cruz,
  3210. Solomon Islands, but fruits are available year-round. In the Solomon Islands, where Can-
  3211. arium is ‘’probably the most important economic tree species” , the plants are usually
  3212. accepted as wild forest species, exploited by gathering, on the basis of recognized individual
  3213. ownership.
  3214. Yields and economics — Large fruited forms or species on Santa Cruz are said to yield
  3215. fewer fruits than the smaller fruited forms.
  3216. Energy — Seed oil and resin might be viewed for energy potential, over and above the
  3217. fuel wood. The resin was used for illumination in the Solomon Islands. The abundance of
  3218. Canarium on Ndenia Island may explain why A gathis resin was not exploited.
  3219. Biotic factors — The following fungi are known to attack Java almond: A edicium pu l-
  3220. neyensis, M eliola canarii, O udesm ansiella canarii, Skierka canarii, and U stilina zonata.
  3221. Seeds dispersed by fruit bats (P ter opus).
  3222. 67
  3223. CANARIUM OVATUM Engl. (BURSERACEAE) — Pili Nut, Philippine Nut
  3224. Uses — The pulp is edible when cooked and yields a cooking oil. The nut or kernel is
  3225. also edible and excellent after roasting. It also yields a good cooking oil.^ Menninger^®^
  3226. describes this as the “ most important of all the nuts in the world to the millions of people
  3227. who depend on it for food.” Abarquez' says pili is second only to cashew as a food nut in
  3228. the Philippines, where it is considered superior to almonds. The nuts have been used to
  3229. adulterate chocolate.This species is one source of the commercial resin traded as Manila
  3230. elemi. Spaniards repaired their ships, in colonial days, with gum elemi. Manila elemi is a
  3231. yellowish-greenish-white, sticky, soft, opaque, fragrant oil mass which gradually becomes
  3232. hard when exposed. It is a source of a kind of paper for window-panes as a substitute for
  3233. glass, and is used in the preparation of medicinal ointment. It is an important ingredient in
  3234. plastics, printing inks for lithographic works, perfumes, and plasters. This resin gives tough­
  3235. ness and elasticity to lacquer, varnish, and paint products. Locally, it is used to caulk boats
  3236. and as an illuminant for native torches. Recently, the possibility of extracting fuel from
  3237. resin has proved enticing, suggesting the possibility of driving a car “ run by a tree.“ '
  3238. According to Garcia, pili plantations, in pure stand, can be interplanted with cassava, ginger,
  3239. papaya, pineapple, coffee, cacao, bananas, and taro.
  3240. Folk medicine — The “ elemi” was once used as an ointment for healing wounds.
  3241. Filipinos use the crushed emulsion of the kernels as a substitute for milk for infants. Uncooked
  3242. nuts are purgative.
  3243. Chemistry — Per 100 g, the seed (ZMB) is reported to contain 699 to 714 calories, 12.2
  3244. to 15.6 g protein, 73.2 to 75.9 g fat, 6.0 to 10.8 g total carbohydrate, 2.3 to 3.5 g fiber,
  3245. 3.0 to 3.6 g ash, 130 to 180 mg Ca, 71 to 591 mg P, 2.9 to 4.8 mg Fe, 3.2 to 3.3 mg Na,
  3246. 521 to 537 mg K, 26 to 35 |xg beta-carotene equivalent. 0.75 to 1.04 mg thiamine, 0.07
  3247. to 0.13 mg riboflavin, 0.44 to 0.58 mg niacin, and 0 to 25 mg ascorbic acid.®^ Campbell
  3248. reports the kernel contains 74% fat, 12% protein, and 5% starch.^ Rosengarten reports
  3249. 71.1% fat, 11.4% protein, and 8.4% carbohydrates.^®^
  3250. Description — Buttressed dioecious trees to 20 m tall, 40 cm DBH, leaves alternate,
  3251. compound, with 5 to 7 leaflets each 10 to 20 cm long; inflorescences and axillary terminal,
  3252. many-flowered, flowers yellowish, fragrant, ca.l cm long; fruits ellipsoid to oblong, 3 to
  3253. 7 cm long, with thin, oily pulp, greenish, turning black when ripe; seed solitary, triangular
  3254. in cross-section with pointed ends, thin, hard shell and a single large kernel.
  3255. Germplasm — Reported from the Philippine Center of Diversity, the pili nut, or cvs
  3256. thereof, is reported to tolerate slope and strong winds. Campbell says no cultivars are
  3257. described,^ but Menninger says 75 kinds grow in enormous quantities from Africa through
  3258. India to northern Australia, Malaya, and in the Pacific Islands. Menninger may mean the
  3259. genus rather than the species.
  3260. Distribution — Endemic to the primary forests of Luzon at low and medium altitudes
  3261. in the Philippines; widely distributed, yet little-known.^ Introduced successfully into El
  3262. Zamorano and Lancetilla, Honduras.
  3263. Ecology — Estimated to range from Subtropical Moist to Rain through Tropical Moist
  3264. to Wet Forest Life Zones, pili nut is estimated to tolerate annual precipitation of 20 to 80
  3265. dm, annual temperature of 23 to 28°C, and pH of 5.0 to 7.0. Best adapted to the hot, wet,
  3266. tropics.
  3267. Cultivation — Generally grown from seed; superior selections may be grafted. It can be
  3268. marcotted and budded as well. In the Philippines, it is often planted between rows of coconut.
  3269. Seedlings, wrapped in banana sheath or bark, are transported carefully to the transplant site
  3270. at the onset of the rainy season. Spacing is generous, 12 to 15 m apart for densities of only
  3271. 40 to 50/ha.
  3272. Harvesting — Vegetatively propagated pilis may bear at age 7 to 8. Rosengarten^®^ says
  3273. 68 Handbook of Nuts
  3274. female trees start bearing at age 6, but full production is not reached until 12 to 15. From
  3275. seed, it takes 7 to 10 years to fruiting, 12 to 13 according to Garcia.*®^ Fruits are usually
  3276. shaken or knocked from the tree. Fresh nuts do not store well, becoming rancid in weeks,
  3277. if not roasted. Abarquez* states, “ Integrating resin tapping with nut production, that is, the
  3278. possibility of getting 2 products without disabling the tree, can be studied. As practiced, it
  3279. is observed that flogging, girdling, or wounding the bark of trees on the lower trunk part
  3280. usually increase the production of fruits in some trees like mango . . . Controlling the
  3281. downward translocation of carbohydrates and other hormones from the canopy to the root
  3282. system, by wounding the bark on the trunk, would induce the production of flower hormones,
  3283. and consequently, fruits. Timing the tapping activities so that it complements with the natural
  3284. budding and fruiting season would give us the desired result.”
  3285. Yields and economics — Sometimes trees may yield as much as 33 kg nuts. Garcia*®^
  3286. puts peak yield at 2.5 MT/ha/yr. Other species can yield nearly 50 kg resin per year. Manila
  3287. exported more than 1000 MT as long ago as 1913. But Abarquez^ shows only a little more
  3288. than a ton around 1975. In 1950, the Philippines had more than 8,000 ha planted to pili,
  3289. reduced to ca. 2,500 by the end of 1976.
  3290. Energy — If the seeds were copiously produced, their 75% oil could be viewed as an
  3291. oil source. Other species of Canarium exude valuable resins “ which could be a promising
  3292. alternative for the oil industry.Such species are said to average 45 kg resin per year.
  3293. But Roecklein and Leung^^^ put yields of C. luzonicum resin at only 4 to 5 kg/yr. The shells
  3294. of the nuts are said to be an excellent fuel, a handful enough to cook a simple dish. Garcia^®^
  3295. describes the wood of the pili as an excellent firewood.
  3296. Biotic factors — Campbell^ states that pests and diseases have not been described.
  3297. 69
  3298. CARYA ILLINOENSIS (Wangenh.) K. Koch (JUGLANDACEAE) — Pecan
  3299. Syn.: Caryapecan (Marsh.) Engl, and Graebn., Carya oliviformis Nutt., and Hicoria
  3300. pecan Britt.
  3301. Uses — Kernels of nuts eaten raw, roasted, or salted and used in candies, confections,
  3302. ice cream, mixed nuts, and for flavoring in baking and cookery. Pecan oil, expressed from
  3303. kernels, is edible and sold for the drug, essential oil, and cosmetic trade. Lumber is hard,
  3304. brittle, not strong, but is occasionally used for agricultural implements, wagons, and for
  3305. fuel.^^® More recently, pecan timber has been used for veneer and lumber, flooring, and
  3306. still for firewood. Smith^*® notes that “ the pecan has great possibilities as a shade (and
  3307. timber) tree in a large area where it cannot be a commençai dependence, but may produce
  3308. an occasional crop.” Doubtless, the deep-rooted pecan can contribute to erosion control.
  3309. To quote S m i t h , “During the regime of the tribal leaders in the old Seminole Nation in
  3310. Seminole County, Oklahoma, they had a law that fined a person five dollars or more for
  3311. mutilating a pecan tree. Yet some people call the Indian a savage. Whoever calls the Indian
  3312. a savage should go look at the gullies we white men have made in Oklahoma where the
  3313. Indian made none!"' Southerners are intercropping pecans with cattle successfully. Pecan
  3314. has been described as the number three hardwood in the U.S., behind walnut and black
  3315. cherry.
  3316. Folk medicine — Reported to be astringent, pecan is a folk remedy for blood ailments,
  3317. dyspepsia, fever, flu, hepatitis, leucorrhea, malaria, and stomach-ache.^^
  3318. Chemistry — Per 100 g, the seed (ZMB) is reported to contain 711 to 718 calories, 9.5
  3319. to 9.7 g protein, 73.7 to 75.3 g fat, 13.4 to 15.1 g total carbohydrate, 2.3 to 2.4 g fiber,
  3320. 1.6 to 1.7 g ash, 75 to 76 mg Ca, 299 to 334 mg P, 2.5 mg Fe, 0 to 3 mg Na, 624 to 1499
  3321. mg K, 20 to 82 jxg beta-carotene equivalent, 0.74 to 0.89 mg thiamine, 0.11 to 0.13 mg
  3322. riboflavin, 0.93 mg niacin, and 2.1 mg ascorbic acid. Leaves and leaf stalks contain a
  3323. phytosterol similar to squalene, capric-, lauric-, myristic-, palmitic-, stearic-, arachidic-,
  3324. oleic-, linoleic-, and linolenic-acids. Tannins containing phloroglucin and catechin have
  3325. been identified; also inositol and 3,4-dihydroxybenzoic acid. The bark contains azaleatin
  3326. (quercetin-5-methyl ether) (Ci6Hi207*H20), and caryatin (quercetin-3,5-dimethylether)
  3327. 70 Handbook of Nuts
  3328. (C,7H,407).'^^ According to Hilditch and Williams,'^* the component acids of the seed fats
  3329. are 3.3 to 7% palmitic-, 1 to 5.5% stearic-, 51 to 88% oleic-, 14 to 38% linoleic-, and I
  3330. to 2% linolenic-acids.
  3331. Toxicity — Langhans, Hedin, and Graves'^^ report that leaves and fruits contain juglone,
  3332. a substance toxic to Fusicladium effusum at concentrations as low as 0.1 mg/m€ (roughly
  3333. 0.1 ppm). They also report linalool as fungitoxic. Schroeder and Storey^^^ report aflatoxins
  3334. in pecans with sound shells. The mycotoxin zearalenone was extracted from kernels with
  3335. sound shells after 28 days. For reasons unclear to this author, Hager’s Handbook*®^ calls it
  3336. a poisonous plant. The pollen is allergenic.
  3337. Description — Deciduous tree, 33 to 60 m tall, with massive trunk to 3.5 m in diameter,
  3338. buttressed at base, crown round-topped; bark light-brown tinged red, twigs with loose pale-
  3339. reddish tomentum, becoming glabrous or puberulent, lenticels numerous, oblong, and orange;
  3340. leaves compound, 30 to 50 cm long, petioles glabrous or pubescent; leaflets lanceolate to
  3341. oblong-lanceolate, more-or-less falcate, long-pointed, doubly serrate, 10 to 20 cm long, 2.5
  3342. to 7.5 cm broad, veins conspicuous; staminate flowers in slender clustered aments 7.5 to
  3343. 12.5 cm long, from axillary buds of previous year’s growth, sessile or nearly so, yellow-
  3344. green, hirsute on outer surface, bract oblong, narrowed at ends, slightly 4-angled, with
  3345. yellow pubescence; fruits in clusters of 3 to 11, pointed at apex, rounded at base, 4-winged
  3346. and angled, 1.5 to 6.5 cm long, up to 2.5 cm in diameter, dark-brown, with yellow scales;
  3347. husk splitting at maturity to nearly the base, often persistent on tree after nut fallen out; nut
  3348. ovoid to ellipsoidal, rather cylindrical toward apex, rounded at base, reddish-brown with
  3349. irregular black markings; shell thin with papery partitions; seed sweet, red-brown, kernel
  3350. separating rather readily. Flowers early spring; fruits fall.^^®
  3351. Germplasm — Reported from the North American Center of Diversity, pecan, or cvs
  3352. thereof, is reported to tolerate high pH, mycobacteria, salt, slope, smog, and weeds.Many
  3353. selected cvs have been made, some of the “ paper-shell” or “ thin-shell” cvs include: ‘Curtis’,
  3354. ‘Frotscher’, ‘Moneymaker’, ‘Pabst’, ‘Schley’, and ‘Stuart’. (2n = 32.)^^^
  3355. Distribution — Native to the valley of the Mississippi River from southern Indiana and
  3356. Illinois, western Kentucky and Tennessee, to Mississippi and Louisiana, west to Texas;
  3357. reappearing in mountains of northern Mexico. Largely cultivated in southeastern U.S., most
  3358. abundant and of its largest size in southern Arkansas and eastern Texas. Improved cvs are
  3359. widely cultivated.
  3360. Ecology — Ranging from Warm Temperate Thom to Moist through Subtropical Dry to
  3361. Moist Forest Life Zones, pecan is reported to tolerate annual precipitation of 3 to 13 dm
  3362. (mean of 11 cases = 8.7), annual temperature of 9 to 21 °C (mean of 11 cases = 16.5),
  3363. and pH of 5.0 to 8.2 (mean of 9 cases = 6.4). Low rich ground along streams is favorite
  3364. habitat, especially in fertile soil, rich in humus, on land that has been under cultivation for
  3365. many years. Quite hardy in the north, it has been successfully planted up to the 43rd parallel.
  3366. While favored by alluvial soils, pecan is by no means restricted thereto.^*® Thrives on a
  3367. variety of soils, from sandy soils of acid reaction to heavy soil with alkaline reaction, and
  3368. gradations between these. All soils should be well-drained and pervious to water. Pecan is
  3369. deep-rooted and requires plenty of water, but will not tolerate water-logged soils.Relative
  3370. humidity above 80% prevents effective pollination. Pecans require 150 to 210 frost-free
  3371. days, but have not fared well in the tropics. Madden, Brison, and McDanieP^^ suggest a
  3372. possible chill requirement of 750 hr below 45°F (7°C). Hardy to Zone 5.^"^^
  3373. Cultivation — Pecans do not come true from seeds and are difficult to start from cuttings.
  3374. Therefore, propagation is mainly by budding and grafting, in order to perpetuate desirable
  3375. varieties. After soil with the proper requirements for pecan production has been selected,
  3376. young trees are set on 11-m squares; in Texas, squares up to 23 m may be used, especially
  3377. on river valley soils. In some areas 75 to 1(X) cm annual rainfall may be sufficient, but
  3378. usually much more is required. Where the rainfall is abundant, growth of trees is rapid and
  3379. 71
  3380. crowding may be a problem. Trees usually do not begin bearing as early in humid areas
  3381. because of greater rate of growth. In western pecan orchards, trees are used in the manner
  3382. of interplanted fruit trees since the trees do not grow so fast and cvs may be selected that
  3383. are prolific at a relatively young age and size. Western cvs apparently lend themselves to
  3384. dwarfing by pruning, and can be kept relatively small, preventing crowding. Unlike most
  3385. trees, pecans do not show a deficiency of moisture by wilting of leaves or shoots. This may
  3386. be due to the deep taproot which absorbs sufficient moisture from the subsoil to prevent
  3387. wilting, but when weeds and other plants growing near pecan trees show signs of water
  3388. deficiency, water should be applied. Trees are often intercropped with cotton, com, or
  3389. peaches until trees come into bearing. Planting of trees originally varies from 11 to 33 m,
  3390. but after a first thinning in 12 to 15 years and a second at the end of 20 to 25 years, trees
  3391. will be spaced 23 to 66 m apart. Nursery trees usually planted in commercial orchards when
  3392. rootstocks are 4 to 6 years old and budded or grafted trees are 1 or 2 years old, although
  3393. older trees are used sometimes. Pecan trees are set in both large and small holes. In heavy
  3394. soils, holes about 1 m in diameter at top give better results. In lighter soils, post-holes have
  3395. proven satisfactory. For larger trees, larger holes should be used to accomodate the larger
  3396. root systems. Trees should be planted about 5 cm deeper than they were in the nursery.
  3397. After they are set, tops should be cut back and the trunks loosely wrapped for a distance
  3398. of 30 to 45 cm from ground with burlap of heavy paper, which is tied loosely. Pecan trees
  3399. are very slow to develop new roots after transplanting and should be supplied with adequate
  3400. moisture during the first summer to help establish the root system. Young trees must be
  3401. protected from sunscald and winter injury. Pmning and training trees to proper shape is
  3402. essential. Young pecan orchards require more frequent cultivation than older orchards,
  3403. because older trees tend to hold weed growth in check by shading and by competition for
  3404. moisture and nutrients. Disking or plowing should be frequent enough to prevent rank growth
  3405. of weeds or grass, the number of cultivations depending on the fertility of the soil. If an
  3406. orchard is on land subject to overflow and bad erosion, it may be sodded with some suitable
  3407. grass; during the growing season, it may be mowed, or sheep and cattle may be allowed to
  3408. graze the land to keep down the vegetation. Where soils are poor, intercropping with legumes
  3409. and adding fertilizer may be useful.
  3410. Harvesting — Pecan nuts are harvested when fully ripe and coming out of hulls with
  3411. little beating of branches. From bloom to harvest varies from 5 to 6 months. Frequently,
  3412. the harvest of nuts is facilitated by the use of sheets spread under trees beyond the spread
  3413. of branches. Such sheets are usually made of heavy cotton sheeting in rectangular pieces
  3414. ca. 5 X 10 m. Nuts are stored in bags or bins after being cured on trays with hardware
  3415. cloth bottoms. They trays are placed across supports to allow air circulation. Nuts may also
  3416. be cured in small burlap bags, provided the bags are arranged so air circulates freely around
  3417. them. Bags should be turned upside-down occasionally to insure more uniform curing. Much
  3418. of the work of curing can be eliminated if nuts are allowed to cure in husk before harvesting.
  3419. Nuts may be stored 2 years without appreciable deterioration, if stored at a temperature of
  3420. 0°C to 3.5°C. They should be stored as soon as curing is completed, since their quality is
  3421. impaired at ordinary temperatures, long before rancidity is apparent.
  3422. Yields and economics — Trees 8 to 10 years old yield from 2 to 12 (to 350) kg per tree.
  3423. Improved cvs often yield greater amounts. Trees yielding 1500 to 1600 nuts per tree may
  3424. have yields of 1,000 to 1,200 kg/ha. As Rosengarten^®^ notes, most edible nuts are essentially
  3425. one-state crops: almonds, pistachios, and walnuts are produced in California; filberts in
  3426. Oregon, and macadamia nuts in Hawaii. The pecan, on the other hand, is a multi-state crop,
  3427. stretching across the country from the Southeast to the Southwest throughout some 20 states.
  3428. U.S. production is tabulated in Table 1. By 1981, a record harvest of nearly 175,000 tons
  3429. was reported.
  3430. Energy — Even native pecans (up to 75% oil) are estimated to yield 750 to 800 kg/ha
  3431. 72 Handbook of Nuts
  3432. Table 1
  3433. UTILIZED PECAN PRODUCTION TONS
  3434. (ap p rox.)
  3435. 1978 1979 1980
  3436. Alabama 11,000 2,000 10,000
  3437. Arkansas 1,600 750 450
  3438. Florida 2,100 1,300 3,000
  3439. Georgia 67,500 32,500 52,500
  3440. Louisiana 4,500 8,000 7,000
  3441. Mississippi 5,000 1,250 2,250
  3442. New Mexico 7,500 7,350 7,350
  3443. North Carolina 2,000 650 850
  3444. Oklahoma 7,750 5,000 1,750
  3445. South Carolina 3,000 1,000 1,100
  3446. Texas 13,000 45,500 5,500
  3447. Total U.S. Production 124,950 105,300 91,750
  3448. After Rosengarten, Jr., F. The Book of Edible Nuts, Walker and
  3449. Company, New York, 1984, 384.
  3450. in T e x a s .Cultiváis may exceed 1000 kg. Prunings and thinnings make very good fuel
  3451. wood. Perhaps even the leaves could be investigated as sources of lauric acid, juglone
  3452. (herbicide), leaf protein, with the residues going into ethanol production.
  3453. Biotic factors — Squirrels may destroy large quantities of nuts during the season, since
  3454. they start feeding on them while the nuts are immature and continue until the nuts are
  3455. harvested. They also gnaw the bark off new shoots so that they die. Squirrel guards on trees
  3456. may effectively control squirrel damage. Because pecan trees are not sufficiently self-
  3457. pollinating, various cvs should be interplanted. Orchards should be laid out and cvs planted
  3458. to allow pollination to occur in the direction of prevailing wind. Although the pollinating
  3459. CVS need be only about 100 m from female trees, they are often alternated with each other.
  3460. Phillips et al.^^^ give an interesting illustrated account of the insects and diseases of the
  3461. pecans. The following are known to cause diseases of pecans: A grobacterium tum efaciens,
  3462. A rticularía quercina, A spergillus chevalieri, B otryosphaeria bergeneriana, B. ribis, C ar-
  3463. yospora m inor, C ephaleuros virescens, C ercospora fusca, C ladosporium effusum, Conio-
  3464. thyrium caryogenum , E lsinoe randii, Eutypa heteracantha, G lom erella cingulata, G nom onia
  3465. caryar, G. dispora, G. nerviseda, H elicobasidium purpureum , M icrocera coccophila, M i-
  3466. crosphaera alni. M icrostrom a ju glan dis, M ycosphaerella caryigena, M . dendroides, M y-
  3467. riangium duriaei, M . tuberculans, N em atospora coryli, P ellicu laria koleroga, P estalotia
  3468. uvicola, P h yllosticta convexula, Phym atotrichum om nivorum , P h ysalospora fu sca, P. rhod-
  3469. ina, P hytophthora cactorum , Schizophyllum com mune, Septoria caryae, and Trichothecium
  3470. roseum.'^'^^^'^''^ Pecan is attacked by the parasitic flowering plant, mistletoe, P horadendron
  3471. serrulata. Insect pests attacking pecan include: M yzocallisfum ipennellus (black pecan aphid),
  3472. C hrysom phalus obscurus (obscure scale), C urculio varyae (pecan weevil), H yphantria cunea
  3473. (fall webworm), Synanthedon scitulae (pecan borer), A crobasis caryae (pecan nut-case
  3474. borer), A crobasis p a llio lella (pecan leaf-case borer), L aspeyresia caryana (hickory shuck
  3475. worm), C oleoph orae caryaefoliella (pecan cigar-case borer), G retchena bolliana (pecan bud
  3476. moth). P hylloxera devastatrix (leaf and stem galls), Strym on m elinus (cotton square borer).
  3477. Nematodes isolated from pecan trees include: Caconem a radidicola, D itylenchus interm e­
  3478. dins, D olichodoru s heterocephalus, H eterodera m arioni, M eloidogyne spp., P ratylenchus
  3479. penetrans, R adopholus sim ilis, and Xiphinem a americanum^'^^^
  3480. 73
  3481. CARYOCAR AMYGDALIFERUM Mutis (CARYOCARACEAE) Mani, Achotillo, Cagui,
  3482. Chalmagra
  3483. Uses — Fruits edible, said to taste like almonds. Pulp of fruit is also used as a fish poison.
  3484. According to the NAS,^^^ Caryocar kernels are said to be the best edible nuts in the tropics.
  3485. Oil used for cooking in tropical America.
  3486. Folk medicine — Fruits are used as a medicine for leprosy.
  3487. Chemistry — Wood, possibly of this species, possibly of C. brasiliense, contains 1.5
  3488. to 1.8% essential oil.
  3489. Description — Trees to 55.0 m tall, the trunk buttressed up to 3.0 m, the young branches
  3490. sparsely puberulous-glabrescent. Leaves trifoliolate; petioles 2.5 to 11.0 cm long, glabres-
  3491. cent, terete; leaflets shortly petiolulate, the terminal petiolule 5.0 to 7.0 mm long, the lateral
  3492. petiolules slightly shorter than the terminal one, the petiolules sparsely puberulous, shallowly
  3493. canaliculate; the laminas elliptic to oblong, slightly asymmetrical, acuminate at apex, the
  3494. acumen 1.0 to 1.5 cm long, cuneate to subcuneate and often markedly unequal at base,
  3495. unevenly coarsely serrate at margins, glabrous on both surfaces, the terminal lamina 7.5 to
  3496. 12.0 cm long, 2.5 to 5.5 cm broad, the lateral laminas slightly smaller than the terminal
  3497. one; primary veins 10 to 11 pairs, plane to prominulous beneath; venation prominulous
  3498. beneath; stipels to 5.0 mm long, ellipsoid, inflated, persistent. Peduncles ca. 3.5 to 7.0 cm
  3499. long, glabrous. Inflorescences clustered racemes, the rachis tomentose, the pedicels elongate,
  3500. ebracteolate. Calyx cupuliform, ca. 6.0 mm long, glabrous on exterior, the lobes 5, small,
  3501. rounded, the margins ciliate. Corolla lobes 5, ca. 2.0 to 2.5 cm long, oblong, glabrous,
  3502. greenish-yellow. Stamens numerous, ca. 200, the filaments shortly united at base in a ring,
  3503. but into groups, white, sparsely pubescent, the apical portion tuberculate, the innermost
  3504. filaments much shorter than the rest, the anthers small. Ovary globose, glabrous on exterior,
  3505. 4-locular. Styles 4, filamentous, shorter than filaments. Fruit globose-ellipsoid, ca. 5.5 cm
  3506. long, exocarp glabrous, smooth; pericarp thick, fleshy; mesocarp and endocarp enveloping
  3507. the seed to form an ovoid stone; the exterior of mesocarp not seen, the interior enveloping
  3508. the endocarp tubercules; endocarp with numerous flattened tubercules ca. 5.0 mm long, and
  3509. a hard woody interior ca. 1.0 mm thick, glabrous within.
  3510. Germplasm — From the South American Center of Diversity, achotillo has been reported
  3511. to tolerate acid soils.Regrettably, this has been confused in the literature, due to ortho­
  3512. graphic similarities, with Peruvian C. amygdaliforme Don. (almendro blanco). The mani
  3513. has inflated stipels to 5 mm long, the Peruvian species lacks stipels.
  3514. Distribution — Native to the forests of the Magdalena River Valley of Colombia.
  3515. Sturtevant^^^ assigns it to Ecuador and says it is the “ almendrón” of Mariquita.
  3516. Ecology — Tropical forest tree, thriving in rich loam in river valleys.Duke®^ reports
  3517. the species from Tropical Moist to Wet Forest Life Zones, annual precipitation of 23 to 40
  3518. dm, annual temperature of 23 to 27°C, and pH of 5.0 to 5.3.
  3519. Cultivation — Not known in cultivation.^^®
  3520. Harvesting — Fruits collected in season for food and medicinal purposes by natives.
  3521. Yields and economics — Of limited use by natives in Colombia.
  3522. Energy — Like other tropical tree species, this one probably can produce 25 MT biomass
  3523. per year. Prunings could be used for energy production.
  3524. Biotic factors — No serious pests or diseases reported for this tree.^^® Probably bat
  3525. pollinated.
  3526. 74 Handbook of Nuts
  3527. CARYOCAR NUCIFERUM L. (CARYOCARACEAE) — Suari Nut, Butternut
  3528. Uses — This is probably one of the most popular edible nuts in the genus Caryocar.
  3529. Without voucher material, we can only guess to which species the various data refer. After
  3530. reading Prance and da Silva’s excellent monograph,this author has done his best. Certainly
  3531. this is the largest, if not the oiliest and tastiest, of the nuts in the genus. The timber of the
  3532. roots is used for making crooks in boats and for canoes.
  3533. Folk medicine — The bark of this or one of the species confused with this is considered
  3534. diuretic and febrifuge.
  3535. Chemistry — Apparently all the species have a high oil content in the pericarp and kernel.
  3536. The pericarp oil is suggestive of palm oil.‘^^
  3537. Description — Large tree to 45.0 m tall, young branches glabrous. Leaves trifoliolate,
  3538. petioles 4.0 to 9.0 (to 15.0) cm long, terete to flattened, glabrous; leaflets petiolulate,
  3539. terminal petiolule 7.0 to 20.0 mm long, lateral petiolules about equal to the center one;
  3540. petiolules glabrous, shallowly canaliculate; laminas elliptic, acuminate at apex, acumen 5.0
  3541. to 15.0 mm long, entire to weakly crenate at margins, rounded to subcuneate at base,
  3542. glabrous on both surfaces, terminal lamina 12.0 to 30.0 cm long, 6.0 to 18.0 cm broad,
  3543. lateral laminas equal or slightly smaller than terminal one, primary veins 8 to 13 pairs, plane
  3544. above, prominent beneath; venation prominulous beneath; stipels absent. Peduncles 6.0 to
  3545. 10.0 cm long, glabrous, sparsely lenticellate towards base. Inflorescences of clustered ra­
  3546. cemes, rachis 1.0 to 4.5 cm long, glabrous; flowering pedicels 4.0 to 6.0 cm long, 5.0 to
  3547. 8.0 cm thick, glabrous, ebracteolate. Calyx campanulate, ca. 2.0 cm long, glabrous on
  3548. exterior, lobes 5, rounded. Corolla ca. 6.0 to 7.0 cm long, elliptic, glabrous, deep-red on
  3549. exterior, paler within. Stamens extremely numerous, over 700, filaments caducous as a unit,
  3550. united at base up to 2.0 mm, dividing into fused groups before becoming free above, outer
  3551. ones 7.0 to 8.5 cm long including base, yellow, apical portion tuberculate, with many shorter
  3552. inner filaments from 3.5 cm long and of all intermediate sizes, inner filaments tuberculate
  3553. at apex only, anthers small. Ovary globose, 4-locular, glabrous on exterior. Styles 4, fila­
  3554. mentous, 8.0 to 9.0 cm long, glabrous. Fruit subglobose to sublobate, to 15.0 cm long,
  3555. exocarp glabrous, lenticellate; pericarp very thick and fleshy, detaching from mesocarp and
  3556. endocarp; mesocarp and endocarp enveloping seed to form a large stone ca. 7.0 cm broad,
  3557. 5.0 cm long, mesocarp becoming lignified and hard, the exterior undulate with short, rounded
  3558. tubercules; endocarp with tuberculate exterior and hard, thin, woody interior ca. 1.0 mm
  3559. thick; with 1 to 2 subreniform seeds only developing.
  3560. Germplasm — Reported from the South American Center of Diversity. The tuberculate
  3561. large fruits and large flowers are larger than those of any other Caryocar.
  3562. Distribution — Native of the primary forests of the Guianas and adjacent Venezuela and
  3563. Brazil. Recently collected in Panama and Choco, Colombia. Apparently abundant in Choco.
  3564. Cultivated in the West Indies, and grown in botanical gardens in Nigeria, Singapore, and
  3565. Sri Lanka.
  3566. Ecology — According to MacMillan, the tree grows well in the moist low country of
  3567. Sri Lanka, especially in rich deep loams or alluvial soils.
  3568. Cultivation and Energy — No data available.
  3569. Harvesting — According to Burkill,^^ it may fruit at 5 years of age, but usually takes 2
  3570. to 3 times as long. Introduced into Singapore in 1899, it did not fruit until 20 years old,
  3571. but flowered years before. At Peradeniya and Henaratgoda, where it was introduced in 1891,
  3572. the trees had not fruited when MacMillan‘S^ went to press, though the Peradeniya specimen
  3573. started flowering after 19 years. These do not seem to be much more precocious than Brazil
  3574. nuts. However, MacMillan mentions another specimen from British Guiana which fruited
  3575. 6 years from planting.
  3576. Yields and economics — The nut is exported commercially from the Guianas.
  3577. Biotic factors — Probably bat pollinated.
  3578. 75
  3579. CARYOCAR VILLOSUM (Aubl.) Pers., CARYO CAR BRASILIENSE Camb., and CARY-
  3580. OCAR C O R IA C E U M Wittmack (CARYOCARACEAE) — Pequi
  3581. Uses — Several species go under the common name pequi and pequia, said to be one of
  3582. the best edible nuts in the tropics. But Sturtevant^^^ calls it is a sort of chestnut eaten in
  3583. times of famine. C a ryo ca r has several nut-bearing species. These are somewhat more prom­
  3584. ising because some species are smaller and easier to harvest. The orange-sized fruit contains
  3585. an oily pulp and kernel that are used for food. So far, they have been employed only in
  3586. home cooking. The fruit is made into a tasty liqueur, well known in Brazil, especially in
  3587. the State of Mato Grosso. There is both the fruit oil and the kernel oil. After refining the
  3588. taxonomy of those species called Pequi and Pequia, Prance and da Silva^^ state that the
  3589. fruit of C. villosum (a huge tree) has an edible pulp and edible cotyledons. The pulp is most
  3590. often eaten and has a faint smell of rancid butter. It is also used to produce an edible oil.
  3591. Wood of C. villosum is so durable as to be used in boat-building and in heavy construction.
  3592. Brazilian Indians obtain a yellow dye from C. brasiliense.^^
  3593. Folk medicine — The bark of this or one of the species confused with this is considered
  3594. diuretic and febrifuge.^*
  3595. Chemistry — According to Hager’s Handbook,the wood of C. brasilien se (or C.
  3596. am ygdaliferum or C. glabrum ) contains 1.5 to 1.8% essential oil. According to a report
  3597. quoted in Burkill,^^ the inner part of the fruit-wall contains a reddish-orange oil, up to 72.3%.
  3598. The kernel contains 61.4% (ZMB) or 45% (APB) oil, composed largely of glyceride esters
  3599. 76 Handbook of Nuts
  3600. of palmitic and oleic acids. Ripe fruits must be treated as soon as harvested, or enzymes
  3601. will induce the development of free fatty acids. Lane'^^ reported a comparison with Malayan
  3602. palm oil:
  3603. Palm oil (%) Pequi pericarp I Pequi kernel (%)
  3604. Myristic 1.5
  3605. 2.5 1.5
  3606. 48.4
  3607. Palmitic 40.8 41.2
  3608. Stearic 3.6 0.8 0.9
  3609. Oleic 45.2 53.9 46.0
  3610. Linoleic 7.9 2.6 3.3
  3611. Hilditch and Williams'^^ present somewhat different data. The fruit-coat fat of Caryocar
  3612. villosum is interesting, because its fatty acids closely resemble those of palm oils, namely:
  3613. myristic 1.8, palmitic 47.3, stearic 1.7, oleic 47.3, linoleic 1.9%. It contained only 2% of
  3614. fully saturated components (tripalmitin), thus differing somewhat from palm oils of similar
  3615. fatty acid composition. No tristearin was detected in the completely hydrogenated fat and
  3616. the components of the fat (in addition to 2% tripalmitin) were therefore 42% oleodipalmitins
  3617. and 56% palmitodioleins — an instance of pronounced “ even distribution.” Intensive crys­
  3618. tallization of the pequia fruit-coat fat yielded five fractions very rich in oleodisaturated
  3619. glycerides and three more soluble fractions which consisted largely of diunsaturated gly­
  3620. cerides. Oleodipalmitin was isolated separately from each of the five fractions and agreed
  3621. in its transition and melting-points with 2-oleodipalmitin, while the hydrogenated products
  3622. in each case were 2-stearodipalmitin. The symmetrical form of oleodipalmitin was thus
  3623. exclusively present. Similar examination of the palmitodistearins obtained by hydrogenation
  3624. of the palmitodioleins in the three more soluble fractions showed, in contrast, that the latter
  3625. were present in both the symmetrical and the unsymmetrical configuration, the amounts of
  3626. each positional isomeride being probably of the same order.
  3627. Description — Large tree to 40.0 m tall and up to 2.5 m diameter, the young branches
  3628. villous-tomentose, becoming glabrous with age. Leaves trifoliolate; petioles 4.0 to 15.0 cm
  3629. long, villous-tomentose to puberulous, terete to slightly striate; leaflets shortly petiolulate,
  3630. the terminal petiolule 3.0 to 6.0 mm long, the lateral petiolules 2.0 to 4.0 mm long; petiolules
  3631. puberulous when young, canaliculate; the laminas elliptic, acuminate at apex, the acumen
  3632. 3.0 to 10.0 mm long, serrate to crenate at margins, rounded to cordate at base, villous to
  3633. glabrous above, densely villous-hirsute or with a sparse pubescence on the venation only
  3634. beneath, the terminal lamina 8.0 to 11.0 cm long, 6.0 to 12.0 cm broad, the lateral laminas
  3635. slightly smaller; primary veins 12 to 19 pairs, slightly impressed or plane above, prominent
  3636. beneath; venation extremely prominent beneath; stipels absent. Peduncles 5.0 to 13.0 cm
  3637. long, tomentellous or puberulous when young, glabrescent, lenticellate. Inflorescences of
  3638. clustered racemes, the rachis 3.0 to 4.0 cm long, tomentose when young; flowering pedicels
  3639. 1.8 to 3.5 cm long, puberulous to glabrous, with 2 membraneous subpersistent bracteoles.
  3640. Calyx campanulate-cupuliform, ca. 1.5 cm long, gray puberulous to glabrous on exterior,
  3641. the lobes 5, rounded. Corolla ca. 2.5 cm long, the lobes 5, oblong-elliptic, pale yellow.
  3642. Stamens numerous, ca. 300, the filaments shortly united into a ring at base but not into
  3643. groups, subpersistent, of two distinct lengths with several of intermediate lengths, the longest
  3644. ca. 6.5 to 7.0 cm long, yellow, the apical 1.0 to 3.0 mm tuberculate, the shortest ca. 55,
  3645. 1.0 to 1.5 cm long, with distinct fused portion at base, tuberculate entire length, the anthers
  3646. small. Ovary globose, 4-locular, glabrous on exterior. Styles 4, filamentous, equalling
  3647. filaments, glabrous. Fruit oblong-globose, 6.0 to 7.0 cm long, 7.0 to 8.0 cm broad; exocarp
  3648. glabrous, lenticellate; pericarp thick, fleshy, detaching from mesocarp and endocarp; me-
  3649. socarp and endocarp enveloping seed to form a reniform stone ca. 5.0 cm broad, the exterior
  3650. of mesocarp smooth and undulate, the interior enveloping endocarp spines; endocarp with
  3651. numerous fine spines ca. 3.0 mm long, and a hard wood interior, ca. 1.0 mm thick.
  3652. 77
  3653. Germplasm — Reported from the South American Center of Diversity, the pequi is
  3654. sensitive to wind damage. Prance and da Silva^^ key C. villosum with acuminate leaflets,
  3655. C. brasilien se as with rounded or acute leaflets. C. coriaceum is also found in the complex
  3656. known to Brazilians as Pequi.
  3657. Distribution — French Guiana and Amazonian Brazil (C. villosum ). Dry woodland of
  3658. the northern and eastern part of the Planalto of central Brazil (C. coriaceum ). Brazil and
  3659. adjacent Bolivia and Paraguay (C. brasilien se). Cultivated in Singapore and Sumatra (C.
  3660. villosum ).
  3661. Ecology — Grows above flood level in the Amazon valley (Burkill, C. villosum ).
  3662. Cultivation — Wickhan, in Lane,*^'* figured the trees should be spaced at 100 trees per
  3663. ha.
  3664. Harvesting — Trees have grown to 18 m in 9 years.
  3665. Yields and economics — I quote exactly from Wickhan’s letter, as quoted by Lane:*^"^
  3666. “ Reckoning the fruit as giving some 3/4 lb. of fat, the yield per acre should be from 1300
  3667. lbs. to 1/2 tons, it will therefore be at once apparent that this greatly exceeds any existing
  3668. source of supply — coconut (copra), palm kernels, etc...”
  3669. Energy — The husk of the fruit is used, like coconut husks, for fuel, either directly or
  3670. after conversion to charcoal. Prunings could also be used for fuel.
  3671. Biotic factors — C aryocar villosum is bat pollinated, with two or three of the many
  3672. flowers in a given influorescence opening at night, shortly after dark. The pollination process
  3673. is described in Prance and da Silva.
  3674. 78 Handbook of Nuts
  3675. CARYODENDRON ORINOCENSE Karst. (EUPHORBIACEAE) — Inche, Cacay, Nambi,
  3676. Arbol de Nuez, Kakari Taccy Nut
  3677. Uses — According to Garcia-Barriga,‘°^ the oil is used like olive oil, while the toasted
  3678. seed is very flavorful and nutritious. According to Schultes,the oil is valued for a wide
  3679. range of uses, from cooking to soap-making and cosmetics. The thin, brown shell surrounding
  3680. the kernel, is easily broken with the fingers.The tree has been suggested as a plantation
  3681. crop for Latin America.*®^
  3682. Folk medicine — In the Llanos of Colombia, the oil is painted onto skin afflictions. A
  3683. half-ounce dose is taken as a laxative. It is believed to fortify the lungs.
  3684. Chemistry — Seeds contain ca. 50% of a yellowish oil, the husk 17.1%, the pulp 82.9%.
  3685. The pulp contains 6.6% water.
  3686. Description — Tree to 20 m tall, the crown conical; trunk yellowish-ochraceous, striate,
  3687. with a watery pinkish-yellow latex. Leaves alternate, glabrous, narrowly elliptic or obovate,
  3688. the margins entire, revolute, 12 to 25 cm long, 4 to 10 cm wide, apically acute, basally
  3689. cuneate; primary veins ca. 7 to 11; biglandular at the base of the blade. Petiole glabrous,
  3690. canaliculate above, dilated at both ends, 1 to 5.5 cm long. Flowers unisexual, the male in
  3691. terminal racemes, with 3 concave tepals, 4 conical glabrous stamens, longidehiscent; disk
  3692. white. Female flowers with 5 to 6 ovate tepals; ovary trilocular, triovulate, stigma short and
  3693. trilobate, disk annular, trilobate. Fruit globose-oblong, 5 to 6 cm long, 4 to 5 cm broad,
  3694. usually 3-seeded. Seeds 3 cm long, 1.7 cm wide.^°^’^^^
  3695. Germplasm — From the South American Center of Diversity, inche is reported to tolerate
  3696. poor soils in lateritic and savanna situations.
  3697. Distribution — According to PIRB,^^^ the species is native to the Llanos Orientales and
  3698. Putumayo of Colombia. I’m told there are plantations in Ecuador, and I have seen plants,
  3699. apparently thriving, in the humid climate of Talamanca, Costa Rica.
  3700. Ecology — I estimate inche ranges from Tropical Dry to Wet through Subtropical Dry
  3701. to Wet Forest Life Zones, tolerating annual precipitation of 15 to 60 dm, annual temperature
  3702. of 23 to 29°C, and pH of 4.5 to 7.5. Said to be of the tropical humid zone,*°^ ranging from
  3703. 300 to 1000 m above sea level,where the drier season lasts at least 4 months.
  3704. Cultivation — Propagated by seed, the tree has been suggested as an oilseed plantation
  3705. crop.
  3706. 79
  3707. Harvesting — Said to start bearing in 4 to 5 years. The determinate height of the tree is
  3708. said to facilitate harvest.
  3709. Yields and economics — According to Garcia-Barriga,*®^ each tree produces 280 to 300
  3710. kg of fruit, which at the density of 50 trees per ha would calculate to 15 MT fruit. In round
  3711. figures, 25 fruits would weigh 375 g, or 15 g per fruit. Of that 15 g, there would be about
  3712. 8 g husk, 1 g testa, and 6 g of kernel. That 6 g kernel should contain about 2 to 3 g oil.
  3713. This suggests a conversion factor of 20% oil in the fruit. According to PIRB,^^^ the cost of
  3714. establishment and maintenance should be less than that of African Oil Palm. Since the yield
  3715. is similar, possibly inche could return equal or greater profits.
  3716. Energy — If we accept the speculative yield and conversion figures derived above, there
  3717. could be 3 MT oil, half the expected yield of oilpalm. But, if the same yields were obtained
  3718. with 100 trees per hectare instead of 50, there could be as good a yield here as with oil
  3719. palm, with 6 MT oil and possibly 12 MT edible seedcake.
  3720. Biotic factors — No data available.
  3721. 80 Handbook of Nuts
  3722. CAST ANEA CRENATA Sieb, and Zucc. (FAGACEAE) — Japanese Chestnut, Juri
  3723. Syn.: Castanea stricta Sieb, and Zucc., Castanea pubinervis (Hassk.) C. K. Schneid.,
  3724. and Castanea japónica Blume.
  3725. Uses — Kernel of nut used as food by Chinese and Japanese, both for humans and for
  3726. fattening sw ine.N ut shell extract, bur, and bark used for staining. Male flower used to
  3727. stain cloth a red-brown color.W ood strong, very hard, heavy, durable in soil, used in
  3728. Japan for furniture, cabinet work, railroad ties, and in ship-building. Planted in southern
  3729. Europe for timber. Well adapted for ornamental planting.
  3730. Folk medicine — In China and Korea, flowers are used for tuberculosis and scrofula.
  3731. Decoction of fresh leaves said to allay skin irritation caused by lacquer. Root used for hernia.
  3732. An ointment for boils made with powdered charcoal from involucres mixed with oil.^"^^
  3733. Chemistry — Per 100 g, the seed (ZMB) is reported to contain 399 calories, 7.0 g protein,
  3734. 1.4 g fat, 89.2 g total carbohydrate, 2.3 g fiber, 2.3 g ash, 79.8 mg Ca, 188 mg P, 3.8 mg
  3735. Fe, 37.6 mg Na, 0.89 mg thiamine, 0.42 mg riboflavin, 3.76 mg niacin, and 68.1 mg
  3736. ascorbic acid.®^
  3737. Description — Small tree or shrub, often less than 10 m tall, but occasionally much
  3738. larger, up to 17 m, attaining great girth, with many spreading limbs and slender branches;
  3739. young shoots at first densely gray-white with short hairs, becoming glabrous or sparsely
  3740. velutinous; leaves at first densely stellate pubescent all over, retaining on under-surface
  3741. some pubescence or becoming glabrous, puberulous on veins above, elliptic to oblong-
  3742. lanceolate, or narrowly oblong, with long acuminate tip and cordate or round at base, margin
  3743. crenate-serrate or subentire with 10 to 25 bristle teeth on each side, 8 to 16 cm long, 3 to
  3744. 5 cm broad, thick and heavy, quite crinkly, dark lustrous green above, grayish-green beneath;
  3745. petiole pubescent, about 2 cm long, stipules soon deciduous, lanceolate, acuminate, gradually
  3746. broaden at base; winter buds short, ovoid, glabrous, shining crimson; staminate spikes 5 to
  3747. 20 cm or more long, densely flowered, yellowish-white, erect or suberect; pistillate flowers
  3748. clustered among the male spikes, occurring in involucres about 5 mm thick, styles exserted,
  3749. about 3 mm long, densely covered with ascending long gray hairs; bur small in wild types,
  3750. in cultivated types often to 6 cm in diameter, with long, almost glabrous spines; nuts 2 to
  3751. 3 per bur, hilum occupying whole basal area.^^^
  3752. Germplasm — Reported from the China-Japan Center of Diversity, Japanese chestnut,
  3753. or CVS thereof, is reported to tolerate disease, frost, and slope.Several Japanese varieties
  3754. are grown extensively, as ‘Alpha’, ‘Reliance’, and ‘Parry’, the last being a hybrid with C.
  3755. dentata, suitable for planting in California. Other Japanese varieties include: ‘Advance’,
  3756. ‘Beta’, ‘Biddle’, ‘Black’, ‘Col’, ‘Eureka’, ‘Felton’, ‘Hale’, ‘Kent’, ‘Kerr’, ‘Killan’, ‘Mar­
  3757. tin’, ‘McFarland’, ‘Prolific’, ‘Success’, and ‘Superb’. ( 2 n = 22,24.)
  3758. Distribution — Native to Japan (Honshu, Shikoku, Kyushu) and Korea. Much planted
  3759. in Japan for the nuts. Introduced and extensively planted in southern Europe for timber.
  3760. Introduced to the U.S. in 1876.^®® Hardy as far north as Massachusetts.^^*
  3761. Ecology — Ranging from Cool Temperate Moist to Rain through Warm Temperate to
  3762. Moist Forest Life Zones, Japanese chestnut is reported to tolerate annual precipitation of
  3763. 9.4 to 23.4 dm (mean of 6 cases = 13.3), annual temperature of 9.9 to 15.8°C (mean of
  3764. 6 cases = 12.9°C), and pH of 5.0 to 6.8 (mean of 5 cases = 5.9).*^ Trees grow best on
  3765. well-drained, porous soil, with deep porous subsoil. Withstand temperatures and rainfall of
  3766. most temperate climates.Hardy to Zone 6.^^^^
  3767. Cultivation — Trees propagated by whip-grafting to American chestnut (C. dentata).
  3768. American species usually cut down, and the sprouts springing from the remaining roots,
  3769. when 1.3 to 2 cm in diameter, are grafted with desired varieties of Japanese chestnut. Whip
  3770. and cleft methods of grafting are used. Trees already grafted with desired varieties may be
  3771. obtained for the orchard. Seedlings may be top-worked with the permanent kinds after they
  3772. 81
  3773. have become established. Trees set out not less than 10 m apart each way. Trees may be
  3774. planted closer at first and thinned out for permanent spacing in 10 to 15 years. Meanwhile,
  3775. trees may be intercropped with vegetables or small tree crops. Two-year old grafts are
  3776. commonly loaded with burs. It is good practice to keep burs picked from young trees for 3
  3777. to 4 years to allow trees to become well-established before crop production is started. If
  3778. trees are allowed to over-bear, nuts run down in size. Japanese varieties do not abort their
  3779. burs, and seem to be completely self-fertile.^^^
  3780. Harvesting — Trees are very productive and begin to fruit commercially when 6 years
  3781. old. Nuts are picked from the ground, dried, and stored until marketed or used.^^^
  3782. Yields and economics — No yield data available, but all records state that trees are
  3783. precocious and very productive. Great quantities of Japanese chestnut are grown and con­
  3784. sumed in Japan and China.
  3785. Energy — Wood, burs, and husks may be used for fuel or charcoal production.
  3786. Biotic factors — The following fungi are known to attack Japanese chestnut: Actinopelte
  3787. japónica, Botryosphaeria ribis, Capnodium salicinum, Cronartium quercinum, Cryptodia-
  3788. porthe castanea, Daedalea que reina, Endothia nitschkei, E. parasitica, E. radicalis, F ornes
  3789. melanoporus, Fomitopsis castanea, Gloeosporium castanicola, Helicobasidium mompa,
  3790. Laestadia orientalis, Leszites betulina, Limacinia cheni, Microsphaera alni, Monochaetia
  3791. desmazierii, M. pachyspora, Ovularia castaneae, Phyllactinia quercus, Phytophthora cam-
  3792. bivora, P. cinnamomi, Polyporus cinnabarinus, P. gilvus, P. hirsutas, P. nidulans, P.
  3793. pargamenus, P. rhodophaeus, P. tulipiferus, P. versicolor, Polystictus hirsutas, P. san­
  3794. guineus, Puccineastrum castaneae, Pycnoporus coccineus, Schizophyllum commune, Sep-
  3795. toria gilletiana, Stereum gausapatum. Trámetes dickinsii, T. vittata. Also Bacterium castaneae
  3796. attacks trees. However, plants are resistant to Eastern Filbert B l i g h t . M o r e susceptible
  3797. to chestnut blight fungus, Endothia parasitica, than the Chinese species, C. mollissima.
  3798. Trees may deteriorate slowly or be killed before reaching maturity.
  3799. 82 Handbook of Nuts
  3800. CAST ANEA DENT AT A (Marsh.) Borkh. (FAG ACE AE) — American or Sweet Chestnut
  3801. Syn.: Castanea americana Raf.
  3802. Uses — Native and cultivated trees provide nuts which are sweeter than Old World types.
  3803. Nuts are gathered and sold in eastern U.S. markets. Reddish-brown wood light, soft, coarse­
  3804. grained, elastic, moderately strong, easily split, easy to work, tending to warp on drying,
  3805. resistant to decay. Used in manufacture of cabinet work, caskets, crates, desks, furniture,
  3806. interior finishes of houses, pianos, railway ties, ship masts, fence posts, telephone poles,
  3807. rails, mine timbers, siding for bams and other buildings, paper pulp. Tannin in wood used
  3808. in tanning extracts. Formerly planted in eastern U.S. as an ornamental and for timber, as
  3809. well as for nuts.^’^^’^^'*
  3810. Folk medicine — Reported to be astringent, sedative, tonic, and vermifuge, American
  3811. chestnut is a folk remedy for dysentery and pertussis.^’ Leaves have sedative properties.
  3812. Indians used the bark to treat worms and dysentery.
  3813. Chemistry — Leaves contain 9% tannic acid, which is colored green with ferric salts,
  3814. and a mucilage insoluble in alcohol.Wood contains from 6 to 11% tannin.Chestnuts
  3815. are starchy nuts, containing ca. 40 to 45% carbohydrates and less than 1% oil, as compared
  3816. with pecans with 70% oil and other tree nuts with ca. 60% oil.^^^ Nuts contain ca. 1,700
  3817. calories/lb.^^^ According to Woodroof,^“^* chestnuts contain no oil and are very high in
  3818. carbohydrates, especially starch, making them more easily digestible than other nuts. Ranging
  3819. from 21 to 25% shells, 4.5 to 6.5% moisture, and 69 to 72% dry matter, native chestnuts
  3820. are reported to contain 2.66 to 2.72% ash, 12.20 to 12.23% total protein, 2.84 to 3.63%
  3821. fiber, 65.03 to 66.16% total nitrogen-free extract, and 16.08 to 16.42% fat.^"^^
  3822. Description — Deciduous tree, up to 50 m tall; tmnk straight, columnar, 1 to 1.3 m in
  3823. diameter; when uncrowned the tmnk is shorter and 3.3 to 4 m in diameter; round-topped,
  3824. with horizontal limbs spreading to 30 m across; branchlets at first yellow-green, tinged with
  3825. red and pubemlous, becoming olive-green and glabrous, eventually becoming dark brown;
  3826. winter-buds ovoid, about 0.6 cm long, with dark-brown scales, scarious on margins; bark
  3827. 2.5 to 5 cm thick, dark-brown, deeply ridged with irregular, often intermpted fissures; leaves
  3828. oblong-lanceolate, apex acute, acuminate, base gradually narrowed and cuneate, 15 to 20
  3829. cm long, about 5 cm broad, when young yellow-green and pubemlous on upper surface and
  3830. tomentose beneath, becoming glabrous at maturity, turning yellow late in fall; petioles about
  3831. 1.3 cm long, slightly angled, pubemlous, often reddish; stipules ovate-lanceolate, pubem­
  3832. lous, about 1.3 cm long; staminate aments at maturity 15 to 20 cm long, with crowded
  3833. flower-clusters; androgynous aments slender, pubemlous, 6 to 12.5 cm long, with 2 or 3
  3834. involucres if pistillate flowers near base; but 5 to 6.5 cm in diameter, covered with glabrous
  3835. much-branched spines, opening with frost and gradually shedding nut; nut much compressed,
  3836. 1.3 to 2.5 cm in diameter, broader than long, with thick pale tomentum at apex or nearly
  3837. to middle, interior of hull lined with mfous tomentum; kernel very sweet. Root system
  3838. extensive both laterally and vertically. Flowers with strong fragrance, June to July.^^®
  3839. Germplasm — Reported from the North American Center of Diversity, American chestnut
  3840. or CVS thereof, is reported to tolerate drought, frost, heat, poor soil, sand, slope, and weeds.
  3841. Some varieties grown for nuts are ‘Ketchem’, ‘Watson’, and ‘GriffinHybrids with
  3842. blight-resistant Chinese and Japanese species have led to several mixed varieties not in
  3843. cultivation. Continuous efforts to find immune or resistant strains and repeated attempts to
  3844. produce resistant hybrids resembling it have failed to give varieties considered safe to plant.
  3845. ‘Clapper’ is a hybrid from a cross of Chinese-American hybrid backcrossed to the American
  3846. chestnut, and is a rapid-growing timber-type.
  3847. (2n = 24.)
  3848. Distribution — Native throughout the eastern U.S. from southern Maine to southern
  3849. Ontario, south to Delaware, Ohio, southern Indiana, and along the mountains to northern
  3850. 83
  3851. Georgia and western Florida, from sea-level in Massachusetts to 1,300 m in North Carolina,
  3852. reaching its greatest height in western North Carolina and eastern Tennessee. Until about
  3853. 1905, chestnut was important for its durable wood and its nuts. Trees were nearly completely
  3854. destroyed by the Chestnut Blight, a fungus bark disease (Endothia parasitica). Sprouts and
  3855. shrubby growth from bases of wild trees still appear and sometimes persist long enough to
  3856. produce fruit.
  3857. Ecology — Ranging from Cool Temperate Steppe to Moist through Warm Temperate to
  3858. Moist Forest Life Zones, American chestnut is reported to tolerate annual precipitation of
  3859. 4.9 to 11.6 dm (mean of 3 cases = 8.3), annual temperature of 8.4 to 12.5°C (mean of 3
  3860. cases = 9.9), and pH of 5.6 to 7.3 (mean of 3 cases = 6.5).®^ Thrives on a variety of
  3861. soils, from almost pure sand to coarse gravels and shales. Does not grow well on limestone.
  3862. Prefers dry, well-drained, rocky land of the glacial drift to the richer, more compact alluvial
  3863. soil of lowlands. Chestnut does not need a rich soil so much as one whose physical structure
  3864. insures good drainage. Light is essential to the tree, since it is somewhat intolerant to shade.
  3865. Grows best in a cool climate, but can endure heat and dry sunny situations.Hardy to
  3866. Zone 4.^"^^
  3867. Cultivation — Propagation is by direct seedling or by use of nursery-grown seedlings.
  3868. To prevent drying out and lowering of germination ability, collected seeds should be kept
  3869. stratified in moist sand until the following spring. The nursery should be located on fresh,
  3870. well-drained, fertile soil. Thorough cultivation of soil is required. Seed should be planted
  3871. about 2.5 cm apart in rows about 45 cm apart, at a depth of 2.5 cm. Bushel contains 6,500
  3872. to 8,000 nuts, sufficient to plant about 200 m of nursery rows, and to produce about 4,000
  3873. plants. While in the nursery, seedlings require careful cultivation and should be kept weed-
  3874. free. When planting in permanent sites, trees should be set 2 m apart each way. If trees are
  3875. to be grown directly from seed without transplanting, seed spots should be prepared, spaced
  3876. as above. Two or three seeds should be planted in each and covered about 2.5 cm deep
  3877. with fine soil. Only one tree should be allowed to remain in each hill. Little cultivation is
  3878. necessary after trees become established. Seedlings grow 25 to 37 cm by the end of the first
  3879. season and 37 to 50 cm per year until the 13th year.^^®
  3880. Harvesting — Mature nuts should be gathered every other day during the period of
  3881. maturity. Frequent and clean collection of nuts is especially important if nuts are likely to
  3882. be infested with weevils or if weather is hot and dry. Within a week’s time, nuts on the
  3883. ground, or those in opened burs on trees, may become dry or they may mold and spoil. In
  3884. harvesting nuts from a tree, it is advisable to first knock nuts from opened burs with pole
  3885. and then gather up nuts from ground. If harvested nuts are infested with weevils, they should
  3886. be treated by immersing them in water at 49°C for 30 to 45 min, depending on size of nuts.
  3887. After heating for proper length of time, nuts are removed immediately from hot water and
  3888. permitted to dry. Nuts, gathered and treated, are spread out in a layer no more than 3 or 4
  3889. nuts deep to cure, on a floor or in trays in a well-ventilated building. Nuts should receive
  3890. no direct sunlight. Time for curing depends upon amount of moisture in air. Usually 1 or
  3891. 2 days of curing is adequate. Under proper conditions, chestnuts can be stored from time
  3892. of harvest to late April with minimal spoilage; nuts come out of storage in the same condition
  3893. as they went in, and they have been found to germinate promptly. Chestnuts for eating may
  3894. be stored in deep freezers, but they must be cooked promptly after being removed. To freeze
  3895. the nuts, they should be shelled and the kernels blanched. Nuts must not be roasted slowly,
  3896. as they will explode in oven or they will not freeze satisfactorily. After shells have been
  3897. removed, if any of brown skin covering kernel remains, kernels should be blanched. This
  3898. is done by immersing kernels in boiling water for 1 or 2 min and quickly freezing them in
  3899. freezer containers. They are then kept — 18°C or lower until ready to be cooked, like frozen
  3900. peas or lima beans. Chestnuts are marketed packaged in cans, woven bags of cotton or jute,
  3901. or in baskets having tight-fitting lids.^^® Leaves are collected in September and October.
  3902. 84 Handbook of Nuts
  3903. With smaller nuts, the American chestnut, had it survived productive, would be expected
  3904. to yield somewhat less than the European. Smith reports Italian yields of ca. 1100 kg/ha,
  3905. French of 1500, and Spanish of ca. 2800 kg/ha.
  3906. Yields and economics — Yield varies from 6,500 to 8,000 nuts per bu. At present time,
  3907. American chestnut is not an item of commercial importance, either for the nuts or for timber,
  3908. as it was prior to 1907 to 1918, when most of the trees in the eastern U.S. were destroyed.
  3909. Chestnuts grown at present are hybrids of Chinese chestnuts (C. mollissima) or other species,
  3910. resistant to blight.
  3911. Energy — Wood and burs may be used for firewood or for the production of charcoal.
  3912. Biotic factors — American chestnut is devastated by Chestnut Blight {Endothia paras­
  3913. itica), and since 1918 it has not been a commercial product.Weevils in the nuts are a
  3914. problem.Browne^^ lists the following as affecting this species: Fungi — Cryptodiaporthe
  3915. castanea, Daedalea quercina, Endothia parasitica, Phellinus gilvas, Phytophthora dentata,
  3916. Polyporus frondosas, P pargamenus, Urnula craterium; Acariña — Oligonychas bicolor,
  3917. Coleóptera — Elaphidion villosanr, Lepidoptera — Acronicta americana, Alsophila po-
  3918. metaria, Anisota virginiensis, Datana ministra, Disphargia gattivitta, Ennomos magnaria,
  3919. E. sabsignaria, Lymantria dispar, Nematocampa dentata, Symmerista albifrons; and Mam­
  3920. malia — Lepas americanas, Odocoileas virginianas. According to Agriculture Handbook
  3921. 165,"^ the following are reported as affecting C. dentata: Actinopelte dryina (leaf spot),
  3922. Alearodiscas acerinas (bark patch), Anthostoma dryophilam, Armillaria mellea (root and
  3923. butt rot), Asconidiam castaneae, Botryosphaeria ribis, B. castaneae, Cenangum castaneae,
  3924. C. albo-atrum, Ceratostomella microspora, Chlorociboria aeruginosa, C. versiformia,
  3925. Chlorosplenium chlora, Clasterosporiam sigmoideam, Clitocybe illudens, C. monadelpha,
  3926. Colpoma quercinum, Corticium caeruleum, Coryneum spp., Cronartium cerebrum (rust),
  3927. Cryptodiaporthe castanea (twig canker), Cryptospora cinctula, Cylindrosporiam castaneae
  3928. (Leaf spot), Daedalea quercina, D. confragosa, Diaporthe eres, Didymella castañeda,
  3929. Diplodia longispora, Discohainesia oenotherae, Discosia artocreas, Endothia gyrosa, E.
  3930. radicalis. Fax olas alveolaris, F ene Stella castanicola, F. phaeospora. Fistulina hepática,
  3931. F. pallida, Flammula sp.. Pomes annosas (root and butt rot), F. applanatus (butt rot or on
  3932. stumps), F. everhartii (white spongy heart rot), F. ohiensis, F. pinicola (brown crumbly
  3933. heart rot), F. scutellatus, Gnomonia setacea, Hymenochaete rubiginosa, Laestadia castan­
  3934. icola, Lenzites betulina, Leptothyrium castaneae, Marssonina ochroleaca, Melanconis mo-
  3935. donia, Melanconium cinctum, Meraliasfagax, M. tremellosas, Microsphaerea alni (powdery
  3936. mildew), Monochaetia desmazierii (leaf spot), M. pachyspora, Mycosphaerella maculifor-
  3937. mis, M. punctiformis, Myxosporiam castaneam. Panas radis, P. stipticas, Pezicula par­
  3938. par ascens, Pholiota adiposa, P. sqaarrosa, Phoma castanea, Phyllosticta castanea, P.
  3939. fusispora, Physalospora obtusa, Phytophthora cinnamomi, Pleurotus ostreatas, Polyporus
  3940. spp., Rutstroemia americana, Scolecosporiam fagi, Sphaerognomonia carpinea, Steccher-
  3941. inum adustum, Steream spp., Strumella coryneoidea, Trametes sepiam (wood rot), and
  3942. Xylaria hypoxylon.^^^'^^^'^^^
  3943. 85
  3944. CASTANEA MOLLISSIMA Blume (FAGACEAE) — Chinese Hairy Chestnut
  3945. Syn.: Castanea saliva \ 2lt . formosana Hayata, Castanea formo sana (Hayata) Hayata,
  3946. and Castanea bungeana Blume.
  3947. Uses — Nut unexcelled in sweetness and general palatability by any other known chestnut.
  3948. By far the most common food nut, almost taking the place of potato in parts of the Orient.
  3949. Eaten raw, boiled, roasted, cooked with meat, made into confections, powdered and mixed
  3950. with candy, dried whole. Valuable for wildlife where nut production is more important than
  3951. timber. Recommended for hardiness, blight resistance and large nuts. Wood, leaves, and
  3952. bark used for their tannin content.Has merit as an ornamental tree.^'*^
  3953. Folk medicine — Reported to be hemostat, Chinese chestnut is a folk remedy for diarrhea,
  3954. dysentery, epistaxis, nausea, and thirst.The flower is used for scrofula. Stem-bark used
  3955. for poisoned wounds; the sap for lacquer poisoning. The fruit pulp is poulticed onto animal
  3956. bites, rheumatism, and virulent sores; husk astringent and used for dysentery, nausea, and
  3957. thirst; charred husks applied to boils. The root is used for hernia.^
  3958. Chemistry — Per 100 g, the seed (ZMB) is reported to contain 403 calories, 11.9 g
  3959. protein, 2.7 g fat, 83.2 g total carbohydrate, 2.2 g ash, 36 mg Ca, 168 mg P, 3.8 mg Fe,
  3960. 216 |xg beta-carotene equivalent, 0.29 mg thiamine, 0.32 mg riboflavin, 1.44 mg niacin,
  3961. and 65 mg ascorbic acid.*^
  3962. Description — Deciduous trees, long-lived, 15 to 20 m tall, spreading, round-topped;
  3963. branches glabrous, branchlets covered with dense pubescence of coarse spreading hairs;
  3964. 86 Handbook of Nuts
  3965. leaves with dense stellate pubescence when young, this persistent on under-surface of mature
  3966. leaves, alternate, 10 to 20 cm long, 5 to 10 cm broad, with 12 to 20 deep serrations on
  3967. each side, oblong-lanceolate to elliptic-oblong, base rounded or cordate, apex acute to
  3968. scarcely acuminate; petioles 2 to 3 cm long, with few long hairs; stipules over 2 cm long,
  3969. very veiny and rugose, abruptly broadened; staminate spikes axillary or terminal, 20 cm
  3970. long or more; pistillate flowers in hirsute globose involucres 1 cm thick, situated at base of
  3971. male spikes or occasionally terminating some spikes; styles about 5 mm long, densely hirsute;
  3972. bur up to 6 cm thick, with long, very stout, strongly pubescent spines; nut about 2.5 cm
  3973. thick, with small to rather extensive patch of tawny felt at apex; nut with thin skin which
  3974. peels readily from kernel. Flowers late May to late June in Maryland, earlier south ward.
  3975. Germplasm — Reported from the China-Japan Center of Diversity, Chinese chestnut,
  3976. or CVS thereof, is reported to tolerate disease, frost, and slope.Many cvs have been
  3977. introduced from China, and several hybrids with Japanese and American chestnuts have
  3978. been produced in attempts to breed-in blight-resistance. But most of them have failed for
  3979. one reason or another. Cultivars presently in the trade include: ‘Abundance’, which produces
  3980. 110 nuts per kg (84 to 167); ‘Ruling’, ‘Meiling’, ‘Nanking’, and ‘Carr’; the latter produces
  3981. 128 nuts per kg, has good cleaning quality, a sweet, pleasing flavor, and was the first variety
  3982. grafted in this country, but is not grown at the present time. Most of grafted Chinese chestnuts
  3983. have shown troublesome stock-scion incompatibility, which causes grafts to fail. Such
  3984. failures may occur in the first year, but more often after 4 to 6 years of vigorous growth.
  3985. Failure seems to relate to winter injury and is more frequent northward. Seedlings of selected
  3986. trees, as ‘Hemming’ from Maryland and ‘Peter Lui’ from Georgia, are among the most
  3987. promising. Seedlings of ‘Nanking’ come true to type and are planted commercially in the
  3988. South. Other cvs are hardy northward to Maryland, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, and the
  3989. warmer areas of New York. Two of the more recent hybrids are ‘Sleeping Giant Chestnut’
  3990. (C. mollissima x (C. crenata x C. dentata)) and ‘Kelsy Chestnut’ (C. mollissima x ?).
  3991. Also, ‘Stoke’ is a natural Japanese x Chinese chestnut hybrid.
  3992. Distribution — Native to north and west China and Korea. First introduced in the U.S.
  3993. in 1853 and again in 1903 and 1906. This species has been in cultivation in China for a
  3994. long time. It is practically the only species of chestnut being planted in the U.S. for
  3995. commercial purposes.
  3996. Ecology — Ranging from Warm Temperate Dry to Moist through Subtropical Dry to
  3997. Moist Forest Life Zones, Chinese chestnut is reported to tolerate annual precipitation of 9.4
  3998. to 12.8 dm (mean of 5 cases = 11.6), annual temperature of 10.3 to 17.6°C (mean of 5
  3999. cases = 14.2°C), and pH of 5.5 to 6.5 (mean of 5 cases = 5.9).^^
  4000. Chinese chestnut requires much the same conditions of climate, soil, and soil moisture
  4001. as does peach. Air-drainage must be good, and frost pockets must be avoided. Trees grow
  4002. naturally on light-textured acid soils, but they show a wide range of tolerance for well-
  4003. drained soils of different textures. Young trees are sensitive to drought and may be killed.
  4004. Cultivars and hybrids are about as hardy as peach and may be planted in any areas where
  4005. peaches do well, most withstanding temperatures to -28°C when fully dormant. Unless
  4006. leaves are removed soon after turning brown, they are apt to become heavily laden with
  4007. wet snow or ice and cause severe damage. This situation is particularly common at altitudes
  4008. of 600 to 700 m, as in West Virginia.Hardy to Zone 4.^"^^
  4009. Cultivation — Propagated readily from seed, from which selections are made. Nuts lose
  4010. their viability quickly after harvesting. Seeds may be germinated in nursery beds and the
  4011. seedlings planted out after two y e a rs.A s they do not compete well with weeds, young
  4012. trees should be kept cultivated for the first few years.Trees lend themselves readily to
  4013. orchard culture, although trees are not particularly vigorous. Trees are self-sterile; in order
  4014. to produce fruit, two or more cultivars should always be planted near each other for cross­
  4015. pollination. Spring growth is rapid as long as soil is moist, but root development is shallow
  4016. 87
  4017. during the first few years, and trees must be watered during dry periods. Young trees
  4018. frequently retain their leaves during much of the winter. Sun-scald on exposed sides of
  4019. trunks of newly planted trees may be a problem. Usually trees are headed low enough to
  4020. provide for shading by tops. Trees should be planted as close as 4 x 4 m or 4.6 X 4.6 m
  4021. each way; such trees should not be pruned. Cutting the lower branches from trunks invites
  4022. blight infection. Trees do best when left to grow in bush form. Trees planted in this manner
  4023. must have good cultivation, the same as for apple, peach, or pear trees.
  4024. Harvesting — Trees begin to bear when 5 to 6 years old; those for orchard culture with
  4025. profitable crops begin in 10 to 12 years. Chestnuts should be harvested daily as soon as
  4026. burs open and nuts fall to ground. Nuts should be placed at once on shelves or in curing
  4027. containers with wooden or metal bottoms to prevent larvae which may crawl out of nut from
  4028. reaching the ground. All infected nuts should be promptly burned. For curing the nuts, they
  4029. should be spread thinly on floors or the like, stirred frequently and held for 5 to 10 days,
  4030. depending upon condition of nuts and atmospheric conditions at time of harvest. During the
  4031. curing period, nuts will shrink in weight, and the color will change from lustrous to dull
  4032. brown. Three weeks is about as long as Chinese chestnuts remain sound without special
  4033. treatment. Chestnuts should be marketed as promptly as possible to minimize deterioration.
  4034. Chestnuts in sound condition may be stored in cold storage with temperature just above
  4035. freezing; this is the simplest method. Stratifying in a wire-mesh container buried deeply in
  4036. moist, well-drained sand is also very satisfactory. Putting nuts in a tightly closed tin container
  4037. at refrigerator temperature or in cold storage at 0°C is also acceptable.
  4038. Yields and economics — Average yields are about 13 to 25 kg per year per tree, with
  4039. large trees producing from 25 to 126 kg per tree.^^^ According to Wyman,trees are said
  4040. to produce an average crop of 34 to 45 kg edible nuts per tree. Major producers are China
  4041. and Korea. Very limited cultivation in U.S., with trend increasing.
  4042. Energy — Wood and burs may be used to bum, as is, or converted to charcoal.
  4043. Biotic factors — The following have been reported as affecting this species: Cronartium
  4044. cerebrum (mst), Cryptodiaporthe castanea (canker, dieback), Cytospora sp. (twig blight),
  4045. Diplodia sp. (twig blight), Discohainesia oenotherae, Gloeosporium sp. (blossom-end rot
  4046. of nuts), Marssonina ochroleuca (leaf spot), Phomopsis sp. (twig blight), Septoria gilletiana
  4047. (leaf spot), and Stereum gausapatum (heart rot)."^ Pollination is carried on by insects. Chinese
  4048. chestnut is largely, but not wholly, self-sterile. More than a single seedling or grafted cv
  4049. should be included in any planting. Several seedlings or several cvs would be better. Trees
  4050. producing inferior fruit should be removed. Chinese chestnut is not immune to the blight
  4051. (Endothia parasitica), but is sufficiently resistant for trees to persist and bear crops. Trees
  4052. develop bark cankers as a a result of infection, but the lesions usually heal. Nuts are attacked
  4053. by several diseases, either before or after harvest. Most serious pests are chestnut weevils,
  4054. often called curculios, which if unchecked, often render whole crops unfit for use.^® Trees
  4055. are often planted in poultry yards, in order to decimate the bugs. Japanese beetles are a
  4056. serious pest on leaves in some areas. June bugs and May beetle also feed on the newest
  4057. leaves, mainly at night.
  4058. Jones et al.^^"^ report that in commercial and home plantings of Chinese chestnut in 6
  4059. southeastern and eastern states, 23 of the trees had main stem cankers incited by Endothia
  4060. parasitica. In general, they found the main stem canker incidence (13 to 93) was higher in
  4061. plantings of the Appalachian Mountain region than in the Piedmont region (2 to 13 incidence).
  4062. They found the trees that were damaged most were located in high-wind and cold-winter
  4063. areas of the Appalachian Mountains.
  4064. 88 Handbook of Nuts
  4065. CASTANEA PUMILA (L.) Mill. (FAGACEAE) — Chinquapin, Allegany Chinkapin
  4066. Uses — Kernels of nuts are sweet and edible, but are not consumed by humans very
  4067. much; they are more of a wildlife food;^^^ also used to fatten hogs.'^® Used by Indians in
  4068. making bread and a drink similar to hot chocolateboiled and strung to make necklaces.'^®
  4069. Shrubs useful for planting on dry, rocky slopes, as they are attractive when in flower and
  4070. again in fall with their light green burs and dark foliage. Often planted as an ornamental.
  4071. The light, coarse-grained, hard, strong, and dark-brown wood is used for fenceposts, rails,
  4072. and railway ties.^^^
  4073. Folk medicine — Reported to be tonic and astringent, chinquapin is a folk remedy for
  4074. intermittent fevers.
  4075. Chemistry — No data available.
  4076. Description — Usually a spreading shrub east of Mississippi River, 2 to 5 m tall, forming
  4077. thickets, often only 1.3 to 1.6 m tall, westward in range to Arkansas and eastern Texas,
  4078. becoming a tree to 17 m tall with trunk up to I m in diameter, round-topped with spreading
  4079. branches; branchlets at first bright red-brown, pubescent or nearly glabrous, becoming olive-
  4080. green or dark-brown; winter-buds reddish, oval to ovoid, about 0.3 cm long, tomentose
  4081. becoming scurfy pubescent; bark 1.3 to 2.5 cm thick, light-brown tinged red, slightly
  4082. furrowed; leaves oblong-elliptic to oblong-ovate, 7.5 to 15 cm long, 3 to 5 cm broad,
  4083. coarsely serrate, acuminate, gradually narrowed, unequal, rounded or cuneate at base, early
  4084. tomentose on both surfaces, at maturity thick and firm, pubescent beneath, turning dull
  4085. yellow in fall; petioles pubescent to nearly glabrous, flattened on upper surface, up to 1.3
  4086. cm long; stipules pubescent, ovate to ovate-lanceolate to linear at end of branch; staminate
  4087. catkins single in leaf-axils toward ends of branches, simple with minute calyx and 8 to 20
  4088. stamens, yellowish-white, slender, at maturity 10 to 15 cm long, pubescent, flowers in
  4089. crowded or scattered clusters; pistillate flowers on catkins near very tips of branches, several
  4090. females near base, numerous males on more distal portion (androgynous), silvery tomentose,
  4091. 7.5 to 10 cm long; fruits usually several or many in large compact head or spike, each
  4092. involucre 1-flowered, 2 to 3.5 cm wide; bur 2 to 3.5 cm in diameter, covered with crowded
  4093. fascicles of slender spines, tomentose at base; nut shining, reddish-brown, ovoid, 1 to 2.5
  4094. cm long, about 0.8 cm thick, coated with sil very-white pubescence, shell lined with lustrous
  4095. tomentum; kernel sweet. Flowers later than leaves. May to early June; fruits September to
  4096. October.
  4097. Germplasm — Reported from the North American Center of Diversity, chinquapin, or
  4098. CVS thereof, is reported to tolerate frost, poor soil, slope, weeds, and waterlogging.^^ Few
  4099. selections of chinquapin have been made. More frequently it has been hybridized with
  4100. chestnuts. C. pumila var. ashei Sudw. (C. ashei Sudw.), the Coastal Chinquapin, grows
  4101. on sand dunes and in sandy woods along the coast from southeastern Virginia to northern
  4102. Florida and along the Gulf; small tree to 9 m tall and 26 cm in diameter, or large shrub,
  4103. leaves smaller, about 7.5 cm long and 3.5 cm broad, and spines on involucre less numerous.
  4104. Thought by some not to be distinct from species. Trees native to Arkansas and eastern Texas
  4105. are so much larger than those east of the Mississippi River, that they are considered by
  4106. some as a distinct species, Castanea ozarkensis Ashe; trees to 20 m tall, with narrowly
  4107. oblong elliptic leaves often 15 to 20 cm long, distinctly acuminate, coarsely serrate, with
  4108. triangular acuminate teeth, x Castanea neglecta Dode is a natural hybrid with American
  4109. chestnut (C. dentata), with intermediate leaves and involucres containing one large nut;
  4110. occurring in Blue Ridge areas (Highlands, North Carolina), ‘Essate-Jap’ is a hybrid between
  4111. the chinquapin and the Japanese chestnut, which forms a larger tree, with early flowers,
  4112. and nuts ripening 2 weeks or more before Chinese chestnuts; it grafts better on Japanese
  4113. stock than on Chinese. (2n = 24.)^^®
  4114. Distribution — Native in eastern U.S. from southern New Jersey and Pennsylvania to
  4115. 89
  4116. western Florida, through Gulf States to Texas (valley of Nueces River). It is most abundant
  4117. and attains its largest size in southern Arkansas and eastern Texas.
  4118. Ecology — Ranging from Cool Temperate Wet through Subtropical Moist Forest Life
  4119. Zones, chinquapin is reported to tolerate annual precipitation of 11 to 13 dm, annual tem­
  4120. perature of 12 to 19°C, and pH of 5.6 to 5.8.^^ Grows in mixed upland woods, on dry sandy
  4121. ridges, on hillsides, in sandy wastes, and along borders of ponds and streams, in dry or wet
  4122. acid soil. Occurs from sea-level to 1,500 m in the Appalachian Mountains. Prefers undis­
  4123. turbed woods with plentiful humus, and a warm temperate climate.Grows in dry woods
  4124. and thickets.*^® Hardy to Zone 5.^^^^
  4125. Cultivation — Propagated from seed, or often spreading by stolons. Seeds germinate
  4126. easily, sometimes sending out hypocotyl before reaching the ground. Although chinquapin
  4127. is planted, it is not cultivated as a crop. Occasionally, plants are planted for ornamentals,
  4128. or along edge of woods for wildlife food. Once planted, shrubs require no attention.
  4129. Harvesting — Shrubs begin bearing nuts when 3 to 5 years old, and are prolific producers
  4130. of small, sweet, nutty-flavored nuts. Nuts harvested in fall by man and wildlife.
  4131. Yields and economics — According to Rosengarten^^^ nuts of C. pumila, sweet and very
  4132. small, yield 400 to 700 nuts per lb (800 to 1540/kg), compared to 75 to 160/lb (165 to
  4133. 352/kg) for the American chestnut, and 30 to 150/lb (66 to 330/kg) for Chinese chestnut.
  4134. Nuts are sold in markets in southern and western states. Timber is used west of the Mississippi
  4135. River. Most valuable as wildlife crop.^^^
  4136. Energy — Wood and burs can be used for fuel, as is, or converted to charcoal.
  4137. Biotic factors — Although chinquapin is not resistant to the Chestnut Blight (Endothia
  4138. parasitica), shrubs make up for loss of diseased stems by increased growth of remaining
  4139. stems and by production of new shoots.Agriculture Handbook 165"^ lists the following
  4140. as affecting C. pumula: Actinopelte dryina (leaf spot), Armillaria mellea (root and butt rot),
  4141. Cronartium cerebrum (rust), Cryptospora cinctula, Discohainesia oenotherae, Endothia
  4142. radicalis, Gnomonia setacea, Lenzites betulina and L. trabea (brown cubical rot of dead
  4143. trunks and timber), Marssonina ochroleuca (brown-bordered leaf spot, eyespot), Melan-
  4144. conium cinctum (on twigs), Microsphaerea alni (powdery mildew), Monochaetia desmazierii
  4145. (leaf spot), Phyllosticta castanea (leaf spot), Phymatotrichum omnivorum (root rot), Phy­
  4146. tophthora cinnamomi (root and collar rot of nursery plants and forest trees). Poly poms spp.
  4147. (various wood rots), and Stereum spp. (various wood rots).
  4148. 90 Handbook of Nuts
  4149. CAST ANEA SATIVA Mill. (FAG ACE AE)—European, Spanish, Italian, or Sweet Chestnut
  4150. Syn.: C astan ea vu lgaris Lam., C astan ea vesca Gaertn., and C astan ea castan ea Karst.
  4151. Uses — European chestnuts are grown for the kernels of the nuts, extensively eaten by
  4152. humans and animals. Nuts used as vegetable, boiled, roasted, steamed, pureed, or in dressing
  4153. for poultry and meats. In some areas, chestnuts are considered a staple food, two daily
  4154. meals being made from them.^^® In some European mountainous regions, chestnuts are still
  4155. the staff of life, taking the place of wheat and potatoes in the form of chestnut flour, chestnut
  4156. bread, and mashed chestnuts. Flour made of ground chestnuts is said to have provided a
  4157. staple ration for Roman legions.In Italy, they are prepared like stew with gravy. Dried
  4158. nuts used for cooking purposes as fresh nuts, or eaten like peanuts. Culled chestnuts used
  4159. safely for fattening poultry and hogs. Cattle will also eat them.^^® Used as a coffee substitute,
  4160. for thickening soups, fried in oil; also used in brandy, in confectionary, desserts, and as a
  4161. source of oil. The relatively hard, durable, fine-grained wood is easy to split, not easy to
  4162. bend. Used for general carpentry, railroad ties, and the manufacture of cellulose. The bark
  4163. is used for tanning.
  4164. Folk medicine — According to Hartwell,the nuts, when crushed with vinegar and
  4165. barley flour, have been said to be a folk remedy for indurations of the breasts. Reported to
  4166. be astringent, sedative and tonic, European chestnut is a folk remedy for circulation problems,
  4167. cough, extravasation, fever, hematochezia, hernia, hunger, hydrocoele, infection, inflam­
  4168. mation, kidney ailments, myalgia, nausea, paroxysm, pertussis, rheumatism, sclerosis, scro­
  4169. fula, sores, stomach ailments, and wounds.Aqueous infusion of leaves used as tonic,
  4170. astringent, and effective in coughs and irritable conditions of respiratory organs.
  4171. Chemistry — Per 100 g, the seed (ZMB) is reported to contain 406 to 408 calories, 6.1
  4172. to 7.5 g protein, 2.8 to 3.2 g fat, 87.7 to 88.6 g total carbohydrate, 2.3 to 2.4 g fiber, 2.0
  4173. to 2.1 g ash, 30.3 to 56.8 mg Ca, 184 to 185 mg P, 3.4 to 3.6 mg Fe, 12.6 to 32.3 mg
  4174. Na, 956 to 1705 mg K, 0.46 mg thiamine, 0.46 mg riboflavin, and 1.21 to 1.26 mg niacin.®^
  4175. Chemical composition is similar to that of wheat; starch is easily digested after cooking.
  4176. WoodrooU"^^ reports Spanish chestnuts to contain 2.87 to 3.03% ash, 9.61 to 10.96% total
  4177. protein, 2.55 to 2.84% fiber, 73.75 to 77.70% total nitrogen-free extract, and 7.11 to 9.58%
  4178. fat. In a study on chestnuts from 19 natural stands in southern Yugoslavia, Miric et al.^^"^
  4179. found in most samples the total fat content was between 4 and 5, the highest 5.62. Oleic
  4180. and linoleic acids predominated, followed by palmitic.
  4181. Description — Tree 30 m or more tall, with girth to 10 m; trunk straight, smooth, and
  4182. blackish or dark-green in youth, finally becoming brownish-gray with deep longitudinal and
  4183. often spirally curved fissures; branches wide-spreading; young shoots at first minutely downy,
  4184. becoming glabrous; buds ovoid, obtuse, the terminal one absent; young leaves densely
  4185. stellately pubescent, becoming glabrous; mature leaves 10 to 25 cm long, 3 to 7 cm broad,
  4186. oblong-elliptic to oblong-lanceolate, apex long-acuminate, base more or less rounded or
  4187. cordate, upper surface soft green, lower paler; blades rather thick and stiff, with 6 to 20
  4188. bristles on each of the rather deeply serrate margins; petioles minutely velutinous, glandular-
  4189. lepidote or glabrous, about 2 cm long; stipules lanceolate, long-acute, gradually broadened
  4190. at base, 1 to 2.5 cm long, not markedly veined; winter buds dull-red, pubescent, long ovoid-
  4191. conic; staminate spikes 8 to 10 cm long, about 1 cm thick; pistillate flowers at base of male
  4192. spikes in large globose strigose involucres 1 to 2 cm thick; styles exserted up to 8 mm,
  4193. sparsely marked with ascending appressed hairs; bur green, 4 to 6 cm in diameter, with
  4194. numerous slender minutely pubescent spines up to 2 cm long; inside or husk marked by
  4195. very dense golden felt; nuts shining brown, with paler base, often 2 to 3.5 cm in diameter,
  4196. at tip thickly pubescent, bearing a short stalked perigynium with its persistent styles; kernel
  4197. variable from bitter to sweet. Flowers late May to July.^^^
  4198. Germplasm — Reported from the Near East Center of Diversity, European chestnut, or
  4199. 91
  4200. CVS thereof, is reported to tolerate bacteria, frost, mycobacteria, and slope.The only
  4201. disadvantage of the European chestnut is that the skin is astringent, but since most of them
  4202. are cooked before eating, the skin is removed readily. The skin should not be eaten, as it
  4203. is indigestible. When European is crossed with American Sweet, this difficulty is modified
  4204. or eliminated. The following are some of the most generally cultivated cvs. ‘Marrón Corn-
  4205. bale’, ‘Marrón Nousillard’, and ‘Marrón Quercy’ originated in France; all have the very
  4206. large light- to dark-brown nuts and are very productive; ‘Numbo’ and ‘Paragon’ are the
  4207. most frequently grown cvs in the U.S.; they have medium-large, roundish nuts of fair quality,
  4208. and bear regularly. ‘Ridgely’, originated in Dover, Delaware, has fair-sized nuts, of very
  4209. good quality and flavor, with 2 or 3 nuts per bur; it is vigorous and productive. ‘Rochester’
  4210. and ‘Comfort’ are grown to a limited extent. Hybrids with C. dentata have leaves with
  4211. cuneate bases. Some garden forms have variegated leaves or laciniate leaves (var. asplenifolia
  4212. Lodd.). (2n = 22,24.
  4213. Distribution — Native from southern Europe through Asia Minor to China. Cultivated
  4214. in many parts of the Himalayas, especially in Punjab and Khasia Hills. Naturalized in central,
  4215. western, and northern Europe, almost forming forests. Introduced on Pacific Coast of the
  4216. U.S. Extensively planted for its nuts and timber.Introduced to the U.S. in 1773 by
  4217. Thomas Jefferson.
  4218. Ecology — Ranging from Cool Temperate Steppe to Wet through Warm Temperate Steppe
  4219. to Dry Forest Life Zones, European chestnut is reported to tolerate precipitation of 3.9 to
  4220. 13.6 dm (mean of 14 cases = 8.6), annual temperature of 7.4 to 18.0°C (mean of 14 cases
  4221. = 10.8), and pH of 4.5 to 7.4 (mean of 10 cases = 6.4).^^
  4222. In woods, and often forming forests, on well-drained soils, often on mountain slopes,
  4223. usually calcifuge. Acclimated to all temperate areas. Trees retain foliage late in fall.^^^
  4224. Cultivation — Thorough preparation of soil before planting is essential. For orchard
  4225. planting, trees are propagated by grafting and budding. Whip grafts on small shoots or
  4226. stocks about 1.3 to 2 cm in diameter, or cleft grafts on shoots 1.3 to 3 cm in diameter give
  4227. most successful results. Bark graft on shoots is also successful. In any method of grafting,
  4228. great care must be used in waxing and then rewaxing in about 2 weeks. Wax should cover
  4229. cuts made in stock and scion, and should be applied immediately after inserting the latter.
  4230. Scion should be waxed for its entire length, leaving no bubbles. Cover whole by tying paper
  4231. bag over top. European types frequently outgrow stocks and cause an enlarged imperfect
  4232. union. For orchard planting, trees should be spaced 13 x 13m, 17 x 17m, or20 x 20
  4233. m; on good soil, the latter is preferable. Row could be set 20 m apart, with trees 7 to 8 m
  4234. apart in rows. It may be necessary to remove every other tree after they reach a certain size.
  4235. Good distance between rows provides for better growth of trees, and interplanting with
  4236. vegetables or small fruits. In any event, do not crowd chestnut trees. Dig holes 75 x 75
  4237. cm, breaking down topsoil around rim and allowing it to fall into hole. Always use fine
  4238. top-soil around roots and firm soil well after planting. Before planting, cut with knife all
  4239. broken or bruised roots, and clip end of every root. Set trees no deeper than in nursery and
  4240. in same position, the bark on the north side being greener than that on south side. There
  4241. will be less loss from sunburn if southern side, hardened by exposure, is again placed to
  4242. the south. During first year or two, trees should be shaded. Sometimes the trunk is wrapped
  4243. with paraffined paper or burlap, lightly enough not to interfere with flow of sap. After
  4244. planting, cut back top to about 1.6 m; if tree is a straight whip, or if branched, cut branches
  4245. down to 2 or 3 buds from trunk. Staking young trees is desirable, but not necessary. Young
  4246. trees should be pruned to an open spreading form with 3 to 5 main branches on which top
  4247. will eventually form, after which trees need little care other than good culture. If trees are
  4248. allowed to overbear, nuts run down in size. Trees usually develop well without irrigation,
  4249. but larger yields result when water is applied. While tree is young, regular irrigation is very
  4250. desirable. Unless intercrops are grown, irrigation may be limited to one application per
  4251. 92 Handbook of Nuts
  4252. month during growing season, after trees are bearing. Young trees may require irrigation
  4253. twice a month. Water should penetrate well into subsoil. Light irrigation induces shallow
  4254. rooting, which is undesirable. Do not continue irrigation too late in growing season, as it
  4255. is likely to make nuts crack open or over-develop them. Cracked nuts soon spoil and mold.
  4256. Cultivation must be thorough, so that free growth is promoted. After maturity, cultivation
  4257. need not be so intensive. During the first few years, it is advisable to hoe around tree by
  4258. hand, but after tree is well-established, annual plowing or cultivation after each irrigation
  4259. is sufficient. Annual cover crops may be used to build up or maintain soil fertility. Two-
  4260. year-old grafts are commonly loaded with burs, and if such grafted trees show a tendency
  4261. to bear heavily while young, burs should be thinned out so that very few remain. Otherwise,
  4262. trees will grow out of shape and be retarded in their development. Sometimes burs are
  4263. picked from trees for 3 or 4 years until trees become well established, before beginning nut
  4264. production. With seedlings and grafted trees, a mixture of cvs gives better yield of nuts. If
  4265. all burs are filled, tree would not stand the weight nor develop nuts to marketable size.
  4266. Many burs are empty and many have few mature nuts, perhaps a provision of nature, rather
  4267. than poor pollination. Many trees self-prune (drop) fruits or abort seeds.
  4268. Harvesting — Allow burs to mature thoroughly and fall of their own accord. Some cvs
  4269. stick, so that shaking or jarring the limbs is useful. In other cvs, burs open, and nuts fall
  4270. to ground. Burs which fall and do not open can be made to shed their nuts by pressure of
  4271. the feet or by striking with small wooden mallet. Some harvesters use heavy leather gloves
  4272. and twist nuts out of burs by hand. Nuts should be picked up every morning and stored in
  4273. sacks, if they are to be shipped at once. If they are to be kept for a while, they should be
  4274. piled on floor to sweat. Pile should be stirred twice a day for 2 days, and then nuts sacked.
  4275. Always store nuts so that air can circulate freely. Do not pile up sacks for any length of
  4276. time, as they will heat and mold. If stacking is necessary, place sticks between sacks for
  4277. ventilation. In gathering nuts, the collector usually has two pails or containers, one for first-
  4278. grade perfect nuts, the other for culls.
  4279. Yields and Economics — Yields average from 45 to 136 kg per tree.^^* In 60- to 80-
  4280. year-old stands in Russia, yields average 770 kg/ha, up to 1230 kg/ha in better stands.
  4281. Italy reports ca. 1100, France ca. 1500 to 2200, and Spain ca. 2800 k g /h a .In the best
  4282. years, 5,000 kg/ha are reported.^*® Nuts are marketed to a limited degree, but are mostly
  4283. locally cultivated and used.^^^
  4284. Energy — Wood and burs may be used for firewood or for the production of charcoal.
  4285. Biotic factors — European chestnut is susceptible to diseases of other chestnuts, especially
  4286. susceptible to attacks of leaf fungi.Agriculture Handbook 165"^ reports the following as
  4287. affecting C. sativa: Actinopelta dryina (leaf spot), Cronartium cerebrum (rust), Endothia
  4288. parasitica (blight), Exosporium fawcettii (canker, dieback), Marssonina ochroleuca (leaf
  4289. spot), Melanconis modonia (twig blight), Microsphaera alni (powdery mildew), Phyllactinia
  4290. corylea (powdery mildew), Phyllosticta castanea (leaf spot), Phymatotrichum omnivorum
  4291. (root rot), Phytophthora cinnamomi (root and collar rot of seedlings), Schizophyllum com­
  4292. mune (sapwood rot), and Stereum versiforme. Browne^^ adds: Fungi — Armillaria mellea,
  4293. Cerrena unicolor, Daedalea quercina, Dematophora sp., Diplodina castaneae, Fistulina
  4294. hepática. Fames mastoporus, Ganoderma applanatum, G. lucidum, Ilymenochaete rubi­
  4295. ginosa, Inonotus cuticularis, /. dryadeus, Laetiporus sulphureus, Microsphaera alphitoides,
  4296. Mycosphaerella castanicola, Phyllactinia guttata, Phytophthora cactorum, P. cambivora,
  4297. P. cinnamomi, P. syringae, Polyporus rubidus, P. squamosus, P. tulipiferae, Rhizinia
  4298. inflata, Rosellinia radiciperda, Sclerotinia candolleana, Stereum hirsutum. Valsa ambiens,
  4299. Verticillium alboatrum; Angiospermae — Viscum album; Coleóptera — Attelabus nitens.
  4300. Platypus cylindrus, Prionus coriareus, Xyleborus dispar; Hemiptera — Lachnus roboris,
  4301. Myzocallis castanicola, Quadraspidiotus perniciosus; Lepidoptera — Carcina quercana,
  4302. Euproctis scintillans, Lithocolletis messaniella, Pammene fasciana, Suana concolor; and
  4303. Mammalia — Dama dama, Sciurus carolinensis.
  4304. 93
  4305. CASTANOSPERMUM AUSTRALE A.Cunn. et Fräs. (FABACEAE) — Moreton Bay Chest­
  4306. nut, Black Bean Tree
  4307. Uses — Australian aborigines processed the seeds for food. Of its edibility, Allen and
  4308. Allen* say, “ The edibility of the roasted seed of C. australe, often equated with that of the
  4309. European chestnut, has been overestimated. Some writers rate its edibility about equal to
  4310. that of acorns, or as acceptable only under dire circumstances of need and hunger . . . The
  4311. astringency of fresh seeds is reduced or removed by soaking and roasting, although even
  4312. after such treatment ill effects are known to occur.“ * Commonly cultivated in Australia in
  4313. home gardens and as a street tree, this species is well known in the timber trade as Black
  4314. Bean. In view of the shape and configuration of the seeds, I believe “ Brown Buns” would
  4315. be more appropriate. The timber dresses well and is regarded as a heavy cabinet timber.
  4316. Before synthetics, the wood was used for electrical switchboards, because of its particularly
  4317. high resistance to the passage of electric current. The wood is also used in inlays, panels,
  4318. umbrella handles, ceilings, plywood, and carved jewel boxes. In South Africa, it is frequently
  4319. cultivated for shade and as an oramental, suitable for planting along suburban sidewalks.
  4320. Around Sydney, Australia, they have become popular as a house plant for short term
  4321. decoration.The NAS^^^ classifies this as a “ vanishing timber” , used sometimes as a
  4322. walnut substitute (750 kg/m^).
  4323. Folk medicine — Extracts have given negative antibiotic tests. According to the Threat­
  4324. ened Plants Newsletter,"^"^^ 100 kg of seed were shipped to the U.S. for cancer and AIDS
  4325. research, research which is suggesting anti-AIDS activity, in vitro at least. In a letter (1987),
  4326. Dr. K. M. Snader, of the National Institutes of Health,tells me, “ I do not at this moment
  4327. know if castanospermine will become an AIDS treatment, but it is showing some activity
  4328. in our screening systems. Indeed, there is enough interest to want to look further at the
  4329. pharmacology and to explore other products with either similar structures or with the same
  4330. mechanism of action.”
  4331. Chemistry — Australian cattle fatalities are reported from grazing the fallen seed during
  4332. dry periods (mostly October to December). Unfortunately, the cattle may develop a liking
  4333. for the seed. Also, with the leaves, cattle becoming fond of them may pine away and die
  4334. if deprived of them.^^^ Seeds contain the triterpenoid castanogenin. The structure is outlined
  4335. in Hager’s Handbook. ^*^ The wood contains bay in (C2H20O9) and bayogenin. Castanospermine
  4336. 94
  4337. Handbook of Nuts
  4338. is said to inhibit alpha- and beta-glucosidases, beta-xylosidase, and to inhibit syncytra
  4339. formation in HIV-infected CD4 positive cells/"^^ According to Saul et al./^® castanospermine
  4340. decreases cytoplasmic glycogen in vivo in rats, showing a dose-dependent decrease in alpha-
  4341. glucosidase activity in the liver (50% at 250 mg/kg), spleen (50% at 250), kidney (48% at
  4342. 250), and brain (55% at 50 mg/kg). At doses of 2,000 mg/kg, the rats experienced diarrhea
  4343. (reversible with diet) with decreased weight gain and liver size. With the HIV, there is a
  4344. dose-dependent decrease in syncytium formation (H9 human aneuploid neoplastic cells
  4345. infected with HIV) with complete inhibition at 100 |xg/m€. Apparently, it affects the envelope
  4346. protein, not the CD4 receptor glycoprotein. At 50 p-g/mi, it inhibits the cell death of infected
  4347. cells. And there is a dose-dependent decrease in extracellular virus (a million-fold at 200
  4348. pg/ m€ ) . ^ ^ 2
  4349. Toxicity — The unpleasant purgative effects of fresh seeds and their indigestibility are
  4350. attributed to the 7% saponin content. Later writers question the presence of saponin. The
  4351. sawdust irritates the nasal mucosa.^ Brand et al.'^^ report an uninspiring 79% water, 3.2%
  4352. protein, 0.7 g fat, and 0.5 g fiber. Menninger^®^ quotes one of his sources, “ Recently 14
  4353. Air Force personnel were admitted to the hospital after being on a survival mission and
  4354. eating the seed.”
  4355. Description — Tall, glabrous, slow-growing, evergreen trees to 45 m tall, 1 to 2 m DBH.
  4356. Leaves large, imparipinnate; leaflets large, 8 to 17, glossy, short-petioled, elliptic, tapering,
  4357. leathery; stipels absent. Flowers large, orange-to-reddish yellow, in short, loose racemes in
  4358. the axils of old branches; bracts minute; braceteoles none; calyx thick, large, colored; teeth
  4359. broad, very short; standard obovate-orbicular, narrowed into a claw, recurved; wings and
  4360. keel petals shorter than the standard, free, subsimilar, erect, oblong; stamens 10, free; anthers
  4361. linear, versatile; ovary long-stalked, many-ovuled; style incurved; stigma terminal, blunt.
  4362. Pod elongated, 18 to 25 cm long, subfalcate, turgid, leathery to woody, 2-valved, valves
  4363. hard, thick, spongy inside between the 2 to 6, large, globose, chestnut-brown seeds.® Seeds
  4364. 2 to 4 cm broad. Fruiting February to April in Australia.
  4365. Germplasm — Reported from the Australian Center of Diversity, Moreton Bay chestnut,
  4366. or CVS thereof, should tolerate some salt. It tolerates shade and some drought, but little frost.
  4367. (2n = 26.)
  4368. Distribution — Only of local importance in its native Australia and New Caledonia.
  4369. Native to the tablelands of northeast Australia, Queensland, and New South Wales. Intro­
  4370. duced into Sri Lanka ca. 1874. Introduced and surviving as far as 35°S in Australia. Now
  4371. somewhat common in India and the East Indies. Planted as an ornamental in the warmer
  4372. and more humid parts of South Africa.
  4373. Ecology — Estimated to range from Subtropical Dry to Rain through Tropical Dry to
  4374. Wet Forest Life Zones, this species is estimated to tolerate annual precipitation of 10 to 60
  4375. dm, annual temperature of 20 to 26°C, and pH of 6.0 to 8.5. Apparently damaged by heavy
  4376. frost (but tolerating 0°C in Sydney). Usually in coastal or riverine forests. Best suited to
  4377. rich loam, it will succeed on sandy, less-fertile soils.
  4378. Cultivation — Seeds should be sown fresh and barely covered (1 to 2 cm) with soil.
  4379. They should germinate in 10 to 21 days when planted at 20 to 30°C. They can be held 6
  4380. to 8 months at 4°C.
  4381. Harvesting — For reasons not fully understood, the tree often fails to fruit where it has
  4382. been introduced as an ornamental. For example, it grows well at Singapore and Manila,
  4383. apparently without fruiting. Some West Indian introductions have fruited at ca. 20 years of
  4384. age. The seeds may be steeped in water for 8 to 10 days, then dried in the sun, roasted on
  4385. hot stones, pounded, and ground into meal.
  4386. Yields and economics — Data provided me by the National Cancer Institute (NCI) indicate
  4387. that one could obtain 100 g pure castanospermine from 1,(X)0 lb seed, suggesting yields of
  4388. 0.0(X)2203% or ca. 2 ppm. Before the NCI AIDS announcement July 24, 1987, the Sigma
  4389. 95
  4390. Chemical Company was offering castanospermine at $22.60 to $23.80 per mg or $89.50 to
  4391. $94.20 per 5 mg, which translates to $8 million to $10 million per pound. There is a newly
  4392. published synthesis which can produce 100 mg and four isomers for $10,000. So the price
  4393. will come down.
  4394. Energy — The wood has a density of 800 kg/m^. If the seed contains only 2 ppm
  4395. castanospermine, most of the residual biomass could be used for fuel.
  4396. Biotic factors — The timber is subject to wood-rotting fungi and to termites. The sapwood
  4397. is subject to beetle attack. Apparently omithophilous (pollinated by birds) and distributed
  4398. by water. Nodulation and rhizobia have not yet been reported.^
  4399. 96 Handbook of Nuts
  4400. CEIBA PENTANDRA (L.) Gaertn. (BOMBACACEAE) — Kapok, Silk Cotton Tree
  4401. Syn: Eriodendron anfractuosum DC. and Bombax pentandrum L.
  4402. Uses — Valued as a honey plant. Young leaves are sometimes cooked as a potherb. In
  4403. the Cameroons, even the flowers are eaten. I have used the water from the superficial roots
  4404. when clean drinking water was unavailable.^® Silky fiber from pods used for stuffing pro­
  4405. tective clothing, pillows, lifesavings devices; as insulation material, mainly against heat and
  4406. cold, because of its low thermal conductivity, and sound, and for caulking various items,
  4407. as canoes. Fiber contains 61 to 64% cellulose, the rest lignin and other substances, including
  4408. a toxic substance, making it resistant to vermin and mites. Wrapped around the trunk of a
  4409. fruit tree, it is supposed to discourage leaf-cutting ants. Fiber is white or yellowish, cylin­
  4410. drical, each a single cell with a bulbous base, resilient, water-resistant, with buoyance
  4411. superior to that of cork. The floss, irritating to the eyes, is used to stuff life-preservers,
  4412. mattresses, pillows, saddles, etc., and it also used as tinder. In the U.S., baseballs may be
  4413. filled with kapok. Mixed with other fibers, like cotton, it is used in the manufacture of
  4414. carpets, laces, felt hats, “ cotton” , fireworks, and plushes. Fiber can be bleached or dyed
  4415. like cotton. Seeds are the source of an oil (20 to 25% in seed, about 40% in kernel), used
  4416. for illumination, for soap making, or as a lubricant. Seed oil roughly comparable to peanut
  4417. oil; used for the same purposes as refined cotton-seed oil. West Africans use the seeds,
  4418. pounded and ground to a meal, in soups, etc. Roasted seeds are eaten like peanuts. Some
  4419. people sprout the seeds before eating them. The young fruits are a vegetable like okra.
  4420. Expressed cake serves for fodder. The timber, though little used, is said to be excellent at
  4421. planing, sanding, and resistance to screw-splitting. Used for boxes, matches, toys, drums,
  4422. furniture, violins, dugouts (said to float even when capsized), and for tanning leather. Shaping
  4423. and boring qualities are poor, turning very
  4424. 97
  4425. Folk medicine — According to Hartwell,Ceiba is used in folk remedies for nasal
  4426. polyps and tumors. Reported to be antidiarrheic, astringent, diuretic, emetic, and emollient,
  4427. Ceiba pentandra is a folk remedy for bowel disorders, foot ailments, female troubles,
  4428. headache, hydropsy, leprosy, neuralgia, parturition, spasm, sprain, swelling, tumors, and
  4429. wounds.^’ The Bayano Cuna use the bark in medicine for female troubles. The roots are
  4430. used in treating leprosy. A bath of a bark infusion is supposed to improve the growth of
  4431. hair (Colombia). The same infusion is given to cattle after delivery to help shed the placenta.^®
  4432. Gum used as tonic, alterative, astringent, or laxative. Young leaves are emollient. Roots
  4433. used as diuretic and against scorpion stings. Juice of roots used as a cure for diabetes.
  4434. Ayurvedics used the alexeiteric gum for blood diseases, hepatitis, obesity, pain, splenosis,
  4435. and tumors. Yunani use the leaves for boils and leprosy, the gum and/or the root for
  4436. biliousness, blood diseases, dysuria, and gonorrhea, considering them antipyretic, aphro­
  4437. disiac, diuretic, fattening, and tonic. Others in India use the roots for anasarca, ascites,
  4438. aphrodisia, diarrhea, and dysentery; the taproot for gonorrhea and dysentery; the gum for
  4439. menorrhagia, and urinary incontinence in children.Malayans use the bark for asthma and
  4440. colds. Javanese mix the bark with areca, nutmeg, and sugar candy for bladder stones.
  4441. Liberians use the infusion as a mouthwash. In Singapore, leaves are mixed with onion and
  4442. turmeric in water for coughs. Javanese use the leaf infusion for catarrh, cough, hoarseness
  4443. and urethritis. Cambodians use the leaves to cure migraine and inebriation. In French Guiana,
  4444. flowers are decocted for constipation. In Reunion, the bark is used as an emetic. Annamese
  4445. also use the bark as emetic, the flowers for lochiorrhea and plague, the seed oil as an
  4446. emollient. West Indians use the leaves in baths and poultices for erysipelas, sprained or
  4447. swollen feet, and to relieve fatigue. The tea is drunk for colic and inflammation. French-
  4448. speaking West Indians take the root decoction as a diuretic. Latin Americans apply the bark
  4449. to wounds and indolent ulcers, using the inner bark decoction as antispasmodic, diuretic,
  4450. emetic, and emmenagogue, and for gonorrhea and hemorrhoids.Colombians use the leaf
  4451. decoction as a cataplasm or bath for boils, infected insect bites and the like.'®^ Nigerians
  4452. use the seed oil for rheumatism.Bark extracts show curare-like action on anesthetized cat
  4453. nerves.
  4454. Chemistry — Per 100 g, the seed is reported to contain 530 calories, 30.4 to 33.2 g
  4455. protein, 23.1 to 39.2 g fat, 21.6 to 38.3 g total carbohydrate, 1.6 to 19.6 g fiber, 6.1 to
  4456. 8.2 g ash, 230 to 470 mg Ca, 970 to 1269 mg Contains little or no gossypol, the seeds
  4457. contain 20 to 25% (kernel, ca. 40%) oil. The percentages of fatty acids in the oil are oleic,
  4458. 43.0; linoleic, 31.3; palmitic, 9.77; stearic, 8.0; arachidic, 1.2; and lignoceric, 0.23. Analysis
  4459. of the seed-cake gave the following values: moisture, 13.8; crude protein, 26.2; fat, 7.5;
  4460. carbohydrate, 23.2; fiber, 23.2; and ash, 6.1%; nutrient ratio, 1:1.5; food units, 107. Analysis
  4461. of a sample from Indo-China gave: nitrogen, 4.5; phosphoric acid, 1.6; potash, 1.5%.
  4462. Analysis of the wood gave: moisture, 9.8; ash, 5.9; fats and waxes, 0.62; cellulose, 68.3;
  4463. and lignone, 25.2%. The yield of bleached pulp was 30%. Destructive distillation of wood
  4464. from West Africa gave: charcoal, 28.4; crude pyroligneous acid, 43.7; tar, 12.8; and acetic
  4465. acid, 2.3%.^° The floss contains pentosans and uronic anhydrides. Root and stem bark
  4466. contain HCN. Leaves contain quercetin, camphorol, caffeic acid, and resin. Bark contains
  4467. up to 10.82% tannin.
  4468. Toxicity — The air-borne floss can induce allergy and conjunctivitis.
  4469. Description — Deciduous, umbraculiform, buttressed, armed or unarmed, medium to
  4470. large trees to 70 m tall, more often to 33 m tall, spines conical when young; branches
  4471. horizontal in whorls and prickly when young; leaves alternate, stipulate, long-petiolate,
  4472. palmately compound with 5 to 11 leaflets, these elliptic or lanceolate, acuminate, entire or
  4473. toothed, up to 16 cm long, 4 cm broad; flowers nudiflorous, numerous, in axillary dense
  4474. clusters or fascicles on pedicels 8 cm long, near ends of branches; calyx 5-lobed, 1 to 1.5
  4475. cm long, green, bell-shaped, persistent; petals 5, fleshy, forming a short tube and spreading
  4476. 98 Handbook of Nuts
  4477. out to form a showy flower 5 to 6 cm in diameter; cream-colored, malodorous; stamens
  4478. united into a 5-branched column 3 to 5 cm long; ovary 5-celled; fruit a 5-valved capsule,
  4479. ellipsoid, leathery, 20 to 30 cm long, about 8 cm in diameter, filled with numerous balls
  4480. of long silky wool, each enclosing a seed; seeds black, obovoid, enveloped in copious,
  4481. shining silky hairs arising from inner walls of capsule. Flowers December to January; fruits
  4482. March to April.
  4483. Germplasm — Reported from the Indochina-Indonesia, Africa, and Middle America
  4484. Centers of Diversity, kapok, or cvs thereof, is reported to tolerate drought, high pH, heat,
  4485. insects, laterite, low pH, slope, and virus.The Indonesian cv ‘Reuzenrandoe’ (giant kapok)
  4486. bears some characteristics of the var. caribaea. “ Some authors believe in an Ameri­
  4487. can/African origin of the kapok tree. If America is the sole center of origin, then the African
  4488. center is secondary. The African kapok tree is divided into the caribaea-forest type and the
  4489. caribaea-savannah type. The latter type, which has a broadly spreading crown, is planted
  4490. in market places. It is possible that this type arose from cuttings of plagiotropic branches.
  4491. Some research has gone into developing whiter floss, indehiscent pods, and spineless trunks.
  4492. Trees are quite variable in the spininess of the stem, habit of branching, color of flowers,
  4493. size of fruits, manner of fruit opening, and length, color, and resiliency of fibers of floss.
  4494. Based on these characteristics, three varieties are recognized: var. indica, Indian forms; var.
  4495. caribaea, American forms; and var. africana, African form s.(2n = 72,80,82)
  4496. Distribution — Probably native to tropical America; widely distributed in hotter parts of
  4497. western and southern India, Andaman Islands, Burma, Malaysia, Java, Indochina, and
  4498. southeast Asia, North Borneo; cultivated in Java.^^^ According to Zeven and Zhukovsky,
  4499. it was believed that the kapok tree originated in an area which was later divided by the
  4500. Atlantic Ocean, so this species is native both to America and Africa. This conclusion is
  4501. based mainly on the great variability of this plant and on the high frequency of dominant
  4502. inherited characteristics in these two continents. Another thought is that seeds may have
  4503. come from America in prehistoric times and that later introduction increased the variability.
  4504. Because of its chromosome number, a polyploid origin is suggested. If this supposition is
  4505. correct, the kapok tree can only have arisen in that area where its parents occur. As all other
  4506. Ceiba species are restricted to America, this would also indicate an American origin.
  4507. Ecology — Ranging from Subtropical Dry to Wet through Tropical Thom to Wet Forest
  4508. Life Zones, kapok is reported to tolerate annual precipitation of 4.8 to 42.9 dm (mean of
  4509. 134 cases = 15.2), annual temperature of 18.0 to 28.5°C (mean of 129 cases = 25.2°C),
  4510. and pH of 4.5 to 8.7 (mean of 45 cases = 6.7).^^ Hardy to Zone 10."^^^ It thrives best in
  4511. monsoon climates below 500 m altitude. Where night temperatures are below 20°C, fmits
  4512. do not set. Trees damaged by high winds and waterlogging. Requires well-drained soil, in
  4513. areas with annual rainfall of 125 to 150 cm, with abundant rainfall during the growing
  4514. season and a dry period from time of flowering until pods ripen. In Java, commonly grown
  4515. around margins of fields and along roadsides.
  4516. Cultivation — On plantations, kapok is usually propagated from seeds of high-yielding
  4517. trees. Planted in nurseries about 30 cm apart, seedlings are moved to the field when about
  4518. 9 months old, topping them to 125 cm. Field spacings of about 6.5 are recommended.
  4519. Sometimes trees are propagated from cuttings.In Indonesia, cuttings are set in a nursery
  4520. for a year and then transplanted at the beginning of the rainy season. The first harvest is
  4521. usually 3 years later.
  4522. Harvesting — Since pods are usually handpicked by climbers, before they dehisce, much
  4523. hand-labor is involved. Trees begin to fruit when 3 to 6 years old. For kapok, natives harvest
  4524. the unopened pods with hooked knives on long poles. Since pods do not ripen simultaneously,
  4525. it is necessary to harvest two or three times a year, before the pods open. Fruits are sun-
  4526. dried and split open with mallets. The floss is removed with the seeds, and the seeds separated
  4527. out by beating with a stick. In Java and the Philippine Islands, machines are employed for
  4528. 99
  4529. cleaning the floss. Floss is pressed into bales for export; these are generally packed in gunny
  4530. cloth, and vary in weight from 80 to 120 lbs and are 8 to 16 ft^ in volume.
  4531. Yields and economics — Trees 4 to 5 years old yield nearly a kilogram of floss, whereas
  4532. full-grown trees, 15 years old, may yield 3 to 4 kg.'^^ Some trees may bear for 60 years or
  4533. more and may yield 4,500 g kapok per year. It takes 170 to 220 pods to give a kilogram
  4534. of floss. An adult tree may produce 1000 to 4000 fruits, suggesting a potential yield of 5
  4535. to 20 kg floss per tree. If the ratios prevail in kapok that prevail in cotton, we would expect
  4536. that to correspond to 8 to 30 kg seed, or 2 to 7.5 kg oil per tree. In 1950, Indonesia produced
  4537. 5,000 MT kapok, 6,500 in 1951, 6,600 in 1952, 7,000 in 1953, exporting ca. 5,000 MT
  4538. a year.Indonesia has produced as much as 16,000 MT kapok oil per year. Until World
  4539. War II, Indonesia was the major producer; Ecuador exported over 1.25 million lbs in 1938.
  4540. Today, Thailand produces about half of the 22 million kg of kapok produced, with the U.S.
  4541. the largest consumer, using about half. Other exporters include Cambodia, East Africa,
  4542. India, Indonesia, and Pakistan.
  4543. Energy — The seed oil, used for cooking, lamps, lubrication, paints, and soaps, might
  4544. serve, like the peanut, as a diesel substitute. Six trees could produce a barrel of oil renewably.
  4545. As firewood, it is of no value, as it only smoulders, but the smouldering is sometimes put
  4546. to use in fumigation.The specific gravity of the wood is 0.920 to 0.933.^^"^
  4547. Biotic factors — The following fungi attack kapok trees: Armillaria mellea, Calonectria
  4548. rigidiuscula, Camillea bomba, C. sagraena, Cercospora ceibae, C. italica, Chaetothyrium
  4549. ceibae, Coniothyrium ceibae, Corticium salmonicolor, Corynespora cassiicola, Daldinia
  4550. angolensis, Fornes applanatus, F. lignosas, F. noxius, Glomerella cingulata, Phyllosticta
  4551. eriodendri, Physalospora rhodina, Polyporus occidentalis, P. zonalis, Polystictus occiden-
  4552. talis, P. sanguineus, Pycnoporus coccincus, Ramularia eriodendri, Schizophyllum com­
  4553. mune, Septoria ceibae, Thanatephorus cucumeris, Ustulina deusta, and U. zonata. The
  4554. bacterium, Xanthomonas malvacearum, also infests trees. The parasite, Dendropthoefalcata,
  4555. also occurs on the tree. The following viruses attack kapok: Cacao virus lA, 1C, and IM;
  4556. Offa Igbo (Nigeria) cacao. Swollen Shoot, and viruses of Adansonia digitata. Nematodes
  4557. isolated by kapok include: Helicotylenchus cóncavas, H. multicinctus, H. retasas, H. pseu-
  4558. dorobastus, H. dihystera, H. cavenessi, Meloidogyne arenaria, M. javanica, Pratylenchas
  4559. brachyaras, P. delattrei, Scatellonema brachyurus, S. clathricaudatum, Tylenchorhynchus
  4560. martini, Xiphinema elongatum, and X. ifacolum.^^^'^^^
  4561. Baker and Harris^^ indicate that the flowers are visited by the fruit bats, Epomorphorus
  4562. gambianas, Nanonycteris veldkamp, and Eidolon helvum. Flowers, though bat pollinated,
  4563. are visited by bees.^^ Logs and lumber very susceptible to insect attack and decay. The
  4564. wood is nearly always turned blue-gray by sap-staining fungi. This can be prevented by
  4565. dipping in a fungicide solution shortly after sawing. In addition, Browne^^ lists the following
  4566. as affecting this species: Coleóptera — Analeptes trifasciata, Aracceras fasciculatas, Ba-
  4567. tocera namitor, B. rufomaculata, Chrysochroa bicolor, Hypomeces sqaamosus, Petrognatha
  4568. gigas, Phytoscaphas triangularis, Steirastoma breve, Tragiscoschema bertolonii; Hemiptera
  4569. — Delococcas tafoenis, Helopeltis schoutedeni, Icerya nigroarcolata, Planococcoides nja-
  4570. lensis, Planococcus citri, P. kenyae, P. lilacinus, Pseudaulacaspis pentágona, Pseudococcus
  4571. adonidum, Rastrococcus iceryoides, Saissetia nigra; Lepidoptera — Anomis leona, Ascotis
  4572. selenaria, Cryptothelea varié gata, Dasy chira mendosa, Suana concolor, Sylepta derogata;
  4573. Thysanoptera — Selenothrips rubrocinctus.
  4574. 100 Handbook of Nuts
  4575. COCOS NUCIFERA L. (ARECACEAE) Coconut
  4576. Uses — Coconut is one of the ten most useful trees in the world, providing food for
  4577. millions of people, especially in the tropics. At any one time a coconut palm may have 12
  4578. different crops of nuts on it, from opening flower to ripe nut. At the top of the tree is the
  4579. growing point, a bundle of tightly packed, yellow-white, cabbage-like leaves, which, if
  4580. damaged, causes the entire tree to die. If the tree can be spared, this heart makes a tasty
  4581. treat, a ‘millionaire’s salad’. Unopened flowers are protected by sheath, often used to fashion
  4582. shoes, caps, even a kind of pressed helmet for soldiers. Opened flowers provide a good
  4583. honey for bees. A clump of unopened flowers may be bound tightly together, bent over and
  4584. its tip bruised. Soon it begins to “ weep” a steady dripping of sweet juice, up to a gallon
  4585. per day, that contains 16 to 30 mg ascorbic acid per 100 g. The cloudy brown liquid is
  4586. easily boiled down to syrup, called coconut molasses, then crystallized into a dark sugar,
  4587. almost exactly like maple sugar. Sometimes it is mixed with grated coconut for candy. Left
  4588. standing, it ferments quickly into a beer with alcohol content up to 8%, called “ toddy” in
  4589. India and Sri Lanka; “ tuba” in Philippines and Mexico; and “ tuwak” in Indonesia. After
  4590. a few weeks, it becomes a vinegar. “ Arrack” is the product after distilling fermented
  4591. “ toddy” and is a common spiritous liquor consumed in the East. The net has a husk, which
  4592. is a mass of packed fibers called coir, which can be woven into strong twine or rope, and
  4593. is used for padding mattresses, upholstery, and life-preservers. Fiber, resistant to sea water,
  4594. is used for cables and rigging on ships, for making mats, rugs, bags, brooms, brushes, and
  4595. olive oil filters in Italy and Greece; also used for fires and mosquito smudges. If nut is
  4596. 101
  4597. allowed to germinate, cavity fills with a spongy mass called “ bread” which is eaten raw
  4598. or toasted in the shell over the fire. Sprouting seeds may be eaten like celery. Shell is hard
  4599. and fine-grained, and may be carved into all kinds of objects, as drinking cups, dippers,
  4600. scoops, smoking pipe bowls, and collecting cups for rubber latex. Charcoal is used for
  4601. cooking fires, air filters, in gas masks, submarines, and cigarette tips. Shells burned as fuel
  4602. for copra kilns or house-fires. Coconut shell flour is used in industry as a filler in plastics.
  4603. Coconut water is produced by a 5-month-old nut, about 2 cups of crystal-clear, cool sweet
  4604. (invert sugars and sucrose) liquid, so pure and sterile that during World War II, it was used
  4605. in emergencies instead of sterile glucose solution, and put directly into a patient’s veins.
  4606. Also contains growth substances, minerals, and vitamins. Boiled toddy, known as jaggery,
  4607. with lime makes a good cement. Nutmeat of immature coconuts is like a custard in flavor
  4608. and consistency, and is eaten or scraped and squeezed through cloth to yield a “ cream” or
  4609. “ milk” used on various foods. Cooked with rice to make Panama’s famous “ arroz con
  4610. coco” ; also cooked with taro leaves or game, and used m coffee as cream. Dried, desiccated,
  4611. and shredded it is used in cakes, pies, candies, and in curries and sweets. When nuts are
  4612. open and dried, meat becomes copra, which is processed for oil, rich in glycerine and used
  4613. to make soaps, shampoos, shaving creams, toothpaste lotions, lubricants, hydraulic fluid,
  4614. paints, synthetic rubber, plastics, margarine, and in ice cream. In India, the Hindus make
  4615. a vegetarian butter called “ ghee” from coconut oil; also used in infant formulas. When
  4616. copra is heated, the clear oil separates out easily, and is made this way for home use in
  4617. producing countries where it is used in lamps. Cake residue is used as cattle fodder, as it
  4618. is rich in proteins and sugars; animals should not have more than 4 to 5 lbs per animal per
  4619. day, as butter from milk will have a tallow flavor. As the cake is deficient in calcium, it
  4620. should be fed together with calcium-rich foods. Trunk wood is used for building sheds and
  4621. other semi-permanent buildings. Outer wood is close-grained, hard, and heavy, and when
  4622. well seasoned, has an attractive dark-colored grain adaptable for carving, especially orna­
  4623. mentals, under the name of “ porcupine wood” . Coconut logs should not be used for fences,
  4624. as decayed wood makes favorable breeding places for beetles. Logs are used to make rafts.
  4625. Sections of stem, after scooping out pith, are used as flumes or gutters for carrying water.
  4626. Pith of stem contains starch which may be extracted and used as flour. Pitch from top of
  4627. tree is sometimes pickled in coconut vinegar. Coconut leaves made into thin strips are woven
  4628. into clothing, furnishings, screens, and walls of temporary buildings. Stiff midribs make
  4629. cooking skewers, arrows, brooms, brushes, and used for fish traps. Leaf fiber is used in
  4630. India to make mats, slippers, and bags. Used to make short-lived torches. Coconut roots
  4631. provide a dye, a mouthwash, a medicine for dysentery, and frayed out, it makes toothbrushes;
  4632. scorched, it is used as coffee substitute. Coconut palm is useful as an ornamental; its only
  4633. drawback being the heavy nuts which may cause injury to man, beast, or rooftop when they
  4634. hit in falling.
  4635. Folk medicine — According to Hartwell,coconuts are used in folk remedies for tumors.
  4636. Reported to be anthelmintic, antidotal, antiseptic, aperient, aphrodisiac, astringent, bacter­
  4637. icidal, depurative, diuretic, hemostat, pediculicide, purgative, refrigerant, stomachic, styp­
  4638. tic, suppurative, and vermifuge, coconut — somewhere or other — is a folk remedy for
  4639. abscesses, alopecia, amenorrhea, asthma, blenorrhagia, bronchitis, bruises, bums, cachexia,
  4640. calculus, colds, constipation, cough, debility, dropsy, dysentery, dysmenorrhea, earache,
  4641. erysipelas, fever, flu, gingivitis, gonorrhea, hematemesis, hemoptysis, jaundice, menor­
  4642. rhagia, nausea, phythisis, pregnancy, rash, scabies, scurvy, sore throat, stomach-ache,
  4643. swelling, syphilis, toothache, tuberculosis, tumors, typhoid, venereal diseases, and wounds.
  4644. Chemistry — Per 100 g, the kernel is reported to contain 36.3 g H2O, 4.5 g protein,
  4645. 41.6 g fat, 13.0 g total carbohydrate, 3.6 g fiber, 1.0 g ash, 10 mg Ca, 24 mg P, 1.7 mg
  4646. Fe, and traces of beta-carotene.Per 100 g, the green nut is reported to contain 77 to 200
  4647. calories, 68.0 to 84.0 g H2O, 1.4 to 2.0 g protein, 1.9 to 17.4 g fat, 4.0 to 11.7 g total
  4648. 102 Handbook of Nuts
  4649. carbohydrate, 0.4 to 3.7 g fiber, 0.7 to 0.9 g ash, 11 to 42 mg Ca, 42 to 56 mg P, 1.0 to
  4650. 1.1 mg Fe, 257 mg K, trace of beta-carotene, 0.4 to 0.5 mg thiamine, 0.03 mg riboflavin,
  4651. 0.8 mg niacin, and 6 to 7 mg ascorbic acid.^^ Coconut oil is one of the least variable among
  4652. vegetable fats, i.e., 0.2 to 0.5% caproic-, 5.4 to 9.5 caprylic-, 4.5 to 9.7 capric-, 44.1 to
  4653. 51.3 lauric-, 13.1 to 18.5 myristic, 7.5 to 10.5 palmitic-, 1.0 to 3.2 stearic-, 0 to 1.5
  4654. arachidic-, 5.0 to 8.2 oleic-, and 1.0 to 2.6 linoleic-acids.^® Following oil extraction from
  4655. copra, the coconut cake (poonac) contains 10.0 to 13.3% moisture, 6.0 to 26.7% oil, 14.3
  4656. to 19.8% protein, 32.8 to 45.3% carbohydrates, 8.9 to 12.2% fibers, and 4.0 to 5.7% ash.
  4657. The so-called coconut water is 95.5% water, 0.1% protein, <0.1% fat, 0.4% ash, 4.0%
  4658. carbohydrate. Per 100 g water, there is 105 mg Na, 312 K, 29 Ca, 30 Mg, 0.1 Fe, 0.04
  4659. Cu, 37 P, 24 S, and 183 mg choline. Leaves contain 8.45% moisture, 4.28% ash, 0.56%
  4660. K^O, 0.25 P2O3. 0.28 CaO, and 0.57% MgO.^«
  4661. Description — Palm to 27 m or more tall, bearing crown of large pinnate leaves; trunk
  4662. stout, 30 to 45 cm in diameter, straight or slightly curved, rising from a swollen base
  4663. surrounded by a mass of roots; rarely branched, marked with rings of leaf scars; leaves 2
  4664. to 6 m long, pinnatisect, leaflets 0.6 to 1 m long, narrow, tapering; inflorescence in axil of
  4665. each leaf as spathe enclosing a spadix 1.3 to 2 m long, stout, straw- or orange-colored,
  4666. simply branched; female flowers numerous, small, sweet-scented, borne toward the top of
  4667. panicle; fruit ovoid, 3-angled, 15 to 30 cm long, containing a single seed; exocarp a thick,
  4668. fibrous husk, enclosing a hard, boney endocarp or shell. Adhering to the inside wall of the
  4669. endocarp is the testa with thick albuminous endosperm, the coconut meat; embryo below
  4670. one of the three pores at end of fruit, cavity of endosperm filled in unripe fruit with watery
  4671. fluid, the coconut water, and only partially filled when ripe. Flowers and fruits year-round
  4672. in the tropics.
  4673. Germplasm — Reported from the Indochina-Indonesia and Hindustani centers of origin,
  4674. coconut has been reported to tolerate high pH, heat, insects, laterites, low pH, poor soil,
  4675. salt, sand, and slope.Many classifications have been proposed for coconuts; none is wholly
  4676. satisfactory. Variations are based on height, tall or dwarf; color of plant or fruit; size of nut
  4677. (some palms have very large fruits, others have large numbers of small fruits); shape of
  4678. nuts, varying from globular to spindle-shaped or with definite triangular sections; thickness
  4679. of husk or shell; type of inflorescence; and time required to reach maturity. Many botanical
  4680. varieties and forms have been recognized and named, using some of the characteristics
  4681. mentioned above. Cultivars have been developed from various areas. Dwarf palms, occurring
  4682. in India as introductions from Malaysia, live about 30 to 35 years, thrive in rich soils and
  4683. wet regions, flower and fruit much earlier than tall varieties, and come into bearing by the
  4684. fourth year after planting. However, dwarf varieties are not grown commercially, and only
  4685. on a limited scale, because of their earliness and tender nuts — which yield a fair quantity
  4686. of coconut water. They are highly susceptible to diseases and are adversly affected by even
  4687. short periods of drought. Tall coconuts are commonly grown for commercial purposes, living
  4688. 80 to 90 years. They are hardy, thrive under a variety of soil, climatic, and cultural conditions,
  4689. and begin to flower when about 8 to 10 years after planting. (2n = 16.)^^^
  4690. Distribution — Now pan-tropical, especially along tropical shorelines, where floating
  4691. coconuts may volunteer, the coconut’s origin is shrouded in mysteries, vigorously debated.
  4692. According to Purseglove,^^^ the center of origin of cocoid palms most closely related to
  4693. coconut is in northwestern South America. At the time of the discovery of the New World,
  4694. coconuts (as we know them today) were confined to limited areas on the Pacific coast of
  4695. Central America, and absent from the Atlantic shores of the Americas and Africa. Coconuts
  4696. drifted as far north as Norway are still capable of germination. The wide distribution of
  4697. coconut has no doubt been aided by man and marine currents as well.
  4698. Ecology — Ranging from Subtropical Dry to Wet through Tropical Very Dry to Wet
  4699. Forest Life Zones, coconut has been reported from stations with an annual precipitation of
  4700. 103
  4701. 7 to 42 dm (mean of 35 cases = 20.5), annual temperature of 21 to 30°C (mean of 35 cases
  4702. = 25.7°C) with 4 to 12 consecutive frost-free months, each with at least 60 mm rainfall,
  4703. and pH of 4.3 to 8.0 (mean of 27 cases = 6.0).^^
  4704. Cultivation — Propagated by seedlings raised from fully mature fruits. Seeds selected
  4705. from high-yielding stock with desirable traits. Seed-nut trees should have a straight trunk
  4706. and even growth, with closely spaced leaf-scars, short fronds, well oriented on the crown,
  4707. and short bunch stalks. The inflorescence should bear about 100 female flowers, and the
  4708. crown should have a large number of fronds and inflorescences. Seed-nuts should be medium­
  4709. sized and nearly spherical in shape; long nuts usually have too much husk in relation to
  4710. kernel. Because male parent is unknown and because female parent is itself heterozygous,
  4711. seed-nuts from high-yielding palms do not necessarily reproduce the same performance in
  4712. progeny. Records are kept of fruits harvested from each mother palm, such as number of
  4713. bunches, number of nuts, weight of husked nuts, estimated weight of copra (about one-third
  4714. weight of husked nuts being considered favorable). After fully mature nuts are picked (not
  4715. allowed to fall), they are tested by shaking to listen for water within. Under-ripe or spoiled
  4716. nuts or those with no water, or with insect or disease damage are discarded. Nuts are planted
  4717. right away in nursery or stored in a cool, dry, well-ventilated shed until they can be planted.
  4718. Seeds planted in nursery facilitate selection of best to put in field, as only half will produce
  4719. a high-yielding palm for copra. Also, watering and insect control is much easier to manage
  4720. in nursery. Soil should be sandy or light loamy, free from waterlogging, but close to source
  4721. of water, and away from heavy shade. Nursery should have long raised beds 20 to 25 cm
  4722. high, separated by shallow drains to carry away excessive water. Beds should be dug and
  4723. loosened to a depth of 30 cm. Loosened soil mixed with dried or rotten leaves and ash from
  4724. burnt fresh coconut husks at a rate of 25 lbs. of husk-ash per 225 ft.^ Nuts spaced in beds
  4725. ca. 20 X 30 cm, a hectare of nursery accommodating 100,000 seed-nuts. Nuts planted
  4726. horizontally produce better seedlings than those planted vertically. The germinating eye is
  4727. placed uppermost in a shallow furrow, about 15 cm deep, and soil mounded up around, but
  4728. not completely covering them, leaving the eye exposed. Soaking nuts in water for 1 to 2
  4729. weeks before planting may benefit germination; longer periods of soaking are progressively
  4730. disadvantageous. Bright sunlight is best for growing stout sturdy seedlings. Regular watering
  4731. in the nursery is essential in dry weather. Mulching may preserve moisture and suppress
  4732. weeds. Paddy straw, woven coconut leaves, and just coconut leaves are used; however, they
  4733. might encourage termites. Potash fertilizer may help seedlings which probably do not need
  4734. other fertilizers, the nut providing most of needed nutrition. About 16 weeks after the nut
  4735. is planted, the shoot appears through the husk, and at about 30 weeks, when 3 seed-leaves
  4736. have developed, seedlings should be planted out in permanent sites. Rigorous culling of
  4737. seedlings is essential. All late germinators and very slow growers are discarded. Robust
  4738. plants, showing normal rapid growth, straight stems, broad, comparatively short, dark-green
  4739. leaves with prominent veins, spreading outward and not straight upward, and those free of
  4740. disease symptoms, are selected for planting out. Best spacing depends upon soil and terrain.
  4741. Usually 9 to 10 m on the square is used, planting 70 to 150 trees per ha; with triangular
  4742. spacing of 10 m, 115 palms per ha; and for group or bouquet planting, 3 to 6 palms planted
  4743. 4 to 5 m apart. Holes 1 m wide and deep should be dug 1 to 3 months before seedlings are
  4744. transplanted. In India and Sri Lanka, 300 to 400 husks are burned in each hole, providing
  4745. 4 to 5 kg ash per hole. This is mixed with topsoil. Two layers of coconut husks are put into
  4746. the bottom of the hole before filling with the topsoil-mixed ash. Muriate of potash, 1 kg
  4747. per hole, is better than ash, but increases cost of planting. The earth settles so that it will
  4748. be 15 to 30 cm below ground level when seedling is planted. In planting, soil should be
  4749. well-packed around nut, but should not cover collar of seedling, nor get into leaf axils. As
  4750. plant develops, trunk may be earthed up, until soil is flush with general ground level. Usually
  4751. 7 to 8 month old seedlings are used for transplants, best done in the rainy season. In some
  4752. 104 Handbook of Nuts
  4753. instances plants up to 5 years old are used, as they are more resistant to termite damage. If
  4754. older plants are used, care must be taken not to damage roots, as they are slow to recover.
  4755. In areas with only one rainy season per year, it is simpler to plant nuts in the nursery in
  4756. one rainy season, and transplant them a year later. Young plantation should be fenced to
  4757. protect plants from cattle, goats, or other wild animals. Entire areas may be fenced in. In
  4758. Sri Lanka and southern India, piles of coconut husks are placed around the tree. At the end
  4759. of the first year after transplanting, vacancies should be filled with plants of the same age
  4760. held in reserve in nursery. Also any slow-growers, or disease-damaged plants should be
  4761. replaced. During the first 3 years, seedlings should be watered during drought, at about 16
  4762. liters per tree twice a week. Keep trees clear of weeds, especially climbers. Usually a circle
  4763. 1 to 2 m in radius should be weeded several times a year, the weeds left as mulch. Cover-
  4764. crops, as Centrosema pubescens, Calopogonium mucunoides, or Pueraria phaseoloides, are
  4765. used and turned under before dry season. Catch-crops such as cassava {Manihot utilissima),
  4766. and green gram {Vigna aureus) and cowpea {Vigna unguiculata), bananas and pineapples,
  4767. may be used. Sometimes bush crops, in addition to or instead of, ground covers are used
  4768. as green manures, e.g., Tephrosia Candida, Crotalaria striata, C. uraramoensis, C. ana-
  4769. gyroides — all fast growers. Gliricidia sepium and Erythrina lithosperma may be grown as
  4770. hedges or live fences, their loppings used as green manure. Usually the cheapest form of
  4771. fertilizer materials are used, consisting of 230 to 300 g N, 260 to 460 g P2O5, and 300 to
  4772. 670 g K2O per palm. Lime is generally not recommended. There is no evidence that salt is
  4773. beneficial, as sometimes claimed. Coconuts can withstand a degree of salinity, about 0.6%,
  4774. which is lethal to many other crops. Needing some magnesium, the palms are extremely
  4775. sensitive to an excess. Cultivation depends on soil type, slope of land, and rainfall distri­
  4776. bution. Disk-harrowing at end of moonsoon rains may be all that is necessary to control
  4777. weeds.
  4778. Harvesting — Trees begin to yield fruit in 5 to 6 years on good soils, more likely 7 to
  4779. 9 years, and reach full bearing in 12 to 13 years. Fruit-set to maturity is 8 to 10 months;
  4780. 12 months from setting of female flowers. Nuts must be harvested fully ripe for making
  4781. copra or desiccated coconut. For coir they are picked about one month short of maturity,
  4782. so that husks will be green. Coconuts are usually picked by human climbers, or cut by
  4783. knives attached to the end of long bamboo poles. With the pole, a man can pick some 250
  4784. palms in a day — by climbing, only 25. In some areas nuts are allowed to fall naturally
  4785. and collected regularly. Nuts are husked in the field, a good husker handling 2,000 nuts per
  4786. day. Then the nut is split (up to 10,OCX) nuts per working day). Copra may be cured by sun­
  4787. drying, or by kiln-drying, or by a combination of both. Sun-drying requires 6 to 8 consecutive
  4788. days of good bright sunshine to dry meat without its spoiling. Drying reduces moisture
  4789. content from 50% to below 7%. Copra is stored in a well-ventilated, dry area. Extraction
  4790. of oil from copra is one of the oldest seed-crushing industries of the world. Coconut cake
  4791. is usually retained to feed domestic livestock. When it contains much oil, it is not fed to
  4792. milk cows, but it used as fertilizer. Desiccated coconut is just the white meat; the brown
  4793. part is peeled off. It is usually grated, then dried in driers similar to those for tea. Good
  4794. desiccated coconut should be white in color, crisp, with a fresh nutty flavor, and should
  4795. contain less than 20% moisture and 68 to 72% oil, the extracted oil containing less than
  4796. 0.1% of free fatty acid, as lauric. Parings, about 12 to 15% of kernels, are dried and pressed
  4797. yielding about 55% oil, used locally for soap-making. The resulting residue “ poonac” is
  4798. used for feeding cattle. Coconut flour is made from desiccated coconut with oil removed,
  4799. and the residue dried and ground. However, it does not keep well. Coir fiber is obtained
  4800. from slightly green coconut husks by retting in slightly saline water that is changed frequently
  4801. (requires up to 10 months); then, husks are rinsed with water and fiber separated by beating
  4802. with wooden mallets. After drying, the fiber is cleaned and graded. The greater part of coir
  4803. produced in India is spun into yam, a cottage industry, and then used for mgs and ropes.
  4804. 105
  4805. In Sri Lanka, most coir consists of mechanically separated mattress and bristle fiber. To
  4806. produce this, husks are soaked or retted for 1 to 4 weeks, and then crushed between iron
  4807. rollers before fibers are separated. Bristle fibers are 20 to 30 cm long; anything shorter is
  4808. sold as superior mattress fiber. In some areas, dry milling of husks, without retting, is
  4809. carried on and produces only mattress fiber. The separated pith, called bast or dust, is used
  4810. as fertilizer since the potash is not leached out. Coconuts may be stored at a temperature of
  4811. 0 to 1.5°C with relative humidity of 75% or less for 1 to 2 months. In storage, they are
  4812. subject to mold, loss in weight and drying up of the nut milk. They may be held for 2 weeks
  4813. at room temperature without serious loss.'^
  4814. Yields and economics — For copra, an average of 6,000 nuts are required for 1 ton;
  4815. 1,000 nuts yield 500 lbs. of copra, which yields 250 lbs. of oil. The average yield of copra
  4816. per ha is 3 to 4 tons. Under good climatic conditions, a fully productive palm produces 12
  4817. to 16 bunches of coconuts per year, each bunch with 8 to 10 nuts, or 60 to 100 nuts per
  4818. tree. Bunches ripen in about 1 year, and should yield 25 kg or more copra. For coir, 1,000
  4819. husks yield about 80 kg per year, giving about 25 kg of bristle fiber and 55 kg of mattress
  4820. fiber. Efficient pressing will yield from 100 kg of copra, approximately 62.5 kg of coconut
  4821. oil, and 35 kg coconut cake, which contains 7 to 10% oil. The factor 63% is generally used
  4822. for converting copra to oil equivalent. Yields of copra as high as 5 MT/ha have been reported,
  4823. but oil yields of 900 to 1,350 kg/ha have been reported. Pryde and Doty^^° put the average
  4824. oil yield at 1,050 kg/ha, Telek and M artin,at 600 kg/ha. World production of coconut
  4825. oil is more than 2 million tons/year, about half of which moves in international trade. Sri
  4826. Lanka, Philippine Islands, Papua, and New Guinea are the largest producers. Only about
  4827. 40% of copra produced is exported, the remaining 60% processed into oil in the country of
  4828. origin. The U.S. annually imports 190 million pounds of coconut oil and more than 650
  4829. million pounds of copra; some sources state 300,000 tons copra and over 200,000 tons
  4830. coconut oil annually.
  4831. Energy — The coconut of commerce weighs 0.5 to 1.0 kg. According to Purseglove,^^^
  4832. the average number of nuts per hectare varies from 2,500 to 7,500, indicating a yield of
  4833. ca. 1,200 to 7,500 kg/ha. On the one hand, ‘Jamaica Tails’ fruits average 1.7 kg, nuts 0.7
  4834. kg, of which 50% is endosperm; on the other hand, ‘Malayan Dwarfs’ fruits average 1.1
  4835. kg, the nut 0.6 kg, yielding 0.2 kg copra (6,000 nuts per ton copra). Average production
  4836. yields of copra (3 to 8 nuts per kg copra) range from 200 kg/ha in Polynesia to 1,200 kg/ha
  4837. in the Philippines, suggesting coconut yields of 1,000 to 8,000 kg/ha. Since about 60% of
  4838. this constitutes the inedible fruit husk and seed husks, I estimate the chaff factor at 0.6.
  4839. Coconut oil, cracked at high temperatures, will yield nearly 50% motor fuel and diesel fuel.
  4840. Coconut destructive distillation is reported to yield 11.5% charcoal, 11% fuel gas, 37.5%
  4841. copra spirit, 12.5% olein distillate, 1% crude acetate, 0.15% glycerol, and 0.85% acetone
  4842. plus methanol.^® As of June 15, 1981, coconut oil was $0.275/lb., compared to $0.38 for
  4843. peanut oil, $1.39 for poppy seed oil, $0.65 for tung oil, $0.33 for linseed oil, $0,265 for
  4844. cotton-seed oil, $0,232 for com oil, and $0.21 for soybean oil.^^^ At $2.00 per gallon,
  4845. gasoline is roughly $0.25/lb. Quick^^"^ tested linseed oil (Iodine number 180) which cokes
  4846. up fuel injectors inless than 20 hr: and rapeseed oil (Iodine number ca.lOO) which logs into
  4847. the hundreds of hours before the onset of severe injector coking. Coconut oil (Iodine number
  4848. 10) should be a very good candidate from this viewpoint. This could be very important in
  4849. developing tropical countries where diesel fuel is scarce and often more expensive than
  4850. coconut oil. One Australian patent suggests that distillation of coconuts at 550° gave 11.5%
  4851. charcoal, 11% fuel gas, and 37.5% copra spirit, 12.5% olein distillate, 12.5% black oil,
  4852. 1% cmde acetic acid, 0.15% glycerol, and 0.85% (acetone + methanol) which natural
  4853. fermentation takes to 2.7-5.8% ethanol. Of course, you can’t have your coconut toddy and
  4854. eat or drink or bum it too.®^
  4855. Biotic factors — Coconuts are subject to numerous fungal diseases, bacterial infections,
  4856. 106 Handbook of Nuts
  4857. and the most serious virus-like disease, cadang-cadang.‘^‘ Coconut trees are also attacked
  4858. by numerous nematodes and some insect pests, the most damaging insect being the black
  4859. beetle or rhinoceros beetle {Oryctes rhinoceros), which damages buds, thus reducing nut
  4860. yield, and breeds in decaying refuse. Diseases and pests of a particular area should be
  4861. considered and a local agent consulted as to how to deal with them. Agriculture Handbook
  4862. No. 165"^ lists the following as affecting this species: Aphelenchoides cocophilus (red ring
  4863. disease), Cephalosporium lecanii, Diplodia epicocos, Endocalyx melanoxanthanus, Endo-
  4864. conidiophora paradoxa (leaf-bitten disease, leaf scorch, stem-bleeding), Gloeosporium sp.,
  4865. Pellicularia koleroga (thread blight), Pestalotia palmarum (gray leaf spot, leaf-break), Phom-
  4866. opsis cocoes (on nuts), Phyllosticta sp. (on leaves), Physalospora fusca (on leaves), P.
  4867. rhodina (on roots and trunk), Phytopthora palmivora (bud rot, leaf drop, wilt), Pythium sp.
  4868. (wilt). Stevenson^^® adds: Aschersonia cubensis, Aschersonia turbinata, Botryosphaeria
  4869. quercuum, Cytospora palmicola, Escherichia coli, Flammula earlei, Herpotrichia schied-
  4870. ermayeriana, Hypocrea rufa, Marasmius sacchari, Pestalotia gibberosa, Pestalotia versi^
  4871. cola, Polyporus lignosus, Polyporus nivosellus, Polyporus zonalis, Rosellinia saintcruciana,
  4872. Thielaviopsis paradoxa, Valsa chlorina.
  4873. 107
  4874. COLA ACUMINATA (Beauv.) Schott and Endl. (STERCULIACEAE) — Kola Nuts, Cola,
  4875. Guru
  4876. Syn: Sterculia acuminata Beauv.
  4877. Uses — Widely used as a flavor ingredient in cola beverages, but has also been used in
  4878. baked goods, candy, frozen dairy deserts, gelatins, and puddings. Kola plays an important
  4879. role in the social and religious life of Africans. Beverage made by boiling powdered seeds
  4880. in water, equal in flavor and nutriment to cocoa. Seeds also used as a condiment. Dye
  4881. utilized from red juice. Wood valuable, light in color, porous, and used in ship-building
  4882. and general carpentry. Tree often planted as o rn am e n ta l.C o la is said to render putrid
  4883. water palatable.®^
  4884. Folk medicine — According to Hartwell,the powdered bark is used for malignant
  4885. tumors and cancer. The tea made from the root is said to alleviate cancer. Reported to be
  4886. aphrodisiac, cardiotonic, CNS-stimulant, digestive, diuretic, stimulant, and tonic, kola is a
  4887. folk remedy for cancer, hunger, nerves, and tumors.Nuts used as diuretic, heart tonic and
  4888. masticatory to resist fatigue, hunger and thirst. A small piece of nut is chewed by Africans
  4889. before mealtime to improve digestion. On the other hand, it is chewed as a stimulant and
  4890. appetite depressant, e.g., during religious fasts. Jamaicans take grated seed for diarrhea.
  4891. Powdered cola is applied to cuts and wounds.Formerly used as a CNS-stimulant and for
  4892. diarrhea, migraine, and neuralgia. The fresh drug is used, especially in its native country,
  4893. as a stimulant, social drug, being mildly euphoric.
  4894. Chemistry — Per 100 g, the fruit (ZMB) is reported to contain 399 calories, 5.9 g protein,
  4895. 1.1 g fat, 90.8 g total carbohydrate, 3.8 g fiber, 2.2 g ash, 156 mg Ca, 232 mg P, 5.4 mg
  4896. Fe, 67 |xg beta-carotene equivalent, 0.08 mg thiamine, 0.08 mg riboflavin, 1.62 mg niacin,
  4897. and 146 mg ascorbic acid. The aril (ZMB) is reported to contain 371 calories, 9.0 g protein,
  4898. 3.6 g fat, 86.2 g total carbohydrate, 4.8 g fiber, 1.2 g ash, 18 mg Ca, 102 mg P, 8.4 mg
  4899. Fe, 180 |xg beta-carotene equivalent, 0.06 mg thiamine, 0.30 mg riboflavin, 4.19 mg niacin,
  4900. and 60 mg ascorbic acid.®’ Contains 1.28 to 3% of fixed oil.^^^ Kola nut important for its
  4901. 108 Handbook of Nuts
  4902. caffeine content and flavor; caffeine content 2.4 to 2.6%. Nuts also contain theobromine
  4903. (<0.1%) and other alkaloids, and narcotic properties. Seeds also contain betaine, starch,
  4904. tannic acid, catechin, epicatechin, fatty matter, sugar and a fat-decomposing enzyme. From
  4905. a bromatological point of view, cola fruits contain, per 100 g, 148 calories, 62.9% water,
  4906. 2.2 % protein, 0.4% fat, 33.7% carbohydrates, 1.4% fiber, 0.8% ash, 58 mg Ca, 25 mg
  4907. carotene, 0.03 mg thiamine, 0.03 mg niacin, 0.54 mg riboflavin, and 60 mg ascorbic acid.
  4908. Hager’s Handbook suggests 1.5 to 2% caffeine, up to 0.1% theobromine, 0.3 to 0.4% d -
  4909. catechin, 0.25% betaine, 6.7% protein, 2.9% sugar, 34% starch, 3% gum, 0.5% fat, 29%
  4910. cellulose, and 12% water.
  4911. Toxicity — Caffeine in large doses is reported to be carcinogenic, mutagenic, and ter­
  4912. atogenic.^^® Caffeine is also viricidal, suppressing the growth of polio, influenza, herpes
  4913. simplex, and vaccinia viruses, but not Japanese encephalitis virus, Newcastle disease, virus,
  4914. and type 2 adenovirus.Tyler^^^ produces a chart comparing various caffeine sources to
  4915. which I have added rounded figures from Palotti.^"^^
  4916. Source Caffeine
  4917. content (mg)
  4918. Cup (6 oz.) expresso coffee
  4919. 310
  4920. Cup (6 oz.) boiled coffee 100
  4921. Cup (6 oz.) instant coffee 65
  4922. Cup (6 oz.) tea 10— 50
  4923. Cup (6 oz.) cocoa 13
  4924. Can (6 oz.) cola 25
  4925. Can (6 oz.) Coca Cola 20
  4926. Cup (6 oz.) mate 25— 50
  4927. Can (6 oz.) Pepsi Cola 10
  4928. Tablet caffeine 100—200
  4929. Tablet (800 mg) Zoom (Paullinia cupana) 60
  4930. In humans, caffeine 1,3,7-trimethylxanthine, is demethylated into three primary metabolites:
  4931. theophylline, theobromine, and paraxanthine. Since the early part of the 20th century,
  4932. theophylline has been used in therapeutics for bronchodilation, for acute ventricular failure,
  4933. and for long-term control of bronchial asthma. At 100 mg/kg, theophylline is fetotoxic to
  4934. rats, but no teratogenic abnormalities were noted. In therapeutics, theobromine has been
  4935. used as a diuretic, as a cardiac stimulant, and for dilation of arteries. But at 100 mg,
  4936. theobromine is fetotoxic and teratogenic.^^ Leung‘S® reports a fatal dose in man at 10,000
  4937. mg, with 1,000 mg or more capable of inducing headache, nausea, insomnia, restlessness,
  4938. excitement, mild delirium, muscle tremor, tachycardia, and extrasystoles. Leung also adds
  4939. “ caffeine has been reported to have many other activities including mutagenic, teratogenic,
  4940. and carcinogenic activities; . . . to cause temporary increase in intraocular pressure, to have
  4941. calming effects on hyperkinetic children . . . to cause chronic recurring headache . . . ” ^^®
  4942. Description — Long-lived evergreen tree, up to 14 m tall, resembling an apple tree; bark
  4943. smooth, green, thick, fissured in old trees. Leaves alternate, on petioles 2.5 to 7.5 cm long;
  4944. young leaves pubescent, often once or twice cut near base about half-way to midrib; mature
  4945. leaves 16 to 20 cm long, 2.5 to 5 cm broad, leathery, obovate, acute and long-acuminate,
  4946. with prominent veins below, margin entire, dark-green on upper surface. Flowers yellow,
  4947. numerous, unisexual or bisexual, 15 or more in axillary or terminal panicles, no petals;
  4948. calyx petaloid, greenish-yellow or white, purple at edges, tube green, limb 5-cleft, lobes
  4949. ovate-lanceolate; male flower with slender column, shorter than calyx, bearing a ring of 10
  4950. 2-lobed anthers, the anthers divergent; perfect flowers with subsessile anthers in a ring,
  4951. ovary 5-lobed, 5-celled, stellate pilose, with 5 linear, re-flexed, superposed styles; ovules
  4952. anatropous, attached in a double row to the ventral surface of each carpel. Fruit oblong,
  4953. obtuse, rostrate, warty coriaceous to woody, 5 to 17 cm long, 5 to 7.5 cm thick, brown
  4954. 109
  4955. resembling alligator skin, pericarp thick, fibrous, cells filled with resinous colored matter
  4956. used as dye. Seeds 5 to 12 per fruit, 2.5 to 5 cm long, 1.3 cm thick, yellow, soft, internally
  4957. whitish, pinkish or purple, brown when dry; cotyledons often 3, flatly ovate or auriculate,
  4958. cells containing starch and albuminous material. Flowers December to February, and May
  4959. to July; fruits May to June, and October to November.
  4960. Germplasm — Reported from the African Center of Diversity, kola, or cvs thereof, is
  4961. reported to tolerate low pH, shade, and slope. (2n = 40.)*^
  4962. Distribution — Native and cultivated along west coast of tropical Africa, now cultivated
  4963. pantropically from 10°N to 5°S latitude, especially in West Indies, South America, Sri
  4964. Lanka, and Malaya. Occurs naturally in forests from Togo and southern Nigeria eastward
  4965. and southward to Gabon, Congo, and Angola. Extensively planted in Nigeria.
  4966. Ecology — Ranging from Subtropical Dry to Wet through Tropical Dry to Wet Forest
  4967. Life Zones, kola is reported to tolerate annual precipitation of 6.4 to 40.3 dm (mean of 12
  4968. cases = 19.8), annual temperature of 21.3 to 26.6°C (mean of 12 cases = 25.2), and pH
  4969. of 4.5 to 8.0 (mean of 7 cases = 5.5).^^ Thrives in tropical areas where mean annual
  4970. temperatures are uniformly 21 to 27°C, moist, with 2(X) to 225 cm rainfall, mostly at sea
  4971. level to 3(X) m altitude. Frequently forms forests in coastal areas. Requires a rich, well-
  4972. drained soil, but will grow on deep sandy loams in West Indies, with high organic content.
  4973. Cultivation — Propagated from seed, which must be sown perfectly fresh. Seeds planted
  4974. singly in pots and young trees kept growing until needed for permanent planting. Only light
  4975. shade, if any, is required after trees are 3 years old. Planting distances about 6 to 8 m each
  4976. way, equalling about 270 trees per ha. Cultivation very easy. Trees respond to fertilizers,
  4977. and produce highest yields only when weeds are kept controlled. Propagation also by cuttings
  4978. of softwood or ripe wood, using bottom heat.^^^^^®
  4979. Harvesting — Trees begin to flower 5 to 10 years after planting, reaching full production
  4980. by the 20th year, continuing to bear for 70 to 100 years. In many regions, trees flower and
  4981. fruit throughout the year, but usually two peak crops are produced in May and June and
  4982. again in October and November. Fruits require about 4 to 5 months to mature. Harvest when
  4983. pods turn chocolate-brown and begin to dehisce. Pods are shaken from tree and immediately
  4984. gathered. Seeds removed from pods and first coat cut off, leaving bare cotyledons. Nuts
  4985. are then carefully graded. Fresh kola nuts tend to mold and spoil easily. Nuts packed and
  4986. transported for local consumption is homemade baskets lined with leaves and wrapped in
  4987. canvas or hide to prevent drying out. Kola nuts imported by the U.S. are split in half,
  4988. sundried, and shipped in bags. Entire seeds are kola nuts of native consumer; kola nuts of
  4989. commerce are the separated, dried cotyledons only.^^®
  4990. Yields and economics — After 10 years, kola trees may be expected to yield 400 to 500
  4991. (to 800) pods annually, this being equivalent to 40 to 50 (to 80) lbs of dried nuts.‘^^^^®
  4992. Purseglove^^^ reports ca. 575 kg/ha salable nuts. Within the tropics, trade of this nut is
  4993. immense. In West Tropical Africa, kola nut ranks second to the oil-palm {Elaeis), with
  4994. exports over 16 million lbs per year. Although most kola nuts are harvested from wild trees
  4995. in West Africa coastal areas, the U.S. imports most of its kola nuts from Jamaica, about
  4996. 170 tons per year.^^^
  4997. Energy — Husks, prunings, and fallen leaves can be used for energy production.
  4998. Biotic Factors — Poor yields some years have been attributed to poor pollination. Fungi
  4999. known to attack kola trees include: Botryodiplodia theobromae, Calonectria rigidiuscula,
  5000. Cephaleuros mycoidea, Fomes lignosus, F. noxius, Marasmius byssicola, M. scandens, and
  5001. Pleurotus colae
  5002. 110 Handbook of Nuts
  5003. COLA NITIDA (Vent.) Schott and Endlicher (STERCULIACEAE) — Gbanja Kola
  5004. Uses — Kola possesses the central stimulating principle of caffeine. This species is more
  5005. valued than C. acuminata as it contains more caffeine. Nuts are used in West Africa to
  5006. sustain people during long journeys or long hours of work. Kola, Cola, or Kola-nuts is the
  5007. dried cotyledon of Cola nitida, or of some other species of Cola. In the U.S., the kola-nut
  5008. is used in the manufacture of nonalcoholic beverages. The tree is valued for its wood, which
  5009. is whitish, sometimes slightly pinkish when fresh; the heartwood is dull yellowish-brown
  5010. to reddish-tinged. Wood is suitable for carpentry and some construction work as house­
  5011. building, furniture, and boat-building. Wooden platters, domestic utensils, and images are
  5012. often carved from the wood. Sometimes trees are planted for ornamental purposes.
  5013. Folk medicine — Reported to be astringent, nervine, poison, restorative, sedative, stim­
  5014. ulant, stomachic, and tonic, gbanja kola is a folk remedy for digestion, dysentery, exhaustion,
  5015. hunger, malaria, nausea, and toothache.^* Dried cotyledons are nervine, stimulant, tonic,
  5016. and astringent.The seeds are used by natives as a stimulant; when chewed, nuts increase
  5017. powers of endurance of the chewer.^^’^^®
  5018. Chemistry — Speaking generically, Hager’s Handbook*®^ stated that the nuts contain 1.5
  5019. to 2% caffeine, a compound the Germans call colarot (= ?cola red) Ci4Hi3(OH)5, and glucose.
  5020. Colarot splits into phloroglucin and a reddish dye. Also contains up to 0.1% theobromine,
  5021. 0.3 to 0.4% D-catechin (C15H14O) (“ colatine” ), L-epicatechin, essential and fatty oils,
  5022. colalipase, colaoxydase, a tannic glycoside, 0.25% betaine, 6.7% protein, 2.9% sugar, 34%
  5023. starch, 3% gum, 0.5% fat, 29% cellulose, 12% water, and procyanidin (C3oH260i2).^®^ The
  5024. glucoside kolanin is a heart stimulant.
  5025. Description — Trees 13 to 20 m tall, with dense crown, the branches and leaves nearly
  5026. touching the ground. Leaves alternate, 7.5 cm or more long, broadly lanceolate, sharply
  5027. acuminate, leathery. Flowers yellowish-white, sometimes with red stripes or blotches; fruits
  5028. 2 in a cluster, covered with a thick green wrinkled coat, each fruit containing 6 to 10 or
  5029. more nuts; nuts usually red or pink, sometimes white. Fruits commonly longitudinally rugose
  5030. and wrinkled, nodular to some degree and dorsally keeled; seed separable into only two
  5031. cotyledons (C. baileyi Cornu, from West Equatorial Africa, has 6 cotyledons with very little
  5032. caffeine.) Flowers and fruits in spring and autumn, with two harvests. The main cola season
  5033. in West Africa is from October to February.
  5034. Germplasm — Reported from the African Center of Diversity, gbanja kola, or cvs thereof,
  5035. is reported to tolerate low pH, shade, slope, and virus.Chevalier has divided C. nitida
  5036. into four subspecies: rubra, alba, mixta, and pallida. C. nitida subsp. rubra Chev., wild
  5037. in Ivory Coast and Ashanti, has nuts larger than those of the cultivated plants and is the
  5038. common cultivated kola of Ashanti; subsp. rubra Chev., from the Ivory Coast, is a distinct
  5039. race based on characters other than those of color of the seeds; subsp. mixta Chev., known
  5040. only in cultivation, has red and white nuts on the same tree, and sometimes on the same
  5041. follicle; and subsp. alba Chev., also only known in cultivation, has only white seeds. There
  5042. is much variation in other characteristics, as size of fruits and nuts and flavor. (2n =
  5043. 4 0 ) 82.278
  5044. Distribution — Native to West Africa from Sierra Leone to the Congo. Introduced to
  5045. East Africa, Sri Lanka, Singapore, Indonesia, Brazil, and West Indies, particularly ] 2l-
  5046. maica.^®^’^^®
  5047. Ecology — Ranging from Subtropical Moist to Wet through Tropical Dry to Moist Forest
  5048. Life Zones, gbanja kola is reported to tolerate annual precipitation of 13.6 to 27.8 dm (mean
  5049. of 6 cases = 22.0), annual temperature of 23.3 to 26.6°C (mean of 6 cases = 25.4°C),
  5050. and pH of 4.5 to 5.3 (mean of 4 cases = 4.9).®^ Kola trees flourish where the mean annual
  5051. temperature is between 20 to 26°C and the annual rainfall is 250 cm or more. It is found
  5052. at low altitudes ranging up to several meters above sea-level. Thrives in deep sandy loam
  5053. with much humus.
  5054. I l l
  5055. Cultivation — Propagation is by seeds (usual), cuttings, air-layering, or grafting. Seeds
  5056. are planted in seed-beds in well-prepared soil containing much humus. Seedlings are planted
  5057. in rows 6.6 m apart each way. Trees respond to fertilizers and produce the highest yields
  5058. only when weeds are cut back regularly. Best crops obtained on soils that are deep, sandy,
  5059. and with a high content of organic matter. Plantain or other plant is used as shade for the
  5060. first year or two. Cassava is a catch-crop for the tree until it gets large enough to bear fruits.
  5061. Trees may also be propagated vegetatively from cuttings. Terminal cuttings set without any
  5062. hormones retain their leaves and start callusing within 3 to 4 weeks after setting. The roots
  5063. usually appear at an acute angle from the callus. New flush growth on the rooted cuttings
  5064. starts at about the third month after potting and is commonly slow. Most cuttings flower
  5065. the first year of growth. Cuttings set out in the field grow rapidly and flower and fruit within
  5066. three years. When propagated by air-layering, about 98% of all branches treated are heavily
  5067. callused within 3 to 4 weeks; within 6 weeks, most branches have developed roots 5 to 8
  5068. cm long. About 95% of all marcots become established satisfactorily in the field. Those
  5069. obtained from mature, already fruiting trees, flowered in 6 to 7 months after cutting them
  5070. from the mother plant, or 3 to 4 months after transplanting. Propagation by budding is
  5071. successful at all times of the year, with the highest bud-take from patch or flute budding
  5072. techniques obtained between January and April, the lowest between September and Decem­
  5073. ber.
  5074. Harvesting — Kola trees produce two crops per year; in Jamaica, pods ripen in May and
  5075. June and again in October-November; in West Africa, the main crop is harvested from
  5076. October to February. The chocolate brown pods, which range in size from 5 to 10 cm long,
  5077. are shaken from the tree and gathered immediately, or are cut off by tree-climbers with
  5078. knives on long sticks. Harvesters climbing trees are occasionally attacked by ants. The seeds
  5079. are removed from the pods and the outer coat is cut off, exposing the bare cotyledons. These
  5080. are carefully graded inasmuch as only sound cotyledons do not deteriorate quickly. Fresh
  5081. kola-nuts tend to mold and spoil rather easily. They must be taken to market quickly for
  5082. local consumption. Kola-nuts of commerce are freed from the white covering, usually after
  5083. soaking or by fermentation in broad leaves. Occasionally, the nuts are buried to keep them
  5084. sound for a favorable market; in the equatorial regions, it is done in ant hills. The main
  5085. trade is in good-sized nuts. Packing is done in baskets along with broad leaves, and with
  5086. occasional moistening, the nuts can be transported for a month, free from mold. Kola-nuts
  5087. prepared for shipment to the U.S. are split in half, sun-dried, and shipped in bags. They
  5088. are usually soaked in water for 2 to 3 hr and the juice thrown off. For export to Europe,
  5089. peat is recommended as a packing material suitable for all conditions of temperature, and
  5090. the nuts, which are mainly used for drugs and wine, are shipped in the dry condition.
  5091. Yields and economics — Depending on how they are propagated, trees begin to bear
  5092. fruit in 4 to 5 years and reach full production in 10 to 15 years, or begin in 7 to 9 years
  5093. and reach maturity in 15 to 20 years. Then they continue to bear good crops of fruits for
  5094. 50 years or more. Usually after a tree is 10 years old, it may be expected to yield, in two
  5095. harvests, about 56 kg of dried nuts per year.^^^ Speaking generically, Purseglove^^^ notes
  5096. that of nearly 250 trees in Nigeria, ca. 20% gave no yield at all, ca. 60% gave mean annual
  5097. yields up to 300 nuts, while 20% produced 72% of the total yield of the plot. The average
  5098. was 210 nuts per tree, the 10 best trees averaging 1,415 nuts, while the best yielded 2,209
  5099. nuts per year. With an average 60 nuts per kilogram, that is more than 36 kg for the big
  5100. yielder. Purseglove concludes there are an average 210 salable nuts per tree, or ca. 575
  5101. kg/ha.^^^ Although most kola-nuts are harvested from wild trees of the West African coast,
  5102. the U.S. imports most of its kola-nuts from Jamiaca. In the U.S., most kola-nuts are used
  5103. for manufacturing nonalcoholic beverages.
  5104. Energy — Husks, prunings, and fallen leaves can be used for energy production.
  5105. Biotic factors — Self-pollinated trees produce only white fruits (white-colored nuts bring
  5106. 112 Handbook of Nuts
  5107. the highest prices); the production of colored (red or pink) nuts may therefore be due to
  5108. cross-pollination. The following fungi have been reported on this species of kolanut: Au-
  5109. ricularia delicata, Botryodiplodia theobromae, Corticium koleroga, Fomes lignosis, F.
  5110. noxius, Graphium rhodophaeum, Irenopsis coliicola, Marasmius equicrinus, M. scandens,
  5111. Nectria delbata, Phaeobotryosphaeria plicatula; twig blight, root rot, and thread blight.
  5112. Nematodes isolated from this tree include the following species: Helicotylenchus cavenessi,
  5113. H. pseudorobustus, Scutellonema clathricaudatum, and Xiphinema sp. Insect pests include
  5114. borers, cola weevils (Balanogastris kolae), and larvae of the moth Characoma. Trees are
  5115. also attacked by pests found on cocoa, as the caspid Sahlbergella singularis and by Me-
  5116. sohomotoma tessmanii.^^^'^''^
  5117. 113
  5118. COLA VERTICILLATA (Thonn.) Stapf ex A.Chev. (STERCULIACEAE) — Owe Cola,
  5119. Slippery Cola, Mucilage Cola
  5120. Syn.: C ola jo h n so n ii Stapf. and S tercu lia verticillata Thonn.
  5121. Uses — Seeds, indistinguishable from true cola in appearance, are edible, though very
  5122. bitter and considered unfit to eat.^^^ Nuts are used to make a beverage. In some districts,
  5123. the people gather the fruit, or at least chew it where found; in others, they usually regard
  5124. it as a “ monkey kola” . Wood of the tree is white and hard, and is used in S. Nigeria to
  5125. make fetish images.
  5126. Folk medicine — Containing caffeine, this species no doubt shares some pharmacological
  5127. properties and folk uses with other Cola species.
  5128. Chemistry — Nuts contain a fair proportion of caffeine.
  5129. Description — Trees large, 8 to 10(to 25) m tall; branches sparsely puberulent, rarely
  5130. cylindrical, brownish dark-red, often weeping. Leaves verticillate in threes or fours, opposite
  5131. in the lower nodes, simple, entire, subcoriaceous to coriaceous; stipules 5 to 6 mm long,
  5132. puberulent on lower surface; petiole 2 to 6 mm long, sparsely puberulent; blades obovate-
  5133. elliptic, oblong or oblanceolate, cuneate at base, attenuate to apex, 12 to 25 cm long, 3 to
  5134. 9 cm broad, glabrous, subcoriaceous, green on upper surface, puberulent and brownish dark-
  5135. red beneath; secondary veins in 5 to 8 pairs, ascending. Panicles axillary, isolated in groups
  5136. of 2 to 3; flowers small, 1 to 3 cm long, puberulent; bracts oval, cuspidate, concave, about
  5137. 6 mm long, more or less persistent; calyx 5- to 8-lobed, densely puberulent on external
  5138. surface, sparsely so on inner surface; male flowers on pedicels 3 to 7 mm long, articulate
  5139. at summit, puberulent, calyx 4 to 5(to 8) mm long with 5 to 6 lobes longer than the tube;
  5140. androphore 1 mm long, puberulent, corona of stamens in 2 verticels, female flowers and
  5141. perfect flowers on pedicels 12 mm long, articulate near the summit, with 5 to 7 lobes about
  5142. 7 mm long; ovary with 5 carpels in 2 tiers of 4 ovules. Fruit on pedicels 3 to 4 cm long;
  5143. follicles subsessile, oblong, up to 20 cm long, 9 cm broad, with short beak, obtuse, and
  5144. more or less recurved, glabrous. Seeds 4 to 9, sometimes up to 12 per follicle, ovoid-elliptic,
  5145. 3 mm long, 2 cm broad, either red or white, with 3 to 4 cotyledons.
  5146. Germplasm — Reported from the African Center of Diversity, owe kola, or cvs thereof,
  5147. is reported to tolerate shade, slope, and virus. (2n = 40.)®^
  5148. Distribution — Native to Tropical West Africa from Ivory Coast and Ashanti to Ca-
  5149. meroons and Lower Congo; planted in N. Nigeria and elsewhere, but nowhere much cul­
  5150. tivated. Some cultivation in Nigeria, Cameroons, Ghana, Dahomey, Gabon, and Cabinda.
  5151. Often found in planting of C. nítida. The only kola found on the Mambilla Plateau in
  5152. Northern Nigeria.
  5153. Ecology — Ranging from Subtropical Moist through Tropical Dry to Moist Forest Life
  5154. Zones, owe kola is reported to tolerate annual precipitation of 13.6 to 22.3 dm (mean of 3
  5155. cases = 17.7), annual temperature of 23.5 to 26.4°C (mean of 3 cases = 17.7°C), and pH
  5156. of 4.8 to 5.0 (mean of 2 cases = 4.9).®^ Indigenous to damp forests of the tropical zone,
  5157. especially in swamps and by streams; requiring the jungle-type habitat. Often planted in
  5158. villages.
  5159. Cultivation — Most trees are self-seeded in humid forests of tropical West Africa.
  5160. Propagated by seed planted in site where desired. No special care given after tree is estab­
  5161. lished.
  5162. Harvesting — Fruits are gathered from trees in the wild in some districts. Occasionally
  5163. trees are planted in villages; fruits are collected when ripe to make beverages.^^®
  5164. Yields and economics — A fruit of minor importance in area of adapation, used mostly
  5165. by natives as a source of caffeine, for a beverage, and for wood.^^®
  5166. Energy — Husks, prunings, and fallen leaves can be used for energy production.
  5167. Biotic factors — The fungus Irenopsis aburiensis has been reported on this tree. No
  5168. serious pests are reported.
  5169. 114 Handbook of Nuts
  5170. CORDEAUXIA EDULIS Hemsl. (CAESALPINIACEAE) — Yeheb Nut
  5171. Uses — Seeds said to be edible raw or cooked, likened by one author to a chestnut, by
  5172. another to a cash ew .M u ch relished by the Somalians, often preferred to the usual diet
  5173. of rice and dates. The leaves are infused to make a tea. Leaves, eagerly grazed by livestock,
  5174. contain a brilliant red dye that will stain the hands, even the bones of goats who eat it.
  5175. Somalians use the magenta-red coloring matter to stain textiles.
  5176. Folk medicine — No data available.
  5177. Chemistry — Per 100 g, the seed (ZMB) contains 448 calories, 12.1 g protein, 13.5 g
  5178. fat, 71.9 g total carbohydrate, 1.6 g fiber, 2.5 g ash, 36 mg Ca, 208 mg P, and 7.2 mg
  5179. Fe. The NAS (1979) reports 37% starch, 24% sugar, 13% protein, and 11% fat. The protein
  5180. contains amino acids in proportions similar to other pulses, deficient in m ethionine.M iege
  5181. and Miege^*^ report 10.8 g arginine, 3.5 g histamine, 3.9 isoleucine, 6.4 g leucine, 6.8 g
  5182. lysine, 0.7 g methionine, 3.9 g phenylalanine, 3.6 g threonine, 4.8 g valine, 1.9 g tyrosine,
  5183. 0.6 g cystine, 9.1 g asparagine, 23.8 g glutamine, 3.9 g serine, 6.6 g prolamine, 4.9 g
  5184. glycine, and 4.5 g alanine per 100 g protein. The albumins have trypsin inhibitors, the
  5185. globulins nearly 10 times as much. Phytohemagglutinins, alkaloids, or glucosides are said
  5186. to be absent.^ The red stain is due to cordeauxione, the only naphthoquinone found in
  5187. legumes.
  5188. Description — Dwarf multistemmed evergreen shrub to 3 m tall; lower branches dense,
  5189. straight, broomlike, hard. Leaves paripinnate; leaflets usually oval-oblong, 4-paired, leath­
  5190. ery, dotted below with reddish, scale-like glands; stipules none. Flowers few, yellow, in
  5191. apical corymbs; calyx short; lobes 5, blunt, valvate, glandular; petals 5, subequal, clawed,
  5192. spoon-shaped; stamens 10, free; filaments hairy below; anthers versatile; ovary short-stalked,
  5193. 2-ovuled, densely glandular; stigma obtuse. Pod leathery, compressed-ovoid, curved, apex
  5194. 115
  5195. beaked, 2-valved, dehiscent, 1 to 4 seeded, seeds ovoid, endosperm lacking, cotyledons
  5196. thick.® Germination epigeal, the eophylls 1 to 8-foliolate, the first eophylls often opposite.
  5197. Germplasm — Reported from the Ethiopian Center of Diversity, yeheb, or cvs thereof,
  5198. is reported to tolerate drought, high pH, poor red sandy soils, sand, and savanna.
  5199. Distribution — Endemic to Somalia, Malawi, and Ethiopia.
  5200. Ecology — Estimated to range from Subtropical Desert to Thom through Tropical Desert
  5201. to Thom Forest Life Zones, yeheb is estimated to tolerate annual precipitation of 1 to 8 dm
  5202. (1 to 2 reported), annual temperature of 23 to 30°C, and pH of 6 to 8.5 (reported 7.8 to
  5203. 8.4). In its native habitat, yeheb occurs in savannas, elevation 300 to 1,000 m, with poor
  5204. red sandy soils, two rainy seasons, annual rainfall of 250 to 400 mm, and no frosts.
  5205. Cultivation — Only recently brought under cultivation at the Central Agricultural Re­
  5206. search Station at Afgoi, Somalia, and at Voi and Galana Ranch, Kenya. Seeds germinate
  5207. as high as 80%, the seedlings quickly developing a thin but tough tap root, which complicates
  5208. transplanting. Hence, field seeding is recommended.
  5209. Harvesting — Starts fmiting at age 3 or 4 years, fmits said to ripen in only 5 to 6 days.^^'*
  5210. Yields and economics — Overexploitation, overgrazing, nonflowering in drought, and
  5211. war in its native habitat, have all jeopardized the very existence of the yeheb. “ The plant
  5212. is in great danger of e x tin ctio n .S o m alis use ca. 200 g pulverized leaves to dye 90,000
  5213. cm^ calico. In the old days of British Somaliland, sacks of the nuts were brought down to
  5214. the coast for sale.^^*
  5215. Energy — No data available.
  5216. Biotic factors — Although the shmb itself is essentially free of insect pests, the nuts are
  5217. attacked by weevils and moth larvae. Rhizobia are not reported, but root nodules are reported
  5218. on younger roots.®
  5219. 116 Handbook of Nuts
  5220. CO RYLU S AM ERICANA Walt. (BETULACEAE) — American Hazelnut or Filbert
  5221. Uses — Cultivated for production of nuts for home use and wildlife, for cover and shelter-
  5222. belt use, and for an ornamental. Kernels eaten raw or roasted, alone or mixed with other
  5223. nuts.^^^ Nuts may be beaten to a powder and used like flour to make filbert bread.
  5224. Folk medicine — According to H artw ell,the bark is used in folk remedies for a poultice
  5225. for tumors. Reported to be a panacea, American hazelnut is a folk remedy for stomatitis
  5226. and tumor.Chippewa used the charcoal, pricked into the temples with needles, as analgesic;
  5227. Ojibwa used a poultice of boiled bark to help close and heal cuts.^’^ Said to cause allergic
  5228. rhinitis, bronchial asthma, and/or hypersensitivity pneumonitis.’*"^
  5229. Chemistry — Smith'”’^ reports the nuts to contain 5.4% water, 16.5% protein, 64.0%
  5230. fat, 11.7% carbohydrates, 2.4% ash, and 3,100 calories per pound.
  5231. Description — Deciduous shrub, forming dense thickets, 1 to 3 m tall; branchlets pu­
  5232. bescent and glandular bristly. Leaves 7.5 to 15 cm long, slightly cordate or rounded at base,
  5233. broadly ovate or obovate, irregularly doubly serrate, sparingly pubescent above, paler and
  5234. finely tomentose beneath. Involucre pubescent but not bristly, compressed, about twice as
  5235. long as nut, the 2 bracts sometimes connate and usually tightly enclosing it with rather short,
  5236. triangular, denate lobes, the whole 1.5 to 3 cm long; nut roundish-ovate, compressed, 1 to
  5237. 1.5 cm long. Flowers March to April; fruits July to October; seed dispersal July to winter.
  5238. Germplasm — Reported from the North American Center of Diversity. Of the botanical
  5239. varieties, the following are sometimes recognized: C. am ericana forma m issouriensis (DC.)
  5240. Fern., plants without stipitate glands, and found occasionally throughout the range of the
  5241. species. C. am ericana var. indehiscens Palm, and Steyerm., with fruiting bracts united on
  5242. one side, found from North Carolina to Missouri. C. am ericana var. calyculata Winkl. (C.
  5243. calyculata Dipp.), the involucre with 2 very large bracts at base. The most important cvs
  5244. of the American filbert are ‘Rush’ and ‘Winkler’, both very widely cultivated and the most
  5245. hardy of all filberts. Four hybrids — ‘Bixly’, ‘Buchanan’, ‘Reed’, and ‘Potomac’, have
  5246. been introduced; these have intermediate characteristics between European and American
  5247. varieties. The cultivars of American hazelnut have smaller nuts than those of European
  5248. filberts. (2n = 22.
  5249. Distribution — Native from eastern Canada and Maine west to Ontario and Saskatchewan,
  5250. south to Florida, Georgia, Oklahoma, and the Dakotas. Also usually cultivated within that
  5251. range.
  5252. 117
  5253. Ecology — Estimated to range from Warm Temperate Dry to Wet through Cool Temperate
  5254. Moist to Wet Forest Life Zones, the American hazelnut is estimated to tolerate annual
  5255. precipitation of 5 to 30 dm, annual temperature of 6 to 14°C, and pH of 5.0 to 8.0.^^
  5256. Naturally grows in or along edge of woods and thickets, on both dry and moist soils.
  5257. However, it grows best on moderately rich, well-drained soils. Filberts should be planted
  5258. on soils which are deep, fertile, and well-drained. Heavy clay or silt soils as well as coarse,
  5259. deep sand should be avoided. When planted on poorly drained soils, shrub grows poorly,
  5260. is subject to winter injury and bears few nuts.^^^ Hardy to Zone
  5261. Cultivation — Most filberts offered for sale by nurserymen have been propagated by
  5262. layering and are on their own roots. Trees that have been grown for 1 or 2 years in the
  5263. nursery after the layers have been removed from parent stock are preferable to older trees.
  5264. Some nurserymen propagate their trees on Turkish filbert roots that do not produce suckers.
  5265. This rootstock generally outgrows the scion to some extent. Filbert can be propagated from
  5266. seed which have been stratified 60 days at 5°C, plus 67 days at 18°C, and 30 days at 5°C.
  5267. Stratified seed should be sown in spring. Seed should be drilled in fall and protected from
  5268. rodents. Germination is hypogeous. Horticultural cvs are propagated by suckers, layering,
  5269. budding, or grafting and cuttings. Filberts of all varieties should be planted 5 to 7 m or
  5270. more apart. In most cases, trees are planted in late winter or very early spring, after danger
  5271. of severe freezing is passed. The same general methods of planting should be used as for
  5272. apple and peach trees. Newly transplanted and young trees should be cultivated sufficiently
  5273. to destroy all grass and weed growth before the beginning of tree growth in spring and
  5274. through July. Mulching trees with any type of organic matter is as satisfactory as cultivation,
  5275. provided that sufficient mulch is applied to a large enough area around each tree to keep
  5276. grass and weed growth suppressed. In general, the same cultural practices used for peaches
  5277. are satisfactory for filberts. Filberts generally respond readily to fertilizer applications,
  5278. although no recommendation would apply to all situations. On most soils, it is not advisable
  5279. to apply any fertilizer the first year after transplanting. Beginning the second year, about
  5280. 475 gm (1 lb) per tree of a 5-10-5 or 6-6-5 fertilizer should be broadcast around the tree
  5281. just before beginning of tree growth. The amount of fertilizer is increased by 475 gm/year
  5282. until trees are 10 to 12 years old; after that, ca. 5 kg/per tree is adequate. Filberts are pruned
  5283. to balance top loss with root loss (in planting), or to train young trees to desired form, or
  5284. to remove dead, broken, or diseased branches, or to stimulate moderate growth of new
  5285. shoots on old trees. At planting, tree should be cut back to about 60 cm above the ground,
  5286. leaving 4 to 6 branches to grow. Trees or shrubs should be trained to the central leader
  5287. form, provided it does not require removal of much wood. The more wood removed from
  5288. young plants, the later they come into bearing; therefore, only necessary pruning should be
  5289. done. Pruning should be done after pollen is shed and anthers have fallen. Since American
  5290. filberts or hazelnuts tend to sucker, the suckers should be removed promptly and the plant
  5291. trained to a single stem. Suckers should be removed at point on trunk or root where they
  5292. originate; cutting them off at surface of soil only increases the number that grow. Suckering
  5293. operations should be done 3 to 4 times a year, as they are easier to remove when young.
  5294. Harvesting — Most filbert varieties are self-unfruitful, even though staminate and pis­
  5295. tillate catkins are on the same tree or bush. Cross-pollination must be provided for satisfactory
  5296. fruit-production. In all plantings, 2 or more varieties should be included. The period of
  5297. pistillate flowering is usually much longer than that of pollen-shedding on a particular variety.
  5298. Furthermore, pollen of one variety must be shed when pistillate flowers of the other variety
  5299. are receptive. Nuts, good flavored, should be harvested from bushes in the fall as soon as
  5300. edges of husks begin to turn brown. As all nuts do not mature at once, 2 to 4 gatherings
  5301. may be necessary in a season. If nuts drop easily to ground, they should not be allowed to
  5302. remain there long because of loss to rodents and birds and discoloration and moldiness due
  5303. to wet weather. Nuts should be promptly dried by spreading them in a thin layer in a dry
  5304. 118 Handbook of Nuts
  5305. place having good air circulation. Nuts dried in an unheated building usually require 4 to
  5306. 6 weeks for drying. During this process, they should be stirred frequently to prevent molding.
  5307. The temperature of nuts dried by artificial heat should not be higher than 45°C; otherwise
  5308. they will not store well. After nuts have dried for this time, they are flailed to remove the
  5309. husk. The nuts, which are the commercial seed, can then be sown, stratified, or stored.
  5310. Storage in sealed containers at 5°C will retain a large part of viability in C. am ericana for
  5311. at least 2 years.
  5312. Yields and economics — Brinkman^^ reports 491 seed per lb (ca. 1,080/kg). American
  5313. filberts give good crops every 2 to 3 years, or light crops every year. Yield, size of nut,
  5314. purity, soundness, and cost of commercial seed vary according to cv.^^® Great quantities of
  5315. hazelnuts are gathered each year for home use in northeastern U.S. and Canada. Many more
  5316. are used as food for wildlife.
  5317. Energy — Small and erratically bearing, this species does not seem to hold great promise
  5318. as a firewood or oilseed species. The 64% oil could conceivably serve as an energy source.
  5319. Biotic factors — A fungus disease. Eastern filbert blight, may cause severe damage to
  5320. European filberts in the eastern U.S.; once well-established in a planting, it is very difficult,
  5321. if not impossible to control. Growers should spot and eradicate early infections. Although
  5322. this disease is almost always on American filbert plants, it usually does little damage to
  5323. them. Each spring, trees should be carefully inspected and any diseased branches cut out
  5324. and burned. Among the insect pests, hazelnut weevil, in severe infestations, may completely
  5325. destroy the crop of nuts. Leaves are preferred food for Japanese beetles, and plants may be
  5326. completely defoliated by them. Filbert bug mite and Birch case-borer (C olephora salm ani)
  5327. may be pest problems. Stink-bugs and other plant bugs attack developing nuts and cause
  5328. them to be bitter when mature. As these insects breed on various plants, as legumes and
  5329. blackberries, control chiefly depends on orchard sanitation and elimination from plantation
  5330. of host plants on which bugs breed. For control of all pests, consult local state agents.
  5331. According to Agriculture Handbook No. 165,'* the following attack this species: A pioporthe
  5332. anom ala, Cenangium furfuraceum , C ucurbitaria con globata, C ylindrosporium verm iform is,
  5333. D iaporth e decedens, D iatrypella fro stii, D . m issouriensis, D ip lo d ia coryli, G loeosporium
  5334. coryli, G nom oniella coryli, G. gnom on, H ym enochaete cinnam om ea, H ypoxylon fuscum ,
  5335. M elanconis fla vo viren s, M icrosph aera alni, P hyllactinia corylea, P hym atotrichum omni-
  5336. vorum , P hysalospora obtusa, P olyporu s albellus, P. elegans, P. radiatus, P . stereoides,
  5337. Scorias spongiosa, Septogloeum profusum , S eptoria corylina, S phaeropsis coryli, Taphrina
  5338. coryli, and Valsa am biens.
  5339. 119
  5340. CO RYLU S AVELLANA L. (BETULACEAE) — European Filbert, Cobnuts, Hazelnuts, Bar­
  5341. celona Nuts
  5342. Uses — Long-cultivated, this is the main source of filberts of commerce. Kernel of nut
  5343. eaten raw, roasted, or salted, alone or with other nuts; also used in confections and baked
  5344. goods. Leaves sometimes used for smoking like tobacco. Hazelnut or filbert oil, a clear,
  5345. yellow, non-drying oil is used in food, for painting, in perfumes, as fuel oil, for manufacture
  5346. of soaps, and for machinery. Hazelwood or nutwood is soft, elastic, reddish-white with dark
  5347. lines, and is easy to split, but is not very durable. It is used for handles, sieves, walking
  5348. sticks, hoops of barrels, hurdles, wattles, and is a source of charcoal made into gunpow­
  5349. der. 278,324
  5350. Folk medicine — According to H artw ell,th e paste derived from the bark is said to be
  5351. a folk remedy for tumors. A salve, derived from the leaves and nuts, in a plaster with honey,
  5352. is said to be a cure for cancer. Reported to be fumitory and vasoconstrictor, European filberts
  5353. are a folk remedy for hypotension and parotid tumors.Medicinally, the nuts are tonic,
  5354. stomachic, and aphrodisiac.^^®
  5355. Chemistry — Per 100 g, the seed is reported to contain 620 to 634 calories, 16.4 to 20.0
  5356. g protein, 54.3 to 58.5 g fat, 21.4 to 22.9 g total carbohydrates, 3.3 to 5.9 g fiber, 1.8 to
  5357. 3.7 g ash, 201 mg Ca, 462 mg P, 4.5 mg Fe, 1044 mg K, 10.80 |xg beta-carotene equivalent,
  5358. 0.17 mg thiamine, 0.44 mg riboflavin, 5.40 mg niacin, and 2.2 mg ascorbic acid.®^ The
  5359. Wealth of India'^^ reports the kernel to contain 12.7% protein, \1 .1% carbohydrate, 60.9%
  5360. fat, 0.35% P; rich in phosphorus. Kernel contains 50 to 65% of a golden yellow oil. The
  5361. fatty acid components are 88.1% oleic, 1.9% linoleic, 3.1% palmitic, 1.6% stearic, and
  5362. 2.2% myristic. The leaves contain myricitroside, a rhamnoside of myricetol and allantoic
  5363. acid. The bark contains lignoceryl alcohol, betulinol, and sitosterol.Pollen contains guan-
  5364. osine (C10N13N5O5) and n-triacosan. The wood contains cellulose, galactan, mannan, araban,
  5365. and xylan. The ripe fruit contains 50 to 60% fat. Corylus oil contains 85% oleic- and 10%
  5366. palmitic-acid esters; in addition, 0.5% phytosterol, protein, corylin (?), 2 to 5% sucrose, 2
  5367. to 5% ash, melibiose (C12H22O11), manninotriose (C18H32O16), raffmose (C,8H320i6), and
  5368. stachyose (C24H42O21). Leaves contain taraxerol (C30H50O), (3-sitosterol, 3a, 7a,22a-tri-
  5369. hydroxystigmasterol, n-nonacosan? (C29H60), myricitrin (C21H50O), sucrose, essential oil,
  5370. 18% palmitic-acid, 6.6% ash (52.8% CaO, 5.8% Si02, 2.6% Fc203). The bark contains
  5371. tannic acid, lignocerylalcohol, sitosterol, and betulin (C3oH5o02).‘*^
  5372. Description — Deciduous shrub or small tree, up to 6 m tall, often thicket-forming; dark-
  5373. brown, smooth, with glandular-hairy twigs; leaves 5 to 12 cm long, orbicular, long-pointed,
  5374. hairy on both surfaces; margin doubly serrated; catkins appearing before leaves; staminate
  5375. catkins 2 to 8 cm long, pendulous, in clusters of 1 to 4; pistillate flowers about 5 mm long,
  5376. bud-like, erect; fruit in clusters of 1 to 4; nuts 1.5 to 2 cm in diameter, brown, invested by
  5377. deeply lobed irregularly toothed bracts as long as nut. Flowers January to March; fruits
  5378. fall.2^®
  5379. Germplasm — Reported from the Near Eastern and Mediterranean Centers of Diversity,
  5380. European filbert, or cvs thereof, is reported to tolerate disease, frost, high pH, low pH, and
  5381. slope.®^ European filberts are varieties or hybrids of C. avellana and C. m axim a, both natives
  5382. of Old World. In Europe, filberts are those varieties with tubular husks longer than nut,
  5383. which is usually oblong; cob-nuts are roundish, angular, with husks about length of nut. In
  5384. America, all varieties of C. avellan a are filberts, and native species of C orylu s are hazelnuts.
  5385. Many hybrids between C. avellana, C. m axim a, and the American filberts have been pro­
  5386. duced and many selections have been made. Hybrids with ‘Rush’ (a selection of C. am er-
  5387. icana) have produced some very hardy and productive plants, as ‘Bixly’, ‘Buchanan’,
  5388. ‘Potomac’, and ‘Reed’. Mixed hybrid seedlings are often sold as ‘Jones Hybrids’. ‘Barcelona’
  5389. is the principal variety cultivated in Oregon, with ‘Daviana’ and ‘DuChilly’ as pollinizers.
  5390. 120 Handbook of Nuts
  5391. ‘Cosford’, ‘Medium Long’, and ‘Italian Red’ are the best of over 100 varieties grown in
  5392. New York. ‘Purple Aveline’ is grown for its deep-red foliage in spring. C. avellana var.
  5393. pontica (C. Koch) Winkler (Pontine Hazel or Trabzon Filbert) with lacerated, tubular husks,
  5394. with nuts maturing by end of August, easily propagated by layering or grafting, long
  5395. cultivated in Asia Minor.Three varieties popular for ornamental planting are ‘Aurea’
  5396. (yellow leaves), ‘Contorta’ (twigs definitely curled and twisted), and ‘Pendula’ (with pen­
  5397. dulous b r a n c h e s ) . ( 2 n = 22,28.)
  5398. Distribution — Native throughout most of Europe, except some islands and in the extreme
  5399. north and northeast, east to the Caucasus and Asia, south to North Africa and temperate
  5400. western Asia. Widely cultivated in temperate zones of Old and New World. Common in
  5401. gardens on hill country in India, but unsuccessful on plains there; cultivated in Oregon and
  5402. W ashington.Cultivated varieties introduced to the west coast of the U.S. in 1871.^®^
  5403. Ecology — Ranging from Boreal Wet through Subtropical Thom to Dry Forest Life
  5404. Zones, European filbert is reported to tolerate precipitation of 3.1 to 13.6 dm (mean of 29
  5405. cases = 7.0), annual temperature of 5.9 to 18.6°C (mean of 29 cases = 10.3°C), and pH
  5406. of 4.5 to 8.2 (mean of 21 cases = 6.5).^^ Grows and is cultivated principally in countries
  5407. where summer temperatures are comparatively cool and winter temperatures uniform and
  5408. mild. Trees often injured during both mild and severe winters. Low temperatures, following
  5409. periods of warm weather during latter half of winter generally cause more cold injury to
  5410. catkins and wood than do abnormally low temperatures earlier in the season. Winters of
  5411. continuous mild temperatures or those with severe but steady low temperatures (not lower
  5412. than -5°C) usually result in little injury. Winters of alternating thawing and freezing cause
  5413. most damage. High summer temperatures, as in Eastern and Central U.S., often cause leaves
  5414. to scorch and bum and are an important factor in preventing trees from growing and fruiting
  5415. satisfactorily. Much of this trouble probably results from inadequate soil moisture supply at
  5416. critical times, as filbert does not have a deep taproot, and the feeding roots are fibrous and
  5417. shallow. Hence, commercial filbert production in the U.S. is confined to the Northwest
  5418. where climatic conditions are more favorable.H ardy to Zone 3.^"^^
  5419. Cultivation — The site for filberts should be selected so as to delay opening of flowers
  5420. until the time when temperatures lower than — 5°C are no longer to be expected. A northern
  5421. slope or cover is the most satisfactory type of site. Cold, exposed sites, subject to drying
  5422. effects of winds, should be avoided. Filberts are usually propagated by layering so that new
  5423. plants are on their own roots. Some varieties sucker profusely, and soil is mounded up
  5424. around these in spring to depth of several cm. By the following spring, roots have developed
  5425. at base of sucker. Then, rooted suckers are cut loose, taken up and grown for a year in the
  5426. nursery before setting them in a permanent site. Filberts may be propagated from seed, but
  5427. varieties and cultivars do not come true. Seeds require after-ripening for germination. They
  5428. may be stratified in sand over the winter. In spring, seeds are planted in the nursery and
  5429. seedlings grown for 2 years. Buds grafted on C. colurna seedlings showed 39% successful
  5430. union. Filbert trees of most varieties should be planted 5 to 7 m or more apart. Small­
  5431. growing hybrids can be planted 3 to 5 m apart. In most cases, trees should be planted in
  5432. late winter or very early spring, after danger of severe freezing weather has passed. The
  5433. same general methods of planting should be used as that used for apple or peach. Newly
  5434. transplanted and young trees should be cultivated sufficiently to destroy all grass and weed
  5435. growth before the beginning of tree growth in spring and through July. Mulching trees with
  5436. organic matter is equally satisfactory, provided that sufficient mulch is applied to a large
  5437. enough area around each tree to suppress grass and weed growth. In general, the same
  5438. cultural practices used for peaches are satisfactory for filberts. Filberts generally respond
  5439. readily to fertilizer applications, although no recommendation would apply to all conditions.
  5440. On most soils, it is not advisable to apply any fertilizer the first year after transplanting.
  5441. Beginning the second year, about 475 g (1 lb) per tree of a 5-10-5 or 6-6-5 fertilizer should
  5442. 121
  5443. be broadcast around tree just before beginning of tree growth. The amount of fertilizer should
  5444. be increased by 475 g (1 lb) per tree per year until trees are 10 to 12 years old; after that
  5445. ca. 5 kg per tree per year is sufficient. Filberts are pruned to: (1) balance top loss with root
  5446. loss in planting operations; (2) train young trees to desired form; and (3) remove dead or
  5447. broken branches and stimulate moderate new shoot growth on older trees. At planting, the
  5448. tree should be cut back to about 60 cm above ground, and 4 to 6 branches should be allowed
  5449. to grow. Trees should be trained to the central leader form, provided it does not require
  5450. removal of much wood. The more wood removed from young trees, the later they come
  5451. into bearing; therefore, only necessary pruning should be done. Older trees that make short
  5452. shoot growth should have branches thinned out and slightly cut back to stimulate production
  5453. of stronger, more vigorous shoots. Pruning should be done after pollen is shed and catkins
  5454. have fallen. All filberts except Turkish tend to grow as bushes by suckering from roots. All
  5455. suckers should be promptly removed and the tree trained to a single stem. Suckers should
  5456. be removed at the point on the trunk or root where they originate; cutting them off at the
  5457. soil surface only increases the suckers that grow. Suckering operations should be done 3 or
  5458. 4 times a year, as young suckers are easier to remove.
  5459. Harvesting — Shrubs or trees begin bearing in about 4 years and bear well nearly every
  5460. year. Staminate and pistillate appear on the same tree in different clusters. Depending on
  5461. the location and winter weather conditions, pollination begins in January to March and lasts
  5462. about 1 month. Young nuts do not become visible until late June or early July. There is a
  5463. 3 to 4 month lapse between pollination and fertilization. Although filbert trees flower when
  5464. freezing temperatures can be expected, they are generally not injured unless the temperature
  5465. drops to about - 10°C during the period of pollination. Most filbert varieties are self-
  5466. unfruitful, and cross-pollination must be provided for satisfactory fruit-production. In all
  5467. plantings, trees of 2 or more varieties should be included. The period of pistillate flowering
  5468. is usually much longer than that of pollen-shedding on a particular variety. Furthermore,
  5469. pollen of one variety must be shed at a time when pistillate flowers of the other variety are
  5470. receptive. Pollen of C. avellana is effective on pistils of C. cornuta and C. americana, but
  5471. a reverse application is usually sterile. C. americana x C. avellana hybrids have been used
  5472. successfully to pollinate C. avellana. Nuts soon become rancid when stored at room tem­
  5473. perature.^^* With good weather and modem equipment, five experienced workers can harvest
  5474. ca. 200 acres in 10 days.^®^
  5475. Yields and economics — No specific yield data available, as nuts are gathered several
  5476. times.A good orchard can provide ca. 2,000 kg/ha dry in-shell nuts annually. U.S.
  5477. imports ca. 45% of filberts consumed annually.Filberts include both C. avellana and C.
  5478. maxima and their hybrids, and they are not separated in the trade. In 1969— 1970, Turkey
  5479. exported about 81,300 MT of shelled nuts valued at $103 million, and 1,228 MT of unshelled
  5480. nuts valued at $783,342. In 1970, production was about 240,000 MT unshelled nuts. Filberts
  5481. range from $125-$150/ton. Major importers are West Germany, USSR, France, Italy, U.K.,
  5482. Switzerland, U.S., Lebanon, East Germany, and Syria. The U.S. produces about 9,000
  5483. tons annually in the shell and imports additional quantities.
  5484. Energy — Though not usually considered a firewood species, the wood could undoubtedly
  5485. serve such a purpose. Specific gravity of 0.917. The oil potential of nearly ca. 1 MT/ha
  5486. would better be utilized for edible than energy purposes.
  5487. Biotic factors — Nuts of some varieties drop freely from husk, while others must be
  5488. removed from husk by hand. Fallen nuts should be gathered 2 to 4 times during the harvest
  5489. season, as they do not all mature at the same time. Those that drop early should not be
  5490. allowed to lie on the ground because of loss to rodents and birds and discoloration or
  5491. moldiness due to wet weather. Nuts should be promptly dried by spreading them in a thin
  5492. layer in a dry place having good air circulation. Nuts dried in an unheated building usually
  5493. require 4 to 6 weeks for drying. During this process, they should be stirred frequently to
  5494. 122 Handbook of Nuts
  5495. prevent molding. Temperature of nuts dried by artificial heat should not be higher than 45°C
  5496. — otherwise they will not store well. Kernels of fully dried nuts are firm and brittle and
  5497. will break with a sharp snap when hit with a hammer or crushed with the fingers. The
  5498. following fungi are known to cause diseases on European filbert: Anthostoma dubium,
  5499. Apioporthe anómala, Armillaria mellea, Cercospora coryli, Chorostate conjuncta, Ciboria
  5500. amentácea, Coriolus hoehnelii, Cryptospora corylina, Cylindrosporium coryli, Cytospora
  5501. corylicola, C. fuckelii, Diaporthe decedens, D. eres, Diatrype disciformis, D. stigma,
  5502. Diatrypella favacea, D. verrucaeformis, Cryptosporiopsis grisea, Diplodia sarmentorum,
  5503. D. coryli, Fenestella princeps, Fornes annosus, Fumago vagans, Gloeosporium coryli, G.
  5504. perexiguum, Gnomonia amoena, G. coryli, G. gnomon, Gnomoniella coryli, Helmintho-
  5505. sporium macrocarpum, H. velutinum, Helotim fructigenum, Hypoxylon fuscum, H. multi­
  5506. forme, H. unitum, Labrella coryli, Lachnum hedwigiae, Mamiania coryli, Mamianiella
  5507. coryli, Marasmius foetidus, Melconis sulphurea, Melanomma pulvis-pyrius, Merulius rufus,
  5508. M. serpens, Monostichella coryli, Nectria coryli, N. ditissima, Nitschkia tristis, Orbilia
  5509. crenato-marginata, Peniophora cinerea, Pestalozzia coryli, Pezicula corylina, Phellinus
  5510. punctatus, Phoma suffulta, Phyllactinia corylea, Phyllosticta coryli, Phytophthora cactorum,
  5511. Radulum oribculae, Rhizopus nodosus, Sclerotinia fructigena, Septoria avellanae, Sillia
  5512. ferruginea, Stereum hirsutum, S. rugosum, Sphaeropsis coryli, Stictis mollis, Taphrina
  5513. coryli, Tyromyces semipileatus, Valsa corylina, and Vuilleminia comedens. European filbert
  5514. trees are attacked by the bacteria, Agrobacterium tumefaciens and Xanthomonas coryli.
  5515. Nematodes isolated from filberts include: Caconema radicicola, Heterodera marioni, Lon-
  5516. gidorus maximus, and Pratylenchus penetrans. Few insects attack leaves, branches, or nuts;
  5517. some may cause severe damage unless controlled. Stink bugs and other plant bugs attack
  5518. developing nuts and cause them to be bitter when mature. As these insects breed on various
  5519. plants, as legumes, blackberries, and others, control chiefly depends on orchard sanitation
  5520. and elimination of host plants on which bugs breed.
  5521. 123
  5522. CORYLUS CHINENSIS Franch. (BETULACEAE) — Chinese Filbert
  5523. Syn.: C orylu s co lu m n var. ch in en sis Burk.
  5524. Uses — Kernels of nuts edible, used for food, eaten raw, roasted, or in cookery, and as
  5525. flavoring. Plants used for hybridizing, since they are trees relatively resistant to Eastern
  5526. filbert blight.
  5527. Folk medicine — No data available.
  5528. Chemistry — No data available.
  5529. Description — Deciduous tree up to 40 m tall; leaves 10 to 17 cm tall, ovate to ovate-
  5530. oblong, cordate or very oblique at base, glabrous above, pubescent along veins beneath,
  5531. doubly serrate, petioles 0.8 to 2.5 cm long, pubescent and setulose; fruits 4 to 6, clustered;
  5532. involucre, not spiny, constricted above nut, with recurved and more or less forked lobes,
  5533. finely pubescent, not glandular; nuts relatively small, hard-shelled but of high quality.
  5534. Germplasm — Reported from the China-Japan Center of Diversity, Chinese filbert, or
  5535. CVS thereof, is reported to tolerate disease, drought, frost, heat, and slope.Som e selections
  5536. are heavy producers. Cultivated, along with its hybrids, in southern Michigan.(2n = 11.
  5537. Distribution — China;cultivated in Michigan.
  5538. Ecology — Ranging from Warm Temperate Dry to Moist Forest Life Zones, Chinese
  5539. filbert is reported to tolerate annual precipitation of 6.6 to 12.3 dm (mean of 2 cases =
  5540. 9.5), annual temperature of 14.7 to 15.0°C (mean of 2 cases = 14.9°C), and pH of 4.9 to
  5541. 6.8 (mean of 2 cases = 5.9).®^ Thrives in soils which permit its strong root system to
  5542. penetrate to great depths. Trees resistant to cold, heat, drought, and other hazardous con­
  5543. ditions of the environment.^^®
  5544. Cultivation — Propagated by seeds, but seedlings vary greatly in productivity and bearing
  5545. age. Often hybridized with other species to get larger nuts and more hardy plants. Trees
  5546. produce few or no suckers.
  5547. Harvesting — Trees begin to bear fruit in about 8 years, and then continue for a long
  5548. time. Nuts harvested in fall as other filbert tree species. Treatment, drying, and storage
  5549. methods similar to those used for other filberts and hazelnuts.
  5550. Yields and economics — Although no exact figures are available for this species, its
  5551. selections and hybrids are said to be heavy producers. No specific production figures for
  5552. this species.
  5553. Energy — As a tall tree, this produces better firewood than some of the bushy species
  5554. of Corylus.
  5555. Biotic factors — No specific data available for this species, but same precautions should
  5556. be taken as for other filberts. Trees are relatively resistant to Eastern filbert blight.
  5557. 124 Handbook of Nuts
  5558. CO RYLU S COLU RN A L. (BETULACEAE) — Turkish Filbert or Hazelnut, Constantinople
  5559. Nut
  5560. Uses — Cultivated for the nuts, the edible kernel used for confections, pastries, and for
  5561. flavoring. Nuts also used roasted or salted, alone or with other nuts. This species is rarely
  5562. cultivated for nuts in North America, but rather as an ornamental and for nursery under­
  5563. stock.
  5564. Folk medicine — Nuts used as a tonic.
  5565. Chemistry — According to Hager’s Handbook,*®^ the nuts contain melibiose, manni-
  5566. notriose, raffinose, and stachyose.
  5567. Description — Deciduous shrub or small tree, rarely up to 25 m tall, with regular
  5568. pyramidal head; leaves 7.5 to 12.5 cm long, deeply cordate, rounded, ovate or obovate,
  5569. slightly lobed, doubly serrate, nearly glabrous above, pubescent beneath; petioles 2.5 cm
  5570. long, usually glabbrescent, stipules lanceolate and acuminate; catkins up to 12 cm long,
  5571. pendent; involucre much longer than nut, open at apex, divided almost to base into many
  5572. long-acuminate or linear serrate lobes, densely covered with glandular hairs; nut globose or
  5573. roundish-ovate, about 2 cm long, hard. Flowers late winter to early spring; fruits fall.^^®
  5574. Germplsm — Reported from the Near East Center of Diversity, Turkish filbert, or cvs
  5575. thereof, is reported to tolerate drought, frost, poor soil, shade, and slo p e .C . colurna var.
  5576. glandulifera DC. has glandular-setose petioles and peduncles, with the lobes of involucre
  5577. less acute and more dentate. Some selectins are heavy producers. Many other named botanical
  5578. varieties, x C. colurnoides C. K. Sch. is a hybrid of C. avellana x C. colurna, grown
  5579. in Germany. (2n =
  5580. Distribution — Native to southeastern Europe and southwestern Siberia, south to the
  5581. western Himalayas from Kashmir to Kumaon, at altitudes from 1,500 to 3,000 m; common
  5582. in Kashmir forests; also found in Afghanistan, Balkan Peninsula, and Rumania. Extensively
  5583. cultivated in Turkey.
  5584. Ecology — Ranging from Cool Temperate Moist to Wet through Subtropical Dry Forest
  5585. Life Zones, Turkish filbert is reported to tolerate annual precipitation of 5.2 to 14.7 dm
  5586. (mean of 8 cases = 8.8), annual temperature of 8.4 to 18.6°C (mean of 8 cases = 12.0°C),
  5587. and pH of 5.3 to 7.2 (mean of 8 cases = 6.6).®^ A temperate plant, but not quite hardy
  5588. northward into the U.S. and Europe. Thrives on deep, fertile, well-drained soils, in regions
  5589. where summer temperatures are comparatively cool and winters uniform and mild. Winters
  5590. too mild or too severe injure both catkins and wood. Also winters with alternate thawing
  5591. and freezing are injurious. For best cultivation, winter temperatures should not drop below
  5592. - 10°C.2"«
  5593. Cultivation — Turkish filbert is propagated from seeds or graftings on seedling stock.
  5594. Since it does not sucker or stool, as do most species of C orylu s, its seedlings are used as
  5595. understocks for horticultural varieties of the European and American species. Trees should
  5596. be planted 5 to 7 m or more apart, except for hybrid varieties, which are small-growing and
  5597. can be planted 3 to 5 m apart. Trees should be planted in late winter or very early spring,
  5598. after danger of severe freezing has passed. The same general methods of planting should
  5599. be used as for apple or peach trees. Newly transplanted and young trees should be cultivated
  5600. sufficiently to destroy all grass and weed growth before the beginning of tree growth in
  5601. spring and through July. Mulching trees with any type of organic matter is equally as
  5602. satisfactory as cultivation, provided that sufficient mulch is applied. In general, the same
  5603. cultural practices used for peaches are satisfactory for filberts. Filberts generally respond
  5604. readily to fertilizer applications, although no recommendation would apply to all conditions.
  5605. On most soils, it is not advisable to apply any fertilizer the first year after transplanting.
  5606. Beginning the second year, about 475 gm (1 lb) per tree of a 5-10-5 or 6-6-5 fertilizer should
  5607. be broadcast around tree just before beginning of tree growth. Amount of fertilizer increased
  5608. 125
  5609. 475 gm (1 lb) per year until the tenth or twelfth year, and from then on apply about 4.7 kg
  5610. (10 lbs) per tree per year. Prune trees to desirable shape and remove dead or broken branches.
  5611. Since Turkish filberts do not sucker, little attention is given to the trees after they are
  5612. established.^^®
  5613. Harvesting — Nuts are harvested in fall. Trees bear every third year, beginning the
  5614. eighth year. However, in Turkey where they are extensively cultivated for the nuts, trees
  5615. yield annually from the fourth year onwards up to the twentieth year. Nuts of Turkish filberts
  5616. are said to be as good in quality as the English hazelnut. Nuts of some varieties drop free
  5617. from husk while others must be removed from husk by hand. Fallen nuts should be gathered
  5618. 2 to 4 times during the harvest season as they do not all mature at same time. Those that
  5619. drop early should not be left on ground because of loss by rodents and birds, and because
  5620. of discoloration and moldiness due to wet weather. Nuts should be promptly dried by
  5621. spreading them in a thin layer in a dry place having good air circulation. Nuts dried in an
  5622. unheated building usually require 4 to 6 weeks for drying. During this process the nuts
  5623. should be stirred frequently to prevent molding. Temperature of nuts dried by artificial heat
  5624. should not exceed 46°C (115°F) — otherwise they will not store well. Kernels of fully dried
  5625. nuts are firm and brittle and will break with a sharp snap when hit with a hammer or crushed
  5626. with the fingers.
  5627. Yields and economics — No specific data on yields separate from that of other filberts
  5628. cultivated in same areas, as Turkey and southeast Europe. However, some selections are
  5629. said to be very good producers of nuts. Extensively cultivated in Turkey, and to a lesser
  5630. degree in southeast Europe and western Asia, south into temperate Himalayas. Although
  5631. trees are said to yield a good crop, production figures are not separated from production of
  5632. other European or Asiatic filberts.
  5633. Energy — Like other members of the genus C orylu s, this holds little promise as an
  5634. energy species, but can provide firewood and seed oils. As a tree species, it can provide
  5635. higher quality firewood than shrubby species of C orylus.
  5636. Biotic factors — The following fungi are known to attack Turkish filbert: H yposylon
  5637. m ultiform e, L enzites jap ó n ica , M icrosph aeria alni, P hyllactinia corylea, and Pucciniastrum
  5638. coryli. The bacterium P seudom onas colurnae has been isolated from this species. Mycorrhiza
  5639. are necessary in the soil. As staminate and pistillate flowers do not always become fertile
  5640. on the same tree at the same time, and since most filberts are self-unfruitful, for commercial
  5641. production, several varieties should be planted near each other for cross pollination, thus
  5642. assuring good nut production.
  5643. 126 Handbook of Nuts
  5644. CO RYLU S CORNU TA Marsh (BETULACEAE) Beaked Filbert
  5645. Syn.: C orylu s rostrata Ait.
  5646. Uses — Nuts used for human food and wildlife food; plants used for erosion control and
  5647. cover and for basket splints.
  5648. Folk medicine — Ojibwa Indians used a poultice of boiled bark to help close and heal
  5649. wounds; Potawatomi used the inner bark as an astringent.^‘^
  5650. Chemistry — No data available.
  5651. Description — Deciduous shrub, 0.6 to 3 m tall, thicket-forming, sometimes a small tree
  5652. to 10 m tall; bark smooth; branchlets pubescent, villous or glabrous, later glabrescent, not
  5653. bristly; leaves 6 to 10 cm long, ovate or narrowly oval, acuminate, cordate or obtuse at
  5654. base, incised-serrate or serrulate on margins, glabrous or with scattered appressed hairs
  5655. above, sparsely pubescent beneath, at least along veins; petioles glandless, 0.4 to 0.8 cm
  5656. long; mature involucral of connate bracts 4 to 7 cm long, densely bristly toward base, usually
  5657. rather abruptly constructed into an elongated beak, cut at summit into narrowly triangular
  5658. lobes; nut ovoid, brown, compressed, striate, 1.2 to 2.3 cm long. Flowers February to May;
  5659. fruits July to September; seed dispersal July to winter.
  5660. Germplasm — Reported from the North American Center of Diversity, beaked filbert,
  5661. or CVS thereof, is reported to tolerate frost, slope, smog, and S02-®^ Among botanical varieties
  5662. are the following: C. cornuta forma inerm is Fern., a form in Quebec with non-bristly
  5663. involucres; C. Cornunta var. californica (A. DC.) Sharp (C. californica (A.DC.) Rose), a
  5664. variety found on the West Coast. (2n = 28.)^^®
  5665. Distribution — Native to eastern North America from Newfoundland and Quebec to
  5666. British Columbia, south to Georgia and Missouri, and on the west coast from California
  5667. northward. Cultivated else where.
  5668. Ecology — Ranging from Boreal Moist through Cool Temperate Steppe to Wet Forest
  5669. Life Zones, beaked filbert is reported to tolerate annual precipitation of 3.5 to 11.6 dm
  5670. (mean of 10 cases = 6.8), annual temperature of 5.7 to 12.5°C (mean of 10 cases = 8.1°C),
  5671. and pH of 5.0 to 7.5 (mean of 9 cases = 6.5).^^ Naturally thrives in moist woods and
  5672. thickets, on low hillsides, in rich, well-drained soil. When cultivated, shrubs should be
  5673. planted in soils which are deep, fertile, and well-drained. Heavy clay or silt soils as well
  5674. as coarse, deep sand should be avoided. When planted on poorly drained soils, the shrub
  5675. grows poorly, is subject to winter injury, and bears few nuts.^^®
  5676. Cultivation — Most filberts offered for sale by nurserymen have been propagated by
  5677. layering and are on their own roots. Trees or shrubs grown for 1 or 2 years in nursery after
  5678. the layers have been removed from parent stock are preferable to older plants. Some nurs­
  5679. erymen propagated their stock on Turkish filbert roots that do not produce suckers. This
  5680. rootstock generally outgrows the scion to some extent. Beaked filberts can be propagated
  5681. from seed which has been stratified for 60 to 90 days at 5°C. Germination is hypogeous.
  5682. Natural seed dispersal is chiefly by animals. Stratified seed are planted in spring. However,
  5683. seed may be planted in fall in drills and protected from rodents. Horticultural varieties are
  5684. propagated by suckers, layering, budding or grafting, and cuttings. Filberts of all varieties
  5685. should be planted 5 to 7 m or more apart. In most cases, trees or shrubs are planted in late
  5686. winter or very early spring, after danger of severe freezing is passed. The same general
  5687. methods of planting should be used as for apple or peach trees. Newly transplanted and
  5688. young plants should be cultivated sufficiently to destroy all grass and weed growth before
  5689. the beginning of tree growth in spring and through July. Mulching plants with any type of
  5690. organic matter is equally as satisfactory as cultivation, provided that sufficient mulch is
  5691. applied. In general, the same cultural practices used for peaches are satisfactory for filberts.
  5692. Filberts generally respond favorably to fertilizer applications, although no recommendation
  5693. would apply to all situations. On most soils it is not advisable to apply any fertilizer the
  5694. 127
  5695. first year after transplanting. Beginning the second year, about 475 g (1 lb) per tree of a 5-
  5696. 10-5 or 6-6-5 fertilizer should be broadcast around the tree just before the beginning of tree
  5697. growth. The amount of fertilizer is increased 475 g/year until plants are 10 to 12 years old;
  5698. after that, about 4.7 kg per plant is sufficient. Pruning filberts is done to balance top with
  5699. loss of roots in planting operations, to train young trees to desired form, to remove dead,
  5700. broken or diseased branches, or to stimulate moderate growth on new shoots on old trees.
  5701. At planting, tree should be cut back to about 60 cm above the ground, leaving 4 to 6 branches
  5702. to grow. Trees or shrubs should be trained to the central leader form, provided it does not
  5703. mean removal of much wood. The more wood removed from young plants, the later they
  5704. come into bearing; therefore, only necessary pruning should be done. Pruning should be
  5705. done after pollen shedding is over and anthers have fallen. Since beaked filberts or hazelnuts
  5706. tend to sucker, the suckers should be removed promptly and the plant trained to a single
  5707. stem. Suckers should be removed at the point on the trunk or root where they originate;
  5708. cutting them off at surface of soil only increases the number that grow. Suckering operations
  5709. should be done 3 to 4 times a year, as they are easier to remove when young.^^^
  5710. Harvesting — Fruits should be gathered by hand from bushes as soon as edges of husks
  5711. turn brown. Fruits should be spread out in a thin layer to dry for a short time, for about 4
  5712. to 6 days. Then husks are removed by flailing. The nuts, which are the commençai seeds,
  5713. may be sown, stratified, or stored. Storage in sealed containers at 5°C will retain some
  5714. viability in C. cornuta for at least 2 years.
  5715. Yields and economics — Beaked filberts yield well every 2 to 5 years, and give a light
  5716. crop every year. Great quantities of hazelnuts are gathered each year for local home-use in
  5717. northeastern and northwestern U.S. and Canada. Many more are used as food for wildlife.
  5718. No exact figures are available on production. Hazelnuts are usually sold as mixed nuts,
  5719. especially during the winter months and holidays.^^^
  5720. Energy — Probably no more promising than other C ory lus species for energy potential.
  5721. Biotic factors — Most filbert varieties are self-unfruitful, even though staminate and
  5722. pistillate catkins are on the same tree or bush. Cross-pollination must be provided for
  5723. satisfactory fruit production. In all plantings, two or more varieties should be included. The
  5724. period of pistillate flowering is usually much longer than that of pollen-shedding on a
  5725. particular variety. Furthermore, pollen on one variety must be shed at the time when pistillate
  5726. flowers of the other variety are receptive. The following fungi are known to attack beaked
  5727. filberts or hazelnut plants: A pioporth e anom ala, C ercospora corylina, C ucurbitaria con-
  5728. globata, D iaporth e decedens, D ia tryp ella m inutispora, G loeosporium coryli, G. rostratum ,
  5729. G nom oniella coryli, H ym enochaete agglutinans, M elanconis fla vo viren s, M icrosph aeria
  5730. alni, N ectria coryli, P ezicu la corylina, P hyllactin ia corylea, P hym atotrichum om nivorum ,
  5731. P olysporus albellus, P . elegans, P. radiatus, P . stereoides, S eptoria corylina, and Sphaer-
  5732. opsis corylii. Among the insect pests, hazelnut weevil, in severe infestations, may completely
  5733. destroy the crop of nuts. Leaves are preferred food for Japanese beetles, and plants may be
  5734. completely defoliated by them. Filbert bud mite may be a pest problem. For control of all
  5735. pests, consult local State agent.
  5736. 128 Handbook of Nuts
  5737. CORYLUS FEROX Wall. (BETULACEAE) — Himalayan or Tibetan Filbert
  5738. Syn.: Corylus tibetica Ratal, {thibetica) and Corylus ferox var. thibetica Franch.
  5739. Uses — Kernel of nut edible, used raw, roasted, or in cookery, and as a flavoring.
  5740. Folk medicine — No data available.
  5741. Chemistry — No data available.
  5742. Description — Deciduous tree to 10 m tall; young branches silky-hairy; leaves 7.5 to
  5743. 12.5 cm long, oblong, ovate to obovate-oblong, usually rounded at base, acuminate, doubly
  5744. serrate, glabrous except along veins beneath, 12 to 14 pairs of veins; involucre glabrescent
  5745. to tomentose, forming a spiny bur about 3 cm across, longer than nut, consisting of 2 distinct
  5746. bracts; nuts from about twice in diameter as long to twice as long as wide.^^®
  5747. Germplasm — Reported from the China-Japan Center of Diversity, Himalayan filbert,
  5748. or CVS thereof, is reported to tolerate frost and slope. (2n = 22,28.)^^
  5749. Distribution — Native to central and western China to Tibet and central Himalaya, up
  5750. to 3,300 m altitude.
  5751. Ecology — Ranging from Warm Temperate to Moist Forest Life Zones, Himalayan filbert
  5752. is reported to tolerate annual precipitation of 12.0 dm, annual temperature of 14.8°C, and
  5753. pH of 5.5.®^ Thrives in temperate forests on well-drained soils.
  5754. Cultivation — This filbert is rarely cultivated, but rather, trees are taken care of in the
  5755. forest. Propagation is by natural distribution of seeds.
  5756. Harvesting — Nuts are collected from native trees in the forest in the fall. Drying and
  5757. storage procedures are about the same as for other filberts.
  5758. Yields and economics — No yield data available. Locally in central Asia, these filberts
  5759. are gathered and sold in local markets. They do not enter international trade.
  5760. Energy — Not a promising energy species.
  5761. Biotic factors — No data available.
  5762. 129
  5763. CORYLUS HETEROPHYLLA Fisch. ex Besser (BETULACEAE) — Siberian Filbert
  5764. Uses — Kernels of nuts used raw, roasted, cooked, or in confections.
  5765. Folk medicine — Reported to be aperitif and digestive.
  5766. Chemistry — No data available.
  5767. Description — Deciduous shrub or small tree to 4 m tall; branchlets pubescent and
  5768. glandular-pilose when young; leaves 5 to 12 cm long and about as wide, orbicular-obovate
  5769. to deltoid-obovate, cordate at base, nearly truncate and abruptly acuminate at apex and with
  5770. a very short point, margins irregularly toothed or incisely serrate, green on both sides,
  5771. glabrous above, pubescent on veins beneath, petioles up to 13 cm long, pubescent and
  5772. glandular-pilose; involucre companulate, 2.5 to 3.5 cm long, somewhat longer than nut,
  5773. striate, glandular-setose near base, lobes of bracts entire or sparingly dentate, triangular;
  5774. nuts 1 to 3 in a cluster, at ends of branchlets, on stalks to 3 cm long, subglobose, about
  5775. 1.5 cm across. Flowers May; fruits August.
  5776. Germplasm — Reported from the China-Japan and Eurosiberian Centers of Diversity,
  5777. Siberian filbert, or cvs thereof, is reported to tolerate frost, low pH, and slope.Several
  5778. botanical varieties are known, and some are cultivated in northern Asia. C. heterophylla
  5779. var. yezoensis Koidz. (C. yezoensis (Koidz.) Nakai) — leaves obovate-orbicular to broadly
  5780. obovate, abruptly short acuminate, rarely glandular-pilose; involucres sparsely glandular-
  5781. pilose; Japan (Hokkaido, Honshu, Kyushu). Other varieties are var. thunbergii Blume, var.
  5782. crista-galli Burkill, var. setchuensis Franch., and var. yunnanensis Franch.®^’^^® (2n = 28.)
  5783. Distribution — Native to eastern Siberia, eastern Mongolia, Manchuria, northern China
  5784. (Tschili), Ussuri, Amur, Korea; introduced and cultivated in Japan and France; probably
  5785. elsewhere.
  5786. Ecology — Ranging from Cool Temperate to Moist through Warm Temperate Dry to
  5787. Moist Forest Life Zones, Siberian filbert is reported to tolerate annual precipitation of 12.0
  5788. to 14.7 dm (mean of 2 cases = 13.4), annual temperature of 14.8 to 14.8°C (mean of 2
  5789. cases == 14.8°C), and pH of 5.3 to 5.5 (mean of 2 cases = 5.4).®^ Naturally found along
  5790. woods and on mountain slopes, often forming dense thickets. Thrives in cool temperate
  5791. regions on soil with good drainage.
  5792. Cultivation — Modest requirements greatly facilitate cultivation. Propagated from seed,
  5793. usually distributed naturally in the forest, and by suckers. The most elementary care of wild
  5794. stands results in considerable improvement in yield and quality of nuts.^^®
  5795. Harvesting — Nuts are probably collected in the fall.
  5796. Yields and economics — Nuts harvested commercially in Northern Asia, usually from
  5797. wild plants only. Does not enter international markets; usually marketed locally.
  5798. Energy — Not a promising energy species.
  5799. Biotic factors — No data available.
  5800. 130 Handbook of Nuts
  5801. CO RYLU S MAXIMA Mill. (BETULACEAE) Giant or Lambert’s Filbert
  5802. Syn.: C orylu s tu bu losa Willd.
  5803. Uses — Widely cultivated for the nuts in Europe; used as roasted or salted nuts, or as
  5804. flavoring in confections and pastries. Sometimes naturalized, and of some interest as an
  5805. ornamental, especially the red-leaved form, found in parks in the Caucasus. This species is
  5806. considered the progenitor in Europe from which most cultivated filberts have been developed:
  5807. C. avellana is more often called the cobnut.
  5808. Folk medicine — No data available.
  5809. Chemistry — No data available.
  5810. Description — Deciduous shrub or small tree, up to 10 m tall; branches somtimes glabrous,
  5811. mostly stipitate-glandular; leaves 7.5 to 15 cm long, 6 to 10 cm broad, orbicular, cordate
  5812. at base, short-acuminate, slightly lobed, doubly serrate, very often red, pubescent beneath;
  5813. petiole 1 to 2.5 cm long; staminate aments to 10 cm long,l cm in diameter; involucre tubular,
  5814. contracted above the nut, forming a gradually narrowed elongated deeply laciniate husk,
  5815. dentate at apex, finely pubescent outside, lower part fleshy, enveloping nut, splitting at
  5816. maturity; nut ovoid, sometimes subcylindrical, acuminate; kernel with thin red or white
  5817. skin. Flowers March; fruits September.
  5818. Germplasm — Reported from the Central Asia and Near East Centers of Diversity, giant
  5819. filbert, or cvs thereof, is reported to tolerate frost, low pH, and slope. C. maxim a var.
  5820. purpurea Rehd. (C. avellana (var.)pu rpurea Loud., C. m axim a var. atropurpúrea Dochnahl)
  5821. has dark purple-red leaves. There are many varieties with large nuts. Cultivated forms are
  5822. partly hybrids with C. avellana, (2n = 22,28.)^^’^^®
  5823. Distribution — Native to southeastern Europe, from Italy and Yugoslavia to Greece,
  5824. Turkey, and western Asia. Widely cultivated elsewhere in Europe and sometimes naturalized.
  5825. Cultivated in Crimea and on the Black Sea Coast for more than a century.
  5826. Ecology — Ranging from Cool Temperate Wet through Warm Temperate Moist to Wet
  5827. Forest Life Zones, the giant filbert is reported to tolerate annual precipitation of 6.3 to 16.7
  5828. dm (mean of 2 cases = 10.5 dm), annual temperature of 9.7 to 14.8°C (mean of 2 cases
  5829. = 12.3°C), and pH of 5.3 to 6.8 (mean of 2 cases = 6.1). Thrives in a cool to warm
  5830. temperate climate under soil and climatic conditions similar to those for C. avellana.
  5831. Cultivation — See C orylus am ericana.
  5832. Harvesting — The harvesting of nuts begins in September. The beaked involucre must
  5833. be removed by hand, and then the nuts are dried for storage until marketed or used. After
  5834. removing the husk, nuts are spread out to dry in thin layers in a dry place having good air-
  5835. circulation. Nuts dried in an unheated building usually require 4 to 6 weeks for drying. They
  5836. should be stirred frequently to prevent molding. The temperature of nuts dried by artificial
  5837. heat should not be higher than 45°C; otherwise they will not store well.^^®
  5838. Yields and economics — The species and its cultivars and hybrids are reported to be
  5839. good producers. Southeastern Europe and southwestern Asia, especially Crimea and the
  5840. Black Sea Region, are major producers. However, this filbert is not separated from the
  5841. Turkish and other filberts grown in the region. Prices vary from $125 to $150/ton for Turkish
  5842. filberts. About 240,000 MT of nuts are produced annually in Turkey and adjacent areas.
  5843. Energy — Although not a promising energy species, this is one of the better species of
  5844. C orylus for energy production.
  5845. Biotic factors — Fungi known to attack this filbert include: M ycosph aerella puntiform is,
  5846. P hyllactinia corylea, and Sphaeragnm onia carpinea. The bacterium, X anthom onas coryli,
  5847. also attack the plant. In some areas, winter injury may be serious. Pests include: Lecanium
  5848. corni (soft scale) and M yzocallis coryli (aphids).
  5849. 131
  5850. COULA EDULIS Baill. (OLACACEAE) — African Walnut, Gabon Nut, Almond Wood
  5851. Uses — The fruits, sold in Cameroon markets, have agreeably edible kernels, resembling
  5852. hazelnuts or chestnuts. They are eaten fresh, boiled in the shell, roasted, boiled, and pounded
  5853. and made into cakes. Some tribes ferment the fruits underground. The timber is red to
  5854. reddish-brown, closegrained, hard, heavy, resistant to water, and immune to insects, e.g.,
  5855. termites, through liable to split. Suitable for house posts, railway sleepers, bridge-piles, and
  5856. charcoal, it has been suggested for heavy carpentry, stair treads, doors, turnery, and boat
  5857. and carriage construction. Durable under water, the wood can be used for bridges and
  5858. pilings.T he fruit shells make finger-rings in Nigeria.
  5859. Folk medicine — The stomachic bark decoction is used for dysentery in Liberia. Powdered
  5860. bark is used in Equatorial Africa for dressing sores, and in decoctions to stimulate appetite
  5861. and counteract anemia, or in enemas for dysentery. Liberians believe the fruits eliminate
  5862. boils.
  5863. Chemistry — Per 100 g, the seed (ZMB) is reported to contain 505 calories, 7.9 g protein,
  5864. 25.7 g fat, 64.3 g total carbohydrate, 2.4 g fiber, 2.1 g ash, 180 mg Ca, and 269 mg P.®^
  5865. DalzieF^ and Irvine^"^^ suggest that the oil content is closer to 50 than 25%. The seed fat is
  5866. very high in oleic acid (87 to 95%), with 3% linoleic, and 1.7% palmitic + stearic acids.
  5867. Menninger cites a source suggesting 87% oleic.
  5868. Toxicity — Leaves said to be poisonous.W ood can cause allergy or asthma in wood­
  5869. workers.^'^
  5870. Description — Medium-sized tree to 20 m tall and 2 m girth; crown deep, dense; buttresses
  5871. 132 Handbook of Nuts
  5872. slight or none; bark fairly smooth, thin, brownish-green; slash brown or yellow, white and
  5873. resinous in young trees, darkening to pink; young parts reddish-brown-hairy. Leaves 30 x
  5874. 8 cm, often rusty, papery, elliptic to oblong-elliptic, glabrous, alternate; tip long-caudate-
  5875. acuminate; base cuneate; midrib slightly raised above; lateral nerves up to 14 pairs, sub­
  5876. parallel, sunken above and raised below; petiole 2 to 3 cm long, usually twisted, rusty-
  5877. puberulous. Flowers (April to May, October to January) in rusty-brown axillary panicles;
  5878. calyx small, cup-shaped; petals 5, fairly thick; stamens 10. Fruit a drupe, ellipsoid-globose,
  5879. 4 X 3 cm, nut-shell hard, rough ca. 4 mm thick, breaking into 3 portions when ripe, difficult
  5880. to break.
  5881. Germplasm — Reported from the African Center of Diversity.
  5882. Distribution — Sierra Leone to Gabon and Zaire; Liberia, Ivory Coast, Gold Coast,
  5883. Nigeria, Cameroon.
  5884. Ecology — Reported from evergreen and deciduous forests, gabon nut is estimated to
  5885. range from Subtropical Dry to Wet through Tropical Dry to Moist Forest Life Zones,
  5886. tolerating annual precipitation of 8 to 35 dm, annual temperature of 23 to 28°C, and pH of
  5887. 6.0 to 8.0.
  5888. Cultivation — Can be grown as a plantation timber crop with the oil or nut as a by­
  5889. product.
  5890. Harvesting — In Angola, north of the Congo River, the nuts mature from December to
  5891. April.In Nigeria, it flowers January to May, fruiting in August.
  5892. Yields and economics — Apparently sold only in Cameroon markets.
  5893. Energy — The wood is suitable for charcoal*'*^ and it is so used in Gabon. The extremely
  5894. hard wood has a density of 1.073.
  5895. Biotic factors — The wood is termite resistant.
  5896. 133
  5897. CYCAS CIRCINALIS L. (CYCADACEAE) — Cica, Crazier Cycas
  5898. Uses — Speaking of Cycads in general, Egolf (in Menninger^®’) says
  5899. Cycad nuts are rather large, many of them an inch across. They are fat and rounded, full of
  5900. starch, and mostly covered by a brilliant orange or reddish outer coat. They look as if they
  5901. are meant to be good to eat. The poisonous substance in Cycads is soluble in water. It can
  5902. be leached from the nuts or from the starchy center of the trunk by water, rendering them
  5903. fit to eat. It is impossible now to tell what primitive genius first discovered that such tempting
  5904. nuts could be made free of their poison. Perhaps some tribesman, wits sharpened by hunger,
  5905. found that Cycad nuts shed into a jungle pool, partially decomposed by water, could be eaten
  5906. whereas those fresh from the plant could not. Where the nuts are eaten they may be treated
  5907. whole, with repeated changes of water, and then beaten to a flour for cooking, or the raw
  5908. nuts may be beaten and the pulp washed in water and strained through a cloth . . . However
  5909. it happened, in nearly every tropical country where Cycads grow men sooner or later found
  5910. they could use the nuts for food. They are not an important staple, because nowhere do
  5911. Cycads grow in dense profusion, but in times of famine, when there is little else to eat, they
  5912. are as welcome as the finest delicacy.
  5913. In Guam, they eat the green husk, fresh or dried, or they cut, soak, and sun-dry it. Indians
  5914. eat the fruit with sugar. In Java, Sumatra, Sri Lanka, and the Phillipines, the shoots and
  5915. leaves are used as a potherb. In Fiji they boil the kernels until they are soft. Indochinese
  5916. pound, soak, settle, and dry the kernels. Africans split the seeds, sun dry them for ca. 4
  5917. days, ferment them in a tin with banana leaves for a week, remove the mold, soak another
  5918. day, pulverize, and use as a porridge.Sap from the kernels has been said to be given to
  5919. children in the Celebes for “ population control.” Crushed seed also used to poison fish. A
  5920. gum can be extracted from breaks in the megasporophylls.^*^ Surface fibers from the leaves
  5921. have been made into cloth.
  5922. Folk medicine — Reported to be carminative, narcotic, and poison, C. circinalis is a
  5923. folk remedy for nausea, sores, swellings, and thirst. Terminal buds are crushed in rice-water
  5924. for adenitis, furuncles, and ulcerous sores. Seeds are applied to malignant and varicose
  5925. wounds and ulcers. Seeds are squeezed and grafted onto tropical ulcers in Guam. The gum
  5926. is used for snakebite in India. Filipinos roast and grate the seeds, applying them in coconut
  5927. oil to boils, itch, and wounds. Indians poultice the female cones onto nephritic pain, using
  5928. the male bracts as aphrodisiac, anodyne, and narcotic. The gum, which expands many times
  5929. in water, is said to produce rapid suppuration when applied to malignant ulcers. The gum
  5930. also has a reputation for treating bugbite and snakebite.
  5931. Chemistry — Seeds contain ca. 31% starch,-2 toxic glycoside, pakoeine, phytosterin,
  5932. and a reducing sugar.^° The pollen is said to be narcotic. Seeds possess antibiotic activity.
  5933. Sequoyitol is also reported, as is alpha-amino-beta-methylaminopropionic acid.
  5934. Caution — FATALITIES are attributed to eating improperly prepared nuts. Many of
  5935. Captain’s Cook’s voyagers vomited following the ingestion of cycad nuts. Symptoms of
  5936. poisoning include headache, violent retching, vertigo, swelling of the stomach and legs,
  5937. depression, stupor, euphoria, diarrhea, abdominal cramps, tenesmus, muscle paralysis, and
  5938. rheumatism.
  5939. Description — Evergreen ornamental shrub or small tree to 6 m tall, unbranched except
  5940. by accident, such as cutting of apex. Trunk stout with hard outer layer like bark, light
  5941. brown-gray, slightly scaly, becoming slightly fissured. Leaves apically crowded with stout
  5942. axis with 2 rows of short spines replacing leaflets toward base. Leaflets thick, stiff, hairless,
  5943. mostly opposite, 15 to 30 cm long, 1 to 2 cm broad, straight or curved, long-pointed at
  5944. apex, with prominent yellowish midvein, but without other visible veins. Male cones large,
  5945. brown, hard, and woody. Female trees produce a ring of light-brown wooly fertile leaves
  5946. 6 to 12 inches long. Each leaf bears in notches along the axis 4 to 10 naked elliptic or nut­
  5947. like seeds, hard with thin outer flesh.
  5948. 134 Handbook of Nuts
  5949. Germplasm — Reported from the African and Indochina-Indonesian Centers of Diversity,
  5950. cica, or CVS thereof, is reported to tolerate some shade and waterlogging.
  5951. Distribution — Old World Tropics, Native from Tropical Africa through southern Asia
  5952. and Pacific Islands. Pantropically introduced.
  5953. Ecology — Estimated to range from Subtropical Dry to Moist through Tropical Dry to
  5954. Wet Forest Life Zones, cica is estimated to tolerate annual precipitation of 10 to 50 dm,
  5955. annual temperature of 21 to 26°C, and pH of 6.0 to 8.0. Hardy to Zone 10b.
  5956. Cultivation — Rarely cultivated for food, more often cultivated as an ornamental. Easily
  5957. propagated from suckers or sprouts at the base of parent plants. Grows slowly.
  5958. Harvesting — For sago starch, the trunks should be felled before fruiting (usually at
  5959. about 7 years). Since the felling of the trunk precludes fruiting, it follows that seeds are
  5960. harvested from older trees.
  5961. Yields and economics — A cycas is said to produce annually ca. 550 seeds, yielding
  5962. about as much starch (ca. 2 kg) as an irreplaceable stem ca. 1 m long. Extraction of starch
  5963. from the seeds is said to be more economical.
  5964. Energy — Since felling these trees is fatal, they are rarely, if ever, used as energy sources.
  5965. Biotic factors — No data available.
  5966. 135
  5967. CYCAS REVOLUTA Thunb. (CYCADACEAE) — Cycad Nut, Sotesu Nut
  5968. Uses—(see Cycas circinalis.) Exported from Japan as an ornamental, used in Japan for
  5969. bonsai. According to Thieret,^*^ the fleshy testa (sweet and mucilaginous) and the starchy
  5970. kernels are both eaten. The roasted kernels, like so many other nondescripts, are said to
  5971. taste like chestnuts. Seeds are eaten by the Annamese of China, though preparation is tough.
  5972. Japanese use the young leaves as a potherb,and the cycad meal as a food extender and
  5973. for the preparation of sake, the sake called doku sake, or poisonous sake. A sago starch is
  5974. extracted from the pith and cortex of the stem before fruiting. It has been said, perhaps
  5975. exaggerated, that a small portion of the pith can support life for a long time. Gum is extracted
  5976. from wounds on the megasporophylls.^’^ Surface fibers from the leaves have been made
  5977. into cloth. Leaves are used for funeral decorations.^^
  5978. Folk medicine — Reported to be emmenagogue, expectorant, fattening, and tonic, C.
  5979. revoluta is a folk remedy for hepatoma and tumors.^' The down from the inflorescence has
  5980. been used as a styptic, the terminal shoot as astringent, and diuretic. Seeds used as astringent,
  5981. emmenagogue, expectorant, and tonic, used for rheumatism.*^ “ The products extracted from
  5982. the seeds are useful to inhibit growth of malignant tumors. The gum, which expands
  5983. many times in water, is said to produce rapid suppuration when applied to malignant ulcers.
  5984. The gum also has a reputation for treating bugbite and snakebite.
  5985. Chemistry — Thieret^’^ reports the kernels contain 12 to 14% CP and 66 to 70% starch.
  5986. Whiting^^* reports that fresh kernels contain 7% protein, 33% starch, dry kernels 12% protein,
  5987. 60% starch, the pith 7 and 41, the fresh outer husk of the seed 4 and 21, the dry outer husk
  5988. 10% protein, and 46% starch. Airdry stems contain 44.5% starch and 9.15% CP. Male
  5989. plants run 27 to 61% starch, averaging over 50% over the year; female stems average only
  5990. 26%. Root nodules contain about 18% starch. Formaldehyde is reported from the kernels,
  5991. but cycasin (C8H16O7N2) is probably the culprit, in both nuts and pith. Thieret^^ reports that
  5992. the testa contains ca. 4% oil, the seeds 20 to 23.5% oil (an oil used during crises on Okinawa
  5993. during World War II). Duke and Ayensu^ report the seeds (ZMB) contain 13.9 to 15.4 g
  5994. protein, and 0.9 to 1.0 g fat. Also reported to contain 14% crude protein, 68% soluble non-
  5995. nitrogenous substances, and 0.16 to 0.22% combined formaldehyde, 90% of which can be
  5996. washed out with water. Seeds may yield 20.44% fat, the component fatty acids of which
  5997. are palmitic-, stearic-, oleic-, and a small amount of behenic-acid. Seeds contain 0.2 to
  5998. 0.3% neocycasin A, neocycasin B, and macrozamin, and cycasin. Trunk contains mucilage
  5999. with xylose, glucose, and galactose. The wax composition is detailed in Hager’s Hand­
  6000. book.'*^ Cycasin is carcinogenic to pigs and rats if ingested orally.*^ It also induces chro­
  6001. mosomal aberrations in onion root tips.
  6002. Caution — FATALITIES are attributed to eating improperly prepared nuts.
  6003. Description — Trunk 1.8 m, densely clothed with the old leaf-bases. Leaves 0.6 to 1.8
  6004. m long; petiole thick, quadrangular; leaflets narrow, margin re volute. Carpophylls 10 to 23
  6005. cm long, blade ovate, laciniate nearly to midrib, stalk longer than blade, with 4 to 6 ovules.
  6006. Immature seed densely tomentose.'^^
  6007. Germplasm — Reported from the Sino-Japanese Center of Diversity, this cycad, or cvs
  6008. thereof, is reported to tolerate drought, floods, poor soil, slope, and typhoons.
  6009. Distribution — China, S. Japan, Formosa, Tonkin. Cultivated in Indian gardens.
  6010. Ecology — Estimated to range from Warm Temperate Dry (without frost) to Wet through
  6011. Tropical Dry to Wet Forest Life zones, C. revoluta is estimated to tolerate annual precipitation
  6012. of 8 to 40 dm, annual temperature of 17 to 25°C, and pH of 6.0 to 8.5. Tolerates the poorer
  6013. steep soils of the Ryukyu’s. Hardy to Zone 9.^"^^
  6014. Cultivation — Rarely cultivated for food, more often cultivated as an ornamental. Easily
  6015. propagated from suckers or sprouts at the base of parent plants. Grows slowly.
  6016. Harvesting — For sago starch, the trunks should be felled before fruiting (usually at
  6017. 136 Handbook of Nuts
  6018. about 7 years). Since the felling of the trunk precludes fruiting, it follows that seeds are
  6019. harvested from older trees.
  6020. Yields and economics — Thieret^'^ reported that an estimated 3 million cycas leaves
  6021. with a gross value of ca. $30,000 were imported annually to the U.S.
  6022. Energy — Since felled trees do not coppice, these trees are rarely, if ever, used as energy
  6023. sources.
  6024. Biotic factors — In the Ryukyu Islands, the poisonous habu viper nests in the top of this
  6025. cycad.
  6026. 137
  6027. CYCAS RUMPHII Miq. (CYCADACEAE) — Pakoo Adji, Pakis Adji, Pahoo Hadji, Akor
  6028. Uses — (See Cyas circinalis.) A well-known oriental ornamental, this fem-like tree is
  6029. often planted, e.g., in cemeteries. The young shoots, shortly before unfolding, are cooked
  6030. as a potherb, often with fish. Eating too much is said to cause rheumatism. The poisonous
  6031. nuts are rendered edible by various types of elaborate processing. Steeping in water seems
  6032. to be one of the most common methods of preparation. In the Moluccas, a delicacy is made
  6033. by cutting the kernels into bars, putting them in a porous bag, and steeping in sea-water for
  6034. a few days. Then the bars are sun dried, pulverized in a basket, and mixed with brown
  6035. sugar and coconut. The starchy pith and cortex of the stem may be eaten after cooking.
  6036. Stems for “ sago” starch should be harvested before fruiting. Gums are extracted from
  6037. wounded megasporophylls.^*^ Stems are used in Indonesia to build small houses.
  6038. Folk medicine — A folk remedy for colic in Java.^‘ The resin is applied to malignant
  6039. ulcers, exciting suppuration in an incredibly short time. In Cambodia, the leafless bulb is
  6040. brayed in water, rice-water, or water holding fine particles of clay in suspension, and applied
  6041. to ulcerated wounds, swollen glands, and boils. The gum also has a reputation for treating
  6042. bugbite and snakebite.
  6043. Chemistry — Probably parallels that of Cycas revoluta.
  6044. Description — Small, dioecious gummiferous tree, 1 to 6 m high, rarely higher. Trunk
  6045. terete, armored by the persistent petiole bases. Leaves in a dense terminal whorl, glabrous,
  6046. shortly petioled, pinnate, with 50 to 150 pairs patent leaflets, glaucous, shining above, 1.5
  6047. to 2.5 m long; leaflets linear-lanceolate, usually somewhat recurved; 1-nerved; the central
  6048. leaflets 20 to 35 cm long, 1 to 2 cm wide, the lower ones gradually shorter and narrower;
  6049. armed on the edges. Male cone stalked, oblong-ellipsoid, yellowish-brown, 30 to 70 cm
  6050. long, 12 to 17 cm wide, with numerous spirally arranged stamens; stamens cuneate with
  6051. upcurved acuminate tips, 3.5 to 6 cm long; the higher ones smaller, anantherous. Female
  6052. cone terminal, after anthesis producing new leaves at the apex; carpophylls numerous, densely
  6053. crowded, densely yellowish-brown tomentose along the edges with 2 to 9 big, short ovules,
  6054. 25 to 50 cm long; tips of the carpophylls oblong, serrate, terminated by a long, entire,
  6055. upcurved point. Seeds ellipsoid or ovoid-ellipsoid, orange when ripe, 3 to 6 cm long, 2.5
  6056. to 5 cm diam.^^®
  6057. Germplasm — Reported from the Indochinese-Indonesian and Australian Centers of
  6058. Diversity.
  6059. 138 Handbook of Nuts
  6060. Distribution — Burma, Malaya, Andamans, Nicobars, Moluccas, New Guinea, and N.
  6061. Australia, cultivated in India.
  6062. Ecology — Estimated to range from Subtropical Dry to Moist through Tropical Dry to
  6063. Wet Forest Life Zones, C. rumphii is estimated to tolerate annual precipitation of 10 to 50
  6064. dm, annual temperature of 21 to 26°C, and pH of 6.0 to 8.0.
  6065. Cultivation — Rarely cultivated for food, more often cultivated as an ornamental. Easily
  6066. propagated from suckers or sprouts at the base of parent plants. Grows slowly.
  6067. Harvesting — For sago starch, the trunks should be felled before fruiting (usually at
  6068. about 7 years). Since the felling of the trunk precludes fruiting, it follows that seeds are
  6069. harvested from older trees.
  6070. Yields and Economics — A cycas is said to produce annually ca. 550 seeds, yielding
  6071. about as much renewable starch (ca. 2 kg) as an irreplaceable stem ca. 1 m long. Extraction
  6072. of starch from the seeds is hence said to be more economical.
  6073. Energy — Rarely, if ever, used as energy sources.
  6074. Biotic Factors — No data available.
  6075. 139
  6076. CYPERUS ESCULENTUS L. (CYPERACEAE) — Tigemut, Yellow Nutsedge, Chufa
  6077. Uses — Grown for the edible tubers, eaten when dry, raw, boiled, or roasted. Juice
  6078. pressed from fresh tubers is consumed in quantities in Europe, especially in Spain, as a
  6079. beverage, called Horchata de Chufas; sometimes it is chilled or frozen. Nuts used as substitute
  6080. for coffee; or for almonds in confectionery, or made into a kind of chocolate. In Africa,
  6081. nuts used in the form of milk pap, made by grinding fresh nuts fine and straining; then
  6082. boiling with wheat flour and sugar. Roasted nuts are ground and sieved to produce a fine
  6083. meal, a high caloric value, which is added along with sugar and other ingredients to water
  6084. as a beverage, or even eaten dry. Oil used for soap-making.^^* Used as a famine food.^^^
  6085. The haulm is grazed by stock, plaited into rough ropes in Lesotho, and is suitable for making
  6086. paper pulp.^^ Tubers are relished by hogs, which are used to suppress the plant when it
  6087. becomes w e e d y .It has already infested more than 1,000,000 ha in the eastern U.S.*^^
  6088. Folk medicine — According to Hartwell,the tubers are used in folk remedies for
  6089. felons and cancers. Reported to be aphrodisiac, astringent, CNS-sedative, CNS-tonic, dia­
  6090. phoretic, diuretic, emmenagogue, emollient, excitant, lactagog, pectoral, puerperium, re­
  6091. frigerant, sedative, stimulant, stomachic, sweetener, and tonic, tigemut is a folk remedy for
  6092. 140 Handbook of Nuts
  6093. abscess, boils, cancer, colds, colic, felons, and flux.^* Medicinally, tubers are stimulant
  6094. and aphrodisiac.Decoction of rhizomes (including tubers) taken in Senegal for stomach
  6095. troubles; leaves poulticed onto forehead for migraine. In Lesotho, heavy consumption said
  6096. to cause constipation.^^ Young Zulu girls eat porridge mixed with a handful of boiled,
  6097. mashed root to hasten the inception of menstruation. Root chewed by the Zulu for relief of
  6098. indigestion, especially when accompanied by halitosis.
  6099. Chemistry — Per 100 g, the root (ZMB) is reported to contain 461 to 476 calories, 5.5
  6100. to 6.5 g protein, 20.0 to 27.4 g fat, 65.1 to 72.6 g total carbohydrate, 10.5 to 11.7 g fiber,
  6101. 1.9 to 2.8 g ash, 39.4 to 87.5 mg Ca, 230 to 321 mg P, 3.6 to 12.6 mg Fe, 0.13 to 0.44
  6102. mg thiamine, 0.14 mg riboflavin, 2.05 mg niacin, and 4.7 mg ascorbic acid.*^ Tubers contain
  6103. 20 to 36% of a nondrying, pleasant tasting edible oil, similar to olive oil.^^^ Another analysis
  6104. of tubers reported 14.15% moisture, 25.82% oil, 5.21% albuminoids, 22.72% starch, 24.79%
  6105. digestible carbohydrates, 5.83% fiber, 1.48% mineral matter. The oil is reported to contain
  6106. 17.1% saturated acids and 75.8% unsaturated acids. The component fatty acids are: 0.01%
  6107. myristic, 11.8% palmitic, 5.2% stearic, 0.5% arachidic, 0.3% linoceric, 73.3% oleic, and
  6108. 5.9% linoleic.^® Burkill'^^ reports the oil to be 73% oleic acid, 12 to 13% palmitic acid, 6
  6109. to 8% linoleic acid, 5 to 6% stearic acid. Raw tubers of the genus C yperus have been
  6110. reported to contain per 100 g, 302 calories, 36.5% moisture, 3.5 g protein, 12.7 g fat, 46.1
  6111. g carbohydrate, 7.4 g fiber, 1.2 g ash, 25 mg calcium, 204 mg phosphorus, 8.0 mg iron,
  6112. 0.28 mg thiamine, 0.09 mg riboflavin, 1.3 mg niacin, and 3 mg ascorbic acid. Dried tubers
  6113. are reported to contain 452 calories, 11.8% moisture, 4.0 g protein, 25.3 g fat, 56.9 g
  6114. carbohydrate, 4.7 g fiber, 2.0 g ash, 48 mg calcium, 212 mg phosphorus, 3.2 mg iron,
  6115. 0.23 mg thiamine, 0.10 mg riboflavin, 1.1 mg niacin, and 6 mg ascorbic acid.^^
  6116. Toxicity — Contains cineole, hydrocyanic acid, and myristic acid.^^
  6117. Description — Perennial herb, forming colonies with creeping thread-like rhizomes 1 to
  6118. 1.5 mm thick; some forms have tuber-like thickenings on rhizomes, these plants rarely
  6119. flower. Tubers 1 to 2 cm long, roots fibrous; culms erect, 2 to 9 dm tall, simple, triangular.
  6120. Leaves several, 3-ranked, pale green, 4 to 9 mm wide, about as long as culm, with closed
  6121. sheaths mostly basal. Umbel terminal, simple or compound, the longest involucral leaf much
  6122. exceeding the umbel; spikelets 0.5 to 3 cm long, 1.5 to 3 mm broad, yellowish to golden-
  6123. brown, strongly flattened, mostly 4-ranked, occasionally 2-ranked, along the wing-angled
  6124. rachis, blunt, tip acute to round; scales thin, oblong, obtuse, distinctly veined, thin, dry at
  6125. tip, 2.3 to 3 mm long. Achene yellowish-brown, 3-angled, lustrous, ellipsoid or linear to
  6126. oblong-cylindric, rounded at summit, 1.2 to 1.5 mm long, granular-streaked. Flowers July
  6127. to September, fruiting through December in extreme south; various in other parts of the
  6128. world.
  6129. Germplasm — Reported from the Mediterranean Center of Diversity, tigemut, or cvs
  6130. thereof, is reported to tolerate heavy soil, laterite, salt, sand, virus, weeds, and waterlogging,
  6131. but not shade.Several botanical varieties are recognized. Two varieties in the U.S. are
  6132. C. esculentus var. angustispicatus Britt., with spikelets less than 2 mm wide, tapering to
  6133. slender points, and C. esculentus var. m acrostachys Boeckl., with spikelets 2 to 3 mm wide,
  6134. uniformly linear and rounded at apex.^^® (2n = 18, 108.)
  6135. Distribution — Cosmopolitan, distributed in tropics, subtropics, and warmer temperate
  6136. regions of world, up to 2,000 m in some areas. Much cultivated in coastal regions of Ghana
  6137. and in some Mediterranean regions.Listed as a serious weed in Angola, Canada, Kenya,
  6138. Malagasy, Mozambique, Peru, South Africa, Tanzania, U.S., and Zimbabwe, a principal
  6139. weed in Australia, Hawaii, India, Mexico, and Switzerland, and a common weed in Ar­
  6140. gentina, Iran, Portugal.
  6141. Ecology — Ranging from Cool Temperate Moist to Wet through Tropical Very Dry to
  6142. Moist Forest Life Zones, tigemut is reported to tolerate annual precipitation of 1.8 to 27.8
  6143. dm (mean of 35 cases = 10.8), annual temperature of 6.9 to 27.5°C (mean of 34 cases =
  6144. 141
  6145. 18.6°C), and pH of 4.5 to 8.0 (mean of 29 cases = 6.3).^^ Common in wet soil, often a
  6146. weed in cultivated fields and pastures. Often locally abundant and weedy in sandy disturbed,
  6147. unstable, or loamy soil. Tolerant of nearly any climatic or soil situation, provided there is
  6148. sufficient water. Often limited to low, poorly drained areas in fields.Hardy to Zone 3.^^^
  6149. According to Holm et al.,^^^ the species grows very well “ on all soil types” ; including
  6150. black peat soils, and performs equally well at pH ranges from 5 to 7. More ecological data
  6151. are reported by Holm et al.‘^^
  6152. Cultivation — Reproduces by seeds and weak thread-like stolons. Propagated in spring
  6153. by planting small tubers or chufas, similar to potatoes. Crop requires no cultivation or
  6154. fertilizers.
  6155. Harvesting — Tubers are harvested 5 to 6 months after planting. Two crops can be
  6156. attained in rainy season. Chufa Oil is obtained by pressing cleaned tubers.
  6157. Yields and economics — One tuber weighing 200 mg can produce 36 plants and 332
  6158. tubers in 16 weeks, 1,900 plants and 7,000 tubers in one year. Holm et al.*^^ report as much
  6159. as 18 MT/ha tubers in the top 45 cm soil, with perhaps 30,000,000 tubers per hectare.
  6160. Yields of 800 kg root per hectare in 4 to 6 months have been rep o rted .Cyperus esculentus
  6161. is a serious weed in sugarcane in Hawaii, Puerto Rico, South Africa, and Swaziland; of
  6162. com in Angola, South Africa, Tanzania, and the U.S.; of cotton in Mozambique, the U.S.,
  6163. and Zimbabwe; of soybeans in Canada and the U.S.; and of potatoes in Canada, South
  6164. Africa, and the U.S. More data are presented by Holm et
  6165. Energy — Although 18 MT tubers/ha might sound like good energy potential, it takes a
  6166. lot of energy to harvest them. Perhaps it is energetically wise to let pigs do the harvesting.
  6167. Leaving a field fallow 4 years has reduced tuber numbers significantly (912 to 7 per 30
  6168. cm^), the equivalent of 21 to 1.6 MT/ha.Savel’eva et al.^^^ have considered this as a
  6169. possible raw material for industry in Russia.
  6170. Biotic factors — Bees visit the flowers in Sierra Leone as a source of pollen.The insect
  6171. Bactra verutana is of interest for biocontrol of the chufa weed. Chufa is an alternative host
  6172. of the vims which produces lucerne dwarf. The following fungi have been reported on
  6173. yellow nutsedge: Aspergillus niger, Puccinia canaliculata, P. conclusa, and P. romagno-
  6174. liana. Nematodes isolated include: Caconema radicicola, Heterodera cyperi, Meloidogyne
  6175. arenaria, and M. In addition, Ascochyta sp. and Phyllachora cyperi have
  6176. been reported.^
  6177. 142 Handbook of Nuts
  6178. CYPER U S R O T U N D U S L. (CYPERACEAE) Purple nutsedge
  6179. Uses — Considered the number one weed in many parts of the world,this sedge has
  6180. still been suggested as a landscape plant in China, and as a soil binder in India. Tuberous
  6181. rhizome, eaten in many areas as vegetable or chewed on, may be regarded as a famine food.
  6182. Plants used as fodder for cattle in West Africa and India. Tubers fed to pigs. Used as bait
  6183. for catching rats in Tanganyika. The tuber is burnt as a perfume in Tripoli. In Asia and
  6184. West Africa, the essential oil obtained from tubers, is used as a perfume for clothing and
  6185. to repel insects, probably due to the camphoraceous odor.^^^^^^^^
  6186. Folk medicine — According to Hartwell,purple nutsedge is used in folk remedies for
  6187. phymata, abdominal tumors, glandular tumors, hard tumors, indurations of the stomach,
  6188. liver, spleen, and uterus, and cervical cancer. Reported to be alterative, analgesic, anodyne,
  6189. anthelmintic, antihistamine, aphrodisiac, astringent, bactericide, carminative, demulcent,
  6190. diaphoretic, diuretic, emmenagogue, emollient, fungistatic, lactagogue, stimulant, sto­
  6191. machic, tonic, tranquilizer, vasodilator, vermifuge, and vulnerary, purple nutsedge is a folk
  6192. remedy for abdominal ailments, amenorrhea, ascites, bladder ailments, bowel ailments,
  6193. cancer of the cervix, chest ailments, cholera, circulation, colds, congestion, depression,
  6194. diarrhea, dysentery, dysmenorrhea, dyspepsia, fever, headache, hemicrania, hypertension,
  6195. impotence, inflammation, metritis, metroxenia, scorpion bites, snake bites, sores, stomach
  6196. ailments, stomach-ache, toothaches, trauma, tumors of the abdomen, ulcers, and wounds.
  6197. In Mali the tubers are taken as an aphrodisiac. Made into a cough medicine for children.
  6198. Used in Africa and Asia for urinary troubles, indigestion, childbirth, jaundice, malaria, and
  6199. many other conditions.Plant used in Vietnam as a diuretic, emmenagogue, headache
  6200. remedy, and for uterine hemorrhage. The tuber is given to women in childbirth in Indo­
  6201. china. The fresh tuber, made into a paste or warm plaster, is applied to the breast with
  6202. galactagogic intent, and, in a dry state to spreading ulcers, in the Indian Peninsula.The
  6203. tuber, in the form of ghees, powders, bolmes, and enemas is used as a folk remedy for
  6204. abdominal tumors. In Ghana, an infusion of the plant is given for cattle poisoning due to
  6205. Ipom oea repens
  6206. Chemistry — Per 100 g, the edible tuber should resemble that of C yperus esculentus,
  6207. which (ZMB) contains 461 to 476 calories, 5.5 to 6.5 g protein, 20.0 to 27.4 g fat, 65.1
  6208. to 72.6 g total carbohydrate, 10.5 to 11.7 g fiber, 1.9 to 2.4 g ash, 29 to 88 mg Ca, 230
  6209. to 321 mg P, 2.6 to 12.6 mg Fe, 0.13 to 0.44 mg thiamine, 0.14 mg riboflavin, 2.05 mg
  6210. niacin, and 5 mg ascorbic acid.®^ Tubers of C yperus rotundus include 0.5 to 1.0% essential
  6211. oil, 0.21 to 0.24% alkaloid, 0.62 to 0.74% cardiac glycosides, 1.25% flavonoids, 1.62%
  6212. polyphenols, 13.22% saccharides, 9.2% starch, 3.72% pectin, 4.21% resin, and 3.25% total
  6213. acids (mostly malic), 0.009% vitamin C. In the essential oil, one finds cyperene-1, cyperene-
  6214. 2, patchoulene (CJ5H22O), mutacone (C15H22O), beta-seliene, beta-cyperone, cyperenone,
  6215. 1,8-cineole, limonene, beta-pinene, p-cymol, camphene, isocyperol (C,5H240). The fatty
  6216. oil contains glycerol, linolenic, linoleic, oleic, myristic, and possibly stearic acid. The tuber
  6217. also contains a substance capable of dissolving several times its weight in lecithin (and other
  6218. items which cause urinary calculi). Molasses extracted from the tuber contains 41.7% d-
  6219. glucose, 9.3% d-fructose, and 4% nonreducing sugars.Salicylic acid may be extracted
  6220. from leaves and sprouted tubers.
  6221. Description — Perennial herb, forming colonies with long, slender, creeping rhizomes,
  6222. about 1 mm thick, with tuber-like thickenings at intervals, to 1 cm thick; culms slender, 8
  6223. to 60 cm tall, simple, smooth, triangular, longer than leaves. Leaves 2 to 6 mm wide,
  6224. crowded in the basal few centimeters, usually spreading. Inflorescence of simple or slightly
  6225. compound umbels, 3 to 11 cm long, on 3 to 8 extremely unequal peduncles, each bearing
  6226. a cluster of 3 to 9 divaricate spikelets; spikelets 0.8 to 2.5 cm long, chestnut-brown to
  6227. chestnut-purple, acute 12- to 40-flowered; bracts usually 3 or 4, about as long as inflores­
  6228. 143
  6229. cence; scales keeled, straight, ovate, closely appressed, nerveless except on keel, 2 to 3.5
  6230. mm long, bluntish. Achene linear-oblong, 1.5 mm long, 3-angled, basally and apically
  6231. obtuse, granular, dull, olive-gray to brown, covered with a network of gray lines. Flowers
  6232. July to October or December; January to April in southern hemisphere.
  6233. Germplasm — Reported from the Euro-Siberian and North American Centers of Diver­
  6234. sity, purple nutsedge, or cvs thereof, is reported to tolerate alkali, heat, high pH, insects,
  6235. laterite, low pH, salt, and weeds. (2n = 108.)®^ Several ecotypes are recognized. Types
  6236. are described from India with the following variation in glume color: (1) yellowish-white,
  6237. (2) light-red, (3) coppery-red with metallic luster, and (4) dark-red with blackish tinge.
  6238. Distribution — Native to Europe, Japan, and North America; widespread in all tropical,
  6239. subtropical, and warm temperate regions of the world.C. rotundas has been reported
  6240. from more countries, regions, and localities than any other weed in the world.
  6241. Ecology — Ranging from Boreal Moist through Tropical Desert to Wet Forest Life Zones,
  6242. purple nutsedge is reported to tolerate annual precipitation of 3.0 to 46.1 dm (mean of 192
  6243. cases = 16.9), annual temperature of 0.0 to 28.6°C (mean of 156 cases = 20.2), and pH
  6244. of 4.3 to 9.1 (mean of 75 cases = 6.4).^^ Continuous shading reduces tuber and bulb
  6245. formation by 10 to 57%. Tubers cannot survive more than 10 days at 45°C or 30 min at
  6246. 60°C. Tubers held at 50°C more than 48 hr no longer germinate. Exposure to — 4°C for 8
  6247. hr does not impair viability. Tubers, when dug, contain about 50% moisture. They cannot
  6248. survive when the level falls below 12 to 15%. Some tubers held in water for 200 days still
  6249. germinate satisfactorily when removed from water and placed under suitable growing con­
  6250. ditions. Thrives in loamy or sandy soil anywhere; in many places up to 2,000 m altitude.
  6251. In wastelands, gardens, waysides, and in open spots; a troublesome weed in cultivated fields.
  6252. Requires a warm climate, no colder than the southern U.S., especially the Cotton Belt.^^®
  6253. According to Holm et al.^^^ it seems limited by cold temperatures, but other than this, it
  6254. grows in almost every soil type, elevation, humidity, soil moisture, and pH, but it cannot
  6255. stand soils with high salt content. It can survive the highest temperatures known in agriculture.
  6256. Also found on roadsides, in neglected areas, at the edges of woods, sometimes covering
  6257. banks of irrigation canals and streams. Nutsedge can take over entire streams or canals as
  6258. water becomes low. When water supply is low, it may become a problem in paddy rice in
  6259. which puddling of the soil cannot be done thoroughly.
  6260. Cultivation — Propagated by seed and tuber-bearing rhizomes. Because it grows so
  6261. profusely, it is considered more a weed than a plant to be cultivated.
  6262. Harvesting — Plants are harvested from native or naturalized stands. In Africa and Asia
  6263. it is harvested on a small scale for the oil, but in most areas it is allowed to grow wild.^^®
  6264. Flowering has been reported as early as 3 weeks in Israel and India, and 4 weeks in Trinidad,
  6265. with tuber formation occurring at 3 weeks in Hawaii, India, Puerto Rico, Trinidad, and the
  6266. southern U.S. In Israel, clipping every 2 weeks reduced tuber numbers by 60% and weight
  6267. by 85%.'^^
  6268. Yields and economics — ''C yperus rotundas may produce up to 40,000 kilograms of
  6269. subterranean plant material per hectare.” In Mauritius, there may be 30 MT green tops and
  6270. tubers, withdrawing 815 kg/ha ammonium sulfate, 320 kg/ha muriate of potash, and 200
  6271. kg of superphosphate. In Argentina, the weed can reduce sugarcane harvested by 75%, the
  6272. sugar yield by 65%. Allowed to remain in corn-fields for 10 days in Colombia, it reduces
  6273. yield by 10%, 30% in 30 days, suggesting a percentage loss for each day it is allowed to
  6274. remain.
  6275. Energy — The 40 tons of underground plant material, convertible to energy, is perhaps
  6276. most efficiently harvested by grubbing pigs.
  6277. Biotic factors — C yperus rotundas is an alternate host of Fusarium sp. and P uccinia
  6278. canaliculata, of abaca mosaic virus, and of the nematodes M eloidogyne sp. and R otylenchus
  6279. sim ilis. The nutgrass moth, B actra traculenta, which bores into the stems of C yperus
  6280. 144 Handbook of Nuts
  6281. rotundas, showed promise for biological control in Hawaii in the early years after its
  6282. introduction from the Phillippines in 1925. As the populations of B actra increased, so also
  6283. did those of the insect Trichogram m a m inutum , which parasitizes the eggs of many moths
  6284. and butterflies. So many of the eggs of B actra were killed that biological control of nutgrass
  6285. was never attained. The jack bean, C anavalia ensiform is, greatly inhibits tuber formation.
  6286. In addition, C intractia m inor, P hyllachora cyperi, P uccinia cyperia, R hizoctonia solanP
  6287. and C intractia peribebu gen sis, H im atia stellifera, and P uccinia cyperi-tergetiformis^^^ are
  6288. reported.
  6289. 145
  6290. DETARIUM SENEGALENSE J. F. Gmel. (CAESALPINIACEAE) Tallow Tree
  6291. Syn.: D, heudelotianum Baill.
  6292. Uses — The only seeds and the pulp around them are used as food sources in Africa.
  6293. The pulp can be made into a sweetmeat. The oily kernels, little eaten by humans, are beaten
  6294. into cattle fodder by the Nupe. Ashes of the fruits are used to prepare a snuff. Seeds are
  6295. used for necklaces and girdles. An aromatic resin, exuding from the trunk, is used to fumigate
  6296. African huts and garments. The resin is used as a masticatory and to mend pottery. The
  6297. wood is used for planks and boat-building in Liberia and sold in England as African Ma­
  6298. hogany. Roots are boiled on the Gold Coast to prepare a bird-lime. Seeds are burned to
  6299. repel mosquitoes.^^’^^^
  6300. Folk medicine — Senegalese use the wood decoction for anemia and cachexia. In Sierra
  6301. Leone, young shoots are boiled as a febrifuge. Liberians use the bark decoction for placental
  6302. retention. In French Guinea, the bark is boiled to make a lotion for itch. Nigerians use the
  6303. seed for people inflicted with wounds by poisoned arrows. In Ghana, the fruit is used for
  6304. rubbing chronic backache or tuberculosis of the spine. Fruits are used for chest ailments in
  6305. West Africa.
  6306. Chemistry — Per 100 g, the raw fruit is reported to contain 116 calories, 66.9% moisture,
  6307. 1.9 g protein, 0.4 g fat, 29.6 g carbohydrates, 2.3 g fiber, 1.2 g ash, 27 mg calcium, 48
  6308. mg phosphorus, 0.14 mg thiamine, 0.05 mg riboflavin, 0.6 mg niacin, and 1,290 mg ascorbic
  6309. acid. Dried fruit contains, per 100 g, 299 calories, 14.0% moisture, 3.4 g protein, 0.5 g
  6310. fat, 78.8 g carbohydrate, 7.1 g fiber, 3.3 g ash, 110 mg calcium, 0.01 mg thiamine, 0.03
  6311. mg riboflavin, 3.8 mg niacin, and 3 mg ascorbic acid.®^ Detaric acid has been isolated from
  6312. 146 Handbook of Nuts
  6313. the fruits.According to Hager’s Handbook,'*^ the fruits are among the highest in the
  6314. world for vitamin C. The figures above suggest that might be true, but the vitamin C is lost
  6315. in drying. Other sources hint that the seeds or fruits are poisonous.
  6316. Description — Tree to nearly 40 m tall, smaller in savanna, with large crown, girth 12
  6317. m, bole 12 m; slash pale-salmon, bark bluish, exuding a slightly fragrant gum or gum-resin,
  6318. twigs rusty. Leaves pinnate, more or less gland-punctuate; leaflets 6 to 12, leathery and
  6319. rather glaucous or minutely pubescent below, with numerous parallel lateral nerves. Flowers
  6320. in fragrant creamy axillary panicles, shorter than leaves, flowers small, profuse, sepals 4,
  6321. white, petals absent, stamens 10, buds glabrous or nearly so, ca. 4 mm long, sepals pubescent
  6322. within. Fruits round, succulent, like flattened mango, >6 cm in diameter, skin smooth,
  6323. crustaceous, with intermediate fibrous layer. Flowers May to August; fruits December to
  6324. January; Ghana.
  6325. Germplasm — Reported from the African Center of Diversity, tallow tree, or cvs thereof,
  6326. is reported to tolerate drought and savanna. The savanna form (senegalense) is smaller than
  6327. the closed forest form (heudelotianum). Seeds of the latter are more likely to be poisonous.
  6328. Distribution — Throughout west Tropical Africa.
  6329. Ecology — A tree of the Closed Forest and Fringing Forests of moister savannas.^'
  6330. Cultivation — Apparently cultivated only to a limited extent in Senegal.
  6331. Harvesting — No data available.
  6332. Yieds and economics — No data available.
  6333. Energy — The wood bums slowly and is favored as a fuel because of the agreeable
  6334. odor.^
  6335. Biotic factors — The heartwood is probably resistant to borers and termites.^*
  6336. 147
  6337. ELAEIS GUINEENSIS Jacq. (ARECACEAE [PALMAE]) African Oil Palm
  6338. Syn.: Elaeis melanococca J. Gaertn.
  6339. Uses — Two kinds of oil are obtained from this palm, palm oil and palm kernel oil. Palm
  6340. oil is extracted from the fleshy mesocarp of the fruit, which contains 45 to 55% oil which
  6341. varies from light-yellow to orange-red in color, and melts from 25° to 50°C. For edible fat
  6342. manufacture, the oil is bleached. Palm oil contains saturated palmitic acid, oleic acid, and
  6343. linoleic acid, giving it a higher unsaturated acid content than palm kernel or coconut oils.
  6344. Palm oil is used for manufacture of soaps and candles, and more recently, in manufacture
  6345. of margarine and cooking fats. Palm oil is used extensively in the tin plate industry, protecting
  6346. cleaned iron surfaces before the tin is applied. Oil is also used as lubricant in the textile
  6347. and rubber industries. Palm kernel oil is extracted from the kernel of endosperm, and contains
  6348. about 50% oil. Similar to coconut oil, with a high content of saturated acids, mainly lauric,
  6349. it is solid at normal temperatures in temperate area, and is nearly colorless, varying from
  6350. white to slightly yellow. This nondrying oil is used in edible fats, in making ice cream and
  6351. mayonnaise, in baked goods and confectioneries, and in the manufacture of soaps and
  6352. detergents. Press-cake, after extraction of oil from the kernels, is used as livestock feed,
  6353. and contains 5 to 8% oil. Palm wine is made from the sap obtained by tapping the male
  6354. inflorescence. The sap contains about 4.3 g/100 m€ sucrose and 3.4 g/100 m€ glucose. The
  6355. sap ferments quickly and is an important source of Vitamin B complex in the diet of people
  6356. of West Africa. A mean annual yield for 150 palms is 4,000 €/ha, double in value to the
  6357. oil and kernels from the same number of palms. The central shoot (or cabbage) is edible.
  6358. 148 Handbook of Nuts
  6359. Leaves used for thatching; petioles and rachices for fencing and for protecting the tops of
  6360. mud walls. Refuse after stripping the bunches is used for mulching and manuring; ash
  6361. sometimes used in soap-making.
  6362. Folk medicine — According to Hartwell,the oil is used as a liniment for indolent
  6363. tumors. Reported to be anodyne, antidotal, aphrodisiac, diuretic, and vulnerary, oil palm
  6364. is a folk remedy for cancer, headaches, and rheumatism.
  6365. Chemistry — As the oil is rich in carotene, it can be used in place of cod liver oil for
  6366. correcting Vitamin A deficiency. Per 100 g, the fruit is reported to contain 540 calories,
  6367. 26.2 g H2O, 1.9 g protein, 58.4 g fat, 12.5 g total carbohydrate, 3.2 g fiber, 1.0 g ash, 82
  6368. mg Ca, 47 mg P, 4.5 mg Fe, 42,420 meg beta-carotene equivalent, 0.20 mg thiamine, 0.10
  6369. mg riboflavin, 1.4 mg niacin, and 12 mg ascorbic acid. The oil contains, per 100 g, 878
  6370. calories, 0.5% H2O, 0.0% protein, 99.1% fat, 0.4 g total carbohydrate, 7 mg Ca, 8 mg P,
  6371. 5.5 mg Fe, 27,280 meg beta-carotene equivalent, 0.03 mg riboflavin, and a trace of thia­
  6372. mine.The
  6373. fatty composition of the oil is 0.5 to 5.9% myristic, 32.3 to 47.0 palmitic, 1.0
  6374. to 8.5 stearic, 39.8 to 52.4 oleic, and 2.0 to 11.3 linoleic. The component glycerides are
  6375. oleodipalmitins (45%), palmitodioleins (30%), oleopalmitostearins (10%), linoleodioleins
  6376. (6 to 8%), and fully saturated glycerides, tripalmitin and diapalmitostearin (6 to 8%).
  6377. Micou^“ notes that vitamin E is a by-product of the process which converts palm oil into
  6378. a diesel-oil substitute.
  6379. Description — Tall palm, 8.3 to 20 m tall, erect, heavy, trunks ringed; monoecious,
  6380. male and female flowers in separate clusters, but on same tree; trunk to 20 m tall, usually
  6381. less, 30 cm in diameter. Leaf bases adhere; petioles 1.3 to 2.3 m long, 12.5 to 20 cm wide,
  6382. saw-toothed, broadened at base, fibrous, green; blade pinnate, 3.3 to 5 m long, with 100
  6383. to 150 pairs of leaflets; leaflets 60 to 120 cm long, 3.5 to cm broad; central nerve very
  6384. strong, especially at base, green on both surfaces. Flower stalks from lower leaf axils, 10
  6385. to 30 cm long and broad; male flowers on short furry branches 10 to 15 cm long, set close
  6386. to trunk on short pedicels; female flowers and consequently fruits in large clusters of 200
  6387. to 300, close to trunk on short heavy pedicles. Fruits plum-like ovoid-oblong to 3.5 cm
  6388. long and about 2 cm wide, black when ripe, red at base, with thick ivory-white flesh and
  6389. small cavity in center; nuts encased in a fibrous covering which contains the oil. About 5
  6390. female inflorescences are produced per year; each inflorescence weighing about 8 kg, the
  6391. fruits weighing about 3.5 g each.
  6392. Germplasm — Reported from the African Center of Diversity, the African oil palm or
  6393. CVS thereof is reported to tolerate high pH, laterite, low pH, savanna, virus, and water­
  6394. logging.^^ Ehsanullah^^ reported on oil palm cultivars. African Oil Palm is monoecious and
  6395. cross-pollinated, and individual palms are very heterozygous. Three varieties are distin­
  6396. guished: those with orange nuts which have the finest oil but small kernels; red or black
  6397. nut varieties which have less oil, but larger kernels. Sometimes oil palms are classified
  6398. according to the fruit structure: Dura, with shell or endocarp 2 to 8 mm thick, about 25 to
  6399. 55% of weight of fruit; medium mesocarp of 35 to 55% by weight, but up to 65% in the
  6400. Deli Palms; kernels large, 7 to 20% of weight of fruit; the most important type in West
  6401. Africa; the Macrocarya form with shells 6 to 8 mm thick forms a large proportion of the
  6402. crop in western Nigeria and Sierra Leone. Tenera, with thin shells, 0.5 to 3 mm thick, 1
  6403. to 32% of weight of fruit; medium to high mesocarp 60 to 95% of weight of fruit; kernels
  6404. 3 to 15% of fruit; larger number of bunches than Dura, but lower mean bunch weight and
  6405. lower fruit-to-bunch ratio. Pisifera, shell-less, with small kernels in fertile fruits, fruits often
  6406. rotting prematurely; fruit-to-bunch ratio low. Infertile palms show strong vegetative growth,
  6407. but of little commercial value; however it has now become of greatest importance in breeding
  6408. commercial palms. Deli Palm (Dura type), originated in Sumatra and Malaya, gives high
  6409. yields in the Far East, but not so good in West Africa. Dumpy Oil Palm, discovered in
  6410. Malaya among Deli Palms, is low-growing and thick-stemmed. Breeding and selection of
  6411. 149
  6412. oil palms have been aimed at production of maximum quantity of palm oil and kernels per
  6413. hectare, and resistance to disease. Recently, much attention has been directed at cross­
  6414. breeding with E. oleifera for short-trunk hybrids, thus making harvesting easier. Zeven^"^^
  6415. elucidates the center of diversity, and discusses the interactions of some important oil palm
  6416. genes.
  6417. Distribution — The center of origin of the oil palm is in the tropical rain forest region
  6418. of West Africa in a region about 200 to 300 km wide along the coastal belt from Liberia
  6419. to Angola. The palm has spread from 16°N latitude in Senegal to 15°S in Angola and
  6420. eastwards to the Indian Ocean, Zanzibar, and Malagasy. Now introduced and cultivated
  6421. throughout the tropics between 16°N and S latitudes. Sometimes grown as an ornamental,
  6422. as in southern Florida.
  6423. Ecology — Occurs wild in riverine forests or in fresh-water swamps. It cannot thrive in
  6424. primeval forests and does not regenerate in high secondary forests. Requires adequate light
  6425. and soil moisture, can tolerate temporary flooding or a fluctuating water table, as might be
  6426. found along rivers. It is slightly hardier than coconut. Ranging ecologically from savanna
  6427. to rain forest, it is native to areas with 1,780 to 2,280 mm rainfall per year. Best developed
  6428. on lowlands, with 2 to 4 month dry period. Mean maximum temperatures of 30 to 32°C
  6429. and mean minimum of 21 to 24°C provides suitable range. Seedling growth arrested below
  6430. 15°C. Grows and thrives on a wide range of tropical soils, provided they have adequate
  6431. water. Waterlogged, highly lateritic, extremely sandy, stony or peaty soils should be avoided.
  6432. Coastal marine alluvial clays, soils of volcanic origin, acid sands, and other coastal alluviums
  6433. are used. Soils with pH of 4 to 6 are most often used. Ranging from Subtropical Dry (without
  6434. frost) through Tropical Dry to West Forest Life Zones, oil palm is reported to tolerate annual
  6435. precipitation of 6.4 to 42.6 dm (mean of 27 cases = 22.7), annual temperature of 18.7 to
  6436. 27.4°C (mean of 27 cases = 24.8), and pH of 4.3 to 8.0 (mean of 22 cases = 5.7).®^
  6437. Cultivation — In wild areas of West Africa the forest is often cleared to let 75 to 150
  6438. palms stand per hectare; this yields about 2.5 MT of bunches per hectare per year. Normally,
  6439. oil palms are propagated by seed. Seed germination and seedling establishment are difficult.
  6440. A temperature of 35°C stimulates germination in thin shelled cvs. Thick-walled cvs require
  6441. higher temperatures. Seedlings are outplanted at about 18 months. In some places, seeds
  6442. are harvested from the wild, but plantation culture is proving much more rewarding. In a
  6443. plantation, trees are spaced 9 x 9 m; a 410-ha plantation would have about 50,000 trees,
  6444. each averaging 5 bunches of fruit, each averaging 1 kg oil to yield a total of 250,000 kg
  6445. 011 for the 410 ha. Vegetative propagation is not feasible, as the tree has only one growing
  6446. point. Because oil palm is monoecious, cross-pollination is general and the value of parent
  6447. plants is determined by the performance of the progeny produced in such crosses. Bunch-
  6448. yield and oil and kernel content of the bunches are used as criteria for selecting individual
  6449. palms for breeding. Controlled pollination must be maintained when breeding from selected
  6450. plants. Seed to be used for propagation should be harvested ripe. Best germination results
  6451. by placing seeds about 0.6 cm deep in sand flats and covering them with sawdust. Flats are
  6452. kept fully exposed to sun and kept moist. In warm climates, 50% of seed will germinate in
  6453. 8 weeks; in other areas it may take from 64 to 146 days. Sometimes the hard shell is ground
  6454. down, or seeds are soaked in hot water for 2 weeks, or both, before planting. Plants grow
  6455. slowly at first, being 6 to 8 years old before the pinnate leaves become normal size. When
  6456. planting seedlings out in fields or forest, holes are dug, and area about 1 m around them
  6457. cleared. Young plants should be transplanted at the beginning of rainy season. In areas
  6458. where there is no distinct dry season, as in Malaya, planting out may be done the year
  6459. round, but is usually done during months with the highest rainfall. Seedlings or young plants,
  6460. 12 to 18 months old, should be moved with a substantial ball of earth. Ammonium sulfate
  6461. and sulfate or muriate of potash at a rate of 227 g per palm should be applied in a ring
  6462. about the plant at time of planting. Where magnesium may be deficient in the soil, 227 g
  6463. 150 Handbook of Nuts
  6464. Epsom salts or kieserite should be applied also. In many areas oil palms are intercropped
  6465. with food plants, as maize, yams, bananas, cassava, or cocoyams. In Africa, intercropping
  6466. for up to 3 years has helped to produce early palm yields. Cover-crops are often planted,
  6467. as mixtures of C alopogonium m ucunoides, C entrosem a pu bescen s, and P ueraria ph aseo-
  6468. loides, planted in proportion of 2:2:1 with seed rate of 5.5 kg/ha. Natural covers and planted
  6469. cover crops can be controlled by slashing. Nitrogen dressings are important in early years.
  6470. Chlorosis often occurs in nursery beds in the first few years after planting out. Adequate
  6471. manuring should be applied in these early years. When nitrogen fertilizers, as sulfate of
  6472. ammonium, are used, 0.22 kg per palm in the planting year and 0.45 kg per palm per year
  6473. until age 4, should be sufficient. Potassium, magnesium, and trace elements requirements
  6474. should be determined by soil test and the proper fertilizer applied, according to the region,
  6475. soil type, and degree of deficiency.
  6476. Harvesting — First fruit bunches ripen in 3 to 4 years after planting in the field, but
  6477. these may be small and of poor quality. Often these are eliminated by removal of the early
  6478. female inflorescences. Bunches ripen 5 to 6 months after pollination. Bunches should be
  6479. harvested at the correct degree of ripeness, as under-ripe fruits have low oil concentration
  6480. and over-ripe fruits have high fatty acid content. Harvesting is usually done once a week.
  6481. In Africa, bunches of semi-wild trees are harvested with a cutlass, and tall palms are climbed
  6482. by means of ladders and ropes. For the first few years of harvesting, bunches are cut with
  6483. a steel chisel with a wooden handle about 90 cm long, allowing the peduncles to be cut
  6484. without injuring the subtending leaf. Usually thereafter, an axe is used, or a curved knife
  6485. attached to a bamboo pole. A man can harvest 100 to 150 bunches per day. Bunches are
  6486. carried to transport centers and from there to the mill for oil extraction.
  6487. Yields and economics — According to the Wealth of India, the oil yield of oil palm is
  6488. higher than that of any other oilseed crop, producing 2.5 MT oil per ha per year, with 5
  6489. MT recorded. Yields of semi-wild palms vary widely, usually ranging from 1.2 to 5 MT
  6490. of bunches per hectare per year. One MT of bunches yields about 80 kg oil by local soft
  6491. oil extraction, or 180 kg by hydraulic handpress. Estate yields in Africa vary from 7.5 to
  6492. 15 MT bunches per hectare per year; in Sumatra and Malaya, 15 to 25 MT, with some
  6493. fields producing 30 to 38 MT. Estate palm oil extraction yield rates vary accordingly: D ura,
  6494. 15 to 16% oil per bunch; D eli D u ra, 16 to 18% Tenera, 20 to 22%. Kernel extraction yields
  6495. vary from 3.5 to 5% or more. The U.S. imported nearly 90 million kg in 1966, more than
  6496. half of it as kernel oil. Recently, palm oil commanded $.31/kg, indicating potential yields
  6497. of about $1400/ha. In 1968 world producing countries exported about 544,000 long tons of
  6498. oil and 420,000 long tons of kernels. The main producing countries, in order of production,
  6499. are Nigeria, Congo, Sierra Leone, Ghana, Indonesia, and Malaysia. The U.K. is the largest
  6500. importer of oil palm products, importing about 180,000 MT of palm oil and 243,000 MT
  6501. of palm kernels annually. Japan, and Eastern European and Middle East countries also import
  6502. considerable quantities of palm oil and kernels. Some palm kernel oil extraction is now
  6503. being done in the palm oil producing countries. Previously, most of the kernels had been
  6504. exported, and the oil extracted in the importing countries.
  6505. Energy — Bunch yields may attain 22,000 kg/ha; of which only about 10% is oil,
  6506. indicating oil yields of only 2,200 kg/ha. Higher yields are attainable. Corley^ suggests
  6507. plantation yields of 2 to 6 MT/ha mesocarp oil, experimentally up to 8.5 MT/ha. Hodge,
  6508. citing oil yields of 2,790 kg/ha, suggests that this is the most efficient oil-making plant
  6509. species. The seasonal maximum total biomass reported for oil palm is 220 MT wet weight.
  6510. When replanting occurs, over 40 MT/ha DM (dry matter) of palm trunks are available
  6511. (conceivably for energy production) after the 70% moisture from the wet material has been
  6512. expelled.^ Although annual productivity may approach 37 MT DM/ha, mean productivity
  6513. during the dry season is 10 g/mVday Averaged over the year, oil palm in Malaysia showed
  6514. a growth rate of 8 g/m^/day for an annual phytomass production of 29.4 MT/ha.Fresh
  6515. 151
  6516. fruit bunch yields have been increased elsewhere by 2 MT/ha intercropping with appropriate
  6517. legumes. Estate yields in Africa are 7 to 15 MT bunches per year, with oil yields of 800
  6518. to 1800 kg/ha, and residues of yields of ca. 6 to 13 MT. It is probable that older leaves,
  6519. leaf stalks, etc., could be harvested with biomass yield of 1 to 5 MT/ha. Based on energetic
  6520. equivalents of total biomass produced, up to 60 barrels of oil per hectare could be obtained
  6521. from this species. An energy evaluation of all the wastes from the palm oil fruit was made,
  6522. and it revealed that this can satisfy ca. 17% of Malaysia’s energy requirements. Palm oil
  6523. could satisfy 20% more.^^^ An alcoholic wine can be made from the sap of the male spikes,
  6524. 150 trees yielding about 4,000 ( of palm wine per hectare, per year. Worthy of energetic
  6525. interest is the suggestion of Gaydou et al.‘®^ that the oil palm can yield twice as much
  6526. energetically as sugarcane, at least based on the Malagasy calculations.
  6527. Biotic factors — Many fungi attack oil palms, but the most serious ones are the following:
  6528. B last {P ythium splendens, followed by R hizoctonia lam ellifera), Freckle (C ercospora elaei-
  6529. dis), Anthracnose (B otryodiplodia palm arum , M elanconium elaeidis, G lom erella cingulata).
  6530. Seedling blight {C urvularia eragrostidis). Yellow patch and Vascular wilt (Fusarium ox-
  6531. ysporum ), Basal rot of trunk {C eratocystis pa ra d o x a , imp. stage of T hielaviopsis p ara d o x d ),
  6532. other trunk rots (G anoderm a spp., A rm illaria m ellea)\ Crown disease, rotting of fruit (M ar-
  6533. asm ius palm ivoru s). Spear rot or bud rot is caused by the bacterium E rw inia sp., which has
  6534. devastated entire areas in S. Congo. The A griculture H andbook 165 reports the leaf spot
  6535. (A chorella attaleae) and the Black Mildew (M eliola m elan ococcae, M . ela eis)^ The following
  6536. nematodes have been isolated from oil palms: A phelenchus avenae, H eterodera m arioni,
  6537. H elicotylenchus pseu dorobu stu s, H . m icrocephalus cocophilus (serious in Venezuela), Scu-
  6538. tellonem a clathrocau datus. The major pests of oil palm in various parts of the world are
  6539. the following: Palm weevils {Rhynchophorus ph oen icis, R. palm arum , R. ferru gin eu s, R.
  6540. schach). Rhinoceros beetles {O rcytes rhinoceros, O. boas, O. m onoceros, O . ow arien sis).
  6541. Weevils (Strategus aloeus, T em noschoita qu adripustulata), Leaf-miners {C oelaenom enodera
  6542. elaeidis, H ispolepsis elaeidis, Alurunus hum eralis), Slug caterpillar (P arasa viridissim a).
  6543. Nettle caterpillar {Setoria nitens), Bagworms (C rem astoph ysch epén du la, M ahesena corbetti.
  6544. M elisa plan a). Rodents may cause damage to seedlings and fruiting palms; some birds also
  6545. cause damage in jungle areas.
  6546. 152 Handbook of Nuts
  6547. ELAEIS OLEIEERA (HBK) Cortes (ARECACEAE) — American Oil Palm, Corozo
  6548. Syn. Corozo oleifera (HBK) Bailey; Elaeis melanococca Gaertn., emend. Bailey;
  6549. Alfonsia oleifera HBK
  6550. Uses — Plants are native and cultivated to a limited extent in South America; the oil is
  6551. used for soap-making, food, and lamp fuel. Its main value lies in its slow-growing, pro­
  6552. cumbent trunk and high percent of parthenocarpic fruits, and for its hybridizing potential
  6553. with E laeis g u i n e e n s i s American oil palm is better for margarine-making than the African
  6554. oil palm, because the former has a low level of free fatty acids and a high melting point.
  6555. Folk medicine — Reported to be tonic, corozo is a folk remedy for dandruff and other
  6556. scalp ailments, inflammation, and stomach problems.
  6557. Chemistry — The pericarp yields 29 to 50%, the kernel 29 to 45% oil. The pericarp oil
  6558. contains 48.3% saturated fatty acids (1.0% C14, 32.6% palmitic, 4.7% Cjg), 47.5% oleic,
  6559. and 12.0% linoleic, with traces of arachidic acid (0.5%), 0.9% hexadecenoic acid, and 0.8%
  6560. linolenic acid.‘^^
  6561. Description — Small palm; trunk procumbent, although an erect habit may be maintained
  6562. for about 15 years; erect portion 1.6 to 3 m tall, trunks lying on soil up to 8.3 m long; roots
  6563. formed along entire length of procumbent portion of trunk. Leaves 30 to 37 per plant; leaflets
  6564. about 6.3 cm broad, all lying in one plane, no basal swellings; spines on petioles short and
  6565. thick. Male inflorescence with 100 to 200 spikelets 5 to 15 cm long, pressed together until
  6566. they burst through the spathe just before anthesis, rudimentary gynoecium with 3 marked
  6567. stigmatic ridges; female inflorescence with spathe persisting after being ruptured by the
  6568. developing bunch; spikelets ending in a short prong. Flowers numerous, sunk in the body
  6569. of the spikelet; bunch of fruits surrounded by the fibers of the spathe, with no long spines;
  6570. bunches round and wide at their center, pointed at top, giving a distinctly conical shape,
  6571. rarely weighing more than 22.5 kg, usually much smaller, containing a large number of
  6572. small fruits. Fruits ripen from pale yellow to bright red (a high proportion, up to 90%,
  6573. parthenocarpic or abortive); perianth persistent as fruit ripens and becomes detached from
  6574. the bunch; fruits 2.5 to 3.0 cm long, weighing as little as 2 to 3.5 g each with average
  6575. weights from 8.5 to 12.6 g; nuts with 2 kernels fairly frequent, with 3 occasional.
  6576. Germplasm — Reported from the South American Center of Diversity, corozo, or cvs
  6577. thereof, is reported to tolerate acid soils, drought, savanna, some salt-water, and waterlog­
  6578. ging.^^ “ Tissue culture has increased interest in the hybrids of E. guineensis x E. oleifera:
  6579. the latter produces a high quality unsaturated oil, although the yield of oil is low. The oil
  6580. yield of the F, hybrid is intermediate between both parental species; in back crosses to E.
  6581. guineensis, however, occasional palms are found that combine good yield (from E. gu i­
  6582. neensis) with improved oil quality and reduced height increment (from E. oleifera): such
  6583. palms can now be multiplied clonally.’’*^^ There are some variations in habit of growth and
  6584. leaf-formation. This species easily hybridizes with the p isifera form of E. gunieensis, the
  6585. African Oil Palm, and the fruits are relatively thin-shelled, but have no fiber
  6586. (2n = 32.)
  6587. Distribution — Native to Central and South America (Brazil, Colombia, Venezuela,
  6588. Surinam, Panama, and Costa Rica.).^^*
  6589. Ecology — Ranging from Subtropical Dry to Moist through Tropical Thom to Moist
  6590. Forest Life Zones, corozo is reported to tolerate annual precipitation of 6.4 to 15.2 (to 40)
  6591. dm (mean of 7 cases = 11.9), annual temperature of 21.0 to 27.8°C (mean of 7 cases =
  6592. 24.4), and pH of (4 to) 5.0 to 8.0 (mean of 5 cases = 6.5).®^ Actually, I have observed
  6593. oil palm in much wetter situations than these data indicate. At the Panama-Costa Rica border,
  6594. where the rainfall is closer to 40 dm, there are abundant strands of corozo, some even said
  6595. to tolerate brackish water. In Latin America plants grow procumbent in swampy areas, and
  6596. more upright in drier areas. Best development is in lowland ravines with rainfall between
  6597. 153
  6598. 1,700 and 2,200 mm annually. Mean maximum temperatures of 30 to 32°C and mean
  6599. minimum temperatures of 21 to 24°C are suitable. Grows and thrives on a wide range of
  6600. tropical soils, provided they have adequate water; soils with pH 4 to 6 are most often used
  6601. for cultivation.
  6602. Cultivation — When this palm is cultivated, seeds are planted in seedbeds and the
  6603. seedlings transplanted into the field when about 12 to 18 months old. Fruits are selected
  6604. from special mother plants, often after pollination with pollen of a selected male palm. Seeds
  6605. may be germinated in a germinator and the seedlings grown in a pre-nursery, and later in
  6606. a nursery. Transplants are planted where the bush has been checked. In the nurseries, plants
  6607. receive water and fertilizer and are shaded to protect them from sunburn. After being planted
  6608. out, they must receive more fertilizer. Ammonium sulfate and sulfate or muriate of potash
  6609. at a rate of 227 g per palm should be applied in a ring about the plant at time of planting.
  6610. Where magnesium may be deficient in the soil, 227 g Epsom salts or kieserite should be
  6611. applied also. Plants grow slowly at first, being about 7 years old before the typical pinnate
  6612. leaves form normal size. In many areas, oil palms are intercropped with vegetable and other
  6613. food crops, as maize, yams, bananas, cassava, or cocoyams. Intercropping for 3 years or
  6614. so has helped to produce early palm yields. Cover crops are often planted, as mixtures of
  6615. C alopogonium m ucunoides, C entrosem a pu bescen s, and P ueraria ph aseoloides, planted in
  6616. proportion of 2:2:1 with seed rates of 5.5 kg/ha. Natural covers and planted cover crops can
  6617. be controlled by slashing. Adequate manure should be applied during the early years to
  6618. provide nitrogen. When nitrogen fertilizers (e.g., sulfate or ammonium) are used, 0.22 kg
  6619. per palm in the planting years and 0.45 kg per palm per year until age 4, should be sufficient.
  6620. Potassium, magnesium, and trace elements requirements should be determined by soil test
  6621. and the proper fertilizer applied, according to the region, soil type, and degree of defi­
  6622. ciency.
  6623. Harvesting — Fruits mature from January to June, usually borne only about 1.5 m above
  6624. the ground, in an averge 5 clusters. Fruits begin to be formed about 4 years after planting
  6625. in the field. Often the first female inflorescences are cut off to allow better plant development.
  6626. Bunches ripen about 6 months after pollination. Ripe fruits are harvested about once a week.
  6627. Bunches are cut with machete or sharp knife, and carried to transport centers, from which
  6628. they go to the mill for oil extraction.
  6629. Yields and economics — Bunches rarely weigh more than 22.5 kg, and generally average
  6630. 8.5 to 12.67 g each; in Colombia, fruits weigh as little as 2.0 to 3.5 g. Fruit-to-bunch ratio
  6631. varies from 32 to 44%.^^^ Oil yield of E. oleifera is much lower than that of E. guineensis\^^^
  6632. a tree can yield annually ca.25 kg fruit (equalling ca. 12,850 individual fruits).Hadcock^^®
  6633. describes a simple oil palm mill (capacity 250 kg bunches per hr) that would work on either
  6634. species of oil palm. Bunches are sterilized for 1 hr before stripping. After stripping, the
  6635. fruit is reheated for 1 hr before it is digested in a rapid digester operated by a 5 h.p engine.
  6636. Oil is extracted with a hydraulic press. The oil is separated from the crude material by means
  6637. of a continuous settling clarifier fitted with a heat exchanger to dry the oil. The efficiency
  6638. of oil recovery is only 75 to 86%. The mill, including the building cost, is U.S. $34,000.^^®
  6639. Energy — See African oil palm, which has a somewhat higher energy potential.
  6640. Biotic factors — Both bee- and wind-pollinated; but up to 90% of fruits may be par-
  6641. thenocarpic. Bees are common around male inflorescence and may act as pollinating agents.
  6642. Hermaphroditic inflorescence plants are found in America and in planted trees in the Congo.
  6643. Most of the pests and diseases of the African oil palm are associated with this palm also,
  6644. especially where it has been planted with E. guineensis
  6645. 154
  6646. Handbook of Nuts
  6647. ELEOCHARIS DULCIS (Burnì.f.) Trin. ex Henschel (CYPERACEAE) — Watemut, Chinese
  6648. Water chestnut, MA TAI, MA HAI
  6649. Syn.: Andropogon dulce Burnì, f., Scirpusplantagineus Tetz., Scirpusplantaginoides
  6650. Rottb., Scirpus tuberosus Roxb., Eleocharis plantaginea (Retz.) Roem. and
  6651. Schut., Eleocharis tuberosa Schultes
  6652. Uses — Edible tubers or corms are used as a vegetable in many East Indian and Chinese
  6653. dishes. Sliced, they are esteemed in Chinese soups for their crisp texture and delicious flavor.
  6654. Sliced water chestnuts are one of the ingredients of chop suey in the U.S. They are rec­
  6655. ommended, as well, in American salads and soups. Shredded water chestnuts often appear
  6656. in meat and fish dishes. Raw corms are eaten out of hand in lieu of fresh fruit in China.
  6657. East Indians cook the tubers, remove the rind, crush the meat with a hammer, sun dry, and
  6658. fry in coconut oil as a delicacy.
  6659. Folk medicine — In China,^ the plant is used for abdominal pain, amenorrhea, anemia,
  6660. bruises, clots, gas, hernia, inflammation, liver, malnutrition, pinkeye, and swellings.
  6661. Porterfield^^® notes that Chinese give quantities to children who have ingested coins, in the
  6662. belief that the water chestnuts will decompose the metal.
  6663. Chemistry — Per 100 g, the root (ZMB) contains 360 to 364 calories, 7.4 to 8.5 g
  6664. protein, 0.7 to 1.6 g fat, 84.8 to 87.6 g total carbohydrate, 3.2 to 3.9 g fiber, 5.1 to 6.0 g
  6665. ash, 18.4 to 26.5 mg Ca, 299 to 407 mg P, 2.8 to 3.7 mg Fe, 53 to 92 mg Na, 2,304 to
  6666. 2,545 mg K, 0 |xg beta-carotene equivalent, 0.16 to 0.65 mg thiamine, 0.11 to 0.92 mg
  6667. riboflavin, 4.6 to 5.3 mg niacin, and 18 to 32 mg ascorbic acid.®^ Another analysis suggested
  6668. 77% carbohydrate (half sugar, half starch) and 8% albuminoids.^ According to Porterfield,^^®
  6669. the water chestnut contains ca.77% carbohydrates. The cane-sugar content, in water-free
  6670. samples, averages about 27.5%, while protein is rather low. The starch content of the fresh
  6671. corm is ca. 7 to 8%.
  6672. 155
  6673. Description — Perennial aquatic or paludal rush-like herb, with elongate rhizomes,
  6674. terminated by a tuber; culms terete, erect, 40 to 80 cm tall, 2.5 mm thick, glaucous-green,
  6675. smooth, septate-nodose within, arising from short, dark-brown, basal tuber or corm 5 cm
  6676. or less in diameter. Sheaths 5 to 20 cm long, frequently partially reddish. Spikelets cylin­
  6677. drical, 4 cm long, 3 to 4 mm thick, scales broadly elliptic, 5 to 6 mm long. Achenes obovate-
  6678. orbicular, 2 mm long, lustrous, tawny, smooth, bristles with short spines at tip, these shorter
  6679. toward apex, style-base short-deltoid with strongly depressed inconspicuous basal disc.
  6680. Flowers summer; fruits July to October.
  6681. Germplasm — Reported from the China-Japan Center of Diversity, water chestnut, or
  6682. CVS thereof, is reported to tolerate waterlogging.*^ Two cvs recognized in China are ‘Ma
  6683. Tai’, or common water-chestnut, usually black and about 2.5 cm in diameter: ‘Mandarin’
  6684. water chestnut, dark reddish-brown, with slight cover of light-brown skin, and about 3.2
  6685. cm in diameter. Shell is a tough hard skin, and the kernel resembles a potato in consistency,
  6686. color, and composition.^^*
  6687. Distribution — Native to the East Indies, China and Japan, Fiji, Philippines, India, and
  6688. New Caledonia, Chinese water chestnuts are cultivated throughout the Far East, especially
  6689. in Taiwan, Malaysia, and Ryukyu Islands.^^* Zeven and Zhukovsky^^® mention it for West
  6690. Africa, as well. Rosengarten^*^ suggests its cultivation in the Atlantic and Gulf Coastal States
  6691. as far north as Virginia. They are suggested also for Puerto Rico and Hawaii.
  6692. Ecology — Ranging from Subtropical Dry to Moist through Tropical Dry to Moist Forest
  6693. Life Zones, water chestnut is reported to tolerate annual precipitation of 8.7 to 24.1 dm
  6694. (mean of 3 cases = 16.7), annual temperature of 18.7 to 26.6°C (mean of 3 cases =
  6695. 22.9°C), and pH of 5.3 to 5.5 (mean of 2 cases = 5.4).*^ Hardy only to Zone 9*^^ or perhaps
  6696. to Zone 7,^"^^ tolerating average annual minimum temperatures of 5 to 10°F (to 15 to 12°C),
  6697. Chinese water chestnuts grow in shallow water, and are adapted for planting along edges
  6698. of ponds, in boggy places, or in marshes, remaining green during the fall and winter. In
  6699. colder areas, plants are grown in pots, tubs, or pools of water.^^*
  6700. Cultivation — Planting is done annually in June or July. Old corms are first planted in
  6701. wet mud and, when sprouted, are planted usually about 15 cm deep in fields of mud covered
  6702. with some, but not too much, water. Also propagated by offsets from the corms, it spreads
  6703. by means of horizontal rhizomes. It grows practically throughout the year, at least until
  6704. ready to replant for the next season. Corms should be planted in rich, fertile soil, one to
  6705. each 15-cm pot, when grown for local or limited culture. Pots should be submerged so that
  6706. the soil surface is covered with 15 cm of water. Potted plants may be put out in pools when
  6707. weather is warm and settled, but should be brought in before frost.^^* DeRigo and Winters^^
  6708. recommend 224 kg N (ammonium sulfate), 112 kg P2O5 (superphosphate), and 168 kg K2O
  6709. (muriate of potash), as the best fertilizer combination for water chestnut growers with soils
  6710. similar to those in the Savannah station of the U.S. Department of Agriculture.
  6711. Harvesting — Corms, mature and ready for use in about 6 months, are harvested as
  6712. needed. For commerical purposes, toward the end of the season all the tubers in a clump
  6713. may be harvested. After the tops are removed, tubers may be plowed up and hand picked.
  6714. At harvest time, the corms, 3 to 5 cm in diameter, may be produced on the rhizomes to a
  6715. depth of 25 cm. Corms are cleaned, dried, and shipped to markets.^^*
  6716. Yields and economics — Plants are very prolific, and a plant may yield 10 to 12 kg of
  6717. chestnuts per season. Yields as high as 40 MT/ha are reported from China, higher than the
  6718. 35 MT/ha reported by DeRigo and Winters.The 10 MT/ha reported in The Wealth of
  6719. India'^^ may be more realistic. Rosengarten^*^ more optimistically suggests 25 to 50 tons per
  6720. hectare. They are used extensively as food in the East Indies, China, and Japan. Canned
  6721. Chinese water chestnuts are imported from Hong Kong in large quantities into Europe, Great
  6722. Britain, and the U.S.^^*
  6723. Energy — Accepting tuber yields of 40 MT/ha, the tubers being ca. 75% water, there
  6724. 156 Handbook of Nuts
  6725. is a DM yield of 10 MT/ha. This could be used as a food or energy source. Tops, normally
  6726. discarded, would probably represent even less DM, also available for energy production.
  6727. Biotic factors — Attacked by several fungi: Cladosporium herbarum, Claviceps nigricans,
  6728. Curvularia lunata, C. maculans, Cylindrosporium eleocharidis, Dermatosorus eleocharidis,
  6729. Entyloma eleochardis, E. parvum, Epicoccum nigrum, Mucor circinelloides, Pestalotia
  6730. scripina, Physoderma heleocharidis, Puccinia eleocharidis, P. liberta, Uredo incomposita,
  6731. Uromyces eleocharidis, Dicaeoma eleocharidis. The following nematodes have been isolated
  6732. from Chinese water chestnuts; Dolichodorus heterocephalus, Hoplolaimus coronatus, and
  6733. Paratylenchus sarissus
  6734. 157
  6735. FAGUS GRANDIFOLIA Ehrh. (FAGACEAE) — American Beech
  6736. S yn .: Fagus americana S w eet, Fagus ferruginea A lt., Fagus atropurpuea Sudw,
  6737. U ses — Nuts eaten raw, dried, or cooked; they usually have a sweet taste. Sometimes
  6738. roasted and ground for use as a coffee substitute.Beech buds may be eaten in the spring^®^
  6739. and young leaves cooked as greens in the spring. The inner bark is dried and pulverized for
  6740. bread flour in times of need and used as emergency food. Beechnuts are used to make cakes
  6741. and pies.^^® Nuts are a fattening feed for hogs and poultry,and also provide food for
  6742. wildlife. Trees make excellent ornamentals and provide valuable timber. The wood is heavy,
  6743. straight-grained, of close texture, hard, but not durable, and hence it is not used as building
  6744. timber, though extensively used for ordinary lumber ware, furniture, and cooperage stock.
  6745. Also used for boxes, clothes-pins, crates, cross-ties, flooring, food containers, fuel, general
  6746. millwork, handles, laundry appliances, pulpwood, spools, toys, veneer, and woodenware.
  6747. After steaming, the wood is easy to bend and is valuable for the curved parts of chairs.
  6748. Wood tar (source of creosote) is obtained through destructive distillation of the wood.^^"^
  6749. Early settlers used the wood mainly for fuel wood. Makes excellent charcoal that was used
  6750. by blacksmiths and in furnaces for smelting iron.^^^
  6751. F olk m ed icin e — Reported to be antidote and poison, American beech is a folk remedy
  6752. for bums, frostbite, rash, and scald,^^ UphoP^"^ reports it to be antiseptic, antipyretic, a
  6753. stimulating expectorant, used for chronic bronchitis, pulmonary tuberculosis, and vomiting
  6754. 158 Handbook of Nuts
  6755. seasickness. Guiaicol (from beech wood creosote) is expectorant and intestinal antiseptic.
  6756. Cherokee Indians chewed the inner bark as a worm treatment. Potawatomi Indians used a
  6757. decoction of leaves on frostbitten extremities and made a leaf decoction compound for
  6758. bums.^*^ Rappahannock Indians applied it to poison ivy rash three times daily in the form
  6759. of a wash made by steeping a handful of beech bark, from the north side of the tree, in a
  6760. pint of water with a little salt.^^®
  6761. Chemistry — Per 100 gm, the seed is reported to contain 608 calories, 20.8 g protein,
  6762. 53.5 fat, 21.7 g total carbohydrate, 4.0 g fiber, and 4.0 g ash.^^ Rosengarten^^^ reports
  6763. beech nuts contain 19.4% protein, 20.3% carbohydrates, and 5,667 calories per kg. Another
  6764. source lists beech nuts as containing (per 100 g) 568 calories, 19.4 g protein, 50.0 g fat,
  6765. 20.3 g carbohydrate, and 6.6% water.Smith^*® reports 6.6% water, 21.8% protein, 49.9%
  6766. fat, 18.0% carbohydrates, 3.7% ash, and 6,028 calories per kg. The wood is a source of
  6767. methyl alcohol and acetic acid. Guaiacol is derived from beech wood creosote by fractional
  6768. distillation.
  6769. Toxicity — Occasionally nuts cause poisoning in man and domestic animals. There have
  6770. been reports that indicate gastrointestinal distress, probably caused by a saponin glycoside.*®"^
  6771. Description — Deciduous tree, to 30 (to 40) m tall and 1 m in diameter, round-topped;
  6772. bark smooth, gray; winter-buds long, lanceolate, acute; twigs slender, often slightly zigzag.
  6773. Leaves alternate, short-petioled, simple, ovate-oblong, obovate or elliptical, 6.5 to 12.5 cm
  6774. long, sharply serrate to denticulate, thin, papery, broadly acute to subcordate at base, straight-
  6775. veined, densely silky when young, becoming glabrous above and dark bluish-green and
  6776. usually silky-pubescent beneath, turning yellow in fall. Flowers monoecious, appearing with
  6777. leaves; staminate flowers in drooping heads, subtended by deciduous bracts, with small
  6778. calyx, deeply 4 to 8 cleft and 8 to 16 stamens; pistillate flowers in 2 to 4-flowered spikes,
  6779. usually in pairs at end of short peduncle, subtended and largely concealed by numerous
  6780. subulate bracts, calyx adnate to ovary with 6 acuminate lobes. Burs prickly, about 2 to 2.5
  6781. cm in diameter, dehiscing into 4 valves, partially opening upon maturity; nuts triangular,
  6782. up to 2 cm long, 2 or 3 in each bur; seed-coat brown, removed from kernel before eating.
  6783. Root-suckering causes thickets around old trees. Flowers spring; fruits fall.^^^
  6784. Germplasm — Reported from the North American Center of Diversity, American beech,
  6785. or CVS thereof, is reported to tolerate frost, high pH, limestone, low pH, shade, slope, weeds,
  6786. and waterlogging.^^ Three natural varieties can be distinguished: var. grandifolia — prickles
  6787. of bur 4 to 10 mm long, erect, spreading or recurved, with leaves usually sharply serrate,
  6788. grows in rich upland soils, from Nova Scotia and New Brunswick to Minnesota, south to
  6789. Virginia and Kentucky, and in mountains to North Carolina, Illinois, and southeastern
  6790. Missouri; var. caroliniana (Loud.) Fern, and Rehd. — prickles of bur 1 to 3 (to 4) mm
  6791. long, usually abruptly reflexed from near base, leaves more acuminate and often merely
  6792. denticulate, found in moist or wet lowland forests, on or near Coastal Plain, Massachusetts
  6793. to Florida and Texas, and north in the Mississippi Valley to southern Illinois and Ohio; var.
  6794. pubescens Fern, and Rehd. — leaves soft-pubescent below, sometimes only slightly so.
  6795. Natives in Kentucky and other mountainous areas where both major varieties occur separate
  6796. them into Red and White Beech, due to color of wood.^^® ‘Abrams’ and ‘Abundance’ were
  6797. introduced into trade in 1926 by Willard Bixby. Both appeared to produce superior nuts.
  6798. ‘Jenner’ is said to bear regular crops of exceptionally large nuts.^^^ (2n = 12.)
  6799. Distribution — Generally distributed throughout eastern U.S. and Canada, from Nova
  6800. Scotia and New Brunswick, south to Florida, west to Minnesota, Wisconsin south to Texas.
  6801. Ecology — Ranging from Cool Temperate Moist to Wet through Subtropical Moist Forest
  6802. Life Zones, American beech is reported to tolerate annual precipitation of 6.7 to 12.8 dm
  6803. (mean of 9 cases = 10.5), annual temperature of 7.0 to 17.6°C (mean of 9 cases = 10.8°C),
  6804. and pH of 4.5 to 6.5 (mean of 8 cases = 5.5).^^ Grows well in acid soils on rather dry
  6805. hillsides, but will grow in lowlands of Coastal Plain. Thrives where soil is protected by
  6806. 159
  6807. mulch of its own leaves. On many rich upland and mountain slopes, this long-lived tree
  6808. forms nearly pure stands. Southward often found on bottom-lands and along margins of
  6809. swamps.Hardy to Zone 3.^^^
  6810. Cultivation — Propagates readily from seed sown in fall or stratified and kept for sowing
  6811. in spring. Cover with V2 inch of soil; protect from vermin.Fall-sown beds should be
  6812. mulched until midsummer and kept in half-shade until past mid-summer of first year.^^^
  6813. Seedlings should be transplanted frequently, for 2 to 3 years, to prevent formation of a long
  6814. taproot. Horticultural varities are grafted on seedling stock and grown on under glass until
  6815. planted out.^^^ Trees are slow-growing and may live 400 years or more.^^^
  6816. Harvesting — Nuts are gathered after heavy frosts have caused them to drop to the
  6817. ground. Treated like other nuts until used.^^^ Fresh nuts will deteriorate within a few weeks
  6818. if not properly dried. Shells are easily removed with the fingernails.Wood is harvested
  6819. from trees 60 to 90 cm in diameter.
  6820. Yields and economics — Rudolf and Leak^®^ report between 2,860 to 5,060 cleaned
  6821. seeds per kg (1,300 to 2,300/lb). Beech nuts are a very minor product in North America,
  6822. compared to other nuts. Used more by people with limited supplies of nuts. Lumber is the
  6823. more important commercial product.
  6824. Energy — The heavy wood (sp. grav. 0.65 to 0.75) is used for fuel wood and charcoal.
  6825. The seeds, though copious at times, are so small that they could hardly be considered an
  6826. energy source. One could multiply seed yields by 0.5 to get a rough idea of the oil potential.
  6827. Biotic factors — Serious bark disease associated with the presence of beech scale,
  6828. prevalent in Canada and Maine. Dormant oil spray is used to check scale. Nicotine-sulfate
  6829. can be used when young leaves first appear. Mottle-leaf or scorch disease, resulting in
  6830. premature leaf-fail, is prevalent on American beech, the exact cause is not yet known.
  6831. The Agriculture Handbook 165"^ reports the following as affecting this species: Anthostoma
  6832. turgidum, Armillaria mellea, Botryosphaeria hoffmanni, Ceratostomella echinella, C. mi-
  6833. crospora, Cercospora sp., Coccomyces comitialis, C. coronatus, Coniothyrium fagi, Con-
  6834. opholis americana, Cryptodiaporthe galericulata, Cryptosporella compta, Cytospora spp.,
  6835. C. pustulata, Daedalea ambigua, D. confragosa, D. unicolor, Daldinia concentrica, D.
  6836. vernicosa, Diaporthefagi, Diatrype spp., Dichaenafaginea, Discosia artocreas, Endobotrya
  6837. legans, Endoconidiophora virescens, Endothia gyrosa, Epifagus virginiana, Favolus alveo-
  6838. laris, Fomes applanatus, F. connatus, F. everhartii, F. formentarius, F. igniarius, F.
  6839. pinicola, Gloeosporium fagi, Graphium album, Hericium coralloides, H. laciniatum, Hy-
  6840. menochaete spp., Hypoxylon spp., Lasiophaeriapezizula, Libertellafaginea, Microsphaera
  6841. alni. Microstroma sp., Mycosphaerella fagi, M. punctiformis, Nectria cinnabarina, N.
  6842. coccinea, N. galligena, Pholiota spp., Phomopsis sp., Phoradendron flavescens, Phyllac-
  6843. tinia corylea, Phyllosticta faginea, Phytophthora cactorum, Polyporus spp., Poria spp.,
  6844. Scorias spongiosa, Septobasidium spp., Steccherinum ochraceum, S. septentrionale, Ster-
  6845. eum spp., Strumella coryneoidea, Trametes spp., Ustulina deusta, U. linearis, Valsa spp.,
  6846. Xylaria corniformis, and X. digitata. Erineum (leaf deformity caused by mites) is also
  6847. reported. In addition, Browne,lists: Fungi— Asterosporium hoffmannii, Cerrena unicolor,
  6848. Ganoderma appalanatum, Gnomonia veneta, Hericium caput-ursi, Hymenochaete tabacina,
  6849. Hypoxylon blakei, H. cohaerens, Inonotus glomeratus, I. obliquus, Phellinus igniarus,
  6850. Phyllactinea guttata, Polyporus adustus, P. hirsutus, P. versicolor, Poria laevigata, Sterum
  6851. fasciatum, S. purpureum, Torula ligniperda, Valsa leucostomoides. Hemiptera — Corythu-
  6852. cha pallipes. Cryptococcus fagi, Parthenolecanium corni, Phyllaphis fagi, Prociphilus im-
  6853. bricator. Lepidoptera — Alsophila pometaria, Cenopis pettitana, Choristoneura fractivittana,
  6854. Datana integerrima, D. ministra, Disphragia guttivitta, Ennomos magnaria, E. subsignaria,
  6855. Halisidota maculata, Hemerocampa leucostigma, Lymantria dispar, Nadata gibbosa, Op-
  6856. erophtera bruceata, Orgyia antiqua, Pandemis lamprosana, Paraclemensia acerifoliella,
  6857. Symmerista albifrons, S. leucitys, Tetralopha asperatella. Mammalia — Erethizon dorsatum.
  6858. 160 Handbook of Nuts
  6859. FA G U S SYLVATICA L. (FAGACEAE) — European Beech
  6860. Uses — The nuts are sweet and edible when roasted. Roasted nuts can be used as a
  6861. substitute for coffee. Press-cake from decorticated nuts is used as a feed for cattle, pigs,
  6862. and poultry.Oil expressed from nuts is used for cooking, illumination, and manufacture of
  6863. soap. Used as a substitute for butter. Leaves used as a substitute for tobacco. Trees furnish
  6864. excellent timber. Wood is heavy, hard, straight-grained, close textured, durable, easy to
  6865. split, strong, resistant to abrasion, and used for flooring, cooperage, furniture, turnery,
  6866. utensils, wagons, agricultural implements, wooden shoes, spoons, plates, pianos, ship build­
  6867. ing, railroad ties, brush backs, meat choppers, construction of dams, water-mills, excelsior,
  6868. wood pulp, and is an excellent fuel. Takes a good polish and can be easily bent when
  6869. steamed. In Norway and Sweden, boiled beech wood sawdust is baked and then mixed with
  6870. flour to form the material for bread. Source of creosote, which is used as a preservative
  6871. treatment of timber. Trees make excellent ornamental plants as leaves remain on tree most
  6872. of winter.
  6873. Folk medicine — Reported to be carminative, poison, analgesic, antidote, antipyretic,
  6874. antiseptic, apertif, astringent, laxative, parasiticide, refrigerant, and tonic, European beech
  6875. is a folk remedy for blood disorders and fever.Source of creosote, used as a deodorant
  6876. dusting powder in cases of gangrene and bed sores when mixed with plaster of paris.^°
  6877. Chemistry — Hager’s Handbookreports the leaves to contain pentosane, methylpen-
  6878. tosane, idalin, a wax, cerotonic acid, p-hydoxybenzoic acid, vanillic acid, p-coumaric-,
  6879. ferulic-, caffeic-, chlorogenic-acid, and traces of inositol and sinapic acid; myricetin, leu-
  6880. codelphinidin, quercetin, isoquercitrin, leucocyanidin, and kaempferol; n-nonacosan, beta-
  6881. sitosterol, alanine, aminobutyric acid, arginine, asparagine, glutamine, hydroxy glutamic
  6882. acid, glycine, hydroxyproline, leucine, lysine, methionine, phenylalanine, proline, threo­
  6883. nine, tyrosine, valine, serine; and a little cystine, tyrosine, and histidine. The seeds contain
  6884. 25 to 45% oil (3.5% stearic-, ca.5% palmitic-, 40 to 76% oleic-, and ca.10% linoleic-acid);
  6885. also choline, neurine, trimethylamine, sugar, malic-, citric-, oxalic-, lactic-, and tannic-
  6886. acids; gums, betaine, sinapic-, caffeic-, and ferulic-acids; saponins, tannins, and the alkaloid
  6887. fagine. Bark contains 3 to 4% tannin, citric acid, beta-sitosterol, betulin. Arachidylalcohol
  6888. (arachinalcohol, n-eicosylalcohol C20H42O), vanilloside (C14H18O8), docosanol, tetracosanol,
  6889. hexacosanol; lauric-, myristic-, palmitic-, stearic-, oleic-, and linoleic-acid. Wood contains
  6890. 0.5% 1-arabinose (C5H10O5), 18% d-xylose (C5H10O5), 1-rhamnose, and d-galactose.^^^
  6891. Toxicity — Raw nuts are poisonous, probably due to the presence of a saponin (CSIR,
  6892. 1948-1976).
  6893. Description — Trees deciduous, long-lived, up to 30 m tall, round-topped; trunk smooth,
  6894. gray; buds slender, fusiform, acute, reddish-brown; branches smooth. Leaves alternate, ovate
  6895. or elliptic, acute, cuneate or rounded at base, 5 to 10 cm long, glabrous, at least along
  6896. veins, with 5 to 8 pairs of conspicuous lateral veins, denticulate, shinking dark-green above,
  6897. turning reddish-brown in fall. Male flowers numerous, in long-stalked aments, perianth
  6898. divided almost to base; peduncles 5 to 6 cm long. Nut ovate, 12 to 30 mm in diameter,
  6899. brown; cupule woody, about 2.5 cm wide, deeply divided into 4 valves which are covered
  6900. outside with awl-shaped spines. April to May.^^^
  6901. Germplasm — Reported from the Euro-Siberian Center of Diversity, European beech,
  6902. or CVS thereof, is reported to tolerate frost, high pH, limestone, low pH, shade, slope, and
  6903. smog.^^ There are many variations of leaf color and size, and branchlet habit. Some of the
  6904. horticultural varieties include: var. albovariegata — leaves variegated with white; var.
  6905. asplenifolia Lodd. — leaves very narrow, deeply toothed or lobed; var. atropunicea Sudw.
  6906. (var. atropurpúrea Hort., var. purpurea Ait., var. riversii Hort., var. suprea) — Purple
  6907. Beech, leaves purple; var. borneyensis — intermediate between vars. pén du la and tortusa\
  6908. leaves coarsely toothed; var. laciniata (var. incisa Hort., var. heterophylla Loud.) — Femleaf
  6909. 161
  6910. or Cutleaf Beech, leaves deeply toothed or lobed or sometimes entire and linear; var. latifolia
  6911. — leaves to 15 cm long and 10 cm wide; var. luteovariegata — leaves variegated with
  6912. yellow; var. m iltoniensis — drooping form; var. pén du la Lodd. — Weeping Beech, branches
  6913. drooping; var. purpuero-pendula Hort. — branches drooping with purple leaves; var. ro-
  6914. seom arginata — leaves purple edged with pale pink; var. rotundifolia — leaves nearly
  6915. orbicular, 2.5 cm or less long; var. quercifolia Schelle (var. quercoides Hort.) — leaves
  6916. deeply toothed and sinuate; var. qu ercoides Pers. — bark dark, rough, oak-like; var. tortuosa
  6917. Dipp. (var. rem illyensis) — branches twisted and contorted, drooping at tips; var. tricolor
  6918. — leaves nearly white, spotted with green and edged with pink; var. varigata — leaves
  6919. variegated with white or yellow; var. zlatia Spaeth — leaves yellow.(2n = 22,24.^^)
  6920. D istrib u tion — Central and southern Europe, east to the Caucasus, ascending to 1,700
  6921. m in Alps. Introduced to Ireland; widely planted as ornamental. Found as far north as
  6922. southeastern Norway.
  6923. E cology — Ranging from Cool Temperate Steppe to Wet through Warm Temperate Dry
  6924. to Moist Forest Life Zones, European beech is reported to tolerate annual precipitation of
  6925. 3.1 to 13.6 dm (mean of 29 cases = 7.8), annual temperature of 6.5 to 18.0°C (mean of
  6926. 29 cases == 9.7°C), and pH of 4.5 to 8.2 (mean of 25 cases = 6.3).^^ In woods on well-
  6927. drained soils, often in mountains and on hillsides. Thrives on northern and eastern exposures,
  6928. enduring much shade, shunning poor soils and swamps, protecting and improving the soil.
  6929. Thrives on loamy limestone soil, but will grow on acid soils. Thrives where soils are protected
  6930. by mulch of its own leaves; growing best in dry sandy loams. Trees are relatively insensitive
  6931. to unfavorable conditions.Hardy to Zone 4.^"^^
  6932. C u ltivation — Propagation readily attained by seed in fall or stratified and kept for sowing
  6933. in spring. Protect seeds and seedlings from vermin. Seedlings should be transp-anted every
  6934. second or third year to prevent formation of long taproot. Varieties are grafted on seedling
  6935. stock under glass. All upright forms may be clipped to form excellent hedges.
  6936. H arvestin g — Nuts are harvested in fall, usually after they fall to ground. Nuts are also
  6937. harvested all winter by wildlife. Timber harvested from mature trees.
  6938. Y ields and econ om ics — Since beech-nuts do not enter markets for human consumption,
  6939. no data are available. The nuts are not a commercial item, but are especially valuable as
  6940. food for wildlife. Trees form extensive forests, and the wood is a common hardwood tree
  6941. in Denmark and Germany, where it is raised as pure growth or as mixed woodland. Nurseries
  6942. propagate large numbers for ornamentals.
  6943. E n ergy — CanneP^ presents biomass data showing that trees ca. 100 years old, spaced
  6944. at 1200 trees per ha, averaged 23.7 m tall, a basal area of 48.2 m^/ha, and a stem volume
  6945. of 460 mVha. The stem wood plus the stem bark, on a DM basis, weighed 365 MT/ha, the
  6946. branches 49, the foliage 5, and the roots were estimated at 50 MT/ha for a total standing
  6947. biomass of ca. 468 MT/ha. The current annual increment (CAI) of stem wood and bark was
  6948. 3.6 MT/ha/yr, which total was estimated at 9.3 MT/ha/yr. These data were taken in a brown
  6949. forest soil in Bulgaria 42 to 43°N, 23 to 25°E, 1400 to 1600 m elevation. On red alluvial
  6950. soil in Denmark (56°00'N, 12°20'E, elevation 200 m), 200-year-old trees, averaging 26 m
  6951. tall, had CAIs of only 5.9 mVha/yr compared with 12.7 for 54-year-old trees. Beck and
  6952. Mittman^^ showed that annual litter fall was close to 5 MT/ha in a pure beech stand in the
  6953. Black Forest of West Germany (mean annual temperature 8.3°, annual precipitation 10.5
  6954. dm; elevation 325 m). In Sweden, Nihlgard and Lindgren^^^ cite annual above-ground
  6955. productivity of 10.4 to 16.7 MT/ha with yearly increments (CAI) of 7.1 to 11.0 MT/ha.
  6956. Apparently, the annual productivity ranges from 3 to 17 MT/ha. Such biomass could and
  6957. does serve as a source of energy in temperate forests. The wood is an excellent fuel,^^"^ and
  6958. would probably make good charcoal.
  6959. B iotic factors — Wooly aphis often covers the surface of leaves of European beech; it
  6960. is controlled by application of oil spray. Nicotine sulfate also is used when young leaves
  6961. 162 Handbook of Nuts
  6962. first appear. Trees are relatively free of fungal and bacterial diseases and are not seriously
  6963. damaged by insects or other p e s t s . The Agriculture Handbook 165"^ lists the following as
  6964. affecting this species: Armillaria mellea, Endothia gyrosa. Massaria macrospora, Nectria
  6965. cinnabarina, Phomopsis spp., and Phytophthora cactorum. Erineum — leaf deformity caused
  6966. by mites, Leaf Scorch — cause unknown, and Mottle Leaf — cause unknown are also listed.
  6967. In addition, Browne^^ lists: Fungi — Armillaria mucida, Asteroporium hoffmannii, Auri-
  6968. cularia auricula-judae, Bulgaria inquinans, Cerrena unicolor, Daedalea quercina, Endothia
  6969. parasitica. Fistulina hepática. Pomes annosus, F. conchatus, F. fomentarius, F. fraxineus,
  6970. F. pinicola, Ganoderma applanatum, Gnomonia veneta, Helicobasidium purpureum. Her-
  6971. icium erinaceus, Hydnum cirrhatum, H. diversidens, Hysterographium fraxini, Inonotus
  6972. cuticularis, /. obliquus, Laetiporus sulphureus, Microsphaera alphitoides, Nectria coccinea,
  6973. N. coccinea faginata, N. ditissima, N. galligena, Oxyporus populinus, Phellinus igniaris,
  6974. Pholiota adiposa, Phyllactinia guttata, Phytophthora cinnamomi, P. syringae, Pleurotus
  6975. ostretus, P. ulmarius, Polyporus adustus, P. giganteas, P. squamosus, P. zonatus, Pythium
  6976. debaryanum, P. ultimum, Rosellinia quercina, Steccherinum septentrionale, Stereum hir-
  6977. sutum, S. purpureum, S. rugosum, Trametes hispida, Truncatella hartigii, Ustulina deusta,
  6978. Volvariella bombycina. Angiospermae — Viscum album. Coleóptera — Agrilus viridis.
  6979. Apoderas coryli, Byctiscus betulae, Cerambyx cerdo, Leperisinus varias, Melolontha mel-
  6980. olontha, Mesosa nebulosa, Phyllobius argentatus. Platypus cylindrus, Prionous coriareus,
  6981. Rhynchaenus fagi, Rhynchites betulae, Strophosomus coryli, Xyleborus dispar. Diptera —
  6982. Contarinia fagi, Hartigiola annulipes, Mikola fagi, Oligotrophus fagineus, Phegobia tor-
  6983. natella, Phegomyiafagicola. Hemiptera — Cryptococcus fagi, Fagocyba cruenta, Phyllaphis
  6984. fagi. Hymenoptera — Caliroa annulipes, Nematus fagi. Lepidoptera — Carcina quercana,
  6985. Cossus cossus, Diurnea fagella, Ectropis crepuscularia, Hepialus humuli, Laspeyresia fa-
  6986. giglandana, Lithocolletis faginella, Lymantria monacha, Nepticula hemargyrella, N. tityr-
  6987. ella, Operophtera bramata, Strophedra weirana, Tortrix viridana. Aves — Columba
  6988. palumbus. Mammalia — Apodemus sylvaticus, Clethrionomys glarcolus. Dama dama. Mi­
  6989. crotis agrestis, Sciurus carolinensis, S. vulgaris.
  6990. 163
  6991. GINKGO BILOBA L. (GINKGOACEAE) — Ginkgo, Maidenhair Tree
  6992. Uses — Valued by the Orientals as a sacred tree, for food, medicine, and ritual. Once
  6993. the acrid nauseous pulp is removed from around them, the seeds can be boiled or roasted
  6994. to make a delicacy, the nut, with a flavor likened by one author to mild Swiss cheese. As
  6995. a delicacy at feasts, the nuts are supposed to aid digestion and alleviate the effects of drinking
  6996. too much wine. Important in oriental medicine, the ginkgo is now under cultivation as a
  6997. medicinal plant in the Occident. Chinese use the seed to wash clothing. Seed are digested
  6998. in wine to make a cosmetic detergent.The thick fleshy seed coat is used as an insecticide.
  6999. The light, yellowish, brittle wood is used for chess-boards and toys. Very valuable in highly
  7000. polluted air as an ornamental shade tree, along streets and in parks.
  7001. Folk medicine — According to Hartwell,the nuts are used in folk remedies for cancer
  7002. in China, the plant for corns in Japan. In China, macerated in vegetable oil for 100 days,
  7003. the fruit pulp is traditionally used for asthma, bronchitis, gonorrhea, tuberculosis, and
  7004. worms.^ According to Monachino,"^*^ the nauseous fruit juice becomes antitubercular after
  7005. immersing in oil for three months. This activity is not lost with sterilization at 100°C for
  7006. 30 min. Daily administration of 150 gm/kg of the extract of the oil-immersed fruits showed
  7007. definite activity against Mycobacterium tuberculosis in guinea pigs. Pan-fried seeds are used
  7008. for leucorrhea, polyuria, seminal emissions, and tuberculosis; seeds, seedcoats, or leaves
  7009. are used for asthma, cough, leucorrhea, spermatorrhea. Seeds are considered antitussive,
  7010. astringent, sedative. Raw seed is said to be anticancer, antivinous; with a fishy taste; they
  7011. 164 Handbook of Nuts
  7012. are consumed, dyed red, at Chinese weddings; said to help bladder ailments, blenorrhea,
  7013. and uterine fluxes. Used for cardiovascular ailments in Szechuan. Ginkgolic acid is active
  7014. against the tubercle bacillus. Elsewhere, leaf extracts are used in peripheral arterial circulation
  7015. problems like arteriosclerotic angiopathy, post-thrombotic syndrome, diabetic vasoconstric­
  7016. tion with gangrene and angina, intermittent claudication, Raynaud’s disease. Extracts are
  7017. inhaled for ear, nose, and throat ailments like bronchitis and chronic rhinitis.^
  7018. Chemistry — Per 100 g, seeds (ZMB) contain 403 calories, 10.2 to 10.5% protein, 3.1
  7019. to 3.5% fat, 83.0% total carbohydrate, 1.3 g fiber, 3.1 to 3.8 g ash, 11 mg Ca, 327 mg P,
  7020. 2.6 mg Fe, 15.3 mg Na, 1139 mg K, 392 mg beta-carotene equivalent, 0.52 mg thiamine,
  7021. 0.26 mg riboflavin, 6.1 mg niacin, and 54.5 mg ascorbic acid.®^ Dry kernels (ca. 59% of
  7022. the seed weight) contain; 6% sucrose, 67.9% starch, 13.1% protein, 2.9% fat, 1.6% pen­
  7023. tosans, 1% fiber, and 3.4% ash. The globulin of the kernel, accounting for 60% of the total
  7024. nitrogen, is rich in tryptophane. Fruit pulp, bitter and astringent, contains a volatile oil and
  7025. a number of fatty acids from formic to caprylic. Press-juice contains: ginnol (C27H56O),
  7026. bilobol (C2,H3402), ginkgol (C24H34O), ginkgic acid (C24H42O2), ginkgolic (hydroxy) acid
  7027. (C22H34O3), ginkgolic (saturated oxy) acid (C2,H3203), ginkgolic acid (C24H48O2), an acid
  7028. corresponding to the formula C21H42O3, an acidic oil, asparagine, reducing sugars, and
  7029. phosphoric acid. Autumn leaves contain ginnol, sitosterol (C27H64)), ipuranol (C33H56O6),
  7030. shikimic acid or shikimin (C7H10O5), linolenic acid, acacetin, apigenin, and substances
  7031. conforming to the formula CnH,405 and Ci,Hi406. Fallen leaves of the plant contain a bright
  7032. yellow crystalline substance, ginkgetin (C32H220,o). Leafy branches contain ceryl alcohol
  7033. and sterols. Staminate flowers of Paris-grown trees contain 3.27 to 3.57% (ZMB) deoxy­
  7034. ribonucleic acid. Male inflorescence may contain raffinose (up to 4% on fresh weight basis).
  7035. Wood contains raffinose and xylan (2.5%). Bark contains tannin dissolved in a pectinous
  7036. mucus.
  7037. Toxicity — Seeds are reputed to be toxic raw, sometimes resulting in children’s deaths.
  7038. According to Duke and Ayensu,^ large quantities can induce convulsions, dyspnea, emesis,
  7039. and pyreticosis. Expressed fruit Juice causes erythema, edema, papules, pustules, and intense
  7040. itching. Some suggest that even old nuts can induce dermatitis. The pollen may cause hay
  7041. fever.
  7042. Description — Deciduous dioecious trees to nearly 35 m tall, often slenderly conical and
  7043. sparsely branched when young, spreading in age. Leaves on stalks up to 7.5 cm long, fan­
  7044. shaped, usually 5 to 8 (15 to 20) cm across, with 2 large lobes, usually undulate or notched,
  7045. but with numerous branching parallel veins. Male and female strobili on different trees.
  7046. Males appear in early spring as catkins drooping from short shoots (3 to 6 on one shoot),
  7047. bearing numerous loosely arranged stamens. Female axes arise from short spur shoots in
  7048. pairs or in threes, each with a long stalk bearing on each side a naked ovule, surrounded
  7049. at the base by a collar-like rim. Seed with a yellow fleshy outer covering enveloping the
  7050. woody shell containing the edible kernel.Seeds 400 to 1,150 per kg.
  7051. Germplasm — Reported from the China-Japan Center of Diversity, ginkgo, or cvs thereof,
  7052. is reported to tolerate acid soil, air pollution, disease, frost, insects, and slope. Dallimore
  7053. and Jackson"^^^ describe several ornamental cvs, ‘Aurea’ with leaves yellow even in summer,
  7054. ‘Fastigiata’ with the branches almost erect, ‘Laciniata’ with deeply cut leaves, ‘Pendula’
  7055. with weeping branches, and ‘Variegata’ with yellow-variegated leaves.
  7056. Distribution — Rarely seen wild, even in China and Japan, yet doing well widely in the
  7057. temperate world as a cultivar. Rosengarten,^®^ terming it “ unknown in the wild’’, notes that
  7058. it has been cultivated as a sacred tree in Chinese Buddhist temple courtyards for over 1,000
  7059. years. Introduced into America in 1784, it has generally been successful on good sites in
  7060. moist temperate areas of the midwestem and eastern U.S., and along the St. Lawrence River
  7061. in Canada.^
  7062. Ecology — Estimated to range from Cool Temperate Moist to Wet through Warm Tern-
  7063. 165
  7064. perate Moist to Wet Forest Life Zones, ginkgo is expected to tolerate annual precipitation
  7065. of 8 to 12 dm, annual temperature of 9 to 14°C, and pH of 4.5 to 6. Waterlogging, strong
  7066. winds, hardpan, and alkaline soils are to be avoided. According to Balz,"^^^ though ginkgo
  7067. tolerates cold, frost, and snow, it does well with summer temperatures above 25°C and air
  7068. relative-humidity ca. 50 to 60%. Monthly rainfall in summer should not fall below 40 mm.
  7069. Deep, light, mellow soils, well-drained and aerated, produce optimal growth. Good growth
  7070. is reported on soils with 2% coarse sand, 10% fine sand, 37% coarse silt, 40% fine silt,
  7071. and 11% clay, as well as 5% coarse sand, 45% fine sand, 25% coarse silt, 15% fine silt,
  7072. and 10% clay. Soils should not contain more than 10 to 15% clay. A pH of 5 to 5.5 is
  7073. recommended with 100 to 200 ppm P2O5, 260 to 400 ppm K2O, 60 to 120 ppm Mg, 3 to
  7074. 5% humus, and <1% salts. The soil should warm up early in spring with late autumn leaf
  7075. fall; i.e., no frost between April 1 and October 31 (7 month or more growing season).
  7076. Isolation of 1,800 to 2,000 hr/year (250 hr/month midsummer) is considered adequate.
  7077. C ultivation — Chinese say that triquetrous seeds produce male trees, lenticular seeds
  7078. produce females. Seeds germinate readily but grow slowly. Cuttings take as long as 2 years
  7079. to root. Seed should be cold-stratified 30 to 60 days for seed collected before completion
  7080. or after ripening. Germinative capacity may vary from about (0 to) 30 to 85%. For amenity
  7081. plantings, seeds should be sown in furrows in November and covered with 5 to 8 cm soil
  7082. and a sawdust mulch. Based on limited studies, one Swiss firm, planning to grow the plant
  7083. in the U.S., suggested sowing the seed under plastic tunnels at a spacing of 25 x 4 cm,
  7084. equalling ca. 1,000,000 seed per ha. With an 80% germination rate, there were 800,000
  7085. plants per ha, held in the tunnel for 2 years, expected to attain 30 cm the first year, 1.2 m
  7086. the second. In autumn of year 2 or spring of year 3, taproots are shortened to 10 to 15 cm
  7087. by under-cutting the stems, cut back to 30 cm by mowing. In the spring of the year, plants
  7088. are outplanted mechanically, at 100 x 30 cm or 33,000 plants per ha.
  7089. H arvestin g — For the pharmaceutical industry, plants are cut back to 30 cm every year
  7090. in October. Trees start bearing fruits at ca. age 25"^^^ (Monachino, 1956) or 30-40 years^
  7091. (Ag. Handbook 450, 1974).
  7092. Y ields and E con om ics — In heavy fruiting years, the trees can bear enough fruits to
  7093. cover 50% of the area circumscribed by the crowns. The Swiss Pharmaceutical firm antic­
  7094. ipated 2,400 to 3,200 kg green leaves per ha in the third year (first year outplanted), 6,000
  7095. to 8,000 in the second year outplanted, and 20,000 to 25,000 kg in the third year outplanted.
  7096. E nergy — From a biomass point of view, the ginkgo is not very promising as an energy
  7097. species. The pulp and seed husks are waste products, when the nuts are gathered. Both
  7098. could be extracted for chemurgics, then processed into energy products. Extracted leaves
  7099. could also be useful for biomass fuels.
  7100. B iotic factors — According to Monachino,the tree is not attacked by insects and it
  7101. is resistant to disease. The A griculture H andbook 165"^ reports the following as affecting
  7102. ginkgo: F om es connatus (sapwood or wound rot), G lom erella cingulata (leaf spot, anthrac-
  7103. nose), M eloidogyne sp. (root knot nematodes), P h yllosticta ginkgo (leaf spot), P hym atotri-
  7104. chum om nivorum , P olyporu s spp. (sapwood rot), and X ylaria longeana (seed rot).
  7105. 166 Handbook of Nuts
  7106. GNETUM GNEMON L. (GNETACEAE) — Manindjo, Malindjo, Tangkil
  7107. Uses — In India, the seeds are eaten after roasting or cooking. Filipinos use the fruits as
  7108. a coffee substitute.Fruits are first peeled and then cooked in Java; then the homy testa
  7109. can be separated; kernels are then pounded and sundried. This mass is then fried in coconut
  7110. oil and salted to eat with rice. Also sweetened and eaten as a delicacy with tea or coffee.
  7111. Young leaves are eaten, raw or steamed. Young leaves and inflorescences are cooked with
  7112. sea food.^^® In Fiji, young leaves are cooked with coconut milk. Bark yields a fiber used
  7113. for making rope.^^ To obtain the strong fiber, durable in sea water, the branches are peeled
  7114. and the bark beaten and split into fine filaments. With good tensile and breaking strengths,
  7115. the fiber is valued for fishing and nets.^® The wood from old trees is dark, brittle, and not
  7116. very durable. Younger poles are used for mooring posts for rafts and boats. Branches may
  7117. be split for cooperage.
  7118. Folk medicine — Indochinese use the roots as a general antidote to poison.
  7119. Chemistry — Per 100 g, the kernel is reported to contain 30 g H2O, 10.9 g protein, 1.6
  7120. g fat, 52.9 g total carbohydrate, 0.9 g fiber, and 1.7 g ash. Young leaves and stem tips
  7121. contain 81.9% H^O, 1.33% ash, 0.24% P2O5, 0.11% CaO, and 0.01% Fe203."''
  7122. Toxicity — If eaten raw, the young leaves, inflorescences and fmits may irritate the
  7123. mouth.
  7124. Description — Tree (sometimes lianoid) 5 to 22 m high, the crown narrow, conical;
  7125. tmnk straight or somewhat crooked; main branches whorled, often somewhat drooping.
  7126. Leaves opposite, shortly stalked, oblong-lanceolate or elliptic-oblong; base acute, obtuse or
  7127. rounded, apex shortly acuminate, acute; entire, thinly coriaceous, above dark-green, shining,
  7128. beneath light-green, pinnatinerved, 5 to 20 cm long, 3 to 8 cm wide, petiole 0.5 to 1 cm
  7129. long. Flowers dioecious, sometimes apparently monoecious, in stalked articulate spikes
  7130. composed of 5 to 8 whorls; whorls supported by an undulate cup. Male spikes single or
  7131. fascicled, 3 to 5 cm long; female spikes solitary, usually longer than the male ones, to 10
  7132. cm long; stalks of the inflorescences 1.2 to 2 cm long. Fruits sessile, ellipsoid, shortly
  7133. 167
  7134. cuspidate, 2 to 2.5 cm long, dark-red when ripe, containing a single large starchy edible
  7135. seed.^^’^^^
  7136. Germplasm — Reported from the Indochinese-Indonesian Center of Diversity, manindjo,
  7137. or CVS thereof, is reported to tolerate alternating dry and wet seasons. Var. ovalifolium is
  7138. considered the wild type, var. gnemon the cultivar.
  7139. Distribution — Native from Assam to Malaysia and Fiji, introduced to Java, Sumatra,
  7140. and else where.
  7141. Ecology — Better adpated to seasonal than to ever-humid tropical forests.
  7142. Cultivation — Cultivated in Asian plains, extending easily to an altitude of 1200 m.
  7143. Sometimes planted in orchards, but mostly in mixed gardens. In the Solomon Islands, seeds
  7144. may be sown, but more frequently, seedlings are transplanted from beneath established trees.
  7145. Vegetative propagation is not known in Santa Cruz on the Solomons. Trees sometimes polled
  7146. to keep them low. They recover readily from pruning.
  7147. Harvesting — In Santa Cruz, Solomon Islands, fruiting peaks around September to
  7148. October and March to April.Fibers are said to be best harvested when trees are 5 m tall.
  7149. Notable for their ability to recover from the near girdling induced by fiber harvest, the older
  7150. trees, often scarred, may be harvested again.
  7151. Yields and economics — Rare in the markets of Malaya, more common in Java.^^
  7152. Energy — In Fiji, at least, the plant is used for firewood.
  7153. Biotic factors — No data available.
  7154. 168 Handbook of Nuts
  7155. HELIANTHUS ANNUUS L. (ASTERACEAE) — Sunflower
  7156. Uses — Cultivated primarily for the seeds which yield the world’s second most important
  7157. source of edible oil. Sunflower oil is used for cooking, margarine, salad dressings, lubri­
  7158. cation, soaps, and illumination. A semi-drying oil, it is used with linseed and other drying
  7159. oils in paints and varnishes. Decorticated press-cake is used as a high protein food for
  7160. livestock. Kernels eaten by humans raw, roasted and salted, or made into flour. Poultry and
  7161. cage birds are fond of raw kernels. Flowers yield a yellow dye. Plants used for fodder,
  7162. silage and green-manure crop. Hulls provide filler in livestock feeds and bedding.
  7163. Folk medicine — Medicinally, seeds are diuretic, expectorant, and used for colds, coughs,
  7164. throat, and lung ailments. According to Hartwell,the flowers and seeds are used in folk
  7165. remedies for cancer in Venezuela, often incorporated in white wine. Reported to be anodyne.
  7166. 169
  7167. antiseptic, aphrodisiac, bactericidal, deobstruent, diuretic, emollient, expectorant, insecti­
  7168. cidal, malaria preventive, sunflower is a folk remedy for aftosa, blindness, bronchiectasis,
  7169. bronchitis, carbuncles, catarrh, cold, colic, cough, diarrhea, dysentery, dysuria, epistaxis,
  7170. eyes, fever, flu, fractures, inflammations, laryngitis, lungs, malaria, menorrhagia, pleuritis,
  7171. rheumatism, scorpion stings, snakebite, splenitis, urogenital ailments, whitlow, and wounds.
  7172. Chemistry — Per 100 g, the seed is reported to contain 560 calories, 4.8 g H2O, 24.0
  7173. g protein, 47.3 g fat, 19.4 g total carbohydrate, 3.8 g fiber, 4.0 g ash, 120 mg Ca, 837 mg
  7174. P, 7.1 mg Fe, 30 p,g Na, 920 mg K, 30 mg beta-carotene equivalent, 1.96 mg thiamine,
  7175. 0.23 mg riboflavin, 5.4 mg niacin, and 0 mg ascorbic acid. Seeds contain 25 to 35 % oil,
  7176. but cultivars have been bred in Russia with up to 50% oil. Oil contains 44 to 72% linoleic
  7177. acid, and 13 to 20% protein of high biological value and digestibility. Stems and husks are
  7178. rich in potash.
  7179. The forage (ZMB) contains 8.8% protein, 2.9% fat, 77.2% total carbohydrate, 30.3 g
  7180. fiber, and 11.1 g ash. Young shoots contain: 13.0% protein, 1.9% fat, 70.3% total car­
  7181. bohydrate, 20.4 g fiber, 14.8 g ash, 1,670 mg Ca, and 370 mg P per 100 g. The flowers
  7182. contain 12.7% protein, 13.7% fat, 64.3% total carbohydrate, 32.9 g fiber, 9.3 g ash, 630
  7183. mg Ca, and 80 mg P per 100 Sunflower oil has a high concentration of linoleic acid,
  7184. intermediate level of oleic acid, and very low levels of linolenic acid. The saturated acids,
  7185. palmitic and stearic, rarely exceed 12%, and the minor acids, lauric, arachidic, behenic,
  7186. lignoceric, eicosenoic, etc. rarely add up to as much as 2%. Tocopherol, or vitamin E, is
  7187. an important vitamin and natural antioxidant. Sunflower oil is somewhat unique in that the
  7188. alpha form predominates, with 608, 17, and 11 mg/kg of alpha, beta, and gamma, compared
  7189. with 116, 34, and 737, respectively, for soybean oil.^^
  7190. Description — Variable, erect, often unbranched, fast-growing, annual herb; stems 0.7
  7191. to 3.5 m tall, hirsute. Leaves alternate, ovate, long-petioled, lamina with 3 main veins, 10
  7192. to 30 cm long, 5 to 20 cm wide, apex acute or acuminate, lower leaves opposite and cordate.
  7193. Flowering head terminal on main stem, 10 to 40 cm in diameter, rotating to face the sun,
  7194. sometimes drooping, heads on lateral branches smaller; outer ray flowers neuter with yellow
  7195. ligulate corolla, disc florets numerous, spirally arranged, perfect; ovary inferior with single
  7196. basal ovule. Achenes obovoid, compressed, slightly 4-angled, variable in size and color,
  7197. seldom less than 1 cm long, usually from 1 to 1.5 cm long, full-colored or striped. Taproot
  7198. strong, penetrating to depth of 3 m and with large lateral spread of surface roots. Flowers
  7199. late summer and fall; fruits fall.^^^
  7200. Germplasm — Reported from the North American (and secondarily, the Eurosiberian)
  7201. Center of Diversity, sunflower, or cvs thereof, is reported to tolerate disease, drought, frost,
  7202. fungi, high pH, laterite, limestone, low pH, mycobacteria, photo-period, poor soil, rust,
  7203. salt, sand, smog, virus, weeds, and waterlogging.®^ Botanically, the sunflower is treated as
  7204. the following subspecies: ssp. lenticularis is the wild sunflower; ssp. annuus is the weedy
  7205. wild sunflower; and ssp. macrocarpus is cultivated for edible seeds. Cultivars are divided
  7206. into several types: Giant types: 1.8 to 4.2 m tall, late maturing, heads 30 to 50 cm diameter,
  7207. seeds laige, white or gray, or with black stripes; oil content rather low; ex. ‘Mammoth
  7208. Russian’. Semi-dwarf types: 1.3 to 1.8 m tall, early maturing, heads 17 to 23 cm diameter,
  7209. seeds smaller, black, gray or striped; oil content higher; ex., ‘Pole Star’ and ‘Jupiter’. Dwarf
  7210. types: 0.6 to 1.4 m tall, early maturing, heads 14 to 16 cm diameter, seeds small, oil content
  7211. highest; ex., ‘Advance’ and ‘Sunset’. Gene centers are in the Americas, with genuine
  7212. resources for resistance in southern U.S. and Mexico. Two types of male sterility are known.
  7213. Although “ sunchoke” is the name given to the hybrid with the Jerusalem artichoke, much
  7214. of what is sold as sunchoke in the U.S. is, in fact, straight Jerusalem artichoke. (2n =
  7215. 3 4 )82,278
  7216. Distribution — Native to western North America, sunflower is one of a few crops to
  7217. have evolved within the present confines of the U.S. Early introduced to Europe and Russia,
  7218. the species has now spread to countries both tropical and temperate.
  7219. 170 Handbook of Nuts
  7220. Ecology — Sunflowers are grown from the Equator to 55°N Lat. In the tropics, they
  7221. grow better at medium to high elevations, but tolerate the drier lowlands. They thrive
  7222. wherever good crops of com are grown. Young plants withstand mild freezing. Plants are
  7223. intolerant of shade. As sunflowers have highly efficient root systems, they can be grown in
  7224. areas which are too dry for many crops. Plants are quite drought-resistant except during
  7225. flowering. In South Africa, reasonable yields have been obtained with 25 cm of rainfall by
  7226. dwarf CVS. Giant types require more moist conditions. Crops may be grown on a wide range
  7227. of soils, including poor soils, provided they are deep and well-drained. Plants are intolerant
  7228. of acid or waterlogged soils. Ranging from Boreal Moist through Tropical Thom to Wet
  7229. Forest Life Zones, sunflower tolerates annual precipitation of 2 to 40 dm (mean of 195 cases
  7230. = 11.4), annual temperature of 6 to 28°C (mean of 194 cases = 19.6), and pH of 4.5 to
  7231. 8.7 (mean of 121 cases = 6.6)®^’^^*
  7232. Cultivation — Seed, harvested at 12% moisture content and stored, will retain viability
  7233. for several years. Sunflower production may be adapted to mechanized or unmechanized
  7234. societies. Propagation is always by seed. Plant with com or beet planter, 2.5 to 7.5 cm
  7235. deep, spaced 0.2 m apart in 0.6 to 0.9 m rows; seed rate of 5.6 kg/ha, giving about 62,500
  7236. plants per ha. May be planted earlier in spring than com, since plants are more tolerant to
  7237. frost. Early weed control is an important factor in yield, so cultivate lightly and early.
  7238. Sunflowers respond well to a balanced fertilizer based on soil test; usually a 1-2-3 NPK
  7239. ratio is best, with a need for boron and other trace elements on lighter soils. Application of
  7240. foliar fertilizers of liquid NPK on plants increases yield 62% with one application and 97%
  7241. with two applications. Sunflowers should not occur in rotation more than once in every 4
  7242. years, and should not be in rotations with potatoes.
  7243. Harvesting — Crop matures about 4 months from sowing; some Russian cvs mature in
  7244. 70 days. Harvest when involucral bracts turn yellow and seeds become loose, but before
  7245. shedding begins. Harvesting methods are similar to those of com: heads are gathered, dried,
  7246. and threshed. For fodder or silage, crop is harvested at the flowering stage. Seed oil is either
  7247. cold- or hot-pressed. Cold-pressed oil is usually pale-yellow, with a mild taste and pleasant
  7248. odor, much esteemed as a salad and cooking oil, especially for butter substitutes. Hot-pressed
  7249. oil is reddish-yellow and is used for technical purposes and as a burning oil. With modem
  7250. methods, hot-pressed oil may be refined for edible purposes.
  7251. Yields and economics — Average yields range from 900 to 1,575 kg/ha of seed; however,
  7252. yields of over 3,375 kg/ha have been reported. Heads may contain 1,000 to 4,000 florets,
  7253. with the potential of as many seeds. Yields from dried seeds are 40% oil, 35% protein meal,
  7254. and 20 to 25% hulls. In 1979, the world low production yield was 308 kg/ha in Algeria,
  7255. the international production yield was 1,266 kg/ha, and the world high production yield was
  7256. 2,420 kg/ha in A ustria.W ith DM yields ranging from 4 to 9 MT/ha (in 3 months) and
  7257. seed yields ranging from 300 to more than 3,000 kg/ha, a straw factor of 3 seems appropriate.
  7258. With an average yield of ca. 1,500 kg/ha (North Dakota), a hectare would yield nearly 225
  7259. gallons of oil, 75% of which could be extracted on the farm. Twelve to 15 gallons are
  7260. required to raise a hectare; hence the fuel from one hectare could produce 8 to 11 hectares
  7261. of crop. In the U.S., the highest average commercial yields occurred in North Dakota and
  7262. Minnesota, which averaged 1,170 and 1,267 kg/ha respectively, compared with 1,019 kg/ha
  7263. for Texas. Pryde and Doty^^® suggest average oil yields of 589 kg/ha from 1,469 kg/ha seed.
  7264. Telek and Martin^^^ suggest oil yields of 450 kg/ha. Experimentally, at Davis, California,
  7265. April plantings yielded 2,592 to 3,181 kg/ha (45.5 to 48.5% oil). May plantings, 2,676 to
  7266. 3,161 kg/ha (45.5 to 48.4% oil), June plantings 956 to 2,643 kg/ha (40.8 to 43.7% oil),
  7267. and July plantings 702 to 2,447 kg/ha (40.2 to 42.6% oil). The lowest oil yield was 282
  7268. kg/ha, the highest, 1,543 kg/ha.^^ In India, rain-fed sunflower gave seed yields of 1,120
  7269. kg/ha in pure stands, 1,050 to 1,070 intercropped with cowpea, and 1,010 to 1,070 kg/ha
  7270. intercropped with peanuts.Volunteer sunflowers themselves may constitute a weed prob­
  7271. 171
  7272. lem, as few as 3/m^ reducing wheat yields by 16%, 23/m^ reducing yields by 35%. World
  7273. production of sunflower seed in 1970 was 9.6 million MT, grown on 8.2 million ha, yielding
  7274. 1,170 kg/ha. Largest producers are the USSR, Rumania, Bulgaria, Argentina, Yugoslavia,
  7275. Turkey, and South Africa. In the tropics, Tanzania produces 10,000 to 20,000 MT per year.
  7276. Cultivars grown in Minnesota contain higher percentages of the desirable linoleic acid than
  7277. same cultivars in other states. Major importers of sunflower seed were Italy, West Germany,
  7278. and Japan. Oil prices in the U.S. in 1970 were $331/ton. Production costs in fully mechanized
  7279. production in the U.S. is about SlOO/ha with fertilizer, $87 without; hand labor figured at
  7280. $2/hr. By 1982, sunflower oil was trading at $.59/kg compared to $.50 to .54 for coconut,
  7281. $.53 for com oil, $.48 for cottonseed, $.59 for linseed, and $.42 for soybean.
  7282. Energy — According to the USD A phytomass files, annual productivity ranges from
  7283. 3 to 15 MT/ha. North Dakota researchers are testing a small auger press, operated on the
  7284. farm, that can extract ca.75 to 80% of the oil in sunflower seeds, or ca. 55 gallons (barely
  7285. more than one 42-gallon barrel) from an average yield of 1,400 Ib/acre. It takes one acre’s
  7286. production to farm and produce 8 to 11 more acres, our usual 10:1 ratio. In North Carolina,
  7287. Harwoodconcluded that sunflower seed was most promising for on-farm production of
  7288. vegetable oil fuels; soybeans, peanuts, and cottonseed considered not well-suited. Sunflowers
  7289. yield ca. 2.5 MT/ha, with ca. 40% oil, indicating a potential of 250 gallons of oil per ha
  7290. if seed were processed in a mill. On-farm processing would produce closer to 200 gallons
  7291. (ca. 5 barrels) at a cost of more than $2.00 per gallon. Production costs are less than one
  7292. barrel per hectare. Harwood puts the energetic returns at greater than 5:1 compared to 3:1
  7293. for peanuts, 2:1 for soybeans, and 1:1 for cottonseed. Pratt et al.^^^ report an endurance test
  7294. involving engines fueled with various mixtures of sunflower oil (25 to 50%) with diesel oil
  7295. (75 to 50%). Two motors needed repair, ten were operating with no apparent difficulties,
  7296. of which two were said to be doing even better. Ohio yields on poor soils (Wood County)
  7297. were only 260 Ib/acre (yielding 9.3 gallons of screw press oil); and on good soils (Champaign
  7298. County), 1,680 Ib/acre (yielding 69.1 gallons oil) cropped after wheat in a double-cropping
  7299. system. Sunflower oil should be dewaxed before being used as a diesel substitute. In
  7300. Australia, sunflower was first commercially planted in 1967, has great potential for expansion
  7301. as a rainfed energy crop. Little water is required for processing oilseeds (unlike ethanol),
  7302. and the seed coat can provide sufficient energy for heat and steam for oil extraction.
  7303. Australians figure a net energy gain of 2 € for every 3 € produced. A hundred kg of dry
  7304. seed will yield about 40 kg oil, 15 to 25 kg hulls, and 40 kg proteinaceous meal. Hulls
  7305. have been pressed into fuel “ logs” . Threshed heads are ground and fed to cattle elsewhere.
  7306. The heads are rich in pectin. Studies have shown that sunflower yields 33.1 MT silage per
  7307. ha, compared to com at 19.26 MT/ha. Annual DM productivity ranges from 3 to 15 MT/ha.
  7308. DM yields averaged closer to 5 MT spaced at 43,000 plants per ha, 8 MT spaced at 172,000
  7309. plants per ha near Clarksville, Maryland. In these experiments, the sunflower followed
  7310. barley.Jake Page’s discussion^"^^ is picturesque: “ But I happen to like sunflow­
  7311. ers . . . They can be grown almost anywhere in the country and you can grow between 500
  7312. and 3,000 pounds of sunflower seeds on an American acre in three months if you’re clever.
  7313. The soil can be lousy, the rainfall terrible . . . if the average American com farmer put 10
  7314. percent of his land into sunflowers, he could become self-sufficient in fuel. It seems that
  7315. using vegetable oil may be more efficient, in a net energy sense, than growing plants for
  7316. conversion into alcohol (another nice alternative fuel) because the processing for alcohol is
  7317. more elaborate, expensive, and energy intensive.”
  7318. Biotic factors — In the USDA’s Agriculture Re sear a new pest of sunflower is
  7319. reported. A scarab beetle {Phyllophaga lancolata) devastated more than 400 ha near Lehman,
  7320. Texas. Eucosma womonana, is also a newly reported sunflower pest in Texas. Seed is set
  7321. low when selfed, as most cvs are self-incompatible. Florets on one head open over 5 to 6
  7322. days and may wait 2 weeks for fertilization. Cross-pollination may be facilitated by 2 to 3
  7323. 172 Handbook of Nuts
  7324. hives of honeybees per ha, the hives spaced in rows 300 to 400 m apart, as they need to
  7325. be distributed to give coverage to all blooms. Gophers dig up seeds; birds eat tremendous
  7326. amounts of seeds from the maturing crop. Insects can be destructive to seeds not stored
  7327. properly. The following fungi are known to cause diseases in sunflowers: Albugo trago-
  7328. pogonis, Alternarla tenuis, Alternarla zinniae, Armillaria mellea, Ascochyta helianthi, Bo­
  7329. trytis cinerea, Cercospora bidentis, Cercospora helianthi, Cercospora helianthicola,
  7330. Cercospora pachypus, Corticium rolfsii, Cystopus cubicus, Cystopus tragopogonis, Dia-
  7331. porthe arctii, Diplodina helianthi, Entyloma polysporum, Erysiphe chicoracearum, Fusar­
  7332. ium acuminatum, Fusarium conglutinans, Fusarium culmorum, Fusarium equiseti, Fusarium
  7333. javanicum, Fusarium oxysporum, Fusarium sambucinum, Fusarium scirpi, Fusarium sem-
  7334. itecum, Fusarium solani, Helminthosporium helianthi, Leptosphaeria helianthi, Leveillula
  7335. compositarum, Leveillula taurica, Macrophomina phaseoli, Oidium helianthi, Ophiobolus
  7336. helianthi, Phialea cynthoides, Phoma olerácea, Phymatotrichum omnivorum, Plasmopara
  7337. halstedii, Puccinia helianthi, Pythium debaryanum, Pythium irregulare, Phythium splen-
  7338. dens, Pythium ultimum, Rhabdospora helianthicola, Rhizoctonia rocorum, Rhizoctonia so­
  7339. lani, Rhizoctonia bataticola, Rhizopus nodosus, Sclerotinia fuckeliana, Sclerotinia libertiana,
  7340. Sclerotinia minor, Sclerotinia sclerotiorum, Sclerotium rolfsii, Septoria helianthi, Sphaer-
  7341. othecafulginea, Sphaerotheca humuli, Uromycesjunci, Verticillium albo-atrum, Verticillium
  7342. dahliae. Bacteria reported as infecting sunflowers include: Agrobacterium tumefaciens. Bac­
  7343. terium melleum, Erwinia aroides. Pseudomonas cichorii. Pseudomonas helianthi, and Pseu­
  7344. domonas solanacearum. Virus diseases reported from sunflowers are Apple mosaic, Argentine
  7345. sunflower. Aster yellows, Brazilian tobacco streak. Cucumber mosaic. Tomato spotted wilt.
  7346. Peach ringsport. Peach yellow-bud mosaic. Pelargonium leaf-curl. Tobacco necrosis. To­
  7347. bacco ringspot, and Yellows. Sunflowers are parasitized by the following flowering plants:
  7348. Cuscuta pentagona. Cuscuta arvensis, Orobanche aegyptiaca, Orobanche cumana. Oro­
  7349. banche muteli. Orobanche ramosa. Striga hermonthica. Striga asiatica. Striga lutea. Striga
  7350. senegalensis. Sunflowers are attacked by many nematodes: Anguina balsamophila, Aphe-
  7351. lenchoides ritzemabosi, Ditylenchus destructor, Ditylenchus dipsaci, Helicotylenchus cav-
  7352. enessi, Helicotylenchus microcephalus, Helicotylenchus microlobus, Helicotylenchus
  7353. pesudorobustus, Heterodera schachtii, Longidorus maximus, Meloidognye arenaria, Me-
  7354. loidogyne hap la, Meloidogyne incognita acrita, Meloidogyne javanica, Meloidogyne tha-
  7355. mesi, Paratylenchus minutus, Pratylenchus penetrans, Rotylenchulus reniformis, Scutellonema
  7356. clathricaudatum, Trichodorus christiei, dXiá Xiphinema ifacolum^'^^^'^^^
  7357. 173
  7358. HYPHAENE THEBAICA (L.) Mart. (ARECACEAE) Doum Palm
  7359. U ses — Unripe kernels are edible, but the ripe kernels are hard as a marble, and even
  7360. strung together to make a weapon. In Bomu Africa, the nuts are pounded to make a meal
  7361. sold instead of millet. The rind of the fruits is dry and sweet, edible in some, inedible in
  7362. others. The part of the germinating seedling just below ground is edible, as is the cabbage
  7363. or palm heart. Trunks yield a sago starch. Osbom^'*^ relates how people in Kharga gnaw on
  7364. the glossy brown fruits. Though fibrous and tough, the fruits have a pleasant flavor suggestive
  7365. of carob or ginger bread. Beverages are made from the fruits. In parts of the Sahara desert,
  7366. the spongy internal parts of the fruit are an important dietary element. Mixed with date
  7367. infusion, the doum nut constitutes a cooling drink much valued medicinally. Stalks of the
  7368. cotyledons are eaten. Inner leaves are valued for forage, while the outer may be used for
  7369. fuel. Fronds, usually unexpanded, used in plaited strips to make mats, hats, baskets, fans,
  7370. bowls, and ropes. A fiber obtained from the root is used for snares and fish nets. Fronds
  7371. of the palm are used for fuel. The hard fruit, used as vegetable ivory, is also the source of
  7372. a black dye. Stems are used in house construction. Ashes are used as
  7373. F olk m ed icin e — According to HartwelF^^ the fruits are used in folk remedies for
  7374. indurations of the limbs. The thick root is used in African folk remedies for hematuria, in
  7375. some cases due to bilharzia. According to Boulos,"*^ the resin from the tree, diaphoretic and
  7376. diuretic, is recommended both for tapeworm and for the bites of poisonous animals. The
  7377. fruits are astringent and anthelmintic. Breads made from the fruit have been recommended
  7378. in fluxes. The beverage made from the fruits is recommended, at least around Kharga, for
  7379. 174 Handbook of Nuts
  7380. strenghtening the heart and for gastroenteritis. Mixed with date infusion, the doum is rec­
  7381. ommended for febrile conditions on the Sahara.
  7382. Chemistry — Per 100 g, the dried nut contains 395 calories, 5.7 to 6.2 g H2O, 2.4 to
  7383. 5.0 g protein, 4.9 to 8.0 g fat, 6.5 to 11.0 g fiber, 1.9 to 5.4 g ash, 121 to 168 mg Ca,
  7384. and 170 to 281 mg P. GohP*® reports that whole nuts of the doum palm (91.4% DM) contain
  7385. (ZMB): 4.5% crude protein, 24.7% crude fiber, 3.6% ash, 2.6% fat, and 64.6% nitrogen-
  7386. free extract. Ground kernels (90.4% DM) from Somalia contain 9.0% CP, 7.3% CF, 2.8%
  7387. ash, 7.0% EE, and 73.9% NFE. Per 100 g, the seed (ZMB) contains 420 calories, 4.1 g
  7388. protein, 6.8 g fat, 85.7 g total carbohydrate, 10.0 g fiber, 3.3 g ash, 153 mg Ca, and 240
  7389. mg P.^^ According to Watt and Breyer-Brandwijk,^^^ the nut contains 50% mannitol, which
  7390. when hydrolyzed with dilute acid furnishes 56 to 58% reducing sugars, 80% of which is
  7391. mannose.
  7392. Description — Palm to 10 m tall, the trunk branching dichotomously 1 to 2 or more
  7393. times. Leaves large, flabellate, with linear-lanceolate lobes, and numerous upward-curved
  7394. hooks on petioles. Flowers small and whitish, monoecious, the male spadices surrounded
  7395. by pointed male spathe-bracts, branches of female spadix being stouter. Fruits 5 x 5 cm,
  7396. yellowish-brown, globose-guadrangular, with strong fiber surrounding the hard seeds.
  7397. Germplasm — Native to the African and Middle Eastern Centers of Diversity, the doum
  7398. palm is said to tolerate drought and fire. The closely related H . indica Becc., often confused
  7399. with H. th ebaica, is probably the only germplasm native to the Middle East.
  7400. Distribution — Sometimes gregarious, forming dense stands along rivers in hot dry
  7401. valleys of tropical Africa, the Middle East, and western India, especially common in the
  7402. coastal regions of East Africa and in Eritrea.
  7403. Ecology — Flourishes in rich sandy loam. Growth, flowering, and fruiting are luxuriant
  7404. in moist places, but in dry places the fruits become small. With no hard data at hand, I
  7405. estimate that the palm is most at home in Subtropical to Tropical Thom to Moist Forest
  7406. Life Zones, tolerating even drier climates along water-courses. Johnson^^^ calls it a promising
  7407. desert palm for deserts and semideserts up to 600 m. Plants wind-polinated. Fmits dissem­
  7408. inated by elephants, baboons, and donkeys, all of which may eat the fmits. Young leaves
  7409. are eaten by camels.
  7410. Cultivation — Cultivated as an ornamental curio, e.g., in India, the palm can be prop­
  7411. agated by seed or off-shoots.^®
  7412. Harvesting — Plant parts harvested as needed.
  7413. Yields and economics — No data available.
  7414. Energy — Around Bomu, Africa, the leaves are used as fuel, especially in boiling down
  7415. salt. The sap can be used for alcohol production. Since this is a very destmctive process,
  7416. it has been outlawed in Eritrea and Kenya. The pod yields an active charcoal with high
  7417. decolorizing and absorbing power.
  7418. Biotic factors — Nuts and the beads made from them may be attacked by the scolytid
  7419. beetle, C occotrypes dactyliperda Fabr. Preventive measures are discussed in The W ealth o f
  7420. India
  7421. 175
  7422. INOCARPUS EDULIS Forst. (FABACEAE) — Tahiti Chestnut, Otaheite Chestnut, Poly­
  7423. nesia Chestnut
  7424. Syn: Inocarpus fagiferus (P ark in son ) F osberg?
  7425. U ses — Nuts said to be edible after processing. Menninger^^ says what I have long
  7426. observed: almost any nut which is difficult to describe is said to taste like a chestnut. So
  7427. with this one. Seeds are sometimes allowed to ferment in pits in the ground. Natives of
  7428. Santa Cruz roast the fruits or slowly dry the unhusked fruit over a fire.^^^ More often they
  7429. are boiled or roasted in ashes. Some Samoans make purees from the cooked seeds. Said to
  7430. be the principle food of the mountaineers of Fiji. Cattle are said to eat the leaves.^^ Seeds
  7431. are strung as beads.Wood used in furniture.
  7432. F olk m ed icin e — Reported to be antidotal to fish poisoning, and useful for blood-shot
  7433. eyes, diarrhea, and hemorrhage.^* Mixed with the fern Drynaria to treat virulent gonorrhea
  7434. in Indonesia. Astringent bark is used for intestinal complaints in Malaya.Seed is boiled
  7435. in coconut milk for parturitional uterine hemorrhage.
  7436. C h em istry — Per 100 g, the seed (ZMB) is reported to contain 426 calories, 6.7 g protein,
  7437. 7.9 g fat, 82.8 g total carbohydrate, 4.4 g fiber, 2.6 g ash, 0.46 mg thiamine, and 4 mg
  7438. ascorbic acid.®^ BurkilP^ reports the seeds (ZMB) analyze 7% fat, 10% albumens, 2.5%
  7439. ash, and 80% non-nitrogenous substances, mostly starch.
  7440. D escrip tion — Tree to 25 m tall, handsome; trunks usually deeply furrowed, commonly
  7441. fluted or buttressed; crown dense. Leaves simple, entire, large, oblong-lanceolate, short-
  7442. petioled, pinnately nerved, leathery; stipules very small, soon caducous. Flowers white,
  7443. cream, or yellow, fragrant, in axillary, simple or branched spikes resembling catkins when
  7444. young; bracts small, connate with rachis, somewhat pouched; bracteoles small; calyx tubular-
  7445. campanulate, bilabiate, membranous, irregularly 2- to 5-toothed; petals 4 to 6, usually 5,
  7446. subequal, imbricate in bud, linear-lanceolate, upper part crinkled; stamens twice the number
  7447. of petals, alternately long and short, the longer ones briefly joined to the petals; anthers
  7448. small, uniform, ovary subsessile or short-stalked, 1-, seldom 2-ovuled; style very short;
  7449. stigma oblique. Pod short-stalked, oblique-obovate, flattened, 2-valved, subdrupaceous,
  7450. leathery, indéhiscent, 1-seeded.®
  7451. 176 Handbook of Nuts
  7452. Germplasm — Reported from the Australian and Polynesian Centers of Diversity, the
  7453. Tahiti chestnut, or cvs thereof, is reported to tolerate swamps, waterlogging, and perhaps
  7454. some salt. (2n = 20.)^’^^°
  7455. Distribution — Native of eastern Malaysia and the Pacific, cultivated in the Malay
  7456. Peninsula. Cultivated successfully in Peradeniya and Singapore. Allen and Allen describe
  7457. it as ubiquitous throughout the South Pacific Islands.^
  7458. Ecology — Estimated to range from Subtropical Dry to Wet to Tropical Dry through
  7459. Moist Forest Life Zones, Tahiti chestnut is estimated to tolerate annual precipitation of 10
  7460. to 50 dm, annual temperature of 22 to 28°C, and pH of 6.0 to 8.0. Rosengarten says, “ It
  7461. prefers a hot, humid, tropical climate at low altitude, with well-distributed rainfall, and
  7462. thrives along the banks of streams and even in swamps.” Often a second-story component
  7463. of low-lying forest.
  7464. Cultivation — Rarely cultivated. In Santa Cruz, the seeds are sprouted in the shade and
  7465. transplanted. It is more gathered than cultivated.
  7466. Harvesting — Fruits start bearing at about age 8. In Santa Cruz, Solomon Islands, there
  7467. are two main harvests per year, and nuts are stored with the fibrous pods intact after cooking
  7468. in large earth ovens.
  7469. Yields and Economics — No data available.
  7470. Energy — No data available.
  7471. Biotic factors — Nitrogen-fixing nodules were not detected in Philippine specimens.^
  7472. 177
  7473. JATROPHA CURCAS L. (EUPHORBIACEAE) — Physic Nut, Purging Nut
  7474. Uses — According to Ochse,^^^ “ the young leaves may be safely eaten, steamed or
  7475. stewed.” They are favored for cooking with goat meat, said to counteract the peculiar smell.
  7476. Though purgative, the nuts are sometimes roasted and dangerously eaten. In India, pounded
  7477. leaves are applied near horses’ eyes to repel flies. The oil has been used for illumination,
  7478. soap, candles, adulteration of olive oil, and making Turkey red oil. Nuts can be strung on
  7479. grass and burned like candlenuts.^^^ Mexicans grow the shrub as a host for the lac insect.
  7480. Ashes of the burned root are used as a salt substitute.A gaceta, Dumag, and Batolos^
  7481. conclude that it has strong molluscicidal activity. Duke and Wain^^ list it for homicide,
  7482. piscicide, and raticide as well. The latex was strongly inhibitory to watermelon mosaic
  7483. virus.Bark used as a fish poison.In South Sudan, the seed as well as the fruit is used
  7484. as a contraceptive.^®^ Sap stains linen and can be used for marking.Little, Woodbury,
  7485. and Wadsworth list the species as a honey plant.
  7486. Folk medicine — According to Harwell,the extracts are used in folk remedies for
  7487. cancer. Reported to be abortifacient, anodyne, antiseptic, cicatrizant, depurative, diuretic,
  7488. emetic, hemostat, lactagogue, narcotic, purgative, rubefacient, styptic, vermifuge, and vul­
  7489. nerary, physic nut is a folk remedy for alopecia, anasarca, ascites, bums, carbuncles,
  7490. convulsions, cough, dermatitis, diarrhea, dropsy, dysentery, dyspepsia, eczema, erysipelas,
  7491. fever, gonorrhea, hernia, incontinence, inflammation, jaundice, neuralgia, paralysis, par­
  7492. turition, pleurisy, pneumonia, rash, rheumatism, scabies, sciatica, sores, stomachache, sy­
  7493. philis, tetanus, thmsh, tumors, ulcers, uterosis, whitlows, yaws, and yellow fever.
  7494. Latex is applied topically to bee and wasp stings.Mauritians massage ascitic limbs with
  7495. 178 Handbook of Nuts
  7496. the oil. Cameroon natives apply the leaf decoction in arthritis.Colombians drink the leaf
  7497. decoction for venereal disease.Bahamians drink the decoction for heartburn. Costa Ricans
  7498. poultice leaves onto erysipelas and splenosis. Guatemalans place heated leaves on the breast
  7499. as a lactagogue. Cubans apply the latex to toothache. Colombians and Costa Ricans apply
  7500. the latex to bums, hemorrhoids, ringworm, and ulcers. Barbadians use the leaf tea for
  7501. marasmus, Panamanians for jaundice. Venezuelans take the root decoction for dysentery.
  7502. Seeds are used also for dropsy, gout, paralysis, and skin ailments.Leaves are regarded
  7503. as antiparasitic, applied to scabies; rubefacient for paralysis, rheumatism, also applied to
  7504. hard tumors.Latex used to dress sores and ulcers and inflamed tongues.Seed is viewed
  7505. as aperient; the seed oil emetic, laxative, purgative, for skin ailments. Root is used in
  7506. decoction as a mouthwash for bleeding gums and toothache. Otherwise used for eczema,
  7507. ringworm, and scabies.I received a letter from the Medical Research Center of the
  7508. University of the West Indies shortly after the death of Jamacian singer Robert Morley:
  7509. I just want you to know that this is not because of Bob Morley’s illness, why I am revealing
  7510. this . . . my dream was: this old lady came to me in my sleep with a dish in her hands; she
  7511. handed the dish to me filled with some nuts. 1 said to her, “ What were those?” She did not
  7512. answer. I said to her, “ PHYSIC N U T S.” She said to me, “ This is the cure for cancer.”
  7513. I found this Jamaican dream rather interesting. Four antitumor compounds, including
  7514. jatropham and jatrophone, are reported from other species of Jatropha.®^ Homeopathically
  7515. used for cold sweats, colic, collapse, cramps, cyanosis, diarrhea, and leg cramps.
  7516. Chemistry — Per 100 g, the seed is reported to contain 6.6 g H2O, 18.2 g protein, 38.0
  7517. g fat, 33.5 g total carbohydrate, 15.5 g fiber, and 4.5 g ash.®^ Leaves, which show anti­
  7518. leukemic activity, contain alpha-amyrin, beta-sitosterol, stigmasterol, and campesterol, 7-
  7519. keto-beta-sitosterol, stigmast-5-ene-3beta, 7-alpha-diol, and stigmast-5-ene-3beta, 7 beta-
  7520. diol.^^"^ Leaves contain isovitexin and vitexin. From the drug (nut?) saccharose, raffinose,
  7521. stachyose, glucose, fructose, galactose, protein, and an oil, largely of oleic- and linoleic-
  7522. acids.^®^ Poisonous seeds can cause death due to phytotoxin, curcin. Curcasin, arachidic-,
  7523. linoleic-, myristic-, oleic-, palmitic-, and stearic-acids.
  7524. Toxicity — The poisoning is irritant, with acute abdominal pain and nausea about V2
  7525. hour following ingestion. Diarrhea and nausea continue but are not usually serious. Depres­
  7526. sion and collapse may occur, especially in children. Two seeds are strong purgative. Four
  7527. to five seeds are said to have caused death, but the roasted seed is said to be nearly innocuous.
  7528. Bark, fruit, leaf, root, and wood are all reported to contain HCN.^^^ Seeds contain the
  7529. dangerous toxalbumin curcin.®^
  7530. Description — Shrub or tree to 6 m, with spreading branches and stubby twigs, with a
  7531. milky or yellowish rufescent exudate. Leaves deciduous, alternate but apically crowded,
  7532. ovate, acute to acuminate, basally cordate, 3- to 5-lobed in outline, 6 to 40 cm long, 6 to
  7533. 35 cm broad, the petioles 2.5 to 7.5 cm long. Flowers several to many in greenish cymes,
  7534. yellowish, bell-shaped; sepals 5, broadly deltoid. Male flowers many with 10 stamens, 5
  7535. united at the base only, 5 united into a colum. Female flowers borne singly, with elliptic
  7536. 3-celled, triovulate ovary with 3 spreading bifurcate stigmata. Capsules 2.5 to 4 cm long,
  7537. finally drying and splitting into 3 valves, all or two of which commonly have an oblong
  7538. black seed, these ca. 2 x 1
  7539. Germplasm — Reported from the Central and South American Centers of Diversity,
  7540. physic nut, or cvs thereof, is reported to tolerate slope. There is an endemic species in
  7541. Madagascar, J. mahafalensis, with equal energetic promise.
  7542. Distribution — Though native to America, the species is almost pantropical now, widely
  7543. planted as a medicinal plant which soon tends to establish itself. It is listed, e.g., as a weed
  7544. in Brazil, Fiji, Honduras, India, Jamaica, Panama, Puerto Rico, and Salvador.
  7545. Ecology — Ranging from Tropical Very Dry to Moist through Subtropical Thom to Wet
  7546. 179
  7547. Forest Life Zones, physic nut is reported to tolerate annual precipitation of 4.8 to 23.8 dm
  7548. (mean of 60 cases = 14.3) and annual temperature of 18.0 to 28.5°C (mean of 45 cases
  7549. = 25.2).«2
  7550. Cultivation — Grows readily from cuttings or seeds. Cuttings strike root so easily that
  7551. the plant can be used as an energy-producing living fence post.
  7552. Harvesting — For medicinal purposes, the seeds are harvested as needed. For energy
  7553. purposes, seeds might be harvested all at once, the active medicinal compounds might be
  7554. extracted from the seed, before or after the oil, leaving the oil cake for biomass or manure.
  7555. Yields and economics — According to Gaydou et al.,^®^ seed yields approach 6 to 8
  7556. MT/ha with ca. 37% oil. They calculate that such yields could produce the equivalent of
  7557. 2,100 to 2,800 € fuel oil per ha (see table under Energy Section). In Madagascar, they have
  7558. ca. 10,000 ha of purging nut, each producing ca. 2,400 € (or 24 h€) oil per ha for a potential
  7559. production of 240,000 h€.*®'^
  7560. Energy — The clear oil expressed from the seed has been used for illumination and
  7561. lubrication, and more recently has been suggested for energetic purposes, one ton of nuts
  7562. yielding 70 kg refined petroleum, 40 kg “ gasoil leger” (light fuel oil), 40 kg regular fuel
  7563. oil, 34 kg dry tar/pitch/rosin, 270 kg coke-like char, and 200 kg ammoniacal water, natural
  7564. gas, creosote, etc. In their study, Gaydou et al.^®^ compare several possible energy species
  7565. with potential to grow in Malagasy. Oil palm was considered energetically most promising,
  7566. but this species was considered second most promising.
  7567. Crop Fuel Energetic
  7568. production production equivalent
  7569. (MXlia) (eiia) (kwlilia)
  7570. Elaeis guineenis 18—20 3,600-^,000 33,900—37,700
  7571. Jatropha curcas 6—8 2,100—2,800 19,800—26,400
  7572. Aleurites fordii 4—6 1,800—2,700 17,000—25,500
  7573. Saccharum officinarum 35 2,450 16,000
  7574. Ricinus communis 3—5 1,200—2,000 11,300—18,900
  7575. Manihot esculenta 6 1,020 6,600
  7576. Biotic Factors — A griculture H andbook N o. 165 lists the following as affecting Jatropha
  7577. curcas: C litocybe tabescens (root rot), C olletotrichum g loesporioides (leaf spot), and Phak-
  7578. opsora jatro p h ico la (rust)."^
  7579. 180 Handbook of Nuts
  7580. JESSENIA BATAUA (Mart.) Burret. (ARECACEAE) — Seje, Mil Pesos, Jagua, Pataba,
  7581. Pataua
  7582. S yn .: Jessenia polycarpa K arst.
  7583. U ses — Fruits provide an oil with a taste almost identical to that of the olive. “ There is
  7584. no question about pataua oil being an excellent edible oil.” ^^^ Ripe fruits are harvested and
  7585. piled up a day or so to encourage further ripening. They are then steamed in water, and the
  7586. pulp separated from the bony seed with a mortar. Brazilians may simple press out the oil.
  7587. The seeds are also consumed as food, and the milky residue from oil extraction, the “ yucuta’ ’,
  7588. is consumed as a beverage. The oil, used as a cooking or edible oil, is also used in medicine.
  7589. A chocolate-colored chicha is made by mashing the fruit, straining out the fruits, and adding
  7590. sugar. Wood is used for both bows and arrow-points.
  7591. 181
  7592. Table 1
  7593. JE S S E N IA COMPARISON OF OIL OF
  7594. B A T A U A WITH OLIVE OIL
  7595. Jessenia bataua* Olive oil
  7596. Fatty acid samples {%) samples (%
  7597. Palmitic 13.2 ± 2.1 11.2
  7598. 0.6 ± 0.2 1.5
  7599. Palmitoleic
  7600. Stearic 3.6 ± 1.1 2.0
  7601. Oleic 77.7 ± 3.1 76.0
  7602. Linoleic 2.7 ± 1.0 8.5
  7603. 0.6 ± 0.4 0.5
  7604. Linolenic
  7605. Other 1.6 (range 0.2 — 4.6)
  7606. Values given as the mean standard deviation of
  7607. 12 separate samples.
  7608. From Balick, M. J. and Gershoff, S. N ., Econ. Bot.,
  7609. 35, 261, 1981. Copyright 1981, The New York Botan­
  7610. ical Garden. With permission.
  7611. Folk medicine — In the Guahibo area, the oil is used for asthma, cough, tuberculosis,
  7612. and other respiratory problems. Elsewhere it is used for bronchitis, catarrh, consumption,
  7613. flu, leprosy, and parturition.^®’^* At least four scientists have speculated that natives gain
  7614. weight, appear healthier with more endurance, and reported fewer respiratory infections
  7615. during the season of daily consumption of “ mil pesos.” Colombians consider the oil ver­
  7616. mifugal.*®^
  7617. Chemistry — I repeat Balick and Gershoff s^^ useful table (Table 1) comparing the oil
  7618. of bataua with olive oil, because olive oil has recently gotten press as very salubrious. Note
  7619. that the bataua, like the olive, contains about 80% oleic acid, a feature recently praised in
  7620. Lubrizol’s special high-oleic sunflower. Parenthetically, I add that Johnson*^^ reports much
  7621. lower oleic acid values, 0.48 to 40.67%. He puts the entire fruit’s oil content at 7.4%, the
  7622. mesocarp pulp at 18.2%, and the seed at 3%. If Lubrizol’s sunflower is good for the temperate
  7623. zone, this oil should be great for the tropical zone. I also repeat Balick and Gershoff’s^^
  7624. Table 3. The data suggest that, though tryptophan and lysine were the limiting amino acids,
  7625. bataua protein is better than most grain and legume proteins.(see Table 2.) Balick and
  7626. Gershoff’s Table 4^^ compares the “ milk” of the seje with human milk, cowmilk, and
  7627. soybean milk, (see Table 3.)
  7628. Description — Unbranched palm to 15 (to 25) m tall, the mature trunk spineless (when
  7629. young, the trunk is covered with dark brown fibers and spines to 80 cm long). Leaves
  7630. pinnate, arching, 6 to 8 (to 10) m long, the rachis deep, canaliculate, vaginate at the base.
  7631. Leaflets alternate, lanceolate, acute, 40 to 75 mm wide. Spathe ca. 1 m long, woody,
  7632. terminating in an acute process. Spadix with 100 to 225 racemes, flowers cream-colored;
  7633. petals valvate. Panicles may contain 1,000 fruits, each weighing 10 to 15 g. There may be
  7634. two panicles per year. Fruits drupaceous, ellipsoid to ovoid, 2.5 to 4 cm long, deep purple
  7635. when ripe.^^’^®’^^
  7636. Germplasm — Reported from the South American Center of Diversity, mil peso is
  7637. reported to tolerate waterlogging. Although taxonomists have tended to recognize at least
  7638. two species of Jessenia, Balick and Gershoff^ suggest that there is only one. Guajibo Indians
  7639. distinguish a type with whitish mesocarp and another with purplish or pinkish mesocarp.
  7640. Further, they recognize a slender variant with a reddish inner skin tissue.^®
  7641. Distribution — Distributed over much of the northern half of South America, including
  7642. Panama and Trinidad.
  7643. 182 Handbook of Nuts
  7644. Table 2
  7645. AMINO ACID ANALYSIS OF J E S S E N IA B A T A U A
  7646. Mg amino acid per g protein Amino acid Per cent of FAOAVHO
  7647. Amino acid component (mean ± standard deviation)* scoring pattern*’ scoring pattern
  7648. Isoleucine 47 ± 4 40 118
  7649. Leucine 78 ± 4 70 111
  7650. Lysine 53 ± 3 55 96
  7651. Methionine 18 ± 6
  7652. Cystine 26 ± 6
  7653. Methionine ± cystine 44 ± 9 35 126
  7654. 62 ± 3
  7655. Phenylalanine
  7656. Tyrosine 43 ± 5
  7657. 105 ± 7 60 175
  7658. Phenylalanine -f tyrosine
  7659. 69 ± 6 40 173
  7660. Threonine
  7661. 68 ± 4 50 136
  7662. Valine
  7663. Tryptophan 9 ± 1 10 90
  7664. Aspartic acid 122
  7665. Serine 54
  7666. Glutamic acid 96
  7667. Proline 75
  7668. Glycine 69 ± 4
  7669. Alanine 58 ± 4
  7670. Histidine 29 ± 4
  7671. Arginine 56 ± 2
  7672. “ Values represent mean ± standard deviation for 7 separate samples with the exception of tryptophan, for
  7673. which only 3 samples were analyzed.
  7674. ^ FAO/WHO provisional amino acid scoring pattern. The scoring pattern represents an “ ideal protein’’ con­
  7675. taining all the essential amino acids to meet requirements without excess (FAO/WHO, 1973).
  7676. From Balick, M. and Gershoff, S. N ., Econ. Bot., 35, 261, 1981. Copyright 1981, The New York Botanical
  7677. Garden. With permission.
  7678. Table 3
  7679. COMPARISON OF “MILK’’ O F J E S S E N IA B A T A U A AND
  7680. OTHER MILKS
  7681. Approx. % calories from each component
  7682. Jessenia bataua
  7683. milk Human milk* Cow milk* Soybean milk*
  7684. Fat 55.3 45.9 49.8 37.6
  7685. Protein l A 5.6 20.9 37.9
  7686. Carbohydrate 37.3 48.5 29.3 24.5
  7687. * USDA, 1963.
  7688. From Balick, M. J. and Gershoff, S. N ., Econ. Bot., 35, 261, 1981. Copyright 1981,
  7689. The New York Botanical Garden. With permission.
  7690. Ecology — Estimated to range from Tropical Dry (along river courses) to Rain through
  7691. Subtropical Dry to Rain Forest Life Zones, the mil pesos is estimated to tolerate annual
  7692. precipitation of 15 to 100 dm, annual temperature of 21 to 27°C, and pH of 4.5 to 7.5.
  7693. Once said to have formed solid gallery forests, but also occurring in inland forest up to
  7694. 1,000 m.
  7695. 183
  7696. Cultivation — Though not normally cultivated, this palm should be given priority in
  7697. testing for plantation culture. “ It has never been cultivated, the minute amounts of oil that
  7698. have entered local native markets always having been extracted from wild tre e s .S e e d s
  7699. apparently take 20 to 40 days to germinate.
  7700. Harvesting — Trees may not fruit for 10 to 12 years.^^^ Fruits ripen from April to
  7701. November in Colombia, September to January in Brazil. Natives believed it bears heavier
  7702. in alternate years like so many of our native fruits.Too often the trees are felled to obtain
  7703. the fruits. But about two months after felling, the Guajibo also harvest the edible grubs of
  7704. the palm weevil.^^’^®
  7705. Yields and economics — Trees average 14 kg fruit per season.Schultes^^® says the
  7706. fruit clusters may weigh 30 kg yielding 1.5 to 3 kg oil. The high price of the similar olive
  7707. oil would suggest introducing this palm into cultivation. An effort towards this end has
  7708. been initiated by the Centro de Dasarollo Las Gaviotas in the Orinoquia of Colombia.
  7709. PIRB256 calculates that the oil can be produced for about $0.20/kg, 1/8 the cost of olive oil.
  7710. Many Latin Americans, nonetheless, import edible oils. Unfortunately, most of the Brazilian
  7711. stands are remote from Belem where there are large vegetable oil factories. “ The low yield
  7712. of oil, coupled with a lack of machinery adapted to processing this fruit, have resulted in
  7713. very limited production.
  7714. Energy — “lam not terribly optimistic on Jessenia as an oilseed fuel, as the oil is simply
  7715. too valuable to bum. In the world market, it (is) probably four times the price of palm oil,
  7716. and thus would be a waste to put in engines.Still, the Colombian natives extract 3 to 4
  7717. bottles of oil from a raceme.
  7718. Biotic factors — No data available.
  7719. 184 Handbook of Nuts
  7720. JU G LAN S AILANTHIFOLIA Carr. (JUGLANDACEAE) — Heartnut, Japanese or Siebold
  7721. Walnut
  7722. Syn.: Juglans sieboldiana Maxim., Juglans mirabunda Koidz., Juglans lavallei Dode,
  7723. Juglans sachalinensis (Miyabe et Kudo) Komar., Juglans allardiana Dode,
  7724. Juglans coarctata Dode
  7725. Uses — Heartnut is grown primarily for the kernels of the nuts, used in confectioneries
  7726. and pastries. Wood soft, not strong, of little value as lumber.^^® Wood dark-brown, not
  7727. easily cracked or warped, used for gunstocks, cabinet work, and various utensils in Japan.
  7728. Bark and exocarp of fruit used for dying.Good shade tree and often planted as an
  7729. ornamental.
  7730. Folk medicine — Reported to be antitussive and tonic.
  7731. Chemistry — Not data available.
  7732. Description — Tall erect tree, to 20 m tall, often grown as a low, wide-branching tree;
  7733. branches grayish-brown, densely glandular-pubescent when young; bark whitish. Leaves
  7734. large, petiolate, with 9 to 21 leaflets; leaflets ovate-oblong, 8 to 12 cm long, 3 to 4 cm
  7735. wide, abruptly acute to acuminate, appressed-serrulate, minutely stellate-pubescent above
  7736. on both surfaces when young, sessile and obliquely truncate at base; petioles and rachis
  7737. densely glandular. Staminate aments 10 to 30 cm long; pistillate aments 10- to 20-flowered,
  7738. pedunculate, densely brown pubescent with crisped hairs. Nut pubescent, with hard shell,
  7739. broadly ovoid to nearly globose, 2.5 to 3.5 cm long, mucronate, rugose, with raised sutures.
  7740. Very variable. Flowers May; fruits summer to fall.^^^
  7741. Germplasm — Reported from the China-Japan Center of Diversity.Nuts vary consid­
  7742. erably in size and roughness. Best-known varieties of common Siebold walnut are ‘DardinelT
  7743. and ‘English’. Heartnut {Juglans ailanthifolia var. cordiform is [Maxim.] Rehd. [Syn.: J.
  7744. cordiform is Maxim; J. su bcordiform is Dode]) has a cordate or cordate-ovoid, rather de­
  7745. pressed shell, with relatively thin shell, is nearly smooth with a shallow groove on each
  7746. side, and has better shelling quality. ‘Fodermaier’ and ‘Wright’ are the best cvs, although
  7747. a great many selections have been made and named. Most named heartnuts were introduced
  7748. to the U.S. in the 1920s and 1930s. This cv is extensively cultivated in Japan and the U.S.
  7749. Hybrids with butternuts (Butterjap or buttemut-siebold) resemble the Siebold in branching,
  7750. leaves, and long racemes of nuts, but resemble the butternut in shape of nut, tree hardiness,
  7751. and resistance to serious diseases. Leaves larger than in the butternut. In breeding, its high
  7752. resistance to M elanconis fungus is transmitted to its hybrids with butternuts. The small size
  7753. of the nut has led to selections of clones. Siebold walnut is susceptible to butternut curculio
  7754. and to witches’ broom or bunch disease, the cause of which is unknown, but an insect-
  7755. transmitted virus is suspected. Hybrid ‘Grietz’ is better adapted to southern localities than
  7756. butternut; and ‘Helmick’ is hardier and very promising. Some cvs are not hardy as far north
  7757. as New York. Juglans aveliana Dode and J. notha Rehd. are alleged hybrids between J.
  7758. ailanthifolia Carr, and J. regia var. orientis (Dode) Kitam.^^® A number of cvs and hybrids
  7759. of heartnut have been developed which should prove useful for cross-breeding. Vigorous
  7760. hybrids, called “ buartnuts” have been produced by crossing heartnuts and butternuts. These
  7761. hybrids combine the butternut’s desirable kernel flavor and superior climatic adaptability
  7762. with the heartnut’s higher yield and better crackability.^®^ (2n = 32.)
  7763. Distribution — Native to Japan. Introduced to San Jose Valley of California about 1870;
  7764. now grown more extensively in northeastern U.S. and southern Ontario. Not worth planting
  7765. in pecan country, and not valued where Persian walnuts (7. regia) thrive. Unadapted to
  7766. extreme temperatures on Northern Plains and Rocky Mountain regions.
  7767. Ecology — Ranging from Warm Temperate Dry to Moist Forest Life Zones, heartnut is
  7768. reported to tolerate annual precipitation of 5.4 to 12.0 dm (mean of 4 cases = 8.3), annual
  7769. temperature of 14.7 to 25.0°C (mean of 4 cases = 18.1), and pH of 5.5 to 6.8 (mean of
  7770. 185
  7771. 3 cases = 6.4).*^ Thrives on wide range of soils from clay to sand, and even makes rapid
  7772. and luxuriant growth on rather poor soil.^^^ Very common along streams and on wettish
  7773. plains.Bears early, and endures temperatures to — 40°C. However, it is more successfully
  7774. grown in areas from Nova Scotia, through Wisconsin and Iowa to southern Oregon and
  7775. British Columbia and south to Virginia, New Mexico, and northern Arizona.Able to
  7776. withstand winters not too cold for peaches. Grown throughout Atlantic coastal states. Pacific
  7777. northwest, and more protected northern areas.Foliage is sometimes injured and season’s
  7778. crop destroyed by late spring frosts.
  7779. C ultivation — Propagation by grafting, methods being the same as for butternut and
  7780. black walnut. Siebold grafts easily on its own seedlings and on butternut (7. cinered). It
  7781. also grafts easily on black walnut, but does not outgrow the stock. Also propagated by
  7782. layering, by bending low-growing branches to the ground and burying about 10 cm, leaving
  7783. remainder of branch protruding upright. Limb is cut half through on underside close to
  7784. trunk, firmly bound with cord to form a girdle, and treated with tree dressing. Bent-down
  7785. limb should be shaded from trunk to ground to prevent sunscald. Layers require about 2
  7786. years to root. Grafted trees or rooted limbs are planted in the orchard about same distances
  7787. as other walnuts, about 20 m each way.^^*
  7788. H arvestin g — Fruits are borne in long racemes and in good locations, trees produce
  7789. prolifically. Nuts fall to ground in late summer and early fall, and should be harvested by
  7790. picking up the nuts as soon as they fall, to discourage infestation by maggots. Hulls are
  7791. removed and nuts dried for a few days, and then stored as for other walnuts.
  7792. Y ields and econ om ics — Heartnuts yield from 106 to 275 nuts per kg, and crack out
  7793. about one-fourth to one-third kg in kernels.Grown on a noncommercial basis in north­
  7794. eastern U.S. and lower Ontario.
  7795. E n ergy — All walnuts are oilseeds, producing good timber, but their value is greater for
  7796. ends other than energetic ends. Yielding better than butternut, this might conceivably be a
  7797. better energy species.
  7798. B iotic factors — In some parts of New York State, a beetle burrows in the terminal
  7799. shoot. Because of Siebold walnut and heartnut’s high resistance to M elanconis fungus, it is
  7800. used for hybridizing with butternut, to which it transmits its resistance.Nearly decimated
  7801. in the U.S. in the early 20th century by walnut bunch disease.The A griculture H andbook
  7802. 165"^ reports the following as affecting heartnut: M elanconis ju glan dis (canker, dieback),
  7803. M eloidogyne spp. (root knot nematodes), X anthom onas ju glan dis (bacterial blight). Also
  7804. listed are brooming disease (virus), rosette (physiogenic, (?) zinc deficiency), and witches’
  7805. broom (cause unknown).
  7806. 186 Handbook of Nuts
  7807. JU G LA N S CINEREA L. (JUGLANDACEAE) — Butternut, White Walnut, Oil Nut
  7808. Uses — Butternut grown primarily for its nuts, used fresh, roasted, or salted, in confec­
  7809. tioneries, pastries, and for flavoring. Sugar may be made from the sap. Green husks of fruit
  7810. are used to dye cloth, giving it a yellow-to-orange color.Bark used by pioneers to make
  7811. a brown dye.^^ Narragansett Indians called the butternut ‘wussoquat’ and used the nuts to
  7812. thicken their pottage.Amerindians ate butternuts raw, cooked, or ground into a meal for
  7813. baking in cakes. Iroquois used seed oil for cooking and as a hair dressing. Nuts were
  7814. combined with maple sugar in New England to make maple-butternut candy.The early
  7815. settlers in New England found they could store the nuts for years as insurance against
  7816. starvation. The wood is coarse-grained, light-brown, turning darker upon exposure, used
  7817. for boat construction, boxes, buildings that come into contact with the ground, cabinet work,
  7818. carving, crates, fence posts, furniture, interior finishing of houses, and mill work. Used to
  7819. make some propellers for early windmills.
  7820. Folk medicine — According to Hartwell,pills made from the bark and poultices made
  7821. from the shucks are said to be folk remedies for cancer. Reported to be alterative, cathartic,
  7822. laxative, stimulant, tonic, and vermifuge, butternut is a folk remedy for cancer, dysentery,
  7823. epithelioma, liver ailments, mycosis, tapeworms, tumors, and warts.Butternut bark (the
  7824. inner bark of the root) is used for fevers and as a mild cathartic.Grieve**^ reports the
  7825. inner bark of the root, collected in May or June, is the best for medicinal use. Has been
  7826. recommended for syphilis and old ulcers; said to be rubefacient when applied to the skin.
  7827. Chemistry — Per 100 g, the seed (ZMB) is reported to contain 654 calories, 24.6 g
  7828. protein, 63.6 g fat, 8.7 g total carbohydrate, 3.0 g ash, and 7.1 mg Fe.^^ Smith^*® reports
  7829. the butternut to be 86.40% refuse, 4.5% water, 27.9% protein, 61.2% fat, 3.4% total
  7830. carbohydrates, 3.0% ash, and 3,370 calories per pound. Butternut bark (the inner bark of
  7831. the root) contains resinoid juglandin, juglone, juglandic acid, and an essential oil.^^® Roots
  7832. give off a toxin that poisons many other plants in the root area.^^^
  7833. Description — Tree to 35 m, with straight trunk 0.6 to 1 m in diameter, round-topped;
  7834. bark smooth, light-gray on young branches, becoming light-brown and deeply fissured, to
  7835. 2.5 cm thick; winter-buds terminal, 1.3 to 2 cm long, flattened, outer scales covered with
  7836. pale pubescence; axillary buds dark-brown with rusty pubescence, ovoid, flattened, rounded
  7837. at apex, 0.3 cm long. Leaves 35 to 75 cm long, with stout pubescent petioles, compound
  7838. with 11 to 17 oblong-lanceolate leaflets, 5 to 7.5 cm long, to 5 cm wide, finely serrate,
  7839. glandular, sticky, yellow-green and rough above, pale pubescent beneath; leaves turning
  7840. yellow or brown before falling in fall; hairy fringe present above leaf-scars. Flowers dioe­
  7841. cious, staminate flowers in thick aments to 1.2 to 5 cm long, calyx 6-lobed, light-yellow
  7842. to green, puberulent on outer surface; bract rusty-pubescent, acute at apex, stamens 8 to 12
  7843. with nearly sessile dark-brown anthers, slightly lobed connectives; pistillate flowers in 6-
  7844. to 8-flowered spikes, constricted above the middle, coated with sticky glandular hairs,
  7845. stigmas red, about 1.3 cm long. Fruits in drooping clusters of 3 to 5, obscurely 2- or 4-
  7846. ridged, ovoid-oblong, covered with rusty, clammy hairs, 3 to 6 cm long with thick husk;
  7847. nut elongated, ovoid, deeply ridged with 4 prominent and 4 less-prominent ribs, light-brown,
  7848. 2-celled at base, 1-celled above the middle; kernel white to cream, sweet, very oily, soon
  7849. becoming rancid. Flowers April to June; fruits fall.^^^
  7850. Germplasm — Reported from the North America Center of Diversity, butternut, or cvs
  7851. thereof, is reported to tolerate bacteria, fungus, limestone, poor soil, slope, and weeds.
  7852. Cvs have been selected with excellent shelling qualities, some of them now being grown
  7853. are ‘Kenworthy’, ‘Kinneyglen’, ‘Buckley’, ‘Helmick’, ‘Craxezy’, ‘Henick’, ‘Johnson’,
  7854. ‘Sherwood’, ‘Thrill’, and ‘Van der Poppen’. x ju glan s quadrangulata Rehd., a natural
  7855. hybrid between7. cinerea and7. regia, occurs occasionally in eastern Massachusetts. Hybrids
  7856. between butternut (7. cinerea) and heartnut (7. ailanthifolia) have appeared in the U.S.^^^
  7857. 187
  7858. ‘Aiken’ was the first grafted butternut available.Grafted cv ‘Deeming’ reported to bear
  7859. “ when it is two feet high’’.^*° (2n = 32.)
  7860. Distribution — Native to eastern North America, from southern New Brunswick to
  7861. Ontario, Michigan, southern Minnesota, and South Dakota, south to eastern Virginia, central
  7862. Kansas, and northern Arkansas, and in the mountains to northern Georgia, Alabama, and
  7863. western Tennessee. Occasionally cultivated elsewhere. Most abundant northward.
  7864. Ecology — Ranging from Cool Temperate Moist to Wet through Warm Temperate Dry
  7865. Forest Life Zones, butternut is reported to tolerate annual precipitation of 5.4 to 12.3 dm
  7866. (mean of 8 cases = 8.6), annual temperature of 8.4 to 18.0°C (mean of 8 cases = 12.1°C),
  7867. and pH of 4.9 to 7.2 (mean of 7 cases = 6.2).®^ Thrives in rich, moist soils near banks of
  7868. streams, on low rocky hills, as well as in forests, along fences, and road-sides. However,
  7869. it cannot be depended upon as an ornamental planting. Succeeds fairly well on poor upland
  7870. soils, but thrives best on fertile, slightly acid or neutral soils with good drainage. Hardiest
  7871. of any of the northern nuts, but short-lived under some conditions, apparently due to fungus
  7872. disease.Hardy to Zone 3.^"^^
  7873. Cultivation — Trees in the forest and along road-sides develop from natural dispersal of
  7874. nuts. When cultivated, nuts or small trees can be planted. To assure viability, seeds should
  7875. not be more than a few years old. Plant where tree is to grow, in spring or fall, burying
  7876. about 2.5 cm in the ground. Fall-planted nuts should be well protected from nut-hunting
  7877. squirrels. Spring-planted nuts should be planted as early as possible, so they can be frozen
  7878. in the ground a few times. Nuts may be stored in freezer a few days before planting to
  7879. insure sprouting. Mid-summer sprouting seedlings grow rapidly, possibly reaching 1 m by
  7880. summer’s end. Plant 10 to 12 m apart for nut production; 5 m apart for timber production.
  7881. Generally takes 10 years from planting to first harvest; the first crop should be a big one.'^^
  7882. Trees are usually grafted either on seedling butternut or black walnut stocks. Black walnut
  7883. stocks are reported to give earlier bearing trees. Butternut is a rather rapid-growing tree;
  7884. however, it begins to deteriorate when it reaches medium size. Trunks of older trees are
  7885. usually hollow. Otherwise, it requires about the same care and cultivation as other nut
  7886. trees.Ashworth^® reports that it is difficult to graft, possibly due to high sap pressure and
  7887. abundant sap flow in the spring.
  7888. Harvesting — Nuts are harvested by picking them up from the ground after they have
  7889. fallen in early to late fall. Husk is removed and nuts are allowed to dry for a few weeks by
  7890. spreading them one deep on a warm attic floor, a greenhouse bench, a sunny garage floor,
  7891. etc. Should be stirred up occasionally so they dry thoroughly. Store in a well-ventilated,
  7892. dry, cool, squirrel-proof place. Kernels are removed by cracking nuts. A hammer and anvil
  7893. or a block of hard wood seems to be the best cracking method. Another method is to cover
  7894. the nuts with hot water and soak them until the water cools. They will crack easily and
  7895. meats come out intact. Kernels may be stored dried, salted, or frozen until used.^^®
  7896. Yields and economics — Yield data for this species are usually included with other native
  7897. and cultivated walnuts. Kernels of butternut are harvested along with other walnuts and sold
  7898. salted or variously packaged.Two billion board feet of butternut lumber was reported to
  7899. be cut in 1 year in 1913. Production in 1941 was ca. 920,000 board feet. West Virginia,
  7900. Wisconsin, Indiana, and Tennessee have been the leading states in production of butternut
  7901. lumber. West Virginia mills shipped ca. 250,000 board feet to North Carolina furniture
  7902. plants in 1963. In 1960, the total veneer production was ca. 4 billion square feet; in 1965,
  7903. ca. 14 billion square feet face veneer was shipped. Butternuts are less important commercially
  7904. than black walnuts.
  7905. Energy — Both timber and seed oils could be used for energy, but they are, at the
  7906. moment, probably more suitable for other ends. This species is said to yield less than J.
  7907. ailanthifolia.
  7908. Biotic factors — The following fungi are known to attack butternut: Actinothecium
  7909. 188 Handbook of Nuts
  7910. juglandis, Botryosphaeria ribis, Cercospora juglandis, Cylindrosporium sp., Fusarium av-
  7911. enaceum, Gnomonia leptostyla, Marsonia juglandis, Melanconis juglandis, Microstroma
  7912. brachysporum, M. juglandis, and Nectria galligena. Trees are attacked by Witches’ broom,
  7913. the cause of which is unknown. The nematodes Caconema radicicola and Meloidogyne sp.
  7914. have also been isolated from the tree.*^^’^^*
  7915. 189
  7916. JUG LAN S HINDSII Jeps. ex R.E.Sm. (JUGLANDACEAE) — California or Hind’s Black
  7917. Walnut
  7918. Syn.: J u g la n s californ ica var. h in d sii Jeps.
  7919. Uses — Kernels of nuts edible, of good quality, but small, used for confectioneries,
  7920. pastries, and roasted or salted nuts. Wood hard, coarse-grained, dark-brown, often mottled,
  7921. with pale thick sap wood. Often cultivated in California as street and shade tree.^"^^
  7922. Folk medicine — No data available.
  7923. Chemistry — No data available.
  7924. Description — Deciduous, round-topped tree 10 to 20 m tall, occasionally to 25 m, with
  7925. erect, unbranched trunk 3.3 to 13 m, 30 to 60 cm in diameter; bark strong-scented, gray-
  7926. brown, smoothish, longitudinally fissured into narrow plates; branches pendulous; branchlets
  7927. villose-pubescent, reddish-brown, lenticels pale. Leaves 22 to 30 cm long, alternate, com­
  7928. pound; petioles and rachis villose-pubescent; leaflets 15 to 19, thin, 6 to 10 cm long, 2 to
  7929. 2.5 cm wide, ovate-lanceolate to lanceolate, long-pointed, often slightly flacate, margin
  7930. serrate, base rounded cuneate to cordate, upper surface puberulous while young, becoming
  7931. bright-green and glabrous, lower surface with tufts of hairs and villose-pubescent along
  7932. midrib and primary veins. Staminate flowers in slender glabrous or villose aments 7.5 to
  7933. 12.6 cm long, calyx elongated, covered with pubescence, 5- or 6-lobed, stamens 30 to 40,
  7934. with short connectives bifid at apex; pistillate flowers oblong-ovoid, thickly covered with
  7935. villose-pubescence about 0.3 cm long. Fruit globose, 3 to 5 cm in diameter, husk thin, dark-
  7936. colored with soft pubescence; nut nearly globose, somewhat flattened at ends, faintly grooved
  7937. with remote longitudinal depressions, shell thick; seed small and sweet.
  7938. Germplasm — Reported from the North American Center of Diversity, Hind’s black
  7939. walnut, or cvs thereof, is reported to tolerate high pH.^^ In California, natural hybrids are
  7940. known between this walnut and Juglans nigra; also a hybrid ‘Paradoxa’ (J. hindsii x J.
  7941. regia) has been produced artificially. J. hindsii var. quercina Sarg. (7. c a lif ornica (var.)
  7942. quercina Babcock) has leaves with 1 to 5 leaflets, usually 3, short-stalked or sessile, broadly
  7943. ovate to oblong, obtuse or emarginate, serrate or entire, 1.3 to 5 cm long. (2n = 24.)^^^
  7944. Distribution — Native to Coastal region of central California. Sometimes cultivated in
  7945. California, eastern U.S., and Europe.
  7946. Ecology — Ranging from Warm Temperate Thom to Dry Forest Life Zones, Hind’s black
  7947. walnut is reported to tolerate annual precipitation of 3.1 to 6.6 dm (mean of 2 cases =
  7948. 4.9), annual temperature of 12.7 to 14.7°C (mean of 2 cases = 13.7), and pH of 6.8 to
  7949. 8.2 (mean of 2 cases = 7^).^^ In natural habitats, trees are found along streams and rivers.
  7950. Trees not suitable for lawn-planting because rootstock is very susceptible to crown rot
  7951. (Phytophthora cactorum ), especially if given frequent summer irrigation.
  7952. Cultivation — Trees used as stock for Persian walnut (7. regia), top-worked high to
  7953. provide butt logs for walnut timber.
  7954. Harvesting — Fruit gathered when ripe in fall. Treated like other walnuts.
  7955. Yields and economics — Valued mostly as a shade or street tree in California, and as
  7956. stock on which to graft varieties of Persian walnut (7. regia). Butt logs 45 cm in diameter
  7957. bring about $200 each.^^®
  7958. Energy — Endangered or threatened species are not recommended as energy species.
  7959. However, if abundant in cultivation, this species could serve as a high-priced oilseed and
  7960. firewood, though the fmit and timber could find better uses.
  7961. Biotic Factors — Trees are resistant to oak root fungus, but particularly susceptible to
  7962. crown rot {P hytophthora cactorum ). The following are also reported as affecting this species:
  7963. C acopaurus epacris, C ylindrosporium ju g la n d is (leaf spot). M icrostrom a ju glan dis, Xan-
  7964. thom onas ju glan dis (bacterial blight). Also reported are Black-line (girdle-graft incompat­
  7965. ibility) and Little leaf (zinc deficiency)."^
  7966. 190 Handbook of Nuts
  7967. JUGLANS NIGRA L. (JUGLANDACEAE) — Eastern Black Walnut
  7968. Uses — Black walnut is one of most valuable natural forest trees in the U.S. The nuts
  7969. furnish a food product, used mainly for flavoring baked goods, pastries, and confectioneries.
  7970. The wood has good texture, strength, and is coarse-grained, very durable, of a rich dark-
  7971. brown color with light sapwood; used in cabinet-making, gun-stocks, interior finishes of
  7972. houses, furniture, air-planes, ship-building. Wood is also easy to work, resistant to destruc­
  7973. tive fungi and insect pests. Woody shells on fruits are used to make jewelry. Green fruit
  7974. husks are boiled to provide a yellow dye. Trees are used for shade and ornamentals.
  7975. Folk medicine — The bark and leaves are considered alterative, astringent, detergent,
  7976. laxative, and purgative. They are used for eczema, herpes, indolent ulcers, scrofula. The
  7977. unripe fruit is sudorific and vermifugal, and used for ague and quinsy, and is rubbed onto
  7978. cracked palms and ringworm. Oil from the ripe seeds is used externally for gangrene, leprosy,
  7979. and wounds. Burnt kernels, taken in red wine, are said to prevent falling hair. Green husks
  7980. are supposed to ease the pain of toothache. Indians used the root bark as a vermifuge.
  7981. Macerated in warm water, the husks and/or leaves, are said to destroy insects and worms,
  7982. without destroying the grass. Insects are said to avoid the walnut; hence it is often used as
  7983. a poor man’s insect repellent. Rubbed on faces of cattle and horses, walnut leaves are said
  7984. to repel flies. The roots and/or leaves exude substances which are known to inhibit ger­
  7985. mination and/or growth of many plant species. All parts of the plant contain juglone, which
  7986. inhibits other plant species. Juglone has antihemorrhagic activity.
  7987. 191
  7988. Chemistry — The genus Juglans is reported to contain the following toxins: folic acid,
  7989. furfural, inositol, juglone, nicotine, and tryptophane.^^ Juglone has an oral LD50 of 2500
  7990. |xg in mice. Chloroform is said to constitute a large part of the essential oil of the leaves.
  7991. Per 100 g, black walnut contains 3.1% water, 628 calories, 20.5 g protein, 59.3 g fat, 14.8
  7992. g total carbohydrate (1.7 g fiber), 2.3 g ash, a trace of Ca, 570 mg P, 6 mg Fe, 3 mg Na,
  7993. 460 mg K, 3(X) lU Vitamin A, 0.22 mg thiamine, 0.11 mg riboflavin, and 0.7 mg niacin.
  7994. Description — Tree up to 33 m tall, occasionally to 50 m, and often 100 years old; trunk
  7995. straight, often unbranched for 20 m, 1.3 to 2 m in diameter; branches forming a round-
  7996. topped crown, mostly upright and rigid; branchlets covered at first with pale or rusty matted
  7997. hairs, and raised conspicuous orange lenticels; bark 5 to 7.5 cm thick, dark-brown tinged
  7998. red, deeply furrowed with broad rounded ridges; twigs light-brown with channeled pith;
  7999. terminal bud as broad as long; no hairy fringe above leaf-scar; leaves compound, deciduous,
  8000. 30 to 60 cm long, petioles pubescent, with 13 to 23 leaflets; leaflets 7.5 to 8 cm long, 2.5
  8001. to 3 cm wide, long-pointed, sharply serrate, slightly rounded at base, yellow-green, thin,
  8002. glabrous above, soft-pubescent beneath, turning bright-yellow in fall before falling; staminate
  8003. aments thick, 7.5 to 12.5 cm long, compact, not-stalked, single; calyx 6-lobed, lobes
  8004. concave, nearly orbicular, pubescent on outer surface, its bract nearly triangular with rusty
  8005. brown tomentum; stamens 20 to 30, in many series, connectives purple, truncate, nearly
  8006. sessile; pistillate aments in 2 to 5-flowered spikes, bracts with pale glandular hairs, green,
  8007. puberulous, calyx-lobes ovate, acute, puberulent on outer surface, glabrous or pilose within;
  8008. fruit solitary or in pairs, globose, oblong or pointed at apex; husk yellow-green or green,
  8009. smooth or roughened with clusters of short pale articulate hairs, 3 to 5 cm in diameter,
  8010. indéhiscent; nut oval, oblong or round, rough or sculptured, 3 to 3.5 cm in diameter, dark-
  8011. brown tinged red, 4-celled at base, slightly 2-celled at apex; kernel sweet, soon becoming
  8012. rancid. (2n = 32.) Flowers April to May; fruits at frost in fall.®^’^^^
  8013. Germplasm — At present, nearly 100 varieties of black walnuts have been selected and
  8014. named. Many can be propagated to order, or scions may be obtained for grafting upon
  8015. established stocks. Varieties or cultivars differ in hardiness, response to length of growing
  8016. season, summer heat, resistance to diseases and susceptibility to insect damage. ‘Thomas’
  8017. is the most cultivated variety in New York; ‘Synder’ and ‘Cornell’ have good cracking
  8018. quality for northern areas; ‘Wiard’, for Michigan; ‘Huber’ and ‘Cochrane’, for Minnesota;
  8019. ‘Sparrow’, ‘Stambaugh’, and ‘Elmer Myers’ are all good in parts of the South; ‘Ohio’ and
  8020. ‘Myers’ are good in north central areas. Natural hybrid, x Juglans intermedia Carr (7.
  8021. nigra x J. regia) has been recorded in the U.S. and Europe. In California, ‘Royal’ (7.
  8022. nigra X 7. hindsii) has been artificially produced. Reported from the North American Center
  8023. of Diversity, walnut is reported to be relatively tolerant to disease, drought, fire, frost,
  8024. fungi, high pH, heat, insects, limestone, slopes, smog, and weeds.
  8025. Distribution — Grows naturally in 32 states and in southern Ontario, Canada; most
  8026. abundant in Allegheny Mountains to North Carolina and Tennessee. Occasionally cultivated
  8027. as an ornamental in eastern U.S., western and central Europe. Planted in Europe for timber.
  8028. Ecology — Wind pollinated, walnut may play a small role in hay fever. Suited to rich
  8029. bottomlands and fertile hillsides from lower Hudson Valley southward, walnut will grow a
  8030. few hundred miles outside its natural range, but may not bear nuts. Seedling trees mature
  8031. fruit rather generally throughout area with a growing season of about 150 days and an average
  8032. summer temperature of 16.5°C. Best suited to deep, rich, slightly acid or neutral soil, with
  8033. good drainage, but will not succeed on infertile upland soil or on soils with poor drainage.
  8034. Reliable indicators for suitable land are good stands of white oak and tulip popular, or where
  8035. com grows well. Because trees have a deep tap-root, they are drought-resistant. Black walnut
  8036. is reported from areas with annual precipitation from 3 to 13 dm (mean of 19 cases = 9),
  8037. annual temperature from 7 to 19°C (mean of 19 cases = 11), and pH from 4.9 to 8.2 (mean
  8038. of 15 cases = 6.3).®^’^^®
  8039. 192 Handbook of Nuts
  8040. Cultivation — Improved varieties do not come true from seed, hence, propagation is by
  8041. grafting scions (twigs) from trees of desired varieties onto main stems of 2- to 3-year old
  8042. native seedlings. Scions develop crowns that bear nuts of their own variety. As there is little
  8043. information available to indicate the best varieties for different localities, local nurseries
  8044. should be consulted as to the best for a given locality. Trees are self-fertile, but the sequence
  8045. of male and female blooming, called dichogamy, can and often does minimize chances of
  8046. a tree shedding pollen on its own pistils. In different trees pollen may be shed before the
  8047. receptivity period of female flowers, or at same time, or after pistil receptivity. For greatest
  8048. possible nut production, plant trees of 2 or more varieties, as different varieties have over­
  8049. lapping pollen-receptivity periods and can pollinate each other. Young plants are best trans­
  8050. planted in early spring, at which time new roots will grow rapidly to replace those lost in
  8051. transplanting. In the South, young trees may be planted in fall or winter. For nut production,
  8052. trees are spaced 20 m apart. For trees up to 2.3 m tall, dig hole 0.6 m deep and 1 m wide.
  8053. Place tree at same depth in hole as it stood in nursery and spread out roots well. Fill hole
  8054. with topsoil and firm down soil. Form a basin around edge of hole and soak soil immediately.
  8055. Black walnuts require large quantities of nitrogen and phosphorus. Apply mixed fertilizer
  8056. (5-10-5 or 10-10-10) each year under tree branches when buds begin to swell in early spring.
  8057. Use rates of 450 g/year of 5-10-5 fertilizer, or 230 g/year for 10-10-10, per tree. Do not
  8058. use during first year, because of danger of injuring roots. In strongly acid soils, apply lime
  8059. to change pH to 6 or 6.5. Do not over-lime, as this makes zinc in soil unavailable to tree.
  8060. Soils east of Mississippi River are often deficient in magnesium, so crushed dolomite
  8061. limestone is used to correct this condition and reduce acidity of soil. Prune any suckers that
  8062. come from below graft on trunk. In orchards, trees over 15 years old may be interseeded
  8063. with grasses and legumes, and animals may be turned in to pasture, as they will not damage
  8064. older trees. All black walnuts tend to bear heavy nut crops every second year. No cultural
  8065. practices have been developed to offset this type of alternating. Some trees bear every year,
  8066. while others bear every third year. Others mainly react to climatic conditions with no pattern.
  8067. In the U.S. growing seasons are divided into 3 zones: North of Mason-Dixon Line, 140 to
  8068. 180 days; south to North Carolina, northern Georgia, Alabama, Mississippi, Arkansas, and
  8069. Oklahoma, 180 to 200 days; south of that, 220 to 260 days. Varieties are selected for each
  8070. area. When trees bearing fruits of exceptional quality are found, they are propagated and
  8071. cultivated for nut production in that area.^^^
  8072. Harvesting — Nuts are harvested from native trees as well as from improved selections
  8073. and cultivars. Fruit ripens in one season, usually by late September or early October. Most
  8074. production is from wild trees growing on non-crop land, and these represent the main
  8075. commercial source of kernels for today’s market. Nuts should be harvested as soon as they
  8076. fall, in order to get light-colored kernels with mild flavor. Leaving them on ground causes
  8077. some discoloration of kernel. Hulls of native trees are thick and heavy, whereas those of
  8078. Thomas’ and ‘Ohio’ have thinner hull, those of ‘Myers’ being thinnest of all. Hull may be
  8079. mashed and removed by hand, or by mechanical devices. After removing the hulls, nuts
  8080. should be washed thoroughly and spread out to dry in direct sunlight. Drying takes 2 to 3
  8081. weeks; nuts can then be stored in a cool, dry place until needed. Nuts are cracked and
  8082. kernels removed for use.^^®
  8083. Yields and economics — Although Duke®^ reported yields of 7.5 MT seeds, this is
  8084. probably highly optimistic. Elsewhere it is said that 95% of the wild black walnut seeds are
  8085. empty or aborted. Perhaps yields could be as high as 2.5 MT/ha under intensive management,
  8086. which is attainable in the commercial walnut, Juglans regia. Selections are made based on
  8087. weight of nuts. Trees may bear at rates of 7,500 seed per ha. Nuts from wild trees weigh
  8088. about 17 g (27 nuts per lb); for selected varieties, weights vary from 15 to 30 g; those 20
  8089. g or over are: ‘Michigan’ (20); ‘Grundy’, ‘Monterey’, ‘Schreiber’ and ‘Thomas’ (21);
  8090. ‘Victoria’ (22); ‘Hare’ (23); ‘Pinecrest’ (25); and ‘Vandersloot’ (30). ‘Thomas’, ‘Ohio’ and
  8091. 193
  8092. ‘Myers’ begin bearing nuts in second or third year after planting, while native trees usually
  8093. do not begin to bear until about 10 years after planting. In 5 to 6 years, these three varieties
  8094. bear about one-fourth bushel of nuts; at 15 to 20 years of age, the first two bear 2 bu of
  8095. nuts, ‘Myers’ about 1 bu, and native trees about V4 bu. Lumber trees yield about 1150 board
  8096. feet at 76 years old. Nut shelling industry is centered in and around Arkansas, Kansas,
  8097. Kentucky, Missouri, Oklahoma, Tennessee, West Virginia, and Virginia. Because of the
  8098. scarcity of trees and the long growing period required to get wood, walnut lumber is not in
  8099. great demand as it used to be. More frequently grown in Europe for lumber. Walnuts are
  8100. grown in the U.S. for nuts and ornamentation. In the U.S. the following are said to deal in
  8101. walnut oil: Main Pure Food Company (13660 S. Figueroa, Los Angeles, California) and
  8102. Tunley Division, Welch, Home and Clark Co. (1000 S. 4th Street, Harrison, New Jersey)
  8103. Well-formed trees will yield lumber worth thousands of dollars.
  8104. Energy — Oil contents of the seeds run about 60%, suggesting that if the walnut yields
  8105. of 7.5 MT/ha were attained, there might be as much as 4.5 MT oil there. Hulls and exocarp
  8106. might be used to fuel the processing, as the value of the timber improves with age (one tree
  8107. commanded $35,0(X) at an Ohio auction). Prunings and culls, as well as fallen and dead
  8108. limbs, might about to 5 MT/ha/year.
  8109. B iotic factors — Walnut anthracnose is most serious disease to native trees. ‘Ohio’ is
  8110. resistant to this disease; ‘Myers’ is less resistant. Disease over-winters in fallen leaves and
  8111. reinfects new leaflets in mid-May until mid-June, often defoliating entire trees. Many nuts
  8112. are empty or contain blackened, shriveled kernels. Bunch disease, of which the cause and
  8113. means of spread are unknown, stunts growth of the tree and lowers nut production. The
  8114. most serious insect pests are walnut lace bug, curculios, walnut husk maggot, walnut cat­
  8115. erpillar and fall web-worm. Serious damage may also be caused by leaf-eating caterpillars,
  8116. scales, aphids and twig girdlers. County agricultural agents should be consulted for measures
  8117. to control these in a particular area.^^® Nematodes include M eloidogyne sp., P ratylenchus
  8118. cojfeae, P . p ra ten sis, and P. vulnus.^^^ The following are reported in A gricu ltu re H an dbook
  8119. 165"^ as affecting Juglans nigra: B otryosph aeria ribis, C ercospora ju g la n d is (leaf spot),
  8120. C ladosporium sp. (? scab), C. pericarpiu m , C ylindrosporium ju g la n d is (leaf spot), C ytospora
  8121. sp. (canker), C. albiceps, P om es igniarius, G nom onia leptostyla (anthracnose, leaf spot,
  8122. leaf blotch), M eloidogyne spp. (root knot nematodes). M icrostrom a ju g la n d is (downy spot,
  8123. white mold), N ectria ditissim a, P h leospora m ultim aculans (leaf spot), P horandendron fla -
  8124. vescens (mistletoe), P hym atotrichum om nivorum (root rot), P hytophthora cinnam om i (collar
  8125. rot of seedlings), P ratylenchus m usicola, R habdospora ju glan dis, Sclerotium rolfsii (seedling
  8126. blight), S phaeropsis druparum , Stereum fa scia tu m , and X anthom onas ju g la n d is (bacterial
  8127. blight)."^
  8128. 194 Handbook of Nuts
  8129. JUGLANS REGIA L. (JUGLANDACEAE) — English Walnut, Carpathian or Persian Walnut
  8130. Uses — Principally valued as an orchard tree for commercial nut production. Nuts are
  8131. consumed fresh, roasted, or salted, used in confectioneries, pastries, and for flavoring. The
  8132. shells may be used as antiskid agents for tires, blasting grit, and in the preparation of
  8133. activated carbon. Ground nut shells are used as an adulterant of spices. Crushed leaves, or
  8134. a decoction are used as insect repellant and as a tea. Outer fleshy part of fruit, very rich in
  8135. Vitamin C, produces a yellow dye. Fruit, when dry pressed, yields a valuable oil used in
  8136. paints and in soap-making; when cold pressed yields a light-yellow edible oil used in foods
  8137. as flavoring. Young fruits made into pickles, also used as fish poison. Twigs and leaves
  8138. lopped for fodder in India. Decoction of leaves, bark, and husks used with alum for staining
  8139. wool brown. Wood hard, durable, close-grained, heavy, used for furniture and gun-stocks.
  8140. Tree often grown as ornamental.
  8141. Folk medicine — According to Hartwell,English walnuts are used in folk remedies
  8142. for aegilops, cancer, carbuncles, carcinoma, condylomata acuminata, corns, excrescences,
  8143. growths, indurations, tumors, warts, and whitlows, especially cancerous conditions of the
  8144. breast, epithelium, fauces, groin, gullet, intestine, kidneys, lip, liver, mammae, mouth,
  8145. stomach, throat, and uterus. Reported to be alterative, anodyne, anthelmintic, astringent,
  8146. bactericide, cholagogue, depurative, detergent, digestive, diuretic, hemostat, insecticidal,
  8147. laxative, lithontryptic, stimulant, tonic, and vermifuge, the English walnut is a folk remedy
  8148. for anthrax, asthma, backache, caligo, chancre, colic, conjunctivitis, cough, dysentery,
  8149. eczema, ejaculation, favus, heartburn, impotence, inflammation, intellect, intestine, intox­
  8150. ication, kidney, legs, leucorrhea, lungs, rheumatism, scrofula, sore, syphilis, and worms.
  8151. Chemistry — Per 100 g, the seed is reported to contain 647 to 657 calories, 2.5 to 4.2
  8152. g H2O, 13.7 to 18.2 g protein, 63.6 to 67.2 g fat, 12.6 to 15.8 g total carbohydrate, 1.6
  8153. to 2.1 g fiber, 1.7 to 2.0 g ash, 92 to 106 mg Ca, 326 to 380 mg P, 3.0 to 3.3 mg Fe, 2
  8154. to 3 mg Na, 450 to 536 mg K, 0.50 |xg beta-carotene equivalent, 0.27 to 0.50 mg thiamine,
  8155. 0.08 to 0.51 mg riboflavin, 0.7 to 3.0 mg niacin, and 0 to 5 mg ascorbic acid. Wealth of
  8156. India^^ also reports, per 100 g, 2.7 mg Na, 687 mg K, 61 mg Ca, 131 mg Mg, 2.4 mg Fe,
  8157. 0.3 mg Cu, 510 mg P, 104 mg S, and 23 mg Cl, and 2.8 |jLg I (as well as Ar, Zn, Co, and
  8158. Mn). About 42% of the total phosphorus is in phytic acid; lecithin is also present. The
  8159. immature fruit is one of the richest sources of ascorbic acid, the skin with 1,090 mg/100 g,
  8160. the pulp with 2,330 mg. The leaves, also rich in ascorbic acid (almost 1% of the weight),
  8161. are rich in carotene (ca. 0.3% wet weight). Juglone is the active compound in the leaves;
  8162. also quercetin, cyanadin, kaempferol, caffeic acid, and traces of p-coumaric acid, hyperin
  8163. (0.2%), quercitrin, kaempferol-3-arabinoside, quercetin-3-arabinoside. The seed oil contains
  8164. 3 to 7% palmitic, 0.5 to 3% stearic, 9 to 30% oleic, 57 to 76% linoleic, and 2 to 16%
  8165. linolenic acids. The oil cake, with 86.6% dry matter (DM), contains 35.0% protein, 12.2%
  8166. fatty oil, 27.6% carbohydrates, 6.7% fiber, 5.1% ash (digestible nutrients: 31.5% crude
  8167. protein, 11.6% fatty oil, 23.5% carbohydrates, and 1.7% fiber). The shells contain 92.3%
  8168. DM, 1.7% protein, 0.7% fatty oil, 31.9% carbohydrates, 56.6% fiber, and 1.4% ash.^®’®^ *®^
  8169. Description — Deciduous, monoecious trees, 12 to 15 m tall (Payne vars.), 17 to 20 m
  8170. tall (‘Eureka’, ‘Placentia’, ‘Mayette’, ‘Franquette’), or rarely up to 60 m tall; bark brown
  8171. or gray, smooth, fissured; leaf-scars without prominent pubescent band on upper edge.
  8172. Leaves alternate, foetid, pinnate, without stipules; leaflets 15 to 24, opposite, 6 to 15 cm
  8173. long, ovate-oblong to ovate-lanceolate, acuminate; margin irregularly serrate, glabrescent
  8174. above, pubescent and glandular beneath. Flowers developing from dormant bud of previous
  8175. season’s growth; staminate flowers in axillary, pendulous aments 5 to 15 cm long, developing
  8176. 1 to 4 million pollen grains each; flowers in axils of scales, with 2 bracteoles, perianth-
  8177. segments 1 to 4, stamens 3 to 40; pistillate flowers in clusters of 3 to 9, developing as many
  8178. nuts; in selected varieties not only terminal bud produces fruit, but all lateral buds on previous
  8179. 195
  8180. years growth also produce; perianth 4-lobed. Fruit 3.5 to 5 cm in diameter, globose or
  8181. slightly obovoid, pubescent; nut ovoid, acute, strongly ridged, not splitting.
  8182. G erm p lasm — Reported from the Eurosiberian and Central Asian Centers of Diversity,
  8183. English walnut, or cvs thereof, is reported to tolerate frost, high pH, heat, insects, low pH,
  8184. and slope. (2n = 32,36.)^^ Varieties are selected on basis of high heat tolerance, resistance
  8185. to walnut blight {X anthom onas ju glan dis), tolerance for winter cold, and yield and quality
  8186. of kernels. Most promising cvs are of Carpathian origin and have been introduced from
  8187. Poland; they withstand temperatures below those recorded in the the fruit belt of New York.
  8188. Recent superior cvs include: ‘Broadview’, ‘Schafer’, ‘Littlepage’, ‘McKinster’, ‘Metcalfe’,
  8189. ‘Jacobs’, and ‘Colby’. Other varieties widely grown in the world include: ‘Marmot’, ‘Mey-
  8190. lanaise’, ‘Come’, ‘Gourlande’, ‘Mayette’, ‘Brantôme’, ‘Ashley’, ‘Glackner’, ‘Nugget’,
  8191. ‘Poe’, ‘Franquette’, ‘Concord’, ‘Ehrhardt’, ‘Payne’, and ‘Waterloo’. Persian walnuts have
  8192. been hybridized with butternuts, black walnuts, and other European and Oriental walnuts.
  8193. Juglans regia var. orientis (Dode) Kitam. J. orientis Dode; J. regia var. sinensis sensu
  8194. auct. Japan (non DC.) is a widely cultivated Chinese tree, with glabrous leaves and bran-
  8195. chlets, leaflets 3 to 9, obtuse, entire, except in young trees, and nuts relatively thin-shelled.
  8196. D istrib u tion — Native to the Carpathian Mountains of eastern Europe, but often found
  8197. growing wild eastward to Himalayas and China. Widely cultivated throughout this region
  8198. and elsewhere in temperate zone of the Old and New World. Thrives in temperate Himalayas
  8199. from 1,000 to 3,000 m altitude. In North America, thrives as far north as New York State.
  8200. Introduced from Spain by way of Chile to California about 1867. In 1873 ‘Kaghazi’ was
  8201. introduced in northern California and a seedling ‘Eureka’ has become the important source
  8202. of our commercial cvs.^^®
  8203. E cology — Ranging from Cool Temperate Steppe to Wet through Subtropical Thom to
  8204. Moist Forest Life Zones, English walnut is reported to tolerate annual precipitation of 3.1
  8205. to 14.7 dm (mean of 25 cases = 8.4), annual temperature of 7.0 to 21.1°C (mean of 25
  8206. cases = 12.0), and pH of 4.5 to 8.2 (mean of 21 cases = 6.4). Thrives on rich, sandy
  8207. loam, well-drained, slightly acid or neutral. Responds well to cultivation and fertilization.
  8208. In areas where hardiness is a problem, trees should not be forced into excessive vegetative
  8209. growth. Minimum temperature should not go below - 29°C. One fault of Carpathian walnut
  8210. is that it begins growth early in spring with the result that crop and foliage may be damaged
  8211. by late frosts. When fully dormant, trees can withstand temperatures from — 24°C to — 2 T C
  8212. without serious damage. French cvs may be more winter hardy. ‘Eureka’ is less hardy than
  8213. newer cvs being produced for northern California, Oregon, and higher altitudes. High summer
  8214. temperatures damage kernels, slightly at 38°C, severely at 40.5 to 43.5°C. Quite variable
  8215. resistance to heat among varieties. Reported from areas with pH 4.5 to 8.3, annual rainfall
  8216. 3 to 15 dm, and annual temperature 7 to 19°C. Rains in late spring and summer increase
  8217. walnut blight infections.
  8218. C ultivation — Since trees are deep-rooted, soil should be fertile, well-drained, alluvial,
  8219. 2 m or more deep, of medium loam to sandy or silt loam texture, and free of alkali salts,
  8220. especially excessive boron. Seedling trees show great variation as to hardiness, type of fruit
  8221. and fruitfulness. ‘Paradox’ hybrids, ‘Royal’ hybrids m d Juglans hindsii are used as rootstocks
  8222. for grafting Persian and Carpathian walnuts. Rootstock of Juglans regia may be used if oak
  8223. root fungus {A rm illaria m ellea) is absent in area. Persian walnuts have been grafted to
  8224. Chinese wingnut (P terocarya stenoptera) Selected varieties are best whip- or bark-grafted
  8225. or patch-budded on seedling trees, or top-worked on existing trees. Persian walnuts are
  8226. planted in the orchard from 10 to 20 m each way; however, many spacings are in use
  8227. depending on cv and cultivation methods. Intercropping young walnuts may be useful for
  8228. the first 5 to 10 years. Intercropping may be difficult because of irrigation, spraying, and
  8229. use of equipment for cultivation of the intercrop. Holes should be dug amply wide to
  8230. accommodate roots, planting no deeper than they were in the nursery. Roots should never
  8231. 196 Handbook of Nuts
  8232. be allowed to dry out. Topsoil should be used to fill hole, firmly tamped around roots. Do
  8233. not transplant when soil is wet. Nut trees must have tops reduced or cut back, either before
  8234. or after planting, usually to about 1.5 to 2 m from ground level. Lower buds should be
  8235. suppressed so the upper ones will be forced to grow and make the framework of the tree.
  8236. Newly planted trees should be staked, either with a single stake driven close to the tree and
  8237. tying it to the stake, or driving three stakes equidistant, fastening tree to each with stout
  8238. cord so as not to injure bark. After trees are planted, they should be watched, and watered
  8239. during dry spells until established. When irrigated, a total of 2V2 to 5 acre feet of water per
  8240. acre should be applied throughout the year, including normal rainfall. The modified central
  8241. leader system of training young walnuts is recommended for western orchards, in which 4
  8242. or 5 main framework branches spaced both vertically and horizontally are developed; the
  8243. first branch should be started no lower than 2 m from the ground. The trend is toward
  8244. heavier and more consistent pruning both in young and old trees; very fruitful new varieties
  8245. respond more readily than some of the older varieties. Standard method for applying zinc
  8246. to walnut trees is to drive zinc-bearing metal pieces or glazing points into outer sapwood
  8247. of trees. Other mineral deficiencies which must be corrected are iron, manganese, boron,
  8248. potassium, magnesium, phosphorus, and copper.
  8249. Harvesting — Pollination is often a problem, as Persian walnuts are monoecious, with
  8250. separate staminate and pistillate flowers in different parts of the same tree. Staminate catkins
  8251. are 10-15 cm long and produce 1-4 million pollen grains each. Sometimes freshly picked
  8252. catkins are put on paper in room at 2 rC and the shed pollen stored in desiccator at 0°C.
  8253. Then pollen is blown on trees by fan mounted on truck. Helicopters are sometimes used to
  8254. blow pollen over orchard. Under favorable conditions, the husks of nuts crack open and
  8255. adhere temporarily to twigs, allowing nuts to fall to the ground, usually between September
  8256. 1 and November 7. Nut fall may be hastened by shaking the trees with long poles or a boom
  8257. shaker. During harvest period, nuts are picked up 3 or 4 times before the total crop has
  8258. matured and dropped. Nuts should not be allowed to remain on ground too long. Nuts are
  8259. washed, if dirty, and spread out in shallow trays with bottom slats spaced 1.5 to 2 cm apart.
  8260. Nuts should not be exposed to sun for entire day. Trays are piled up so as to permit ventilation
  8261. after nuts have become warm. Too-fast drying causes shell to crack and open. In large
  8262. orchards, a drying house is constructed for curing process. After curing and bleaching, nuts
  8263. are graded and packed for shipment.
  8264. Yields and economics — Newer cvs begin producing nuts in 5 to 6 years; by 7 to 8
  8265. years, they produce about 2.5 tons of nuts per hectare. Orchards on relatively poor, unir­
  8266. rigated mountain soil report 1.5 to 2.25 MT/ha; orchards in well-cultivated valleys, 6.5 to
  8267. 7.5 MT/ha. A grown individual can yield about 185 kg, but 37 kg is more likely.In the
  8268. U.S., California is the major producing area, with about 129,400 acres producing 77,000
  8269. tons nuts per year; Oregon is second with about 3,500 tons annually; the total valued at
  8270. about $32.3 million. About 60% of Persian walnuts are sold shelled. Lumber from large
  8271. trees may bring up to $1,500 per
  8272. Energy — If the walnut yields of 7,500 kg/ha®^ yielded all their 65% (63 to 67%) oil,
  8273. there is a potential oil yield of nearly 5 MT per year, a very worthwhile target, if attainable.
  8274. The green hulls have recoverable ascorbic acid content (2.5 to 5% of dry weight). Hulls
  8275. contain 12.2% tannin, bark contain 7.5%, leaf blades contain 9 to 11%. After extraction of
  8276. the vitamin C and tannin, the residues might be used for fuel or ethanol. Prunings from the
  8277. trees might contribute another 5 MT biomass per year.
  8278. Biotic factors — Seedlings are very susceptible to mushroom root rot, and Walnut girdle
  8279. disease ‘Blackline’ is thought to occur when certain horticultural varieties of Juglans regia
  8280. are grafted on rootstocks of Juglans hindsii and its hybrids, associated with graft incom­
  8281. patibility. Fungi known to attack Persian walnuts include: A ltern arla nucis, A rm illaria
  8282. m ellea, A scoch yta ju glan dis, A spergillus fla vu s, A uricularia auricula-judae, A uricularia
  8283. 197
  8284. mesenterica, Cerrena unicolor, Cladosporium herbarum, Coniophora cerebella, Coprinus
  8285. micaceus, Coriolus tephroleucus, Cribaría violaceae, Cryptovalsa extorris, Cylindrosporium
  8286. juglandis, C. uljanishchevii, Cytospora juglandina, Cytosporina juglandina, C. juglandi-
  8287. cola, Diplodia juglandis, Dothiorella gregaria, Erysiphe polygoni, Eutypa ludibunda, Ex-
  8288. osporina fawcetti, Fomes fomentarías, F. igniarius, F. ulmarius, Fusarium avenaceum, F.
  8289. lateritium, Ganoderma applanatum, Glomerella cingulata, Gnomonia ceratostyla, G. Jug­
  8290. landis, G. leptostyla, Hemitricia leiotyichia, Hypoxylon mediterraneum, Inonotus hispidas,
  8291. Laetiporus sulphureus, Lentinus cyathiformis, Ficea tenera, Marsonia juglandis, Melanconis
  8292. carthusiana, M. juglandis, Melanconium juglandis, M. oblongum, Melanopus squamosus,
  8293. Microsphaera alni, M. juglandis, Microstroma juglandis, Mycosphaerella saccardoana, M.
  8294. woronowi, Nectria appianata, N. cinnabarina, N. ditissima, Oxyporuspopulinus, Phelliunus
  8295. cryptarum, Phleospora multimaculans, Phoma juglandis, Phomopsis juglandis, Phoma jug­
  8296. landis, Phyllactinia guttata, Phyllosticta juglandina, P. juglandis, Phymatotrichum omni-
  8297. vorum, Phytophthora cactorum, P. cinnamomi, P. citrophthora, Pleospora vulgaris, Pleurotus
  8298. ostreatus, Polyporus hispidas, P. picipes, P. squamosus, Polystictus versicolor, Rhizopus
  8299. nigricans, Stereum hirsutum, Trametes suaveolens, Tubercularia juglandis, T. vulgaris,
  8300. Verticillium albo-atrum. Bacteria attacking Persian walnut include: Agrobacterium tume-
  8301. faciens. Bacillus mesentericus. Bacterium juglandis. Pseudomonas juglandis, Xanthomomas
  8302. juglandis. Cuscuta pentagona also parasitizes the tree. The following nematodes have been
  8303. isolated from Persian walnut: Cacopauruspestis, Diplogaster striatus, Diplogaster coronata,
  8304. Ditylenchus intermedias, Meloidogyne arenaria, M. javanica, M. sp., Pratylenchus coffeae,
  8305. P. pratensis, P. vulnus, Rhabditis debilicauda, R. spiculigera, Tylolaimophorus rotundi-
  8306. cauda. Among the insect pests of this walnut are the following: Walnut Blister mite (Er-
  8307. iophytes tristriatus). Walnut aphid (Chromaphis juglandicola), Italian pear scale (Diaspis
  8308. piricola). Calico scale (Eulecanium cerasorum), Frosted scale (Parthenolecanium prui-
  8309. nosum). Walnut scale (Quadraspidiotus juglansregiae). Codling moth (Cydia pomonella).
  8310. Fruit tree leaf-roller {Archips argyrospila), Indian meal moth {Plodia interpunctella), Walnut
  8311. caterpillar {Dataña integerrima). Red-humped caterpillar (Schizura concinna). Walnut span
  8312. worm (Phigalia plumigeraria), and Walnut husk fly (Rhagolestis completa).
  8313. 198 Handbook of Nuts
  8314. LECYTHIS MINOR Jacq. (LECYTHIDACEAE) — Coco de Mono
  8315. Syn: L ecyth is elliptica H.B.K.
  8316. Uses — These trees are cultivated for the nuts, which have a delicious flavor and possess
  8317. a high oil content. Small trees are highly ornamental.
  8318. Folk medicine — Duke and Wain^^ cite the species as antiasthmatic, depilatory, and
  8319. poisonous.
  8320. Chemistry — The seeds have been reported to be somewhat toxic, especially if eaten in
  8321. large quantities. Ingesting the nuts is known to cause loss of hair and nails, at least in
  8322. seleniferous areas. Though seeds taste agreeable, injestion may induce nausea, anxiety, and
  8323. giddiness. Dickson^^ attributes the temporary loss of hair and fingernails that he experienced
  8324. after eating 300 to 600 seeds of L. minor to toxic elements in the seeds. Throughout northern
  8325. Colomiba, L. minor is thought to be poisonous. Castaneda,however, feels they are
  8326. nontoxic. The toxicity of the seeds may depend upon the soils. Some evidence suggest that
  8327. toxic seeds come from plants found on soil high in selenium.Mori^^^ suggests that the
  8328. data suggesting toxicity in L. ollaria may in fact refer to this species. Without voucher
  8329. specimens, weTl never know.
  8330. Toxicity — Identified as a selenium-containing analog of the sulfur amino acid, cysta­
  8331. thionine, the active compound has the following formula: HOOC-Ch(NH2)-CH2-Se-CH2-
  8332. CH(NH2)C00H.3^"
  8333. Description — Small to medium-sized trees, often branched from base when in open
  8334. habitats, 5 to 25 m tall, to 70 cm DBH, the crown dilated. Twigs gray, glabrous to pubescent.
  8335. Bark gray, relatively smooth when young, with deep vertical fissures when older. Leaf
  8336. blades ovate, elliptic, or oblong, 8.5 to 24.5 x 4.5 to 10 cm, glabrous, coriaceous, with
  8337. 12 to 19 pairs of lateral veins; apex mucronate to acuminate, infrequently acute; base obtuse
  8338. to rounded, infrequently truncate, narrowly decurrent; margins usually crenulate to serrate,
  8339. infrequently entire; petiole 5 to 20 mm long, usually puberulous, infrequently glabrous.
  8340. Inflorescences racemose, unbranched, or once-branched, terminal or in axils of uppermost
  8341. leaves, the principal rachis 10 to 35 cm long, with 10 to 75 flowers, all rachises pubescent,
  8342. the pedicels jointed, 1 to 3 mm long below articulation, subtended by an ovate, caducous
  8343. bract 2 to 4 x 2 to 3 mm, with 2 broadly ovate, caducous bracteoles 3 to 6 x 3 to 4 mm
  8344. inserted just below articulation. Flowers 5 to 7 cm diameter; calyx with 6 widely to very
  8345. widely ovate, green lobes 6 to 11 x 6 to 9 mm; petals 6, widely obovate or less frequently
  8346. widely oblong to oblong, 27 to 42 x 14 to 25 mm, green in bud, usually white, less
  8347. frequently light-yellow at anthesis; hood of androecium dorsiventrally expanded, 20 to 23
  8348. X 19 to 25 mm, with well-developed, inwardly curved, antherless appendages, the outside
  8349. of hood white or light-yellow, the appendages always light-yellow; staminal ring with 300
  8350. to 410 stamens, the filaments 2 mm long, dilated at apex, light-yellow, the anthers 0.5 to
  8351. 0.7 mm long, yellow; hypanthium usually pubescent, infrequently glabrous; ovary 4-locular,
  8352. with 3 to 6 ovules in each locule, the ovules inserted on floor of locule at juncture with
  8353. septum, the summit of ovary umbonate, the style not well differentiated, 2 to 4.5 mm long.
  8354. Fruits cup-like, globose or turbinate, 5 to 7 x 7 to 9 cm, the pericarp 7.5 to 11 mm thick.
  8355. Seeds fusiform, 2.4 to 3 x 1.3 to 2 cm, reddish-brown, with 4 to 6 light-brown longitudinal
  8356. veins when dried, the testa smooth, with cord-like funicle surrounded by fleshy white aril
  8357. at base."'"’"^’""5
  8358. Germplasm — Reported from the South American Center of Diversity, coco de mono,
  8359. or CVS thereof, is reported to tolerate low pH.^^ Very closely related to another coco de
  8360. mono, Lecythis ollaria, found east of the Andes and also suspected to exhibit seed toxicity.
  8361. (X = 17.)
  8362. Distribution — Introduced at Mayaguez, P.R.; La Lima, Honduras: Summit, Panama;
  8363. and Soledad, Cuba. Ranges from the Maracaibo lowlands of Venezuela to the northern coast
  8364. 199
  8365. of Colombia from where it ascends the Magdalena and Cauca Valleys. This species most
  8366. often occurs in dry, open, somewhat disturbed habitats, where it grows as a small, much-
  8367. branched tree. However, it is also found in moister forests, especially along watercourses,
  8368. where it forms a handsome, single-trunked tree to 25 meters.
  8369. Ecology — Ranging from Tropical Very Dry to Wet Forest Life Zones, coco de mono
  8370. is reported to tolerate annual precipitation of 9.1 to 22.8 dm (mean of 3 cases = 15.1 dm),
  8371. annual temperature of 24.4 to 26.5°C (mean of 3 cases = 25.3°C), and pH of 5.0 to 8.0
  8372. (mean of 3 cases = 6.6).^^ Thrives along rivers in tropical forests.
  8373. Cultivation — Trees are easily propagated from seeds, but never systematically culti­
  8374. vated.^^®
  8375. Harvesting — Flowers most profusely from April to December and produces mature fruit
  8376. from December to February throughout its native range. At Summit Gardens, Panama, where
  8377. it is cultivated as an ornamental, this species flowers during the wet season from April to
  8378. November.Like Brazil nuts, these nuts are collected from native trees when ripe. Trees
  8379. may begin to bear fruit when only 2 m tall.^^®
  8380. Yields and economics — Formally, before 1968, nuts were distributed regularly, at least
  8381. locally in Honduras.
  8382. Energy — These relatively slow-growing trees and their prunings could serve as energy
  8383. sources. Annual leaf litter from another species of Lecythis was nearly 2 MT/ha/year.^^^
  8384. Biotic factors — Probably pollinated by bees and disseminated by fruit bats as in Lecythis
  8385. pisonis.
  8386. 200 Handbook of Nuts
  8387. LECYTHIS OLEARIA L. (LECYTHIDACEAE) — Monkey Pod, Monkey Pot, Olla de Mona
  8388. Uses — The Monkey Pot is grown and/or collected for the seeds, which are edible and
  8389. are the source of an oil used for illumination and for making soap. Sap may be mixed into
  8390. an agreeable drink. Wood is easy to split, strong, and polishes well. Resistant to insects,
  8391. termites, and barnacles, it is used for wharves, piles, sluices, and house-framing. Bark is
  8392. recommended for tanning.
  8393. Folk medicine — Oil extracted from the seeds is considered a powerful hemostat.'^^
  8394. Latex of the pericarp is used by South American Indians as a depilatory.
  8395. Chemistry — Ingestion of the seed has associated with alopecia and selenium poisoning,
  8396. as manifested by acute intoxication, fever, diarrhea, and various neurological symptoms,
  8397. the active principle being the selenium analog of the sulfur amino acid cystathionine.*^
  8398. While I might try the seeds were I suffering cancer or AIDS, there are enough toxicology
  8399. data to make me avoid the seeds as part of my regular diet. After prolonged exposure to
  8400. active extracts or the seeds, sacrificed guinea pigs exhibited hair growth inhibition, atrophy
  8401. and disappeamce of the sebaceous glands, marked atrophy of the epidermis, edema, and
  8402. intraalveolar hemorrhage of the lungs, necrotic foci of the liver and spleen, and intense
  8403. sinusoidal congestion of the adrenals.Such symptoms might also result from experimental
  8404. self-medication.
  8405. Description — Small-to-medium tree with warty branches; bark reddish-yellow, hard and
  8406. heavy; wood reddish-yellow to dark-brown, very strong. Leaves sessile or subsessile, al­
  8407. ternate, chartaceous, ovate to oblong-ovate, apex acute to obtuse, base rounded to subcordate,
  8408. subserrate, the reticulate venation not prominent, 5.2 to 9 cm long, 2.5 to 5 cm wide.
  8409. Inflorescence in terminal spikes, with ovate deciduous bracts. Flowers variable; sepals 6,
  8410. oblong, uneven with rounded margins, concave, persistent; petals 6, larger than the sepals,
  8411. spathulate, subequal, oblong, to subrounded, concave, with a reflex margin, white. Capsule
  8412. 201
  8413. pot-shaped, brown, rounded, 3.5 to 6 x 5.6 to 8.2 cm, with a 6-lobed ring-shaped, obtuse
  8414. calycine ring; pericarp woody; seeds with brown covering and a yellowish oily meat.^^’^^^
  8415. Germplasm — Reported from the South American Center of Diversity, monkey pot, or
  8416. CVS thereof, is reported to tolerate limestone and low pH.^^ Some authors think this is
  8417. conspecific with L. minor. Prance and Mori,^^^ tabulating the differences, maintain them as
  8418. distinct.
  8419. Distribution — North-central Venezuela, east of the easternmost branch of the Andes,
  8420. west of the Paria Peninsula, and north of the Rio Orinoco.
  8421. Ecology — Ranging from Subtropical Moist through Tropical Very Dry to Moist Forest
  8422. Life Zones, monkey pot is reported to tolerate precipitation of 9.1 to 22.8 dm (mean of 4
  8423. cases = 13.3), annual temperature of 23.7 to 26.2°C (mean of 4 cases = 24.8°C), and pH
  8424. of 5.0 to 7.1 (mean of 4 cases = 6.4).^^ Usually a small tree in savanna-like environments,
  8425. sometimes to 20 m tall in more favorable environments.
  8426. Cultivation — Trees are easily propagated from seed, in nature probably disseminated
  8427. by bats.
  8428. Harvesting — Seeds harvested from wild trees as available. Extraction of oil said to be
  8429. carried out by local populations.
  8430. Yields and economics — Seed collected locally and used for oil or as a food, especially
  8431. by natives of northern South America.
  8432. Energy — I can only speculate about these tropical trees with no real yield data. With
  8433. breeding for dwarfing and improved reliability and quantity of yield, I think these trees
  8434. could yield 1 to 3 MT oil per ha. Prunings, fruit husks, and leaf litter could also be captured
  8435. for energy conversion.
  8436. Biotic factors — No pests or diseases reported on this plant.
  8437. 202 Handbook of Nuts
  8438. LECYTHIS PISONIS Cambess. (LECYTHIDACEAE) — Sapucaia
  8439. Uses — Sapucaia nuts and paradise nuts are almost contradictory terms, paradise implying
  8440. a good exotic flavor, and sapucaia because, according to one interpretation, the nuts were
  8441. fed to chickens by Amazonian
  8442. Indians.Mori is of the opinon that sapucaia is the Tupi-
  8443. guorani name given to the fruit because of the wailing sound of the wind blowing across
  8444. the empty open fruits.Some connoisseurs consider them the finest of nuts. The kernels,
  8445. eaten raw or roasted, are occasionally used to make candies or cakes. An edible oil expressed
  8446. from the kernels is also used to produce soap and illumination. Since monkeys are fond of
  8447. the seeds, the empty pods, with lids removed, are baited with com to trap monkeys who
  8448. can get their open hands in but have trouble getting their closed hands out. The trees could
  8449. be widely planted, as they furnish fuel, food, timber, and are ornamental.Still they have
  8450. their detractions. Falling empty pods are dangerous to pedestrians. Trees are deciduous, so
  8451. leaves must be raked after they have fallen. The fleshy flowers are also messy.
  8452. Folk medicine — The oil is regarded as antipodriagic and cardiotonic. Water preserved
  8453. in the fmits for 24 hr is said to remove skin blemishes.While I find no anticancer data
  8454. for this species, I would not hesitate to eat the seeds of the seleniferous varieties if I had
  8455. cancer or AIDS. I might suffer from nausea and alopecia, side effects common with synthetic
  8456. chemotherapy. Some people trek to New York to visit with an M.D. (I. Revici) who has
  8457. “ anti-AIDS medications” based on synthetic combinations of selenium and fatty acids or
  8458. vegetable oils. I urge further testing of seleniferous Lecythidaceous fmits in the U.S. cancer
  8459. screening program.
  8460. Chemistry — Rosengarten^^^ suggests that the kernels contain ca. 62% fat and 20%
  8461. protein. Pereira^^^ says fmits contain 9% oil. Finding no more data on these Lecythis species,
  8462. I suggest that they might be comparable in composition to Brazil nuts in component fatty
  8463. acid percentages, i.e., ca. 15% palmitic-, ca. 5% stearic-, ca. 45% oleic-, and ca. 35%
  8464. linoleic. Selenium content might be predicted to vary with provenance. Nuts are said to get
  8465. rancid within a week or two.^^
  8466. Description — Tree to 40 m tall, 1V2 m DBH, deciduous near the end of the dry season.
  8467. Leaves simple, alternate, entire, penninerved. Flowers large, attractive, yellow to lilac or
  8468. lavender or blue, sepals 6, petals 6, stamens numerous, ovary 4-locular. Pods 30 to 40
  8469. seeded, operculate. Seeds wrinkled, irregularly oblong, ca. 5 cm long, more rounded than
  8470. Brazil nuts, lighter brown and with thinner shell. Kernels ivory white, with a creamy texture.
  8471. Mori and Prance,keenly aware of the taxonomic complexities of the group, list 10
  8472. characteristics, the combination of which uniquely identifies the “ sapucaia group” :
  8473. 1. Large trees (at maturity they are emergents)
  8474. 2. Brownish bark with pronounced vertical fissures
  8475. 3. Laminated outer bark
  8476. 4. Deciduous leaves which are flushed shortly before or at the same time as the flowers
  8477. 5. Leaves, flowers, and fmits which possess an unidentified compound that oxidizes
  8478. bluish-green when the parts are bmised
  8479. 6. Hood of androecium flat with the proximal appendages anther-bearing and the distal
  8480. ones antherless
  8481. 7. Pollen of the hood anthers turning from yellow or white to black after 24 hr
  8482. 8. Short styles with an annular expansion towards the apex
  8483. 9. Large, dehiscent, woody fmits
  8484. 10. Seeds with a long cord-like funicle which is surrounded by a large fleshy aril
  8485. Germplasm — Reported from the South American Center of Diversity, sapucaia and
  8486. closely related species, show a rather general lack of tolerance to environmental extremes.
  8487. 203
  8488. Such narrow tolerances seem to be characteristics of rainforest species. As defined by Mori
  8489. and Prance,the sapucaia group consists of three species, in addition to L. piso n is (incl.
  8490. L. usitata): L. am pla (incl. L. costaricen sis) from Nicaragua to Colombia, L. lanceolata,
  8491. from Rio de Janeiro to Bahia, and L. zabucaja (incl. L. tum efacta), from Venezuela and
  8492. the Guianas disjunctly to Central Amazonia. Many of the data in the literature on sapucaia
  8493. may refer to one or the other of these.
  8494. D istrib u tion — Common in the coastal forests of eastern Brazil and Amazonia.
  8495. E cology — Estimated to range from Tropical Moist to Wet through Subtropical Dry to
  8496. Wet Forest Life Zones, sapucaia is estimated to tolerate annual precipitation of 12 to 42
  8497. dm, annual temperature of 23 to 2 T C , and pH of 4 to 8. Said to occur in samll groups near
  8498. hilltops in forests. The ‘sapucaia’ group of L ecythis is not found at elevations over 800 m
  8499. or in the dryer savanna or caatinga habitats. They inhabit forests with around 20(X) mm or
  8500. more rainfall per year and in some areas tolerate moderate dry seasons of up to 6 months.
  8501. Nevertheless, this is a typical moist-forest group which provides a good example of the
  8502. effects of climatic and geological changes on the distribution and evolution of neotropical
  8503. lowland trees.T he annual leaf litterfall of a 10-year-old stand was estimated at 1,849
  8504. kg/ha at Pau-Brasil Ecological Station, on oxisols (haplorthoxs) pH 4.5 to 5.5, annual
  8505. precipitation 13 to 14 dm, annual temperature 24 to 25°C with annual amplitude of 7 to
  8506. 362 on the phenology and floral biology are treated by Mori et al.^^° Over 6 years
  8507. in Bahia, leaf fall was mostly from September to December, flowering in October and
  8508. November, and fruiting 7 months later in March and April (southern hemisphere).
  8509. C ultivation — Seeds could be planted in situ or in pots for transplant later.
  8510. H arvestin g — Said to start bearing when 8 to 10 years old, the seeds are largely harvested
  8511. from the wild, often by animals other than man. Bats are the dispersal agent. It is very
  8512. difficult for man to get the seeds before bats get them.^*^
  8513. Y ield s and econ om ics — Rosengarten^®^ quotes estimates of 70 kg nuts per tree. None­
  8514. theless, there are no large plantations, only a few small plantings in Brazil, the Guianas,
  8515. the West Indies, and Malaysia. The fact that the fruit is dehiscent, exposing the delicious
  8516. nuts to the nut-eating animals and birds, makes this much less attractive than its relative,
  8517. the Brazil nut, for commercial exploitation. Dwarfed cvs, which might be bagged for
  8518. protection from predators, might make the sapucaia a more attractive commercial possiblity.
  8519. E n ergy — Assuming 50 kg nuts per tree and 100 trees per ha (they may bear quite
  8520. precociously) and 60% oil, there is an incredible 3 MT oil per hectare, if you could capture
  8521. it all. This edible oil could be used for fuel, if fuel were more valuable than food, and the
  8522. press-cake, if non-seleniferous, could be used for food or feed. Prunings from the trees, as
  8523. well as the husks, might be used for fuel. As Periera^^^ notes, the dry fruits serve as fuel.
  8524. Leaf litter alone approaches 2 MT/ha/hr.
  8525. B iotic factors — Mori and Prance^^^ found that the carpenter bee, X ylocopa fro n ta lis, is
  8526. a regular visitor to the flowers. It transports two types of pollen from the flower, viable
  8527. pollen from the staminal ring and non viable pollen (the reward) from the hood of the flowers.
  8528. Non viable pollen is collected and placed in pollen baskets; viable pollen, deposited on head
  8529. and back, causes fertilization.Bats, monkeys, parrots, and peccaries probably obtain most
  8530. of the pro duc tion.In Trinidad, bats {P hyllostom us hastatus) remove the seeds,
  8531. dropping them after eating the aril, either in flight or under their roosts. Bats are the main
  8532. dispersers.
  8533. 204 Handbook of Nuts
  8534. LICANIA RIGIDA Benth. (ROSACEAE) — Oiticica
  8535. Syn.: P lera g in a um hresissim a Arruda Camara
  8536. Uses — Seeds of this tree are the source of Oiticica Oil, a drying oil used in place of
  8537. tung oil for varnishes and protective coatings. Trees are sometimes grown as shade trees in
  8538. villages where the plants are native. Timber sometimes used in construction.*’
  8539. Folk medicine — No data available.
  8540. Chemistry — Hilditch and Williams*^^ indicate that the seed fat contains 61% alpha-
  8541. licanic acid (4-keto-9,l 1,13-octadecatrienic acid) (C18H28O3) and 17% alpha- elaeostearic
  8542. acids. Licanic acid is unique among natural fatty acids in containing a ketonic group.
  8543. According to Vaughan,the oil most closely resembles tung oil in chemical and physical
  8544. properties. The oil cake contains 9% protein, but contains so much tannin and residual oil
  8545. as to be unsuitable for animal feed. Hager’s Handbook*^^ puts the oil content of the whole
  8546. fruit at 33 to 45%, the kernels at 49 to 65%. Of this, 70 to 82% is alpha-licanic acid, 4 to
  8547. 12% oleic-, up to 4% linoleic-, 10 to 11% palmitic-, and stearic- and isolicanic-acid.
  8548. Myricetin is also reported. Here we have no exception to disprove the rule. In general,
  8549. tropical oilseeds have higher percentages of saturated fatty acids, compared to their temperate
  8550. counterparts. In the Rosaceae, seed fats of tropical genera have about 10% saturated fatty
  8551. acids, temperate genera about 5%. The tropical oils hence become rancid more rapidly. *^®’*^*
  8552. Description — Small tree to 15 m tall, with spreading crown, the young branches lanate
  8553. to tomentellous, soon becoming glabrous and lenticellate. Leaves oblong to elliptic, 6.0 to
  8554. 13.0 (to 16.0) cm long, 2.8 to 6.5 cm broad, coriaceous, rounded to cordate at base, glabrous
  8555. and shining on upper surface, the lower surface with deeply reticulate venation quite or
  8556. nearly describing stomatal cavities, with lanate pubescence among but not on veins; midrib
  8557. prominulous above, puberulous toward base when young; primary veins 11 to 16 pairs.
  8558. 205
  8559. prominent on lower surface, prominulous above; 5.0 to 8.0 cm long, tomentose when young,
  8560. becoming glabrescent with age, terete, with two sessile glands. Stipules linear, to 10.0 mm
  8561. long, membranous, caducous. Inflorescenes racemose panicles, the rachis and branches
  8562. gray-tomentose. Flowers 2.5 to 3.5 mm long, in small groups, sessile on primary branches
  8563. of inflorescence. Bracts and bracteoles 1.5 to 2.5 mm long, ovate, tomentose on exterior,
  8564. persistent, entire to serrulate, eglandular. Receptacle campanulate, gray-tomentose on ex­
  8565. terior, tomentose within; pedicels to 0.5 mm long. Calyx lobes acute, tomentose on exterior,
  8566. tomentellous within. Petals 5, densely pubescent. Stamens ca. 14; filaments equalling calyx
  8567. lobes, connate to about half-way from base, densely pubescent. Ovary attached to base of
  8568. receptacle, villous. Style equalling calyx lobes, villous nearly to apex. Fruit elliptic, 4.0 to
  8569. 5.5 cm long; epicarp smooth, drying green or black; mesocarp thin, fleshy; endocarp thin,
  8570. fibrous, fragile, fibers arranged longitudinally promoting longitudinal dehiscence, sparsely
  8571. pubescent within. Germination hypogeal.^^^
  8572. Germplasm — Reported from the South American Center of Diversity, oiticica, or cvs
  8573. thereof, is reported to tolerate drought. Some efforts have been made to develop high-
  8574. yielding strains which can be propagated vegetatively. The number of native trees is limited
  8575. by their habitat requirements and cannot be increased to meet increasing demands for oil.®^^^^
  8576. Distribution — Dry forests and gallery forests of northeastern Brazil. According to
  8577. Prance,this species is cultivated outside its natural range, e.g., in Trinidad, “but is not
  8578. used commercially outside Brazil.” This tree is confined primarily to the arid regions of
  8579. northeastern Brazil, including the states of Ceara, Rio Grande de Norte, Bahia, Piaui,
  8580. Maranhao, Paraiba, and northern Pernambuco. Introduced to Trinidad and a few other regions
  8581. with similar ecological conditions.
  8582. Ecology — Oiticica trees thrive on dry tropical lowlands where there is a dry season from
  8583. July to December and where the annual rainfall varies from ca. 9 to 14 dm.®^ It is often
  8584. found in dry open grasslands bordering rivers. Plantations should be put on well-drained,
  8585. alluvial, fertile soils, rich in potash, with a pH of about 7.0. The average temperature should
  8586. be 31.7 to 32.9°C.^^^ Markley^^ suggests that it is especially common along the banks of
  8587. rivers, said to form dense groves in rich alluvial soils.
  8588. Cultivation — Propagation is by seed, grafting, and budding. Seeds lose their viability
  8589. soon after ripening, seeds 6 months old having lost most of their viability. Best growth is
  8590. obtained when the seeds are sown in well-watered, good alluvial soils, in a nursery. Seedlings
  8591. are about 17 cm tall in 60 days. The nursery should be irrigated and deeply cultivated.
  8592. Transplants are set 0.5 m apart in rows 1 m apart and irrigated every 10 to 15 days during
  8593. the dry season. Four months after transplanting (when the seedling is about 6 months old)
  8594. seedlings average nearly a meter tall. Stocks are grafted when 5 to 7 months old. Several
  8595. methods of grafting, including inarching and budding, have been tried, with budding being
  8596. most practicable, because of the difficulty in transporting stocks when inarching. Buds
  8597. sprouted in 25 to 80 days after grafting, mostly in 24 to 40 days. The period between sowing
  8598. of seed and final setting of the grafted tree in the orchard is about 22 months, depending
  8599. upon the time of the rainy season.
  8600. Harvesting — Usually 3 years after the beginning of nursery work or 2 years and 3
  8601. months after grafting, about 12% of the trees were found to flower and set fruit. Then the
  8602. trees continue to bear for many years, some estimate as long as 75 years. Ripened fruits
  8603. fall to the ground or are knocked off by shaking the trees. They are collected by men,
  8604. women, and children, and delivered to local warehouses. Extracting companies maintain
  8605. collection stations at the end of or along the few available roads or railroads in the regions
  8606. where the nuts grow native. After the refining companies receive the fruits, they ship them
  8607. to larger warehouses or the extracting companies where the fruits are cleaned and prepared
  8608. for processing. Seed (kernel) is easily removed from the husk and the oil obtained by pressure
  8609. alone, or by pressure plus action of solvents. Because of its unpleasant odor and semisolid
  8610. 206 Handbook of Nuts
  8611. state, its uses will be greatly restricted until means are found for refining it and keeping it
  8612. in a liquid state. After pressing, the oil is transported to the refinery. Harvesting is from
  8613. December through April. As Vaughan^^^ puts it, “ From December to March, the fruits
  8614. fall to the ground and are collected.”
  8615. Yields and economics — Having seen no published yield data on this tree, I estimate
  8616. that in good years a tree may drop 2 to 3 MT fruits per hectare, suggesting potential kernel
  8617. yields of 1,200 to 3,000 kg, and oil yields of 700 to 1,800 kg/ha. Concerning the oil yields,
  8618. the following data may be helpful: average weight per nut = 2.27 to 4.7 g; average percent
  8619. of kernel per nut = 58 to 70%; average percent of oil per kernel = 52.9 to 60%.^^^ Felling
  8620. the tree and exporting seed are prohibited. Brazil has the monopoly on production of Oiticica
  8621. Oil, producing annually ca. 20,000 MT, this amount fluctuating from year to year. Vaughan^^^
  8622. suggested an annual seed production of 54,000 MT. In 1941, Brazil produced 18 to 19 MT,
  8623. exporting more than 16 MT.^^^ Oiticica oil must compete with tung, dehydrated castor oil,
  8624. and in some cases, with linseed oil. Around 1957, the industry was centered in Ceara, where
  8625. 14 of the 20 processing mills were located. The largest mill, Brazil Oiticica S.A., had a
  8626. reported crushing capacity of 3,500 tons per month, mostly oiticica and cashew.
  8627. Energy — Prunings and falling biomass from large trees like this could easily add up to
  8628. 5 to 10 MT/ha. Seed yields should be higher than those of temperate tree members of the
  8629. Rosaceae, e.g., almond. The press-cake, because of a relatively toxic reputation, might be
  8630. better for fuel than for food.
  8631. Biotic factors — Fertilization of the flowers is by means of insects, but a large number
  8632. of buds drop before opening or without setting fruit. It has been estimated that for a tree to
  8633. set 150,000 seeds (458 kg), it would have to bear 12 million buds.^^®
  8634. 207
  8635. MAC AD AMI A INTEGRIFOLIA Maiden & Betche, MAC AD AMI A TETRAPHYLLA L. John­
  8636. son (PROTEACEAE) — Macadamia Nuts, Australian Nuts
  8637. Uses — Macadamia nuts are eaten raw or, after cooking in oil, are roasted and salted;
  8638. also used to make an edible bland salad oil. Rumsey^®^ recommends it also as a timber tree
  8639. and ornamental. Years ago a coffee-like beverage known as “ almond coffee” was marketed
  8640. from the seeds.
  8641. Folk medicine — No data available.
  8642. Chemistry — Per 100 g, the nut is reported to contain 691 calories, 3.0 to 3.1 g H2O,
  8643. 7.8 to 8.7 g protein, 71.4 to 71.6 g fat, 15.1 to 15.9 g total carbohydrate, 2.5 g fiber, 1.7
  8644. g ash, 48 mg Ca, 161 mg P, 20 mg Fe, 264 mg K, 0 mg (3-carotene equivalent, 0.34 mg
  8645. thiamine, 0.11 mg riboflavin, 1.3 mg niacin, and 0 mg ascorbic acid.®^ According to
  8646. MacFarlane and Harris, the oil is high in monounsaturates (79%) and palmitoleic acid
  8647. (16 to 25%). The composition ranges from 0.1 to 1.4% lauric, 0.7 to 0.8 myristic, 8.0 to
  8648. 9.2 palmitic, 15.6 to 24.6 palmitoleic, 3.3 to 3.4 stearic, 54.8 to 64.2 oleic, 1.5 to 1.9
  8649. linoleic, 2.4 to 2.7 arachidic, 2.1 to 3.1 eicosenoic, and 0.3 to 0.7% behenic acids. The
  8650. oil-cake contains 8.1% moisture, 12.6% oil, 2.6% crude fiber, 33.4% crude protein, and
  8651. 43.3% N-free extract.
  8652. Description — Macadamia integrifolia: trees up to 20 m tall, with spread of 13 m. Leaves
  8653. opposite in seedlings, later in whorls of 3, pale-green or bronze when young, 10 to 30 cm
  8654. long, margins with few or no spines, petioles about 1.3 cm long. Flowers creamy white,
  8655. petalless, borne in groups of 3 or 4 along a long axis in racemes, much like grapes. Fruit
  8656. 208 Handbook of Nuts
  8657. consisting of a fleshy green husk enclosing a spherical seed; nuts round or nearly so, surface
  8658. smooth or nearly so, 1.3 to 2.5 cm in diameter; shell tough, fibrous, difficult to crack;
  8659. kernel white, of uniform quality, shrinking only slightly after harvesting. Flowers June
  8660. through to March, some strains almost ever-bearing, flowering while fruiting.
  8661. M acadam ia tetraph ylla: trees up to 20 m tall, with spread of 13 m. Leaves opposite in
  8662. seedlings, commonly in fours rarely in threes or fives, purple or reddish when young, margins
  8663. serrate with many spines, up to 50 cm long, sessile or on very short petioles. Flowers pink,
  8664. in large racemes. Fruit consisting of a fleshy green husk enclosing one seed; nuts usually
  8665. elliptical or spindle-shaped, surface pebbled; kernel grayish; variable in quality and shrinking
  8666. some after harvest. Flowers between August and October, producing one main crop. Between
  8667. these two distinct types are numerous intermediate forms varying in spininess of leaves,
  8668. color of flower, size of nut and thickness of shell.
  8669. Germplasm — Reported from the Australian Center of Diversity, macadamias or cvs
  8670. thereof are reported to tolerate drought, slope and wind.^^ Since 1956, M acadam ia inte-
  8671. grifolia (smooth-shelled type) and M acadam ia tetraphylla L. (rough-shelled type) are the
  8672. names properly applied to the cultivated Macadamia nuts. Prior to this time they had been
  8673. generally referred to M acadam ia ternifolia. F. Muell. is a distinct species, bearing small,
  8674. bitter, cyanogenic seeds less than 1.3 cm in diameter, inedible and never cultivated. Many
  8675. cultivars have been developed, and grafted trees of promising selections have been made.
  8676. Three cvs of M . integrifolia, ‘Kakea’, ‘Ikaika’ and ‘Keauhou’, have been planted extensively
  8677. in Hawaii, all giving satisfactory production under favorable conditions. ‘Keaau’ has been
  8678. more recently recommended for commercial planting in Hawaii, since it is highly resistant
  8679. to wind and yields 5 to 10% more than previous cvs, the entire crop maturing and dropping
  8680. before the end of November. Most of the Australian crop is based upon M . tetraphylla,
  8681. with some orchards of grafted M . integrifolia cvs. Among the medium- to thick-shelled
  8682. selections, used mainly for processing, are ‘Richard’, ‘Tinana’, ‘Our Choice’ and ‘Hinde’.
  8683. Rough-shelled types, mostly grown for table purposes, are ‘Collard’, ‘Howard’, ‘Sewell’
  8684. and ‘Ebony’. Cvs showing hybrid characteristics are ‘Oakhurst’ and ‘Nutty Glen’. ‘Ted-
  8685. dington’ is a hybrid with thin shell.
  8686. Distribution — Native to coastal rain-forests of central east Australia (New South Wales
  8687. and Queensland). Introduced in other parts of tropics, e.g., Ceylon, and commercially grown
  8688. in Costa Rica, Hawaii, and France, at medium elevation.
  8689. Ecology — Ranging from Warm Temperate Dry (without frost) through Tropical Moist
  8690. Forest Life Zones, macadamias are reported to tolerate annual precipitation of 7 to 26 dm,
  8691. annual temperature of 15 to 25°C, and pH of 4.5 to 8.0.^^ Macadamia grows best in rain­
  8692. forest areas, along coasts with high humidity and heavy rainfall. However, it is tolerant of
  8693. adverse conditions when once established. Inland crops are usually lighter than coastal crops.
  8694. Trees produce a deep taproot and relatively few lateral roots; therefore, they may need
  8695. windbreaks in exposed areas. Under orchard conditions, trees are shapely, robust, and more
  8696. heavily foliaged than they are in rain-forest. Grows well on a wide range of soils, but fails
  8697. on infertile coastal sands, heavy clays, or gravelly ridges. Yields well on deep, well-drained
  8698. loams and sandy loams. Slopes steeper than 1 in 25 should be planted on the contour, and
  8699. every precaution taken to prevent soil erosion.
  8700. Cultivation — Propagation by seed is not difficult, but seedlings are variable in production
  8701. and nut characteristics, and of little value for commercial plantings. Freshly harvested nuts
  8702. are best for germination, but require 30 to 90 days before germination. Propagation is usually
  8703. by cuttings, marcottage, and side-tongue grafts. Root-stocks for grafting are readily grown
  8704. from seed by ordinary nursery means. Grafting in Macadamia is more difficult than in most
  8705. nut trees, due to hardness of wood. Best results are obtained when seedling root-stocks are
  8706. side-wedge grafted with selected scions. After-care of graft is similar to that practiced in
  8707. other trees. Budding is much less satisfactory than grafting. The most suitable time for
  8708. 209
  8709. transplanting young trees to orchard is from February to April in Australia and in Hawaii,
  8710. when rainfall is good and sufficient soil moisture available. Taproot should be severed about
  8711. 30 cm below ground about 6 weeks before time to transplant, to allow fibrous roots to
  8712. develop. Roots are very susceptible to exposure and should not be allowed to dry out. Grafted
  8713. trees should be planted with the union well above ground level and watered immediately.
  8714. Since trees have a tendency to grow tall, young trees, when about 75 cm tall, should be
  8715. topped little by little to produce a few evenly spaced limbs, thus developing a strong, rounded
  8716. symmetrical tree. Little pruning is required in bearing trees except to discourage leaders, to
  8717. reduce lateral growth, to let in light, and to make cultural and harvesting operations more
  8718. favorable. Pruning should be done toward the end of winter after the crop is harvested.
  8719. Macadamia grows best in soils with a good supply of humus. Farm-yard manure may be
  8720. added, and green manure crops can be grown between trees in summer. Under orchard
  8721. conditions, regular applications of fertilizer are required, as a 8:10:5 formula, at a rate of
  8722. .45 kg per tree per year of age, maximum of 4.5 kg. Fertilizer should be applied in early
  8723. spring just before trees make new growth and start flowering. Zinc deficiencies seem to be
  8724. a problem with this tree — the symptoms being small, yellowish or slightly mottled leaves
  8725. which are bunched together, crop retardation, and poor shoot growth. The condition corrected
  8726. by application of foliar spray in early spring after the first flush of growth, at a rate of 4.5
  8727. kg zinc sulfate, 1.3 kg soda ash (or 1.7 kg hydrate lime) in 100 gal water. However, spray
  8728. is effective at any period of year if symptoms are obvious. Since root system is rather close
  8729. to surface, shallow cultivation for weed control should be practiced. Summer cover crops,
  8730. e.g., cowpeas, and autumn green manure crops may be grown between trees until harvest
  8731. time. Grazing cattle on weeds and grass in orchards has the advantage of adding animal
  8732. manure.
  8733. Harvesting — Nuts mature 6 to 7 months after flowering and should be allowed to ripen
  8734. on the trees. Usually the nuts fall to the ground when mature. In some cvs, nuts remain on
  8735. trees and must be removed with rakes. After harvesting, nuts are dehusked, usually with an
  8736. improvised com-sheller, washed, placed on wire trays for about 6 weeks to dry out, graded,
  8737. and shipped to market. Machinery for cracking shells has been designed for processing
  8738. purposes, in addition to several efficient hand-operated crackers, which produce a kernel
  8739. undamaged. Kernels which are broken during cracking are used by confectioners. Shelled
  8740. kernels deteriorate rather quickly unless kept in vacuum-sealed jars. Processed nuts when
  8741. roasted and slightly salted keep extremely well.^^^’^"^®
  8742. Yields and economics — Most trees begin bearing fruit at 6 to 7 years, while other trees
  8743. must be 10 to 15, vegetatively propagated trees bearing earlier. Yield records vary widely,
  8744. depending on strain characteristics and environmental factors. Macadamia has great com­
  8745. mercial potential in the tropics and makes an excellent door-yard tree. In addition to pro­
  8746. duction of nuts in Australia, production in Hawaii in 1970 amounted to 5750 tons. Presently,
  8747. production is being developed in South Africa, Paraguay, Costa Rica, Jamaica, Samoa, and
  8748. Zimbabwe.
  8749. Energy — According to Saleeb et al.,^^® nuts of M. integrifolia and M. tetraphylla are
  8750. equal in oil content, with an iodine value of 75.4 and 71.8, respectively. They describe a
  8751. method for partially extracting the oil (6 to 14% of the weight of intact oven-dry kernels),
  8752. rendering them more attractive, digestible, and less fattening, while diverting 14% of the
  8753. weight to oil production. In Australia yields are estimated at about 45 kg per tree annually;
  8754. in Hawaii, at 135 kg per tree. New cultivars are known to yield as much as 3.75 tons/ha,
  8755. averaging 1 ton of kernels, which should contain more than 700 kg oil/ha renewably (oil
  8756. makes up 65 to 75% of the kernel).
  8757. Biotic factors — Macadamia trees are attacked by G loeosporium sp. (Blossom blight)
  8758. and M acrophom a m acadam iae. Nematodes isolated from trees include: H elicotylenchus
  8759. dihystera, R otylenchus erythrinae, and Xiphinem a am ericanum . In Hawaii, the Southern
  8760. green stink-bug is a serious problem, damaging about 10% of the seed.^*^
  8761. 210
  8762. MADHUCA LONGIFOLIA (L.) Macbr. (SAPOTACEAE) — Mahua, Illupei Tree, Mawra
  8763. Butter Tree
  8764. Syn.: Madhuca indica J. F. Gmel., Bassia longifolia L.
  8765. Uses — Mahua is valued for its edible flowers and oil-bearing seeds. Fresh flowers are
  8766. extremely sweet, less so when dried, having a flavor resembling that of figs. Rich in vitamins,
  8767. the flowers are eaten fresh or dried and cooked with rice, grains or shredded coconut, fried
  8768. or baked into cakes, or ground into flour and used in various foodstuffs. A large portion of
  8769. the crop of flowers is made into syrup containing ca. 60% sugar, suitable for making jams,
  8770. sweetmeats, or as a honey substitute, for production of alcohol (with average yields of 90
  8771. gals of 95% alcohol per ton of dried flowers), for making vinegar, or distilled liqueurs and
  8772. wine. Molasses sugar of good quality is made from mahua. Syrup is used by natives of
  8773. Bastar (in Madhya Pradesh) instead of brown sugar. Flowers, and spent flowers after fer­
  8774. mentation, are used as feed for livestock. The flesh of animals fed on mahua flowers has a
  8775. delicate flavor. Pressed cake of corollas is used as fertilizer. Mahua cake has insecticidal
  8776. and piscicidal properties. Because the saponin present in it has a specific action against
  8777. earthworms, it is applied to lawns and golf greens. Used, along with Acacia concinna, as
  8778. a hairwash in South India. Seeds, with 50 to 60% fat content, are the source of Mahua Oil
  8779. or Tallow Mawra Butter, used for manufacturing soaps and candles, and when refined, used
  8780. as butter. Oil has poor keeping quality. Used for edible and cooking purposes in some rural
  8781. areas. Refined oil is also used in the manufacturer of lubricating greases and fatty alcohols,
  8782. and as a raw material for the production of stearic acid. Wood is durable, lasting exceptionally
  8783. well under water, planes well, and takes a good finish, but is difficult to saw, and has a
  8784. tendency to split or crack. Wood is used for building purposes, as door and window frames,
  8785. beams, and posts, furniture, sports goods, musical instruments, oil and sugar presses, boats
  8786. and ship-building, bridges, well construction, turnery, agricultural implements, drums, carv­
  8787. ing, and has been tried for railway sleepers. The bark contains 17% tannin and is used for
  8788. dyeing and tanning. Mahua berries are eaten raw or cooked, and are eaten by cattle, sheep,
  8789. goats, monkeys, and birds. Sometimes used as green manure.
  8790. 211
  8791. Folk Medicine — According to Hartwell,the flowers are used in folk remedies for
  8792. abdominal tumors. Reported to be anodyne, antidote, astringent, bactericide, carminative,
  8793. demulcent, emetic, emollient, expectorant, insecticide, lactagogue, laxative, piscicide, re­
  8794. frigerant, stimulant, and tonic, mahua is a folk remedy for bee-sting, bilious conditions,
  8795. blister, blood disorders, breast ailments, bronchitis, cachexia, cholera, colds, consumption,
  8796. cough, diabetes, dysuria, ear ailments, eye ailments, fever, fistula, gingivitis, headaches,
  8797. heart problems, intestinal ailments, itch, leprosy, orchitis, phthisis, piles, pimples, rheu­
  8798. matism, skin ailments, smallpox, snakebite, suppuration, tonsillitis, tuberculosis, tumors of
  8799. the abdomen, and wounds.^’ The gummy juice is used for rheumatism, the bark decoction
  8800. as an astringent and emollient, and as a remedy for itch; root, bark, leaves, and flowers for
  8801. snakebite, the flowers for scorpion sting.Mahua is considered to be astringent, stimulant,
  8802. emollient, demulcent, and nutritive in Ayurvedic medicine. Bark used to treat rheumatism,
  8803. ulcers, itches, bleeding and spongy gums, tonsillitis, leprosy, and diabetes. The emollient
  8804. oil is used in skin diseases, rheumatism, bilious fevers, burning sensations, headaches; being
  8805. laxative, it is useful in habitual constipation, piles, and hemorrhoids; and is used as an
  8806. emetic. Used in winter for chapped hands. Roots are applied to ulcers, bleeding tonsillitis,
  8807. rheumatism, diabetes mellitus, and spongy gums. Medicinally, flowers are reported to be
  8808. cooling, aphrodisiac, demulcent, galactagogue, expectorant, nutritive, tonic, and carmina­
  8809. tive, are considered to be beneficial in heart diseases, bronchitis, coughs, wasting diseases,
  8810. burning sensation, biliousness, and ear complaints; dried flowers used as a fomentation in
  8811. orchitis. Fried flowers are eaten by people suffering from piles. Mahua flowers show anti­
  8812. bacterial activity aginst Escherichia coli. The edible honey from the flowers is reported to
  8813. be used for eye diseases. Liquor made from the flowers used as an astringent and a tonic.
  8814. Mahua leaves are astringent, used in embrocations. Fruit used for bronchitis, consumption,
  8815. and blood diseases; seeds are galactagogue.
  8816. Chemistry — Per 100 g, the inflorescence (ZMB) is reported to contain 5.0 g protein,
  8817. 1.8 g fat, 89.0 g total carbohydrate, 1.6 g fiber, 4.2 g ash, 130 mg Ca, and 120 mg P. Per
  8818. 100 g, the leaf (ZMB) is reported to contain 9.1 g protein, 3.9 g fat, 79.4 g total carbohydrate,
  8819. 19.0 g fiber, 7.6 g ash, 1460 mg Ca, and 210 mg P.®^ An insoluble gum from incisions on
  8820. the trunk contains 48.9% gutta, 38.8% resin, and 12.3% ash. Bark contains 17% tannin.
  8821. The wood contains naphthaquinone, lapachol, and alpha- and beta-lapachones; the essential
  8822. oil from the fruit pulp contains ethyl cinnamate, alpha-terpineol, and a sesquiterpene fraction.
  8823. Myricetin and myricetin-3-O-L-rhamnoside has been isolated from the leaves.In addition.
  8824. The Wealth of India^^ reports 51.1% fatty oil, 8.0% protein, 27.9% N-free extract, 10.3%
  8825. fiber, and 2.7% ash in an analysis of the seed kernel. Senaratne et al.^®^ report the fatty
  8826. acid components of the seed oil to be 23% palmitic, 15% stearic, 46% oleic, 14% linoleic,
  8827. and traces of linolenic acids. The glyceride structure of the oil is reported to be 1% dipalmito-
  8828. stearins, 1% oleo-dipalmitins, 27% oleo-palmitostearins, 41% palmito-dioleins, and 30%
  8829. stearodioleins. The Wealth of India'^^ reports the values are trace trisaturated, 47% mono-
  8830. unsaturated-disaturated, 36% mono-saturated-diunsaturated, and 17% tri-unsaturated. Per
  8831. 100 g, the corollas are reported to contain 18.6% moisture, 4.4% protein, 0.5% fat, 72.9%
  8832. total sugars, 1.7% fiber, 2.7% ash, 140 mg P, 140 mg Ca, and 15 mg Fe; magnesium and
  8833. copper are present. The sugars are identified as sucrose, maltose, glucose, fructose, ara-
  8834. binose, and rhamnose. Corollas also contain 39 lU carotene, 7 mg ascorbic acid, 37 |xg
  8835. thiamine, 878 |xg riboflavin, and 5.2 mg niacin per 100 g. Folic acid, pantothenic acid,
  8836. biotin, and inositol are also present. Corollas also contain an essential oil, anthocyanins,
  8837. betaine, and salts of malic and succinic acids. The ripe fruits, per 100 g, are reported to
  8838. contain 73.64% moisture, 1.37% protein, 1.61% fat, 22.69% carbohydrates, 0.69% mineral
  8839. matter, 45 mg Ca, 22 mg P, 1.1 mg Fe, 512 lU carotene, and 40.5 mg ascorbic acid; tannins
  8840. are present. The oil contains 22.7% ethyl cinnamate, 3.5% alpha-terpineol, and 67.9%
  8841. sesquiterpene and sesquiterpene alcohol. The green leaves contain 78.95% moisture, 19.60%
  8842. 212 Handbook of Nuts
  8843. organic matter, 0.43% N, 1.45% mineral matter, 0.43% potash (K2O), 0.087% phosphoric
  8844. acid (P2O5). and 0.10% silica. Analysis of samples of coagulum from incisions made in the
  8845. bark show 12.2 to 19.9% caoutchouc, 48.9 to 75.8% resin, and 11.9 to 38.9%
  8846. insolubles.
  8847. Toxicity — According to Burkill,^^ there is a saponin or sapo-glucoside in the seeds
  8848. which has a destructive action on the blood. Awasthi et al.^'^ report the presence of a bitter
  8849. glucosidic principle from mahua seed that was shown to possess digitalis-like action on frog
  8850. heart. Over-consumption of mahua flowers is reported to cause vomiting and stomach
  8851. disorders. ;2^
  8852. Description — Large deciduous tree, 13 to 17 m tall, with a short trunk and numerous
  8853. spreading branches forming a dense rounded crown. Leaves elliptic to linear-lanceolate, 8
  8854. to 20 cm long, 3 to 4.5 cm wide, tapering to base, glabrous when mature, clustered at ends
  8855. of branches. Flowers small, in dense clusters of 30 to 50 at ends of branches; corolla tubular,
  8856. 1.5 cm long, yellowish to cream-colored, thick, fleshy, globe-shaped, enclosed at the base
  8857. in a velvety chocolate-brown calyx. Fruit an ovoid berry up to 5 cm long, yellow when
  8858. ripe. Seeds 1 to 4, yellow to brown, ovoid, shining, 2.5 to 3 cm long, kernel about 70%
  8859. by weight of seed and containing 35 to 40% of a greenish grease (fat-oil). Trees shed their
  8860. leaves in February, and flowers appear in March and April, at which time the ground beneath
  8861. the trees is carefully cleared. Flowers March to April; fruits May to June.^^^
  8862. Germplasm — Reported from the Hindustani Center of Diversity, mahua, or cvs thereof,
  8863. is reported to tolerate drought, frost, insects, poor soil, slope, savanna, and waterlogging.®^
  8864. According to The W ealth o f India van Royen revised the taxonomy and nomenclature of
  8865. the genus M adhuca of the Malaysian area. He merged M . indica and M . longifolia under
  8866. the latter name and distinguished two varieties, var. longifolia and var. latifolia.'^^
  8867. Distribution — Native to southern India. Although it grows spontaneously in some parts,
  8868. it is extensively cultivated throughout India and Sri Lanka.
  8869. Ecology — Ranging from Warm Temperate Moist through Tropical Very Dry to Moist
  8870. Forest Life Zones, mahua is reported to tolerate annual precipitation of 7.0 to 40.3 dm (mean
  8871. of 4 cases = 17.7), annual temperatures of 24.2 to 27.5°C (mean of 4 cases = 25.4°C),
  8872. and pH of 5.0 to 7.5 (mean of 3 cases = 6.6).®^ Mahua, usually drought-resistant, is
  8873. especially suited for dry or waste lands where little else will grow. Trees thrive on dry,
  8874. stony ground in all parts of India, and are protected by the natives. Trees are frost-hardy,
  8875. but do suffer from severe conditions. It is sometimes found in waterlogged or low-lying
  8876. clayey and shallow soils. Requires full sun and is readily suppressed by shade. When cut
  8877. in dry season, plants coppice well, but not during the rainy season.^^®
  8878. Cultivation — In southern India, trees are frequently cultivated as an avenue tree. Seeds
  8879. may germinate naturally during the rainy season, soon after falling, where earth is washed
  8880. into small hollows. Subsequent growth is slow, but is favored by sunlight. For artificial
  8881. propagation, seeds are sown directly or for transplant. Fresh seeds are sown in July and
  8882. August, in prepared lines or patches. Transplanting may be risky due to the long, delicate
  8883. taproots. In India, seeds are sown directly in deep containers or the seedlings transplanted
  8884. into them from the nursery during the first rainy season a few weeks after germination.
  8885. Young trees are frequently intercropped with annual crops, at least during the first 10 to 15
  8886. years. ^^®
  8887. Harvesting — Under favorable soil and climatic conditions, mahua trees begin to bear
  8888. fruit in 8 to 10 years after planting, and continue to do so for over 60 years. Corollas fall
  8889. in great showers in early morning to the previously cleaned ground, from about the end of
  8890. March until the end of April. They are collected by women and children and spread out on
  8891. mats to dry in the sun, shrinking to about one-half their weight and turning reddish-brown.
  8892. Sometimes flowers are collected before they drop; in some places it is the practice to remove
  8893. only the corolla, leaving the pistil to ripen to a fruit. Harvest period is 7 to 10 days for a
  8894. 213
  8895. single tree. Flowers, when dried, are sold to distilleries, where they are immersed in water
  8896. for about 4 days, allowed to ferment and thereafter distilled. The spirit, somewhat similar
  8897. to Irish whiskey, has a strong, smokey, and rather fetid flavor, improved by aging, producing
  8898. a strong palatable drink. One ton of dried flowers produces ca. 90 gal of 95% ethyl alcohol.
  8899. Fruits may occur in alternate years. Fruits fall from tree when ripe or may be dropped by
  8900. shaking the branches. Season for collecting is short, from May to June, but may be extended
  8901. until December in southern India. Seeds are separated from the smooth chestnut-brown
  8902. pericarp by bruising, rubbing, or subjecting them to moderate pressure. Then they are dried
  8903. and shelled to get the kernel, these constituting the Mahua seed of commerce. Mahua oil
  8904. is extracted by cold expression; the yield of oil, depending on the efficiency of equipment,
  8905. varies from 20 to 43%, the highest gotten when extracted by solvents. In Central India,
  8906. kernels are pounded, boiled, wrapped in several folds of cloth, and then the oil is expressed.
  8907. Fresh Mahua Oil from properly stored seeds is yellow with a disagreeable odor. In warmer
  8908. areas, the oil is a liquid; in cold weather or areas, it solidifies to a buttery consistency.
  8909. Mahua cake from seeds is used as a manure, alone or mixed with mineral fertilizers, or
  8910. made into a compost with sawdust, cane trash, or bagasse, about 3 months being required
  8911. for nitrification of the cake. Quantities (1,000 to 1,750 tons) of this compost are exported
  8912. from India to Sri Lanka and Britian annually. Mahua cake also has insecticidal and piscicidal
  8913. properties, and is applied to lawns and golf courses against earth worms.
  8914. Y ield s and E con om ics — Trees require about 20 years to attain full production of flowers
  8915. and seeds; an average tree producing from 90 to 125 kg of flowers per year. Mahua is
  8916. essentially a forest crop. Still, the total amount of seeds collected in the forest is less than
  8917. from trees in semi-cultivated areas. An estimated 7 million trees in India produce about
  8918. 100,000 tons of seed per year. India is the principal producer of all products of mahua, and
  8919. the bulk of the crop is consumed locally. Some products are exported to Belgium, Germany,
  8920. France, and Britain. Indian mills convert 15,000 to 30,000 tons of seeds into oil annually.
  8921. E n ergy — A good fuel wood, it is hard and heavy, specific gravity approximately 0.95
  8922. to 0.97. Pruning, perhaps amounting to 2 to 4 MT ha, could be used for firewood. Sap wood
  8923. has a calorific value of 4,890 to 4,978 calories (8,802 to 8,962 Btu); heartwood, 5,005 to
  8924. 5,224 calories (9,010 to 9,404 Btu). Seed oil (20 to 43%) could be used for diesel substitution,
  8925. the press-cake converted to power alcohol. Assuming 100 trees per ha and 1(X) kg flowers
  8926. per tree, one might expect 900 gallons (>20 barrels) ethanol per hectare.
  8927. B iotic factors — Trees are damaged by loranthaceous parasites. Mahua trees are affected
  8928. by several fungi: S copella (U rom yces) echinulata (rust), P olystictus steinheilianus (white
  8929. spongy rot). P om es caryoph ylli (heart rot of stems), and P olyporus gilvus (root and butt
  8930. rot). Leaves are eaten by caterpillars: A chaea ja n a ta , A nuga m ultiplicans, B om boletia nu-
  8931. gatrix, M etanastria hyrtaca, and R hodoneura s p p ., A crocercops spp. (leaf-miners); the bark
  8932. is destroyed by O donoterm es obesus, C optoterm es ceylanicus, and K aloterm es sp. (white
  8933. ants) and X yloctonu s scolytoides (bark borers); sap wood of dead trees is damaged by Schis-
  8934. toceros an abioides and X ylocis tortilicornis (ghoon borers).Also attacked by the sap-
  8935. sucker U naspis acum inata In addition, Browne^^ lists Angiospermae: D en drophthoe fa l-
  8936. cata; Lepidoptera: O phiusa ja n a ta .
  8937. 214 Handbook of Nuts
  8938. MORINGA OLEIFERA Lam. (MORINGACEAE) — Horseradish-Tree, Benzolive Tree,
  8939. Drumstick-Tree, Sohnja, Moringa, Murunga-Kai
  8940. Syn.: Moringa pterygosperma Gaertn., Moringa nux-ben Perr., Guilandina moringa L.
  8941. Uses — Described as “ one of the most amazing trees God has created” .A lm o st every
  8942. part of the Moringa is said to be of value for food. Seed is said to be eaten like a peanut
  8943. in Malaya. Thickened root used as substitute for horseradish. Foliage eaten as greens, in
  8944. salads, in vegetable curries, as pickles and for seasoning. Leaves pounded up and used for
  8945. scrubbing utensils and for cleaning walls. Flowers are said to make a satisfactory vegetable;
  8946. interesting particularly in subtropical places like Florida, where it is said to be the only tree
  8947. species that flowers every day of the year. Flowers good for honey production. Young pods
  8948. cooked as a vegetable. Seeds yield 38 to 40% of a nondrying oil, known as Ben Oil, used
  8949. in arts and for lubricating watches and other delicate machinery. Haitians obtain the oil by
  8950. crushing browned seeds and boiling in water. Oil is clear, sweet and odorless, said never
  8951. to become rancid (not true, according to Ramachandran et al.).^®"^ It is edible and used in
  8952. the manufacture of perfumes and hairdressings. Wood yields blue dye. Leaves and young
  8953. branches are relished by livestock. Commonly planted in Africa as a living fence (Hausa)
  8954. tree. Ochse^^® notes an interesting agroforestry application; the thin crown throws a slight
  8955. shade on kitchen gardens, which is “ more useful than detrimental to the plants” . Trees
  8956. planted on graves are believed to keep away hyenas and its branches are used as charms
  8957. against witchcraft. In Taiwan, treelets are spaced 15 cm apart to make a living fence, the
  8958. top of which is lopped off for the calcium- and iron-rich foliage.Bark can serve for
  8959. tanning; it also yields a coarse fiber. Trees are being studied as pulpwood sources in India.
  8960. Analyses by Mahajan and Sharma^®^ indicate that the tree is a suitable raw material for
  8961. producing high alpha-cellulose pulps for use in cellophane and textiles. In rural Sudan,
  8962. powdered seeds of the tree Moringa oleifera are used to purify drinking water by coagulation.
  8963. In trials, the powder was toxic to guppies (Poecilia reticulata)^ protozoa {Tetrahymena
  8964. pyriformis), and bacteria {Escherichia coli), and it inhibited acetylcholinesterase. It had no
  8965. 215
  8966. effect on coliphages, lactic dehydrogenase, or invertase, and the equivalent of cotyledon
  8967. powder up to 1000 mg/liter had no mutagenic effect on salmonella. Pericarp had no effect.
  8968. Powdered cotyledon at 5 mg/liter affected oxygen uptake of T. pyriformis, 30 to 40 mg/liter
  8969. disturbed locomotion of guppies, and the 96-H LC50 for guppies was 196 mg/liter. Toxic
  8970. effects may have been due to 4(alpha-1-rhamnosyloxy) benzyl isothiocyanate, a glycosidic
  8971. mustard oil. The toxin seemed not to be a danger to the health of man, at least not in the
  8972. concentrations present during the use of the seeds for nutrition, medicine, or water purifi­
  8973. cation.^®^ For the low-turbidity waters of the Blue Nile, only a quarter seed per liter of water
  8974. is required, for moderately turbid water, half a seed, and for fully turbid, 1 to 1.5 seeds
  8975. per liter. Such seed are hulled, crushed, and reduced to a powder.
  8976. Folk Medicine — According to Hartwell,the flowers, leaves, and roots are used in
  8977. folk remedies for tumors, the seed for abdominal tumors. Reported to be abortifacient,
  8978. antidote (centipede, scorpion, spider), bactericide, cholagog, depurative, diuretic, ecbolic,
  8979. emetic, estrogenic, expectorant, purgative, rubefacient, stimulant, tonic, vermifuge, and
  8980. vesicant — horseradish-tree is a folk remedy for adenopathy, ascites, asthma, baldness,
  8981. boils, bums, catarrh, cholera, cold, convulsion, dropsy, dysentery, dysuria, earache, epi­
  8982. lepsy, erysipelas, faintness, fever, gout, gravel, hematuria, hysteria, inflammation, madness,
  8983. maggots, neuralgia, palsy, pneumonia, rheumatism, scabies, scrofula, scurvy, skin ailments,
  8984. snakebite, sores, spasms, splenitis, sterility (female), syphilis, toothache, tumors, ulcers,
  8985. vertigo, wounds, and yellow-fever.^^ The root decoction is used in Nicaragua for dropsy.
  8986. Root juice is applied externally as mbefacient or counter-irritant. Leaves applied as poultice
  8987. to sores, mbbed on the temples for headaches, and said to have purgative properties. Bark,
  8988. leaves, and roots are acrid and pungent, and are taken to promote digestion. Oil is somewhat
  8989. dangerous if taken internally, but is applied externally for skin diseases. Bark, regarded as
  8990. antiscorbutic, exudes a reddish gum with properties of tragacanth; sometimes used for
  8991. diarrhea. Bitter roots act as a tonic to the body and lungs, and are emmenagogue, expectorant,
  8992. mild diuretic, and stimulant in paralytic afflictions, epilepsy, and hysteria. Other medicinal
  8993. uses are suggested in Kirtikar and Basu,^^^ Morton,and Watt and Breyer-Brandwijk.^^^
  8994. Chemistry — Per 100 g, the pod is reported to contain 86.9 g H2O, 2.5 g protein, 0.1
  8995. g fat, 8.5 g total carbohydrate, 4.8 g fiber, 2.0 g ash, 30 mg Ca, 110 mg P, 5.3 mg Fe,
  8996. 184 lU Vitamin A, 0.2 mg niacin, and 120 mg ascorbic acid, 310 |xg Cu, 1.8 |xg I. Young
  8997. pods contain indoleacetic acid and indole acetonitrile.^®® Leaves contain 75 g H2O, 6.7 g
  8998. protein, 1.7 g fat, 14.3 g total carbohydrate, 0.9 g fiber, 2.3 g ash, 440 mg Ca, 70 mg P,
  8999. 7 mg Fe, 110 |xg Cu, 5.1 |xg I, 11,300 lU Vitamin A, 120 |xg Vitamin B, 0.8 mg nicotinic
  9000. acid, 220 mg ascorbic acid, and 7.4 mg tocopherol per 100 g. On a ZMB, leaf curries
  9001. contain 25.8 ppm thiamin, 7.26 ppm riboflavin, and 35 ppm niacin.^®^ If ascorbic acid is
  9002. the target, leaves should be gathered before flowering and consumed quickly. Estrogenic
  9003. substances, including the antitumor compound, beta-sitosterol, and a pectinesterase are also
  9004. reported. Leaf amino acids include 6.0 g arginine per 16 g N, 2.1 histidine, 4.3 lysine, 1.9
  9005. tryptophane, 6.4 phenylalanine, 2.0 methionine, 4.9 threonine, 9.3 lucine, 6.3 isoleucine,
  9006. and 7.1 valine. Pod amino acids include 3.6 g arginine per 16 g N, 1.1 g histidine, 1.5 g
  9007. lysine, 0.8 g tryptophane, 4.3 g phenylalanine, 1.4 g methionine, 3.9 g threonine, 6.5 g
  9008. leucine, 4.4 g, isoleucine, and 5.4 valine. Seed kernel (70 to 74% of seed) contains 4.08
  9009. g H2O, 38.4 g crude protein, 34.7 g fatty oil, 16.4 g N free extract, 3.5 g fiber, and 3.2 g
  9010. ash. Seeds contain 100 ppm Vitamin E and 140 ppm beta-carotene.^^ The seed oil contains
  9011. 9.3% palmitic, 7.4% stearic, 8.6% behenic, and 65.7% oleic acids among the fatty acids.
  9012. (Myristic and lignoceric acids have also been reported.) The cake left after oil extraction
  9013. contains 58.9% crude protein, 0.4% CaO, 1.1% P2O5 and 0.8% K2O. Gums exuding from
  9014. the trunks contain L-arabinose, D-galactose, D-glucuronic acid, L-rhamnose, and D-xylose.^^^
  9015. Pterygospermin (C22H18O2N2S2), a bactericidal and fungicidal compound, isolated from
  9016. Moringa has an LD50 subcutaneously injected in mice and rats of 350 to 400 mg/kg body
  9017. 216 Handbook of Nuts
  9018. weight. It might serve as a fruit- and vegetable preservative. In low concentrations, it protects
  9019. mice against staphylococcus infections.^® Root-bark yields two alkaloids: moringine and
  9020. moringinine. Moringinine acts as a cardiac stimulant, produces rise of blood-pressure, acts
  9021. on sympathetic nerve-endings as well as smooth muscles all over the body, and depresses
  9022. the sympathetic motor fibers of vessels in large doses only. The root alkaloid, spirochin,
  9023. paralyzes the vagus nerve, hinders infection, and has antimycotic and analgesic activity. In
  9024. doses of 15 g, the root bark is abortifacient.^^^
  9025. Description — Short, slender, deciduous, perennial tree, to about 10 m tall; rather slender
  9026. with drooping branches; branches and stems brittle, with corky bark. Leaves feathery, pale-
  9027. green, compound, tripinnate, 30 to 60 cm long, with many small leaflets, 1.3 to 2 cm long,
  9028. 0.6 to 0.3 cm wide, lateral ones somewhat elliptic, terminal one obovate and slightly larger
  9029. than the lateral ones; flowers fragrant, white or creamy-white, 2.5 cm in diameter, borne
  9030. in sprays, with 5 sepals, 5 petals; stamens yellow. Pods pendulous, brown, triangular,
  9031. splitting lengthwise into 3 parts when dry, 30 to 120 cm long, 1.8 cm wide, containing
  9032. about 20 seeds embedded in the pith, pod tapering at both ends, 9-ribbed. Seeds 1 to 2 cm
  9033. wide, dark-brown, with 3 papery wings. Main root thick. Fruit production in March and
  9034. April in Sri Lanka.
  9035. Germplasm — Reported from the African and Hindustani Centers of Diversity, Moringa
  9036. or CVS thereof is reported to tolerate bacteria, drought, fungus, laterite, mycobacteria, and
  9037. sand.*^ Several cvs are grown: ‘Bombay’ is considered one of the best, with curly fruits.
  9038. Others have the fruits 3-angled or about round in cross-section. In India, ‘Jaffna’ is noted
  9039. for having fruits 60 to 90 cm, ‘Chavakacheri murunga’ 90 to 120 cm long. (2n = 28.)
  9040. Distribution — Native to India, Arabia, and possibly Africa and the East Indies; widely
  9041. cultivated and naturalized in tropical Africa, tropical America, Sri Lanka, India, Mexico,
  9042. Malabar, Malaysia, and the Philippine Islands.
  9043. Ecology — Ranging from Subtropical Dry to Moist through Tropical Very Dry to Moist
  9044. Forest Life Zones, Moringa is reported to tolerate annual precipitation of 4.8 to 40.3 cm
  9045. (mean of 53 cases = 14.1) annual temperature of 18.7 to 28.5°C (mean of 48 cases =
  9046. 25.4) and pH of 4.5 to 8. (mean of 12 cases = 6.5). Thrives in subtropical and tropical
  9047. climates, flowering and fruiting freely and continuously. Grows best on a dry sandy soil,
  9048. but grows “ in all types of soils, except stiff clays’’.^® Drought resistant.
  9049. Cultivation — In India, the plant is propagated by planting limb cuttings 1 to 2 m long,
  9050. from June to August, preferably. The plant starts bearing pods 6 to 8 months after planting,
  9051. but regular bearing commences after the second year. The tree bears for several years.
  9052. Harvesting — Fruit or other parts of the plant are usually harvested as desired, according
  9053. to some authors; but in India, fruiting may peak between March and April and again in
  9054. September and October. Seed gathered in March and April and oil expressed.
  9055. Yields and economics — I feel, from personal observations, that Moringa’s biomass and
  9056. pod production should approach that of Prosopis growing in the same habitat. A single tree,
  9057. 3 years old, can yield more than 600 pods per year, or up to 1000."^® A single fruit will have
  9058. ca. 20 seeds, each averaging 300 mg, suggesting a seed yield of 6 kg per tree, an oil yield
  9059. conservatively of 2 kg per tree. Such could be very useful in poor developing countries
  9060. which import vegetable oils. I would suggest a target yield of about 10 MT pods per hectare.
  9061. Horseradish-tree is grown locally in India, Sri Lanka, and elsewhere, and is consumed as
  9062. a local product, either ripe or unripe.
  9063. Energy — According to Verma et al.,^^® “ saijan” is a fast-growing tree being planted
  9064. in India on a large scale as a potential source of wood for the paper industry. At Fort Meyers,
  9065. Florida, trees attain ca. 5 m height 10 months after seed is planted.It seems doubtful that
  9066. the wood and seed oil could both be viewed as fountains of energy. According to Burkill,^^
  9067. “ The seeds yield a clear inodorous oil to the extent of 22 to 38.5%. It bums with a clear
  9068. light and without smoke. It is an excellent salad oil, and gives a good soap . . . It can be
  9069. 217
  9070. used for oiling machinery, and indeed has a reputation for this purpose as watch oil, but is
  9071. now superseded by sperm oil.” Sharing rather similar habitat requirements with the jojoba
  9072. under certain circumstances, perhaps it might be investigated as a substitute for sperm whale
  9073. oil like jojoba. Growing readily from cuttings, the ben oil could be readily produced where
  9074. jojoba grows. Coming into bearing within two years, it could easily be compared to jojoba
  9075. in head-on trials. I recommend such.
  9076. Biotic factors — Fruitflies (Gitona spp.) have infested the fruits which then dried out at
  9077. the tip and rotted.Leaves of young plants and freshly planted stumps are attacked by
  9078. several species of weevils {Myllocerus discolor var. variegatus, M. 1 l-pustulatus, M. ten-
  9079. uiclavis, M. viridanus and Ptochus ovulum). Also parasitized by the flowering plant, Den-
  9080. drophthoe flacata. Fungi which attack the horseradish-tree include: Cercospora moringicola
  9081. (Leaf-spot), Sphaceloma morindae (Spot anthracnose), Puccinia moringae (rust), Oidium
  9082. sp., Polyporus gilvus, and Leveillula taurica (Papaya powdery mildew).
  9083. 218 Handbook of Nuts
  9084. N ELU M BO NUCIFERA Gaertn. (NELUMBONACEAE) Sacred Lotus, Lotus Root, Indian
  9085. Lotus, Hasu
  9086. Syn.: Nymphaea nelumbo L., Nelumbo nelumbo (L.) Karst., Nelumbium nelumbo
  9087. (L.) Druce, Nelumbium speciosum Willd.
  9088. Uses — Rhizomes and seeds of the sacred lotus are frequently used for food, especially
  9089. in the Orient. The small scale-like leaves on the rootstock, up to 30 cm long, are used as
  9090. food in some countries. Plants are grown by Chinese and Japanese for the edible tubers,
  9091. which are used much like sweet potatoes, roasted, steamed, or pickled. In China, a type of
  9092. arrowroot is prepared from the rhizomes. Leaves may be eaten raw as a vegetable in salads.
  9093. Fruits can be eaten after the seeds are removed. Flowering stalks are eaten as a vegetable.
  9094. Seeds are usually boiled or roasted after removing the bitter-tasting embryo, or eaten
  9095. r a w 209,278.283
  9096. Folk medicine — According to Hartwell,the lotus is used in folk remedies for corns.
  9097. 219
  9098. calluses, and tumors, and/or indurations of the abdomen, cervix, ear, limbs, kidney, liver,
  9099. and spleen. In China, the leaf juice is used for diarrhea or decocted with licorice for sunstroke
  9100. or vertigo. Flowers decocted, alone or with roses, for premature ejaculation. Floral receptacle
  9101. decocted for abdominal cramps, bloody discharge, metrorrhagia, and non-expulsion of am-
  9102. niotic sac. Fruit decocted for agitation, fever, heart, and hematemesis. Seed used for diarrhea,
  9103. enteritis, insomnia, metrorrhagia, neurasthenia, nightmare, spermatorrhea, splenitis, leu-
  9104. corrhea, and seminal emissions. The nourishing seeds are believed useful in preserving
  9105. health and strength, and promoting circulation. Root starch given for diarrhea, dysentery,
  9106. dyspepsia, the tonic paste applied to ringworm and other skin ailments. Plant refrigerant in
  9107. smallpox, said to stop eruptions. Antidote to alcohol and mushroom. Honey from bee visitors
  9108. is considered tonic; used for eye ailments. The embryo is used for cholera, fever, hemoptysis,
  9109. spermatorrhea. Knotty pieces of rootstock used for épistaxis, dysentery, hematemesis, he-
  9110. matochezia, hematuria, hemoptysis, and metrorrhagia. Cotyledons believed to promote vi­
  9111. rility and alleviate leucorrhea and gonorrhea. Stamens said to purify the heart, permeate the
  9112. kidneys, strengthen the virility, blacken the hair, make joyful the countenance, benefit the
  9113. blood and check hemorrhages; for hemoptysis, spermatorrhea.^ According to Kirtikar and
  9114. Basu,‘^^ nearly every part of the plant has a distinct name and economic use. Ayurvedics
  9115. use the whole plant to give tone to the breast, and to correct biliousness, fever, nausea,
  9116. strangury, thirst, and worms. They use the root for biliousness, body heat, cough, and thirst,
  9117. the stem for blood disorders, leprosy, nausea, and strangury, the leaves for burning sen­
  9118. sations, leprosy, piles, strangury, and thirst, the flower for biliousness, blood defects, cough,
  9119. eyes, fever, poisoning, skin eruptions, and thirst, the “ aphrodisiac” anthers in bleeding
  9120. piles, diarrhea, inflammations, mouth sores, poisoning, thirst, and as a uterine sedative, the
  9121. fruit for blood impurities, halitosis, and thirst, the “ aphrodisiac” seeds for burning sensa­
  9122. tions, diarrhea, dysentery, leprosy, nausea, and to strengthen the body, and the honey as
  9123. an excellent tonic, useful in eye diseases. Yunani employ the diuretic root in chest pain,
  9124. leucoderma, smallpox, spermatorrhea, and throat ailments, the flower for bronchitis, internal
  9125. ailments, thirst, and watery eyes, and as a tonic for the brain and heart, the seeds for chest
  9126. complaints, fevers, leucorrhea, menorrhagia, and as a uterine tonic.
  9127. Chemistry — Per 100 g, the seed (ZMB) is reported to contain 318 to 390 calories, 16.6
  9128. to 24.2 g protein, 1.0 to 2.7 g fat, 70.2 to 76.2 g total carbohydrate, 2.5 to 13.1 g fiber,
  9129. 4.5 to 5.2 g ash, 139 to 330 mg Ca, 298 to 713 mg P, 6.1 to 7.1 mg Fe, 17.4 to 49.0 mg
  9130. Na, 942 to 1665 mg K, 0 to 35 jxg beta-carotene equivalent, 0.65 to 0.75 mg thiamine,
  9131. 0.18 to 0.26 mg riboflavin, 1.9 to 7.8 mg niacin, and 0 to 44 mg ascorbic acid. The rhizome
  9132. (ZMB) contains 16.7 mg protein, 0.6 g fat, 74.1 g total carbohydrate, 4.9 g fiber, 6.8 g
  9133. ash, 370 mg Ca, 1.36 mg thiamine, 0.37 mg riboflavin, 12.96 mg niacin, and 93 mg ascorbic
  9134. acid.®^ Saline extracts bacteriostatic. Extracts show antitumor activity, vindicating its herbal
  9135. anticancer reputation. Liriodenine is active in the KB tumor system, oxoushinsunine, cy­
  9136. totoxic; nuciferine and nomuciferine, antispasmodic. Anonaine, armepavine, demethylco-
  9137. claurine, gluconic acid, isoliensinine, liensenine, liriodenine, lotusine, D-N-methylcoclaurine,
  9138. neferin, nelumboside, N-nomuciferine, nomuciferine, nuciferine, pronuciferine, quercitin,
  9139. and roemerine are reported.Hagers Handbook^®^ mentions quercetin, isoquercitrin, leu-
  9140. cocyanidin, and leucodelphinidin from the leaves, quercetin, isoquercitrin, luteolin, glu-
  9141. coluteolin, kaempferol, and robinin in the petals and stamens. Seeds contain the active beta-
  9142. sitosterol and related esters, as well as glutathione, the embryo containing methylcorypalline
  9143. (a coronary dilator^'^O» luteolin-7-glucoside, mtin, and hyperoside. Raffmose and stachyose
  9144. have been isolated from the rhizome, ( + )catechin, ( + )-gallocatechin, neochlorogenic acid,
  9145. gallocatechin, leucocyanidin, and leucodelphinidin from the roots.H su et al.^"^^ add the
  9146. cardiotonic alkaloid higenamine. Is it a wonder that a chemistry set like this is considered
  9147. sacred in some parts of the world?
  9148. Description — Perennial rhizomatous herbaceous aquatic, from a stout, creeping root­
  9149. 220 Handbook of Nuts
  9150. stock 10 to 20 m long, branching, bearing numerous scale-like leaves as well as foliage
  9151. leaves, with milky juice; leaves blue-green with a silvery sheen, waterproof, peltate, circular,
  9152. up to 90 cm in diameter, concave, on petioles up to 1 m long above water, margins raised
  9153. upwards, the leaf-stalks and flower-stalks 1 to 2 m tall, hollow, with small scattered prickles;
  9154. flowers borne singly at ends of stalks, opening on three successive days before fading,
  9155. fragrant, extending above the leaves on long cylindrical stems; flowers 10 to 26 cm in
  9156. diameter, sepals 4 to 5, green caducous, inserted at base of receptacle, petals numerous,
  9157. rose-red to white, free, obovate, obtuse, 8 to 12 cm long, 3 to 7 cm broad, anthers linear,
  9158. yellow, 15 to 20 mm long, the filaments linear, 7 to 25 mm long; receptacle spongy, in
  9159. fruit in 10 cm high and wide, flat, the nuts (seeds) embedded within; nuts 2.0 cm by 1.3
  9160. cm, ovoid to ellipsoidal, brown to blackish, protruding like knobs, without endosperm, with
  9161. a hard pericarp. Flowers June to August.
  9162. Germplasm — Reported from the Near Eastern Center of Diversity, sacred lotus, or cvs
  9163. thereof, is reported to tolerate bacteria, frost, and waterlogging.®^ Many varieties are cul­
  9164. tivated in various parts of the world. Some of the best known cvs are album grandiflorum;
  9165. album plenum (‘Shiroman’, with double white flowers 30 cm across); kermesinum (light
  9166. rose); kinshiren (white shaded pink); osiris (deep rose); pulchrum (dark rosy-red); pekinese
  9167. rubrum (rosy-carmine); roseum (rosy-pink); plenum (large and double); pygmaeum (dwarf).
  9168. Seeds known to be 200 years old have been germinated from collections in dry Gobi Desert
  9169. lakes, plants of these are now being grown in the Kenilworth Aquatic Gardens in Washington,
  9170. D.C.^^® Priestley and Posthumus^^® describe viable Manchurian seed radiocarbon dated as
  9171. over 450 (ca. 466) years old. (2n = 16.)
  9172. Distribution — Native from the southern border of the Caspian Sea to Manchuria, south
  9173. throughout the warmer parts of India, Pakistan, China, Iran, Japan, and Australia. It is
  9174. cultivated in some Mediterranean countries and is naturalized in Rumania. It was commer­
  9175. cially introduced in the U.S. about 1876; it has now become naturalized.^^®
  9176. Ecology — Ranging from Warm Temperate Dry to Moist through Tropical Very Dry to
  9177. Moist Forest Life Zones, sacred lotus is reported to tolerate annual precipitation of 6.4 to
  9178. 40.3 dm (mean of 11 cases = 14.2), annual temperature of 14.4 to 27.5°C (mean of 11
  9179. cases = 19.6°C), and pH of 5.0 to 7.5 (mean of 10 cases = 6.2).®^ Lotus thrives with
  9180. plenty of sunshine and rich soil. The rhizomes grow in mud at the bottom of water, 60 to
  9181. 90 cm deep. They require a minimum winter temperature above freezing. A good soil would
  9182. contain two parts loam and one part well-decayed manure. Once set, the plants flower freely.
  9183. Unless the roots are frozen, they are not harmed by the cold.^^®
  9184. Cultivation — Sacred lotus may be propagated from seed, sown in shallow pans of sandy
  9185. soil, immersed in water tanks heated to 15°C. Seedlings are allowed to grow in the seed
  9186. pans until large enough to plant out in tubs or ponds. When seeds are sown directly in ponds
  9187. or pools, they are rolled in a ball of clay and dropped in the water. The hard seeds germinate
  9188. better if scarified by boring or filing. Plants may be propagated by sections of the rhizomes
  9189. placed in large tubs or pools, indoors or outdoors. Divisions of the tubers may also be used
  9190. similarly. From 30 to 45 cm of compost is placed in a vessel, or tubs may be filled with
  9191. soil and submerged so that the soil surface is 18 to 30 cm below water level. Planting should
  9192. be in spring when weather has definitely warmed. Plants will grow in ponds or larger bodies
  9193. of water, as well as in tubs or half-barrels. Tubers may also be planted in late spring just
  9194. before they start new growth, in rich soil in the bottom of a pond, in water 30 to 90 cm
  9195. deep. If rhizomes are covered with sufficient water to prevent them from freezing (about
  9196. 90 cm), they will over winter satisfactorily. If water is not deep enough to prevent the
  9197. rhizomes from freezing, the pool should be drained in the fall, the tubs removed to a cellar
  9198. or some place where the temperature is maintained about 1 to 8°C, or the plants should be
  9199. covered with 1 m or so leaves, hay, or straw and left outdoors for the winter.^^®’^®^
  9200. Harvesting — Parts are harvested when available or needed.^^®
  9201. 221
  9202. Yields and economics — Commercially, only the rhizomes are sold in shops and markets
  9203. in southeastern Asia.^^® Duke®^ reports rhizome yields of 4.6 MT/ha.
  9204. Energy — This aquatic plant seems better viewed as an edible ornamental rather than a
  9205. vigorous biomass candidate. I don’t find it recommended (like the water hyacinth and cattail,
  9206. for example) by the champions of aquatics for energy.
  9207. Biotic factors — Sacred lotus is attacked by several fungi: A ltern aría nelum bii, A. tenuis,
  9208. C ercospora nelum bii, Fusarium bulbigenum , G loeosporium nelum bii, M acrosporium neF
  9209. umbii, M yrothecium roridum , Phom a nelum bii, P h yllosticta nelum bonis, P hysoderm a n el­
  9210. umbii, and Sclerotium rolfsii. It is also attacked by B acillus nelum bii.
  9211. 222 Handbook of Nuts
  9212. NYPA FRUTICANS Wurmb. (ARECACEAE) — Nipa Palm
  9213. Uses — Menninger^^ summarizes that the palm supplies roofing, thatching, baskets,
  9214. matting, cigarette wrappers, fuel, alcohol, sugar, toddy, and other products. Also useful for
  9215. stabilizing soils in tidal terrain. The nut is jelly-like at first, becoming nutty, and finally so
  9216. hard as to require grating or pounding for eating raw.^®^ The tender palm hearts are eaten
  9217. as a vegetable. Leaves are much valued for thatching, basketry, and mats. Umbrellas, sun-
  9218. hats, raincoats, mats, and bags are made from the leaves in the Philippine Islands. Midribs
  9219. are used for making coarse brooms and as fuel. Young unexpanded leaves are used as
  9220. cigarette wrappers. Leaflets, with 10.2% tannin and 15.2% hard-tans are used for tanning
  9221. leather. When fishing, fishermen submerge nipa leaves in the sea to attract fish. Salt is
  9222. obtained by burning the roots or leaves and leaching the ash. The ash is used, with wood-
  9223. tar, in blackening teeth. Sap is used for making jaggery, sugar,^^^ alcohol, and vinegar.
  9224. Arrows are made from the petioles in the Mentawai Islands.
  9225. Folk Medicine — Reported to be intoxicant, nipa palm is a folk remedy for centipede
  9226. bites, herpes, sores, toothache, and ulcers.’* The sugar is used in a tonic prescription. The
  9227. stem-bud has been used in making a charmed preparation to counteract poison.
  9228. Chemistry — Of 18% of solids in the fresh sap, 17% was found to be sucrose, 1/2%
  9229. ash. The increase in total carbohydrates in the kernels was from 71 to 78%, between the
  9230. time they were removed for sugar-tapping (3 months) and at maturity (4 months). Leaves
  9231. contain 10% tannin.Fresh nipa sap contains ca. 17% sucrose and only traces of reducing
  9232. sugars. Vinegar (from sap fermented ca. 2 weeks) contains 2 to 3% acetic acid. Inunature
  9233. seeds contain ca. 70% starch. Leaflets contain ca. 10.2% tannin and 15.2% hard-tans.
  9234. Description — Gregarious palm, the rootstock stout, branched, covered with the sheaths
  9235. of old leaves, leafing and flowering at the ends of the branches. Leaves pinnatisect; 4.5 to
  9236. 223
  9237. 9 m long; leaflets linear-lanceolate, 1.2 to 1.5 m long, the sides reduplicate in vernation.
  9238. Spadix 1.2 to 2.1 m long, terminal, erect in flower, drooping if fruit. Flowers monoecious,
  9239. male in catkin-like lateral branches of the spadix, female crowded in a terminal head, perianth
  9240. glumaceous. Male flowers minute, surrounded with setaceous bracteoles; sepals linear with
  9241. broad truncate inflexed tips, imbricate; petals smaller; stamens 3; filaments connate in a
  9242. very short column; anthers elongate, basifixed; pistillode 0. Female flowers much longer
  9243. than the male; sepals 6, rudimentary, displaced; staminodes 0; carpels 3, connate, tips free
  9244. with an oblique stigmatic line; ovules 3, erect. Fruit large, globose syncarp, 30 cm in
  9245. diameter, of many obovoid, hexagonal, 1-celled, 1-seeded carpels, 10 to 15 cm long, with
  9246. pyramidal tips and infra-apical stigmas; pericarp fleshy and fibrous; endocarp spongy and
  9247. flowery; seed erect, grooved on one side; testa coriaceous, viscid within, adherent to the
  9248. endocarp; hilum broad; endosperm homy, equable, hollow; embryo basilar, obconic.*^^
  9249. Germplasm — Reported from the Indochinese-Indonesian Center of Diversity, the nipa
  9250. palm, or cvs thereof, is reported to tolerate heavy soils, salt, and tidal waterlogging. (2n
  9251. = 16.)
  9252. Distribution — India south to Australia and New Guinea,in tidal mud from the mouth
  9253. of the Ganges to Australia.Introduced in the mangroves of South Nigeria, where it has
  9254. mn wild.^^® Reported to have grown successfully in brackish waters of southern Florida.
  9255. Ecology — Estimated to range from Subtropical Dry to Wet through Tropical Dry to
  9256. Moist Forest Life Zones, nipa palm is estimated to tolerate annual precipitation of 5 to 45
  9257. dm, annual temperature of 21 to 27°C, and pH of 6.5 to 8.5. Often gregarious in mangrove
  9258. swamps and tidal forests, growing best in alluvial deposits of clayey loam with sufficient
  9259. salt.^®
  9260. Cultivation — Cultivated in Sumatra for wine and foliage production. Reproduces nat­
  9261. urally by seed and detached portions of rhizome. It may attain 2 m height during its first
  9262. year.*^® Management consists of thinning natural stands to 2,500 to 3,500 palms per ha, 1.5
  9263. to 2 m apart. Periodic pmning to maintain 7 to 8 leaves if favorable to sap production.
  9264. Other authors suggest much wider spacings, 380 to 750 trees per ha. Bangladesh nursery
  9265. results are best where submerged at least 230 min/day.
  9266. Harvesting — Nuts are harvested as needed. The palm is ready for wine tapping after
  9267. the second flowering, when about 5 years old. Tapping may continue 50 years or more. If
  9268. the plant bears more than one spadix, one is topped, the other removed. Sap collection is
  9269. continued for about 3 months.
  9270. Yields and economics — The average yield of sap per plant is 43 €. According to
  9271. McCurrach,^®^ one hectare of nipa will yield 8,000 gals of sweet syrup, inexpensive source
  9272. of sugar, vinegar, and particularly alcohol. Nipa production is rural-based and labor intensive,
  9273. though probably less so than other alcohol plants.
  9274. Energy — On Bohol Island in the Philippines, a mini-distillery was set up to evaluate
  9275. potential for the production of ethanol from the nipa palm. Sap of the nipa contains ca. 15%
  9276. sugar, which can be collected from mature fruits stalks after cutting off the head. With care,
  9277. this can be repeated over an extended period of time, yielding up to 40 € per tree per season.
  9278. This translates to a projected 30,000 € juice per hectare. Cultivated palms may produce as
  9279. much as 0.46 £ per tree per day, equivalent to ca. 8,000 £ alcohol per ha per year.^^^
  9280. Halos^^‘ states that nipa is a better alcohol producer on a hectare basis than sugarcane or
  9281. coconut, comparing better with sweet potato. In 1919, 2 1/4 million gallons (more than
  9282. 50,(XK) barrels) alcohol were produced from nipa palm. Midribs of the leaves are sometimes
  9283. used for fuel.
  9284. Biotic factors — Grapsid crabs are the worst pests of young nipa palms. Pollinated by
  9285. Drosophila flies.
  9286. 224 Handbook of Nuts
  9287. ORBIGNYA COHUNE (Mart.) Dahlgren ex Standi. (AREACEAE) Cohune Palm
  9288. Syn.: A tta lea coh u n e Mart.
  9289. Uses — Seeds are source of Cohune Oil, a nondrying oil, considered finer than that of
  9290. coconut, used in food, as illuminant, and in the manufacture of soap. Very young buds, or
  9291. cabbage, consumed as a vegetable. Young leaves used to make hats and other apparel, and
  9292. for thatching.Pole-like rachis of the leaf used for forming the framework of huts. Large
  9293. quantities of nuts were once used in England for preparing charcoal used in gas masks.
  9294. Fruits made into sweetmeats and used as fodder for livestock. Trunk used for building. Sap
  9295. used for winemaking and for making intoxicating beverage.^^®’^*^
  9296. Folk medicine — Reported to be poisonous.
  9297. Chemistry — Per 100 g, the seed (ZMB) is reported to contain 6.9 g protein and 52.2
  9298. g fat. The tissue removed from the seed contained 1.2 g protein and 0.5 g fat.^^
  9299. Toxicity — “ It was said that if too much of the nut was eaten, constipation and sometimes
  9300. death might result.
  9301. Description — Tall monoecious palm 16 to 20 m tall; trunk to 30 cm thick, spineless,
  9302. usually ringed, covered with old leafbases. Leaves with petioles flat above, rounded below,
  9303. fibrous at base; blade up to 10 m long, erect, pinnate with 30 to 50 pairs of leaflets; leaflets
  9304. 45 cm or less long, stiff, dark-green; flower-stalks from lowest leaves, in woody spathe.
  9305. Flowers small; staminate flowers fall as spathe opens; anthers slender, pale, contorted and
  9306. spirally twisted. Fruit 7.5 cm long, ovoid, in large grape-like clusters. Flowers February.
  9307. Germplasm — Reported from the Middle American Center of Diversity, cohune palm,
  9308. or CVS thereof, is reported to tolerate limestone, poor soil, sand, slope, savanna, and wa­
  9309. terlogging. 2n = 32.^^
  9310. Distribution — Native to wet Atlantic lowlands of Central America from Mexico to
  9311. Honduras and Belize; grown south to Panama and northern South America.
  9312. Ecology — Ranging from Subtropical Dry to Moist through «Tropical Day Forest Life
  9313. Zones, cohune palm is reported to tolerate annual precipitation of 6.4 to 40.3 dm (mean of
  9314. 5 cases = 18.3), annual temperature of 21.3 to 26.5°C (mean of 5 cases = 24.1°C), and
  9315. pH of 5.0 to 8.0 (mean of 3 cases = 6.9). Thrives in tropical swamps and uplands, or in
  9316. tropical greenhouses, where night temperatures are not below 15.5°C; occurs from sea-level
  9317. to 600 m altitude, and appears on all types of soils, including marls, limestones, granites,
  9318. and slate-derived soils, as well as shales and mudstones. Grows in small congested patches.
  9319. Occurs also along large streams, on upland sites, on hills and in valleys, preferring rich
  9320. pockets of soil.®^’^^®
  9321. Cultivation — Lacking basal shoots, the palm is propagated by seed, in rich soil containing
  9322. loam, manure, and sand in proportions of 3-1-1. Seeds retain their viability for ca. 6 months.
  9323. Seeds should be planted about 5 cm deep and watered freely. Spacings between trees should
  9324. allow about lOO/ha.^^®
  9325. Harvesting — When freed of competing vegetation, lianas, and epiphytes, each palm
  9326. bears prolifically. In natural habitat, trees generally do not bear fruit until crown is free in
  9327. the canopy.
  9328. Yields and economics — Yields vary; often nuts are not available enough to supply an
  9329. oil-mill economically. Large supplies of nuts are not readily available and accessible. Fruits
  9330. or nuts are exported from Central America for soapmaking.
  9331. Energy — Although not so promising as the babassu for oil production, the germplasm
  9332. of the cohune may contribute to building a bigger genetic base for other oleiferous species.
  9333. Specific gravity of the wood is 0.868 to 0.971.^^^
  9334. Biotic factors — The following fungi cause diseases in this palm: Achorella attaleae,
  9335. Gloeosporium palmigenum, and Poria ravenalae.^^^'^^^ Bruchid beetles may damage the
  9336. seeds, destroying both embryo and endosperm.
  9337. 225
  9338. ORBIGNYA MARTIAN A Barb. Rodr., ORBIGNYA OLEIFERA Burret, ORBIGNYA SPE­
  9339. CIOSA (Mart.) Barb. Rodr. (ARECACEAE) — Babassu
  9340. Uses — Babassu kernels taste, smell, and look like coconut meat, but contain more oil.
  9341. The oil can be used for the same purposes as coconut oil, for margarine, shortening, general
  9342. edibles, toilet soap, fatty acids, and detergents. Unlike many palm oils, the babassu oil does
  9343. not quickly turn rancid. Babassu oil is rich in “ practically all of the elements needed in the
  9344. manufacture of plastics, detergents, emulsifiers, and many related materials” (H. G. Bennett,
  9345. as quoted in Balick^^). The protein- and oil-rich seed cakes are suitable for animal feed.
  9346. The endocarp is a good fuel. Leaves are used for thatching. Palm hearts are also eaten.
  9347. Folk medicine — The oil is used in medicinal salves.
  9348. Chemistry — Atchley^^ cites analyses with 9.4 to 16.2% protein, fat content of 0.2 to
  9349. 62.9% oil — the higher oil figure possibly representing fruit rather than seed. NAS^^^ notes
  9350. that fruit oil may be as high as 72%. Pesce^^^compares the analysis of the coconut with
  9351. babassu (Table 1). Mesocarp runs 16.3 to 17% moisture, 1.5 to 4.9% fatty material, 63.8
  9352. to 71.3% starch, 0.0 to 0.8% sugar, dextrim cellulose 2.05%, 3.12 to 3.19% nitrogenated
  9353. 226 Handbook of Nuts
  9354. Table 1
  9355. BABASSU KERNELS AND COCONUT COPRA
  9356. Babassu Coconut
  9357. (Orbignya martiana) {Cocos nucífera)
  9358. (%)
  9359. Moisture
  9360. 4.21 3.80
  9361. Oil
  9362. 66.12 66.00
  9363. Protein
  9364. 7.17 7.27
  9365. Digestible carbohydrates 14.47 15.95
  9366. Woody fiber
  9367. 5.99 4.55
  9368. Ash
  9369. 2.03 2.43
  9370. From Johnson, D. V ., Ed. and Transl. (Original by Pesce, C.), Oil Palms
  9371. and Other Oilseeds of the Amazon Reference Publications, Algonac, M ich.,
  9372. 1985, 199. With permission.
  9373. Table 2
  9374. CHEMICAL COMPOSITION
  9375. AND PROPERTIES OF
  9376. COCONUT AND BABASSU OIL
  9377. Coconut oil Babassu oil
  9378. Fatty acids
  9379. (%) (%)
  9380. Saturated
  9381. Caproic 0.0—0.8 0.0—0.2
  9382. Caprylic 5.5—9.5 4.0—6.5
  9383. Capric 4.5—9.5 2.7—7.6
  9384. Laurie 44.0—52.0 44.0-46.0
  9385. Myristic 13.0—19.0 15.0—20.0
  9386. Palmitic 7.5— 10.5 6.0—9.0
  9387. Stearic 1.3 3.0—6.0
  9388. Arachidic 0.0—0.4 0.2—0.7
  9389. Unsaturated
  9390. Oleic 5.0—8.0 12.0—18.0
  9391. Linoleic 1.5—2.5
  9392. 1.4—2.8
  9393. From Eckey, E. W ., Vegetable Fats and Oils,
  9394. Reinhold Publishing, New York, 1954. With
  9395. permission.
  9396. material, 1.2% ash, and 0.3 to 11.4% undetermined. The press-cake has 11.6% moisture,
  9397. 6.5% oil, 19.8% protein, 40.0% digestible carbohydrates, 16.5% woody fiber, and 5.6%
  9398. ash.*^^ Eckeycompares the coconut oil with that of babassu (Table 2).
  9399. Description — Tall, erect, smooth-stemmed palm. Leaves erect-declined, large, elegant,
  9400. recurved at the flexuous apex; leaflets long, rigid, proximate, oblique-acuminate, disposed
  9401. in a vertical plane. Spadix large, ramose, pendent; branches rigid, bracted, dense; female
  9402. spadices with many sessile flowers on branches and male flowers abortive, small in the
  9403. apices; in male spadices, flowers with small calyx, petals two, rarely three, biquadridentate;
  9404. curved inward, overlapped; stamens 24, aggregated in groups of eight; loculus of anthers
  9405. irregularly coiled and twisted. Female flowers much larger, ovoid-oblong, bibracted, fer­
  9406. ruginous tomentoso; sepals broadly oblong, obtuse-careened-acuminate; petals slightiy smaller,
  9407. oblong, with irregularly serrated margins, at the protracted apex tri-dentate; androecia abor­
  9408. tive, half the number of petals; stigmas 3 to 6. Drupe large, oblong, conical, pointed.
  9409. 227
  9410. enveloped almost half-way, at the base ferruginous-tomentose and at the apex albo-tomen-
  9411. tose, haloed, 3 to 6 seeded.
  9412. Germplasm — Reported from the Brazilian Center of Diversity, babassu, or cvs thereof,
  9413. is reported to tolerate alkalinity, sand, savanna, and waterlogging, perhaps even brackish
  9414. water.^°‘ Taxonomically confusing, the literature has contradictory references to O. martiana,
  9415. O. oleifera, and O. speciosa as the true “ Babassu” . The taxon oleifera “ prefers a drier,
  9416. semi-deciduous forest” .^^
  9417. Distribution — Babassu ranges from 3 to 10°S latitude and 40 to 70°W longitude in
  9418. Brazil.
  9419. Ecology — Estimated to range from Tropical Dry to Wet through Subtropical Dry to Wet
  9420. Forest Life Zones, babassu is estimated to tolerate annual precipitation of 15 to 60 dm,
  9421. annual temperature of 23 to 29°C, and pH of 4.5 to 8.0. Babassu grows best in alkaline or
  9422. neutral soils, under average rainfall and good drainage; but it is found in areas of high to
  9423. low rainfall, dry to swampy conditions, and generally in siliceous soils. It occurs as isolated
  9424. specimens and in solid stands, but principally in mixed hardwood forests, except in Maranhao
  9425. and Piaui, on the Pantanal of Mato Grosso and in local areas in some river valleys, where
  9426. it may form dense f o r e s t s .T h e day I spent on the bus crossing Maranhao and Piaui
  9427. was dominated by panoramas of babassu.
  9428. Cultivation — Mostly harvested from the wild, like Brazil-nuts and cashews. While
  9429. plantations have been established, little has been done to examine the variability of wild
  9430. trees for use in breeding and selection programs.
  9431. Harvesting — Slow to mature, babassu may start yielding at 8 years, rising to 12 years,
  9432. and bearing for 75 years or longer. While the palm flowers year round, it does not always
  9433. set fruit. In Brazil, fruits ripen from July to November, then fall to the ground. After
  9434. collection, the fruit is usually dried in the sun to facilitate removing the kernel from the
  9435. shell.With an axe and mallet, capable natives can shell up to 8 kg kernels a day, but are
  9436. more likely to average 4 to 5 kg a day.
  9437. Yields and economics — At an Office of Technology Assessment in 1980, Duke adduced
  9438. incredible figures stating that some babassu trees were reported to yield more than a ton of
  9439. fruit per year. Of the fruit, 10% is kernel, 50% (to 68%) of which is oil, indicating a yield
  9440. of ca. 40 kg oil per tree, or a barrel of oil for every four trees.Assuming a 63 to 70% oil
  9441. content per kernel, Balick^^ suggests a possible maximum of ca. 63 kg oil per tree per year,
  9442. indeed a living “ oil-factory” . Though individual trees are reported to produce 1000 kg nuts
  9443. a year, palms on cultivated plantations have yielded 1,500 kg/ha nuts. The fruit weighs 150
  9444. to 200 g and may contain 3 to 8 kernels containing 60 to 70% oil and constituting 10% of
  9445. the fruit’s weight. The kernel is surrounded by a pulp that is 10% starch, enclosed by a
  9446. hard woody shell nearly 12 mm thick. The pulp constitutes 20% of the weight of the fruit.
  9447. American imports peaked in 1945 at nearly 45,000 tons in a year when Brazil harvested
  9448. more than 70,000 tons. In 1974, Brazil produced >200,000 tons babassu kernels worth ca.
  9449. 500 million cruzeiros. Babassu is probably the only species that could replace coconut in
  9450. the production of olein and stearin.Babassu, covering nearly 15 million swampy hectares
  9451. in the Amazon and employing nearly 100,000 people in Brazil, has been recommended for
  9452. further study and use by the NAS. Back in 1957, Markley^®® noted, “ It is probably the
  9453. largest vegetable oil industry in the world wholly dependent on a wild plant, developed from
  9454. an indigenous cottage industry and still capable of further expansion.” Markley^®* gives
  9455. details of the historical production and value of the Brazilian crop. Pinto^^"^ tabulates data
  9456. for 1940 to 1949.
  9457. Energy — As early as 1951, Pinto^^"^ noted, “ The shells and husks have proved to be a
  9458. source of fuel and when distilled may yield useful hydrocarbon products and also carbon
  9459. suitable for gas absorption. The whole nut is occasionally used for the production of oily
  9460. smoke in the curing of wild rubber; also, buttons are made from the shells.” Michael Balick^*
  9461. 228 Handbook of Nuts
  9462. says, “ the babassu palm is one of the best sources of fuel in the form of charcoal or coke.
  9463. Babassu charcoal bums with a lower content of sulfur, and in some cases has more volatile
  9464. material than certain mineral coals.” In Brazil during World War I, the nuts were found
  9465. equivalent to coal in heat content, and the husks were easily converted to coke.^^ Analyzing
  9466. 62 kinds of biomass for heating value, Jenkins and Ebeling*"^^ reported a spread of 19.92 to
  9467. 18.83 MJ/kg, compared to 13.76 for weathered rice straw to 23.28 MJ/kg for pmne pits.
  9468. On a percent DM basis, the husks contained 79.71% volatiles, 1.59% ash, 18.70% fixed
  9469. carbon, 50.31% C, 5.37% H, 42.29% O, 0.26% N, 0.04% S, and undetermined residue.
  9470. Assuming 250 babassu trees per hectare, Pinto^^^ projects a potential production of 34,932,040
  9471. MT of kernels and (using his 65% figure) >22 million MT oil (or more than 55 million
  9472. barrels per year). This is about 15 times 1974 production of ca. 220,000 MT and 1978
  9473. production of ca. 240,000 MT. During World War II, liquid fuels were derived from babassu,
  9474. which burned easily and cleanly in diesel engines. Residues can be converted to coke and
  9475. charcoal. Clearly, this and other oil palms deserve further study as potential energy sources.
  9476. Biotic factors — The tree is sometimes attacked by beetles. Pachymerus nucleorum often
  9477. destroy the fallen fmits.
  9478. 229
  9479. PACHIRA AQUATIC A Aubl. (BOMBACACEAE) — Saba Nut, Malabar Chestnut, Provision
  9480. Tree, Maranhau Nut
  9481. Uses — According to Sturtevant,^^^ the roasted nuts taste like chestnut, no nut being
  9482. better than this nut cooked with salt. Not all nut-eaters would agree. Young leaves and
  9483. flowers are also used as a vegetable. The seeds contain 50 to 58% oil, with an aroma
  9484. suggesting licorice or fenugreek. Panamanians and/or Colombians make a breadstuff from
  9485. powdered roasted seed. UphoP^'* suggests that seeds of large fruited types are used as cacao
  9486. substitutes. Choco witch doctors are said to use the seeds as a narcotic (but I’m not sure
  9487. that, in fact, they do). Bark yields a yellow dye used to tint sails, fishing nets, and lines.
  9488. Folk medicine — Saba nut is a folk remedy for eye ailments and inflammations. Gua­
  9489. temalans use the bark and immature fruits for liver afflictions. Bark, which has demonstrated
  9490. antibiotic activity, is used for diabetes in Panama.*®
  9491. Chemistry — Per 100 g (ZMB), the seed of Pachira macrocarpa is reported to contain
  9492. 560 calories, 16.9 g protein, 41.4 g fat, 37.9 g total carbohydrate, 13.1 g fiber, 3.7 g ash,
  9493. 87.7 mg Ca, 302.3 mg P, 4.0 mg Fe, 76.1 mg Na, 7(X) mg K, 1300 |xg beta-carotene
  9494. equivalent, 0.03 mg thiamine, 0.06 mg riboflavin, 4.02 mg niacin, and 25.4 mg ascorbic
  9495. acid.*^ Seeds contain 58% fat. The seed fats of a Congo specimen contained 46% palmitic,
  9496. 43% oleic, and 11% linoleic acids. Those of a Sudanian specimen contained 50.7% palmitic
  9497. and stearic, 40.8% oleic, and 8.5% linoleic. Those from South America contained 56%
  9498. palmitic, 3% stearic, 7.5% oleic, and 5% linoleic acids. There is also a report of 26.5%
  9499. cyclopropenoid acids in the seed fat.^^* Bark contains 2.7% tannin.
  9500. D^ription — Evergreen tree to 23 m high and 70 cm dbh, often buttressed; outer bark
  9501. hard, planar, thin, with weak distant vertical fissures; inner bark thick, reddish, marbled
  9502. with white. Leaves palmately compound, glabrous; stipules ovate, ca. 1 cm long; petioles
  9503. 230 Handbook of Nuts
  9504. to 24 cm long, often ribbed, swollen at both ends; leaflets 5 to 7(9), oblong-ovate to elliptic,
  9505. caudate-acuminate to apiculate at apex, tapered to an acute base and decurrent on petiolule,
  9506. 5 to 29 cm long, 3 to 15 cm wide, whitish-lepidote especially below. Flowers sweetly
  9507. aromatic, usually solitary in upper axils; pedicels stout, 1 to 5.5 cm long; calyx more or
  9508. less tubular, truncate, the lobes obscure; petals 5, valvate, linear, greenish-white to brown,
  9509. 17 to 34 cm long, ca. 1.5 cm wide, curled outward at anthesis, stellate-puberulent outside,
  9510. glabrous to villous inside; stamens many, scarlet in apical third, white basally, erect to
  9511. spreading, slightly shorter than petals, variously united in small clusters basally to middle,
  9512. the clusters finally uniting with staminal column; anthers horseshoe-shaped, dehiscing by
  9513. straightening; ovary broadly ovoid, ca. 1 cm long; style colored like stamens but several
  9514. cm longer; stigma of 5 tiny lobes. Capsules reddish-brown, elliptic, oblong-elliptic, or
  9515. subglobose, shallowly 5-sulcate, mostly to 20(30) cm long and 10(12) cm wide, the valves
  9516. 5, densely ferrugineous outside, appressed-silky-pubescent within; seeds usually 2 or 3 per
  9517. carpel, irregularly angulate, mostly 3 to 4.5 cm long at maturity, brown, buoyant, embedded
  9518. in solid, white, fleshy mesocarp.^^
  9519. Germplasm — Reported from the Latin America Center of Diversity, saba nut, or cvs
  9520. thereof, is reported to tolerate drought and waterlogging. The genus apparently contains
  9521. only one more species, the very similar Pachira insignis.^^^
  9522. Distribution — Native to the Americas, Mexico to Peru and Brazil, but cultivated in
  9523. Angola and the Congo, Florida, and the West Indies. According to R obyns,it ranges
  9524. from southern Mexico through Central America to Ecuador, northern Peru and northern
  9525. Brazil; often cultivated throughout tropical America, in some isles of the Antilles, in Africa
  9526. and Asia.
  9527. Ecology — Ranging from Tropical Moist to Wet through Premontane Moist to Wet Forest
  9528. Life Zones, saba nut is estimated to tolerate annual precipitation of 20 to 50 dm, annual
  9529. temperature of 22 to 28°C, and pH of 6 to 8.5. Rather pure stands occur, rather typical of
  9530. Tropical Moist and Wet Forests in Panama.Apparently confined to riverine and swamp
  9531. situations in my experience. The seeds may germinate while floating, striking root when
  9532. they lodge on soils.
  9533. Cultivation — Menninger^^ says it is grown commercially in the Congo, but I know of
  9534. no cultivation, except as a curio, here in America.
  9535. Harvesting — Trees as short as 2 m may begin flowering and fruiting.In Panama,
  9536. flowering all year though concentrated in February to April; most of the fruits mature from
  9537. March to August. New leaves appear around May.
  9538. Yields and Economics — With precocious fruiting, the tree may produce many large
  9539. fruits, with many large seeds.
  9540. Energy — With more than 50% oil, seeds might be viewed as an oilseed candidate for
  9541. fresh-water and slightly brackish swamps in the tropical moist to wet forest life zones.
  9542. Biotic factors — Pachira insignis is listed as an important alternative host to Steirostoma
  9543. breve (Cocoa beetle), major cocoa pest in tropical South America and the Caribbean Is­
  9544. lands.
  9545. 231
  9546. PAULLINIA CUPANA Kunth ex H.B.K. (SAPINDACEAE) — Guaraña, Uabano, Brazilian
  9547. Cocoa
  9548. Syn.: Paullinia sorbilis Mart.
  9549. Uses — Guaraña is a dried paste, chiefly of crushed seeds, which may be swallowed,
  9550. powdered, or made into a beverage. It is a popular stimulant in Brazil among natives who
  9551. grate a quantity into the palm of hand, swallow it, and wash it down with water. Taste is
  9552. astringent and bitterish, then sweetish. A refreshing guaraña soft drink is made in Brazil
  9553. similar to making the ordinary drink, but sweetened and carbonated. Odor is similar to
  9554. chocolate. Cultivated by the Indians and seed made into a paste, sold in two grades. Said
  9555. to be used also in cordials and liqueurs (fermented with cassava). Brazilian Indians make a
  9556. breadstuff from pounded seeds. Tyler^^^ notes that Coca-Cola — Brazil uses guaraña in a
  9557. carbonated beverage it markets there. I enjoyed it with rum at the airport in Rio. “ Zoom” ,
  9558. a rather tasty beverage, has been promoted as a “ cocaine” substitute. Menninger calls it
  9559. “ the most exciting nut in the world” . Erickson et al.^^ mention the product “ guaraña flor” ,
  9560. a flour extracted from burned flowers.
  9561. Folk medicine — A nervine tonic and stimulant, the drug owes its properties to caffeine.
  9562. Used for cardiac derangements, headaches, especially those caused by menstrual or rheumatic
  9563. derangements, intestinal disorders, migraine and neuralgia. Action is sometimes diuretic,
  9564. and used for rheumatic complaints and lumbago. Said also to alleviate fever, heat stress.
  9565. 232 Handbook of Nuts
  9566. and heart ailments. With words like aphrodisiac, diet, narcotic, and stimulant associated
  9567. with guaraña in the herbal literature, it is little wonder that the herb has excited curiosity
  9568. among avante-garde Americans. Promotional literature states that guaraña outsells Coke in
  9569. Brazil, suggesting that Amazon natives sniff the powdered seeds, and stating (wrongly or
  9570. rightly) that guaraña decreases fatigue and curtails hunger. However, Latin Americans used
  9571. the plant mainly as a stimulant and for treating chronic diarrhea and headache.People
  9572. accustomed to guaraña swear “ that it improves health, helps digestion, prevents sleepiness,
  9573. increases mental activity” , and many whisper that it also improves sexual activity, but “ it
  9574. might act as a limiting factor to fertility(Pio Correa, as quoted in Menninger^^).
  9575. Chemistry — Indians in South America also made an alcoholic beverage from the seeds
  9576. along with cassava and water. Guaraña contains guaranine, an alkaloid similar to theine of
  9577. tea and caffeine of coffee; about 2.5 to 5% caffeine; and 5 to 25% tannin, as catechutannic
  9578. acid. An 800 mg tablet of “ Zoom” is said to contain ca. 60 mg caffeine.Adenine,
  9579. catechin, choline, guanine, hypoxanthine, resin, saponins, theobromine, theophylline, tim-
  9580. bonine, and xanthine are reported, in addition to the caffeine.^®®
  9581. Toxicity — May be quite high in caffeine (possibly the highest of any plant).Dysuria
  9582. often follows its administration. Has been approved for food use (§172.510). In humans,
  9583. caffeine, 1,3,7-trimethylxanthine, is demethylated into three primary metabolites: theo­
  9584. phylline, theobromine, and paraxanthine. Since the early part of the 20th century, theo­
  9585. phylline has been used in therapeutics for bronchodilation, for acute ventricular failure, and
  9586. for long-term control of bronchial asthma. At 100 mg/kg theophylline is fetotoxic to rats,
  9587. but no teratogenic abnormalities were noted. In therapeutics, theobromine has been used as
  9588. a diuretic, as a cardiac stimulant, and for dilation of arteries. But at 100 mg, theobromine
  9589. is fetotoxic and teratogenic.^^ Leung^^® reports a fatal dose in man at 10,000 mg, with 1,000
  9590. mg or more capable of inducing headache, nausea, insomnia, restlessness, excitement, mild
  9591. delirium, muscle tremor, tachycardia, and extrasystoles. Leung also adds “ caffeine has been
  9592. reported to have many other activities including mutagenic, teratogenic, and carcinogenic
  9593. activities; . . . to cause temporary increase in intraocular pressure, to have calming effects
  9594. on hyperkinetic children . . . to cause chronic recurring headache . . . ” .
  9595. Description — Large, woody, evergreen perennial, twining or climbing vine to 10 m
  9596. tall, usually cultivated as a shrub; leaves small, pinnate, 5-foliolate, alternate, stipulate, 10
  9597. to 20 cm long, the petiole 7 to 15 cm long, flowers in axillary racemes, yellow; the sepals
  9598. 3 to 5, 3 mm long, petals 3 to 5 mm long, hairy; fruit a 3-valved capsule with thin partitions,
  9599. in clusters like grapes, pear-shaped, 3-sided; seed(s) globose or ovoid, about the size of a
  9600. filbert, purplish-brown to brown or blackish, half enclosed in the aril, flesh-colored, white,
  9601. yellow, or red, easily separated when dry. Germination cryptocotylar, the eophylls unifo-
  9602. liolate.^^®
  9603. Germplasm — Reported from the South American Center of Diversity, guaraña, or cvs
  9604. thereof, is reported to tolerate a pronounced dry season.®^
  9605. Distribution — Native to the Brazilian Amazon Basin, especially in the region of Maues,
  9606. in the valley of the Papajoz River, below Manaos,^®"^ in the upper regions of the Orinoco
  9607. Valley in southwestern Venezuela, and in the Moist Evergreen Forests of northern Brazil.
  9608. It has been reported in parts of Uruguay and was introduced in Sri Lanka and France (1817)
  9609. from South America.It seems to be thriving at the New Alchemist’s outpost in Gandoca,
  9610. Costa Rica (TMF).
  9611. Ecology — Ranging from Tropical Dry to Moist through Subtropical Moist to Wet Forest
  9612. Life Zones, guaraña is reported to tolerate annual precipitation of 10 to 24 dm and annual
  9613. temperature of 23 to 27°C.®^ Guaraña grows naturally in deep acidic oxisols, where there
  9614. is a pronounced dry season from June to September. Flowering commences at the end of
  9615. the rainy season. The plant does not tolerate soil compaction. Although guaraña was originally
  9616. a swamp creeper in the moist evergreen forests of the Amazon, it has been more successfully
  9617. 233
  9618. grown on well-drained black sandy soils. Plants do not do well when cultivated on yellow
  9619. clay soils.
  9620. Cultivation — Guaraña is obtained from both wild and cultivated plants.Pio Correa,
  9621. however, states that the plants are never found wild.^^^ Since seeds require about 3 months
  9622. to germinate, cultivated guaraña is usually propagated by shoots. Young shoots are spaced
  9623. about 7 m apart, and a triangular bower is built over each plant to provide support for the
  9624. climbing vine. Or seedlings may be spaced at 4 x 4 m (625 plants per ha) or 3 x 3 m
  9625. (1,100 plants per ha). Young plants should be shaded. Leguminous ground covers are often
  9626. established between the plants (P ueraria, V id a ). It has been suggested as an intercrop for
  9627. B actris gasipaes. It can be planted among growing cassava plants. Planting is usually in
  9628. February and March. Once established, plants require practically no care, except for
  9629. weeding.
  9630. Harvesting — Plants begin to flower and produce a small quantity of fruit when about
  9631. 3 years old. Production increases with maturity, and vines live about 40 years. Fruits, like
  9632. clusters of grapes, are hand-picked in October, November, and December, after they have
  9633. ripened. As soon as the berries are harvested, they are thoroughly soaked in water, passed
  9634. over a sieve to remove the seeds from the white pulp (aril) that surrounds them and the
  9635. seeds placed in the sun to dry. After drying, seeds are immediately baked or roasted for
  9636. half a day to prevent fermentation, which sets in rapidly after the fruit is picked from the
  9637. vine. Seeds are roasted over a slow fire in clay ovens, skillfully, so that all seeds are equally
  9638. toasted and not burned. Roasted seeds, removed from the ovens, are separated from their
  9639. dry paper-thin shells by rubbing in the palm of the hands or by placing them in sacks and
  9640. beating them with clubs. Then the kernels are macerated with mortar and pestle. The coarse
  9641. powder produced is mixed with a little water and kneaded into a paste which is shaped into
  9642. cylindrical sticks or loaves ca. 2.5 cm in diameter and 12 to 30 cm long, weighing about
  9643. 225 g each (about 1/2 lb). These “ cakes” are dried and smoked for about 60 days in an
  9644. open-fire drying house, where they require a dark chocolate-brown color and a metallic
  9645. hardness. Crude guaraña is sold on the market in this form, which will keep for many
  9646. years.
  9647. Yields and economics — A mature guaraña shrub or vine averages 1.3 to 5.0 kg/year
  9648. seed, occasionally yielding 9 kg; still, yields run only 77 to 175 kg dried seed per hectare.
  9649. In past decades, Brazil produced about 80 MT of guaraña paste annually, and exported about
  9650. 50 MT. Herbal interests may have stimulated trade since then. About 6,(X)0 ha are now
  9651. cultivated, much of it in the Brazilian county of Maues, which produces ca. 80% of the
  9652. world’s supply as of 1980.^^’^^®
  9653. Energy — Lacking biomass data for this species, I will suggest that the pods, as residue,
  9654. might equal or exceed in quantity the biomass of the harvested seeds. The pulp and aril
  9655. probably represent less biomass, also a waste product. Prunings might be used for fuel wood.
  9656. Biotic factors — The most severe fungus known to attack guaraña is C olletotrichum
  9657. guaranicola Alb., which attacks the foliage and inflorescence. “ Black speckle” , caused
  9658. also by C olletotrichum sp., can be controlled by such compounds as benomyl, captafol,
  9659. macozeb, and methyl thiophanate. Fusarium decem ceH arare Brick, (so-called “ trunk gall” ),
  9660. causing a proliferation of buds resulting in large masses of nonproductive tissue, can kill
  9661. the plant. A red root rot is caused by G anoderm a ph ilip p i (Bres. & P. Henn.) Bres., causing
  9662. yellowing of the foliage, gradual decline, often followed by death. Pollination is by insects,
  9663. primarily bees and wasps; ants are also numerous.
  9664. 234 Handbook of Nuts
  9665. PHYTELEPHAS MACROCARP A Ruiz and Pav. (ARECACEAE) — Ivory Nut Palm, Tagua
  9666. Uses — In Ecuador, they have “ commercialized” the hard, compact, heavy, brilliant
  9667. seeds, so highly valued for their thousand uses, and industrial applications, especially in
  9668. the button industry. The cabbage is quite edible, usually cooked, and the young fruits make
  9669. a beverage said to be just as good as coconut water; older fruits become thicker and more
  9670. mucilaginous or gelatinous, at which time it may be spooned out as a custard. Finally, they
  9671. harden as the “ vegetable ivory.” More recently, it has been used in polishing compounds
  9672. for the metals finishing industry. The roots are boiled to make a beverage. Refuse from the
  9673. button “ tumerys” can be made into cattle food and it is less legitimately used as a coffee
  9674. substitute, probably after scorching. According to Gohl,^^® ivory nut meal can be used for
  9675. all classes of livestock without any particular restrictions. Durable leaves used for thatch,
  9676. the stems are split and used for flooring. Empty spathes have been used as very durable
  9677. broom heads.
  9678. Folk Medicine — A liquid prepared by boiling the roots is considered diuretic in Ecuador.
  9679. Chemistry — Per 100 g, the seeds contain (ZMB) 5.3 g protein, 1.6 g fat, 91.6 g total
  9680. carbohydrate, 9.3 g fiber, and 1.5 g ash.^^® Seeds may contain 40% Mannan A and 25%
  9681. 235
  9682. Mannan B. Mannan A yields on hydrolysis 97.6% mannose, 1.8% galactose, and 0.8%
  9683. glucose. Mannan B yields 98.3% mannose, 1.1% galactose, and 0.8% glucose. Nuts are
  9684. said to contain the alkaloid phytelephantin. Personal correspondence reveals that it is the
  9685. raw material for the preparation of the sugar D-mannose. D-mannan has shown some antitumor
  9686. activity.
  9687. Description — Acaulescent or short-stemmed diocecious palms to 20 m tall, 70 cm DBH.
  9688. Leaves pinnate, to 4 m long, 15 to 30 in the rosette, leaflets in a single plane, to 70 cm
  9689. long. Male flowers in elongate cluster to 2 m long. Female flowers in heads to 50 cm long
  9690. with perianth, the tepals to 30 cm long. Ovary 4- to 6-locular; style with 4 to 9 long lobes.
  9691. Germplasm — Reported from the Tropical American Center of Diversity, tagua, or cvs
  9692. thereof, is reported to tolerate rocky soil, shade, and temporary waterlogging.
  9693. Distribution — Panama to Brazil, Venezuela, and Ecuador. Although a species of mature
  9694. forest, it is often left to stand in cleared pastures and banana plantations.
  9695. Ecology — Estimated to range from Subtropical Moist to Rain through Tropical Moist
  9696. to Rain Forest Life Zones, tagua is estimated to tolerate annual precipitation of 20 to 110
  9697. dm, annual temperature of 22 to 28°C, and pH of 4.5 to 8.0. Sometimes gregarious; said
  9698. to “ prefer” naturally drained or porous soils, but flourishes on some rocky terrain and in
  9699. clay alluvial terraces. Ranges from sea level to 1800 m above sea level.
  9700. Cultivation — Tagua is rarely cultivated. There have been a few plantations started in
  9701. Ecuador, mountaineers merely scattering the seeds and weeding them, perhaps thinning them
  9702. occasionally. Seeds begin to germinate in 3 to 4 months. Young plants may need protection
  9703. from the sun.
  9704. Harvesting — A tagua may mature in 10 years, faster than commonly believed,^ starting
  9705. flowering only at 14 to 15 years (BurkilF^ says they start fruiting at 6 years), such that the
  9706. fruit appears to arise from the ground. Then the females produce fruits “ uninterruptably”
  9707. every subsequent year, a palm lasting for centuries in the mountains. Fruiting occurs through­
  9708. out the year. When collectors are in too big a hurry, they may destructively fell the tree,
  9709. which kills it, unable to coppice. The unripe fruits thus obtained, are artificially matured
  9710. under organic matter, becoming the “ blond” tagua, as opposed to the “ dark” or “ black”
  9711. tagua. Leaves to be used for thatching are first fermented for 8 to 15 days.
  9712. Yields and economics — Well-developed palms produce 15 to 16 mazorcas (clusters),
  9713. each of which weighs 8 to 15 (to 19) kg. Twelve inflorescences will yield 100 pounds of
  9714. seeds with their shells, or ca. 60 pounds of shelled seed. Seeds may weigh up to 240 g.
  9715. Burkill figures that each tree produces 45 to 100 kg fruits per yr for 50 to 100 years. Back
  9716. in 1948, Acosta-Solis^ noted that a good price was about $0.70/l(X) lb. In 1928, Esmeraldas
  9717. Ecuador exported more than 1000 tons of seeds, 1929 being the highest year ever, with
  9718. nearly 2200 tons exported, dwindling down to 500 tons by 1941, and almost nothing after
  9719. that. In New York, in 1941, the Esmeraldas tagua was worth only ca. $2.00/100 lb, a mere
  9720. $0.10/kg.2
  9721. Energy — Phytelephas microcarpa is said to produce a valuable oil.^^*
  9722. Biotic factors — In Ecuador, a coleopteous larva attacks the stem, destroying the pith,
  9723. and often killing the tree; superficially this resembles the larva of Rhynchophorus palmarum.
  9724. Dryocoetes sp. (Coleóptera) may attack the fruit.^
  9725. 236 Handbook of Nuts
  9726. PINUS EDULIS Engelm. (PINACEAE) — Piñón, Pine Nut, Nut Pine, Silver Pine
  9727. Syn.: P in u s cem broides var. edu lis (Engelm.) Voss and C aryopitys edu lis Small.
  9728. Uses — The State Tree of New Mexico, this species furnishes the piñón nuts or Indian
  9729. nuts of commerce. Piñón nuts are evident in the firepots of the Gatecliff Shelter, Nevada,
  9730. carbon-dated at 6000 years. Nuts (seeds) considered main article of subsistence by Indians
  9731. of California, Nevada, and Utah, eaten raw or, more frequently, roasted. Nuts have a rather
  9732. disagreeable flavor but are highly nutritious, rich in protein. Seeds are smaller but tastier
  9733. than those of the single-leaf piñón. In spring, buds at ends of limbs, inner bark, and core
  9734. of cone (which is something like cabbage stalk when green) are eaten. Wood is mainly used
  9735. for fuel and fenceposts; infrequently the tree-form is used for lumber of fair quality. The
  9736. piñón wood was also used in Indian construction. The pitch was used as a glue for water­
  9737. proofing jugs, as a black dye for blankets, and to repair pottery. Navajo smeared piñón
  9738. pitch on a corpse prior to burial. Hopi dabbed it on their foreheads to protect them against
  9739. sorcery. Navajo used it for incense.
  9740. Folk medicine — According to Hartwell,the pitch is used in folk remedies for tumors
  9741. of the fingers and external cancers. Reported to be antiseptic and suppurative, the plant is
  9742. used as a folk remedy for boils, bugbites, laryngitis, myalgia, pneumonia, sores, sore throat,
  9743. swellings, syphilis, and wounds. Various parts of the plant are used medicinally by Indians:
  9744. crushed nuts for treatment of bums or scalds; smoke from burning branches for coughs,
  9745. colds, and rheumatism; and pitch for sores and wounds. Fumes of burning pitch were inhaled
  9746. by Indians for headcold, cough, and earache.^'
  9747. Chemistry — Per 100 g, the “nut” is reported to contain 714 calories, 3.0 g H2O, 14.3
  9748. g protein, 60.9 g fat, 18.1 g total carbohydrate, 1.1 g fiber, and 2.7 g ash.®^
  9749. Description — Straggling tree, forming a broad, pyramid-shaped crown in young trees
  9750. and later becoming round-topped, to 15 m tall, usually smaller; diameter to nearly 1 m;
  9751. tmnk often crooked and twisted; bark irregularly furrowed and broken into small scales.
  9752. Leaves mostly 2 to a fascicle, sometimes with varying proportions of 1- or 3-needled
  9753. fascicles, 2 to 4 (5) cm long, sharp-pointed, margins entire, sheaths of the fascicles deciduous,
  9754. the odor of the crushed foliage fragrant. Staminate cones about 6 mm long, yellow, soon
  9755. fading. Ovulate cones subterminal or lateral, 2 to 5 cm long, nearly as wide, ovoid, usually
  9756. brown at maturity, short-stalked, the scales becoming thickened, 2 to 6 mm long, 4-sided,
  9757. knobbed at the apex, the dorsal umbo inconspicuous; seeds large, 10 to 16 mm long, brown,
  9758. wingless, thick-shelled; cotyledons 6 to 10.^®
  9759. Germplasm — Reported from the North American Center of Diversity, piñón, or cvs
  9760. thereof, is reported to tolerate severe climatic conditions, including low relative humidity,
  9761. very high evaporation, intense sunlight, low rainfall, hot summers, slope, weeds, and alkaline
  9762. 237
  9763. soil.^^ Piñón, or pine nuts, refer to the seeds of several pine species which grow along the
  9764. western area of North America from British Columbia southward into Mexico. P inus cem -
  9765. broides Zucc., or Mexican nut-pine, occurs in mountains of central and northern Mexico
  9766. and extends northward into New Mexico and southeastern Arizona; it is a tree to 20 m tall
  9767. with needles in fascicles of 3, bright green, 2.5 to 5 cm long, and seeds more or less
  9768. cylindrical to obscurely triangular and somewhat compressed at apex, about 1.5 to 2 cm
  9769. long. Pinus m onophylla Torr., or single-leaf piñón, occurs from Utah and Nevada, south
  9770. to Baja California and Arizona; it is a tree up to 7 m tall with the needles occurring singly,
  9771. or rarely in pairs, rather pale glaucous green, about 3.5 cm long, and seeds 1.3 to 1.5 cm
  9772. long and oblong. Hybrids between P. edulis and P. m onopylla are produced naturally,
  9773. especially in Utah; such trees have both 1 or 2 needles per fascicle, and other anatomical
  9774. features of the leaves are intermediate between the two species. Artificial hybrids have also
  9775. been produced with similar characteristics. P. edulis var. albo-variegata Hort. has white
  9776. leaves mixed with the green leaves.
  9777. D istrib u tion — Dry rocky places in the Colorado Plateau region of southwest Wyoming,
  9778. Utah, western Colorado, extreme western tip of Oklahoma, western Texas, New Mexico,
  9779. adjacent Chihuahua, Mexico, and eastern Arizona.^®
  9780. E cology — Ranging from Warm Temperate Thom to Wet through Subtropical Moist
  9781. Forest Life Zones, piñón, or cvs thereof, is estimated to tolerate annual precipitation of 3
  9782. to 21 dm (mean of 3 cases = 15), annual temperature of 15 to 21 °C (mean of 3 cases =
  9783. 18), and pH of 5.0 to 8.5 (mean of 3 cases = 5.1).*^ To 1500 to 2750 m elevation. Thrives
  9784. on high tablelands at elevations from 1,600 to 3,000 m altitude, on shallow, rocky soil,
  9785. where annual rainfall of 30 to 45 cm and climate is arid. Sometimes forms pure groves but
  9786. more often grows along with oak, juniper, or yellow pine.^^^ Hardy to Zone 5.^"^^
  9787. C u ltivation — Trees or shmbby plants cultivated by Indians as far north as British
  9788. Columbia. Propagated from seeds scattered over ground. Not apparently cultivated in any
  9789. orderly fashion. Elsewhere grown as an ornamental. Trees are slow-growing, and often form
  9790. a compact shmb.^^*
  9791. H arvestin g — Cone matures in August or September of second season and sheds seed
  9792. shortly thereafter. Seeds are gathered in quantities in favorable seasons. Indians usually
  9793. collect nuts from the ground after cones have opened, or beat the nuts loose from their cones
  9794. with poles. Present-day nut-collectors, who often collect the nuts for recreation and then
  9795. sell them to local groceries, break off cone-bearing limbs, or tear green cones loose with
  9796. garden rakes, causing serious damage to trees, thus lowering their productivity. Nuts are
  9797. dried and sorted much like other nuts. They have unusual keeping qualities and may be
  9798. stored for as much as 3 years without becoming rancid.
  9799. Y ields and econ om ics — No data available, as most nuts are collected from wild plants
  9800. which vary widely in their size and productivity. Trees do not bear regularly nor equally
  9801. fruitfully. Piñón is considered a staple food for some Indian groups, both for themselves
  9802. and as an article for selling at markets, especially in New Mexico, Arizona, and Mexico.
  9803. Prices range to as much as $2.85 per pound in retail groceries.
  9804. E nergy — Historically, the wood, the cones, the needles, and the pitches and resins of
  9805. pines have been used as energy sources. Scandinavians have even adapted automobile engines
  9806. to run on turpentine-like compounds. Although the seeds may run more than 50% oil, they
  9807. seem better adapted to edible than to energy ends.
  9808. B iotic factors — A gricu ltu re H an dbook 165"^ lists the following as affecting this species:
  9809. Arceuthobium cam pylopodum Engelm. f. divaricatum (western dwarf mistletoe), A rm illaria
  9810. m ellea (root rot), C oleosporium crow ellii (needle rust), C. jo n esii (needle rust), C ronartium
  9811. occidentale (piñón blister rust), D iplo d ia pin ea (seedling blight), E lytroderm a deform ans
  9812. (needle cast, witches’-broom). P om es p in i (butt and heartwood rot), and H ypoderm a sac-
  9813. catum. (needle cast)."^ Wild animals also collect the nuts.
  9814. 238 Handbook of Nuts
  9815. PINUS QUADRIFOLIA Pari, ex Sudw. (PINACEAE) — Parry’s Pine-Nut, Piñón
  9816. Syn.: P in u s cem broides var. p a rra ya n a (Engelm.) Voss and P in u s p a rra ya n a Engelm.
  9817. Uses — Nuts (seeds), which are rich in proteins, are used as an important food supply
  9818. by Mexicans and Indians, in Lower California especially. Seeds are eaten raw or in con­
  9819. fections under name of pignolia. Taste is that of piney-flavored peanuts, except that the
  9820. meat is softer. Dense foliage makes the tree desirable as an ornamental tree in cultivation.
  9821. Trees also used in environmental forestry, as watershed, and as habitat or food for wildlife.^
  9822. Folk medicine — According to Hartwell,the ointment derived from the pitch is said
  9823. to be a folk remedy for external cancers. Duke and Wain^‘ report Parry’s pine-nut to be a
  9824. folk remedy for cancer.
  9825. Chemistry — No data available.
  9826. Description — Evergreen trees to 12.3 m tall, with thick, spreading branches forming a
  9827. pyramid, eventually becoming round-topped and irregular. Needles stout, in fascicles of 4,
  9828. not over 3.5 cm long, pale glaucous green, incurved, irregularly deciduous, mostly falling
  9829. the third year. Cones subglobose, chestnut-brown, lustrous, 3.5 to 5 cm broad, broadly
  9830. ovate, compact until mature; scales thick, pyramidal, conspicuously keeled, umbo with
  9831. minute prickle. Seeds few, large, dark red-brown, mottled, about 1.3 cm long; shell thin
  9832. and brittle. Fruit matures in August or September of second season. Hybridizes with P.
  9833. monophylla, single-leaf piñón, from border of U.S. into Baja California, Mexico.Fruit
  9834. green before ripening; yellowish or reddish-brown when ripe. Flowers June; cone ripens in
  9835. September; seeds dispersed September to October.^
  9836. Germplasm — Reported from the Middle America Center of Diversity, Parry’s pine-
  9837. nut, or CVS thereof, is reported to tolerate drought, heat, poor soil, and slope.
  9838. Distribution — Native at low elevations of southern California and northern Baja Cali­
  9839. fornia, Mexico. Not hardy north ward. Most abundant of piñón pines. There are very
  9840. dense and extensive stands in the Sierra Juarez and the Sierra San Pedro Mártir, which
  9841. produce tremendous quantities of piñón nuts.^^^
  9842. Ecology — Ranging from Warm Temperate Wet through Subtropical Moist Forest Life
  9843. Zones, Parry’s pine-nut is reported to tolerate annual precipitation of 10.3 to 21.4 dm (mean
  9844. of 2 cases = 15.9), annual temperature of 21.2°C, and pH of 5.0 to 5.3 (mean of 2 cases
  9845. = 5.2).*^ Thrives on arid mesas and low mountain slopes on well-drained soils. Tolerates
  9846. high temperatures and low rainfall; very drought-resistant.^^®
  9847. Cultivation — Trees not known to be in cultivation for the nuts. Sometimes trees are
  9848. cultivated as ornamentals. Propagated from seed, mainly distributed naturally.First cul­
  9849. tivated in 1885. Germination hastened and improved by cold stratification of stored seeds
  9850. for up to 30 days at 0° to 5°C in a moist medium.^
  9851. Harvesting — Natives usually collect nuts from the ground after cones have opened, or
  9852. they beat nuts loose from cones with long poles. Present-day nut-collectors, who often collect
  9853. the nuts for recreation and then sell them to local groceries, break off cone-bearing branches,
  9854. or tear green cones loose with garden rakes, causing serious damage to trees, thus lowering
  9855. their productivity. Nuts have good keeping qualities and unshelled piñón nuts can be stored
  9856. for 3 years without becoming rancid. Piñón nuts mature in the second season during August
  9857. and September.There is a 1- to 5-year interval between large seed crops. Seeds are dried
  9858. for 2 to 8 days. Seeds may be collected by shaking the tree and collecting seeds on a cloth
  9859. spread on the ground.^
  9860. Yields and economics — In California, between 820 and 1,200 (average 960) seeds per
  9861. pound were collected from three samples.^ Exact yield data are difficult to obtain, as fruiting
  9862. is uneven, and nearly all piñón nuts are harvested from wild plants, which may be scattered.
  9863. Nuts form a very important item of the diet for some Mexicans and Indians, especially in
  9864. Baja California, and are sold in markets from San Diego southward, for as much as $2.85
  9865. per Ib.^^®
  9866. 239
  9867. Energy — Historically, the wood, the cones, the needles, and the pitches and resins of
  9868. pines have been used as energy sources. Scandinavians have even adapted automobile engines
  9869. to run on turpentine-like compounds. Although the seeds may run more than 50% oil, they
  9870. seem better adapted to edible than to energy ends.
  9871. Biotic factors — This piñón nut tree is attacked by a fungus, Hypoderma sp. and may
  9872. be parasitized by the mistletoe, Arceiithobium campylopodum.^^^
  9873. 240 Handbook of Nuts
  9874. PISTACIA VERA L. (PISTACIACEAE) — Pistachio
  9875. Uses — Pistachio is cultivated for the nut, rich in oil, eaten roasted, salted, or used to
  9876. flavor confections and ice cream. Arabs call the nut “ Fustuk” . The outer husk of the fruit,
  9877. used in India for dyeing and tanning, is imported from Iran. The fruit is the source of a
  9878. non-drying oil. In Iran, Bokhara Galls of Gul-i-pista, are used for tanning.The nuts are
  9879. much liked by squirrels and some birds, including bluejays and red-headed woodpeckers.
  9880. The wood is excellent for carving and cabinet work.*^^ In Iran, fruit husks are made into
  9881. marmalade; they are also used as fertilizer.
  9882. Folk medicine — According to Hartwell,the nuts are said to be a folk remedy for
  9883. scirrhus of the liver. Reported to be anodyne and decoagulant, pistachio is a folk remedy
  9884. for abdominal ailments, abscess, amenorrhea, bruises, chest ailments, circulation problems,
  9885. dysentery, dysmenorrhea, gynecopathy, pruritus, sclerosis of the liver, sores, and trauma.
  9886. Algerians used the powdered root in oil for children’s cough. Iranians infused the fruits’
  9887. outer husk for dysentery. Lebanese used the leaves as compresses, believing the nuts en­
  9888. hanced fertility and virility.Arabs consider the nuts to be digestive, aphrodisiac, and tonic.
  9889. They are used medicinally in East India.
  9890. Chemistry — Per 100 g, the seed (ZMB) is reported to contain 624 to 627 calories, 19.7
  9891. to 20.4 g protein, 56.4 to 56.7 g fat, 20.1 to 20.6 g total carbohydrate, 2.0 g fiber, 2.9 to
  9892. 3.3 g ash, 138 mg Ca, 528 mg P, 7.7 mg Fe, 1026 mg K, 146 jjig beta-carotene equivalent,
  9893. 0.71 mg thiamine, 1.48 mg niacin, and 0.0 mg ascorbic acid.®^ Galls produced on leaves
  9894. contain 45% tannin. Tannin contains gallotanic acid, gallic acid, and an oleo-resin, to which
  9895. the odor is due.^^® Low in sugar (ca. 8%), high in protein (ca. 20%) and oil (>50%). The
  9896. oil is nearly 90% unsaturated fatty acid (70% oleic and 20% linoleic fatty acid).^^^ The
  9897. 241
  9898. edible portion of the nuts contains 9.0 ppm Al, 0.02 As, 0.002 Au, 11 B, 0.1 Ba, 16 Br,
  9899. 1066 Ca, 0.04 Cd, 408 Cl, 0.2 Co, 0.6 Cr, 0.1 Cs, 33 Cu, 0.1 Eu, 3.8 F, 46 Fe, 0.1 Hg,
  9900. 51 I, 8639 K, 0.02 La, 0.01 Lu, 949 Mg, 3.4 Mn, 538 Na, 1.1 Ni, 0.8 Pb, 10 Rb, 960 S,
  9901. 0.05 Sb, 0.004 Sc, 0.1 Se, 0.03 Sm, 0.4 Sn, 10 Sr, 0.4 Th, 3.1 Ti, 0.01 V, 0.1 W, 0.1
  9902. Yb, and 30 ppm Zn dry weight. The normal concentration of some of these elements in
  9903. land plants are 50 ppm B, 14 Ba, 15 Br, 2000 Cl, 0.5 Co, 0.2 Cs, 14 Cu, 3.200 Mg, 630
  9904. Mn, 3 Ni, 20 Rb, 3,400 S, 26 Sr, and 0.2 ppm Se dry weight. They were higher in copper,
  9905. fluorine, iodine, and potassium, and they were equal or higher in europium and thorium
  9906. than any of the 12 nut species studied by Furr et al. Moyer^^^ reports pistachios to contain,
  9907. per 100 g edible portion, 594 calories, 19.3 g protein, 53.7 g fat, 19.0 g carbohydrates,
  9908. 5.3% water, 131 mg Ca, 500 mg P, 7.3 mg Fe, 972 mg K, and 158 mg Mn. An analysis
  9909. of pistachio kernels in the Wealth of India gave the following values per 100 g: 5.6%
  9910. moisture, 19.8% protein, 53.5% fat, 16.2% carbohydrates, 2.1% fiber, 2.8% mineral matter,
  9911. 0.14% Ca, 0.43% P, 13.7 mg Fe, 240 I.U. carotene (as vitamin A), 0.67 mg thiamine,
  9912. 0.03 mg riboflavin, 1.4 mg nicotinic acid, no vitamin C, and 626 calories. The fatty acid
  9913. composition of the oil is 0.6% myristic, 8.2% palmitic, 1.6% stearic, 69.6% oleic, and
  9914. 19.8% linoleic acids. Galls contain 50% tannins. Both young and mature leaves contain
  9915. shikimic acid.^®
  9916. D escrip tion — Slow-growing, long-lived (700 to 15(X) years), small, dioecious bushy
  9917. tree, to 10 m tall, developing a large trunk with age; branches pendant. Leaves odd-pinnate,
  9918. the 3 to 11 leaflets ovate, slightly tapering at the base. Flowers dioecious, without petals,
  9919. brownish-green, small, in axillary racemes or panicles; pedicels bracted at base; staminate
  9920. flowers with 5-cleft calyx and 5 very short stamens with large anthers; pistillate flowers
  9921. with 3 to 4 cleft calyx, 1-celled sessile ovary and short 3-cleft style. Fruit a dry, ovoid to
  9922. oblong, pedicelled drupe, up to 2.5 cm long, reddish and wrinkled, enclosing 2 yellow-
  9923. green oily cotyledons (kernel). Flowers early summer; fruits August to September.
  9924. G erm p lasm — Reported from the Central Asia Center of Diversity, pistachio, or cvs
  9925. thereof, is reported to tolerate drought, frost, and heat.®^ Many varieties of pistachio have
  9926. been developed, because the crop has been grown for several thousand years, most are
  9927. named after the area in which they were cultivated. Iranian: light-yellow kernel, larger size
  9928. but lacks oily nut flavor; Sicilian, Syrian, and Turkish: almost green kernel throughout, with
  9929. good flavor; Afghan and Italian: deep-green kernels prefered for ice cream and pastry. In
  9930. Syria, district cvs are ‘Alemi’, ‘Achoury’, ‘Aijimi’, ‘Aintab’, ‘Ashoori’, ‘El Bataury’,
  9931. ‘Mirhavy’. In Sicily: ‘Trabonella’, and ‘Bronte’. In California, 13 cvs have been tested:
  9932. ‘Ibrahmim’, ‘Owhadi’, ‘Safeed’, ‘Shasti’, ‘Wahedi’ (largest nuts of any cv). In Turkey:
  9933. ‘Uzun’ (nuts 34 to 36 mm long) and ‘Kirmizi’ (red-hulled, thin-shelled, free-splitting, green-
  9934. kemeled, containing 20.3% protein and 65.47% oil).^^® Joley^^^ reports on cvs being tested
  9935. at Chico, California. Male cv ‘Peters’, nearest to a universal pollinator, coincides well with
  9936. ‘Red Aleppo’ and ‘Trabonella’ (early blossoming) and with ‘Kerman’ (late blossoming).
  9937. Cultivar ‘Chico’ provides a supplement to ‘Peters’. The first nut-bearing cvs tested at Chico
  9938. were ‘Bronte’, ‘Buenzle’, ‘Minassian’, ‘Red Aleppo’, ‘Sfax’, and ‘Trabonella’. The most
  9939. promising in quality and greeness of kernels are ‘Bronte’, ‘Red Aleppo’, and ‘Trabonella’.
  9940. ‘Kerman’ is liked by importers and processors for its size, crispness, and snap when bitten
  9941. into and chewed. A sister seedling of ‘Kerman’, ‘Lassen’, also produces good quality large­
  9942. sized nuts.^^^ (2n = 30.)
  9943. D istrib u tion — Native to Near East and Western Asia from Syria to Caucasus, and
  9944. Afghanistan, forming pure stands at altitudes up to 1(XK) m; pistachio has been introduced
  9945. and is now cultivated in many subtropical areas of the world, such as China, India, the
  9946. Mediterranean, and U.S. (Arizona, California, and Florida).
  9947. E cology — Ranging from Warm Temperate Dry through Subtropical Thom to Dry Forest
  9948. Life Zones, pistachio is reported to tolerate annual precipitation of 4.7 to 11.2 dm (mean
  9949. 242 Handbook of Nuts
  9950. of 7 cases = 6.2 dm), annual temperature of 14.3°C to 26.2°C (mean of 7 = 18.8°C), and
  9951. pH of 7.1 to 7.8 (mean of 4 cases = 7.6).^^ Hardy to Zone Pistachio requires cold
  9952. winters (to - 18°C) and long hot dry summers (to 38°C) to mature. Philippe^^^ assumes it
  9953. requires 600 to 1500 hours below TC to meet its chilling requirements. In Iran, it grows
  9954. at 1200 m elevation on desert plateau. In Turkey and California it grows in the same areas
  9955. as olives and almonds, but flowers later in the spring than almonds, and is less susceptible
  9956. to fruit injury. Requires from 30 to 45 cm annual rainfall, any less may need irrigation, but
  9957. requires less than most other culitvated fruit and nut trees. Soils should be deep, friable,
  9958. and well-drained but moisture-retaining; the root is deep-penetrating.^^® It can, however,
  9959. survive in poor, stony, calcareous highly alkaline or slightly acid, or even saline soils.
  9960. C u ltivation — Trees are difficult to transplant; green seed (nuts) are planted in their
  9961. permanent place. Other species of Pistacia are used as stock upon which to bud pistachio.
  9962. Care should be taken to select areas for the pistachio orchard which are protected from wind,
  9963. as in a valley, with less exposure to cold, and with soil relatively free of sand but possessing
  9964. the ability to retain moisture. After planting, soil should be cultivated periodically for 5 to
  9965. 7 years, by which time the trees are 2 to 3 m tall. Branches of selected cvs are then bud-
  9966. grafted (2 buds per tree to insure at least one taking) on new trees. Male varieties shedding
  9967. pollen during the first half of female blooming period should be selected. In California,
  9968. male varieties ‘Peters’ and ‘Chico 23’ correspond well to female ‘Red Aleppo’, ‘Trabonella’,
  9969. and ‘Bronte’. One male tree should be planted to 7 or 8 females. Plantings should be about
  9970. 9 m apart under irrigation, farther apart without irrigation. Pistachio responds favorably to
  9971. applications of nitrogen. After grafting, 4 to 6 years are required before trees begin to bear.
  9972. The trees do not bear fully until they are 20 to 25 years old, and continue to bear for 40 to
  9973. 60 years or more. Pistachio trees are delicate, and production of nuts is influenced by excess
  9974. of rain, drought, excessive heat or cold, and high winds.
  9975. H arvestin g — Harvest period is August to September in most areas. It is best to harvest
  9976. the whole tree when most of the crop is ripe. Nuts can be knocked from trees. Clusters of
  9977. nuts are removed, allowed to dry 3 days on the ground, and beaten or stamped on to separate
  9978. the nuts from the clusters. They are then put in a tank of water to soak for 12 hr, and then
  9979. stamped on or beaten to remove the outer green husk. Finally, they are washed and dried
  9980. in the sun.'^^’^^®
  9981. Y ield s and econ om ics — Adult trees yield an average of 11.25 kg annually. Three kg
  9982. unshelled nuts yield 1 kg shelled.^^® Joley’^^ reports on the average yield of four pistachio
  9983. CVS per tree per year since start of production: ‘Kerman’ 22.45 kg dry weight, 15 years in
  9984. production; ‘Bronte’ 11.25 kg dry weight, 14 years in production; ‘Trabonella’ 6.35 kg dry
  9985. weight, 12 years in production; and ‘Red Aleppo’ 4.50 kg dry weight, 12 years in production.
  9986. For 8- to 15-year old trees in Jordan, Philippe^^^ estimates yields at 2 to 8 kg in shell per
  9987. tree, 200 to 800 kg/ha, for 16- to 30-year-old trees, 8 to 30 kg per tree, 800 to 2,400 kg/ha.
  9988. In 1976, the yield of American pistachios was 150,000 lbs; in 1979, more than 17 million
  9989. lbs. Yields of 50 to 150 lbs per tree are reported in California.Duke®^ reports 7 kg fruit
  9990. per plant. Nuts are marketed mostly unshelled and salted. Soaked in a brine solution, they
  9991. are quickly dried in the sun or in artificial driers to prevent development of surface mold.
  9992. Before marketing the shell is cracked for consumer convenience. “ Red” pistachios are
  9993. roasted, salted, and shell is colored with a vegetable dye; “ White” pistachios are roasted
  9994. and shell coated with a mixture of salt and cornstarch; “ Naturals” have only salt added
  9995. after roasting.^^® In 1979, the revolution in Iran caused the world’s main pistachio supply
  9996. to disappear, which in turn caused prices to rise from $1.25/lb in 1978 to $2.05/lb in 1980.
  9997. In 1982, the American crop of 43 million pounds of pistachios was valued at more than $60
  9998. million. Indications are that the U.S. crop will be 70 to 80 million pounds by the 1990s,
  9999. eventually topping 120 million pounds.
  10000. E n ergy — The wood has a specific gravity of 0.9179 to 0.92(X),^^'* and is said to make
  10001. 243
  10002. an excellent fireplace wood.*^^ Analyzing 62 kinds of biomass for heating value, Jenkins
  10003. and Ebeling’"^^ reported a spread of 19.26 to 18.06 MJ/kg, compared to 13.76 for weathered
  10004. rice straw to 23.28 MJ/kg for prune pits. On a percent DM basis, the shells contained 82.03%
  10005. volatiles, 1.13% ash, 16.85% fixed carbon, 48.79% C, 5.91% H, 43.41% O, 0.56% N,
  10006. 0.01% S, 0.04% Cl, and undetermined residue.
  10007. B iotic facto rs — Pollination is by wind or air drift. Many insects are serious crop-
  10008. destroying pests and should be controlled; an aphid (Anapleura lentisci) is one such pest.
  10009. Numerous fungi, causing serious damage, attack pistachio: A lternaría tenuissim a, A stero-
  10010. m ella pistaciaru m , C ladosporiu m herbarum , C ylindrosporium garbow skii, C. p ista cia e,
  10011. C ytospora teretinthi, F am es rim osus, Fusarium roseum , F. solani, M onilia p ista cia , O zon-
  10012. ium auriconium , P apu lospora sp., P hellinus rim osus, P hleospora p ista cia e, P hyllactin ia
  10013. suffulta, P h yllosticta lentisci, P. terebinthi, Phym atotrichum om nivorum , P hytophthora p a r ­
  10014. asitica, P ileola ria terebinthi, P leurotus ostreatus, R hizoctonia bataticola, R osellina n eca­
  10015. trix, Septogloeum p ista cia e, S eptoria p ista cia e, S. pistaciaru m , S. pistacin a, Stem phylium
  10016. botryosum , T etracoccosporium sp., and U rom yces terebinthi. The P hytophthora causes
  10017. footrot via damage to cambium; S eptoria spp. cause defoliation and CuS spray should be
  10018. used; P hom opsis and Fusarium attack the female flowers; a virus causing rosettes is serious
  10019. in Asia; mistletoe attacks the trees; and the following nematodes have been isolated from
  10020. pistachio: H eterodera m arioni, M eloidogyne sp., and X iphinem a index.The roots are
  10021. very susceptible to root-knot nematodes.Verticillium wilt is the primary threat, according
  10022. to Vietmeyer.^^^ Rice et al.^^^ report epicarp lesion symptoms being reproduced on apparently
  10023. L eptoglossu s
  10024. healthy pistachio fruit clusters exposed to field-collected adult leaf-footed bugs,
  10025. clypealis. Two species of leaf-footed bugs, L eptoglossu s clypealis and L. o ccid en ta lis, and
  10026. at least four species of stink-bugs in the genera Thyanta, C hlorochroa, and A crosternum
  10027. produced similar external and internal damage to pistachio fruits. Other fruit symptoms, not
  10028. associated with insects, were panicle and shoot blight, endocarp necrosis, and stylar-end
  10029. lesion. Several species of smaller plant bugs in the family Miridae, including L ygus hesperus
  10030. and C alocoris norvegicus, caused epicarp lesion symptoms.
  10031. 244 Handbook of Nuts
  10032. PITTOSPORUM RESINIFERUM Hemsl. (PITTOSPORACEAE) — Petroleum Nut (Eng­
  10033. lish), “ Hanga” (Philippine)
  10034. U ses — Called petroleum nuts because of the fancied resemblance of the odor of the
  10035. fruit’s oil to that of petroleum, the fruits, even green ones, bum brilliantly when ignited.
  10036. Hence, they are used like torch nuts or candlenuts for illumination in the bush. Dihydroterpene
  10037. (CioHig) is used in perfumes and medicines. Heptane (CyH^^) is a component of gasoline,
  10038. and has been suggested as a possible component of paint and varnish.
  10039. F olk m ed icin e — The fmit is used as a panacea by Philippine traditionalists — especially,
  10040. however, for abdominal pain. The oleoresin is used to treat muscular pains and skin dis­
  10041. eases. The nut decoction is used for colds. Cmshed nuts are mixed with coconut oil as
  10042. a relief for myalgia. AltshuP® quotes from a 1947 Sulit herbarium specimen, “ Petroleum
  10043. gas extracted from the fruit is medicinal for stomach-ache and cicitrizant.’’ Hurov^"^^ says
  10044. the fruit is used to treat rheumatism, muscle pains, and wounds.
  10045. C h em istry — The volatile oil of the fmit is reported to contain “ dihydroterpene and
  10046. heptane, which is a cardiac glycosideThe Horticultural and Special Crops Laboratory
  10047. at Peoria analyzed an accession of fmit, and identified, from its “ squeezings” , constituents
  10048. passing through a gas chromatographic column, heptane (about 45% of the elutents) nonane,
  10049. alpha-pinene or beta-ocimene, beta-pinene, myrcene, and unidentified materials. The es­
  10050. sential oil (8 to 10% of fmit weight) contains myrcene (40%) and alpha-pinene (38%) in
  10051. 245
  10052. ± equal quantities (oil of P. undulatum contains mostly limonene). The two components
  10053. n-heptane (5%) and n-nonane (7%) are minor components.
  10054. D escrip tion — Aromatic tree to 30 m tall, but probably smaller in its elfin forest habitat
  10055. (perhaps even epiphytic); fruiting when only 6 to 12 m tall. Leaves aromatic, coriaceous,
  10056. entire (possibly evergreen), thickest above the middle, pinnately nerved, with a short acumen
  10057. at the tip. Flowers fragrant, white, clustered on the stems. Fruits average 25 mm in diameter
  10058. (12 to 43). Each fruit has 5 to 72 seeds (average 31), the seeds ranging from 1 to 4 mm,
  10059. averaging 3 mm. The seeds are about as close to hexahedral and prismatic as any I have
  10060. seen, being quite angular, black to blackish-gold, often still surrounded by a gummy or
  10061. resinous endocarp.
  10062. G erm p lasm — The FORI Director in the Philippines is actively collecting superior
  10063. germplasm in the high mountains of Bontoc and Benguet where they abound, especially in
  10064. elfin forests.
  10065. D istrib u tion — In the Philippines, petroleum nut is locally known in Benguet as apisang,
  10066. abkol, abkel, and langis; in the Mountain Province, dael and dingo, and in Abra, sagaga.
  10067. It abounds in Mt. Pulis, Ifugao, and is reported from the head-waters of the Agno and Chico
  10068. River Basins. Also in the Bicol Provinces, Palawan, Mindoro, Nueva Ecija, and Laguna
  10069. Provinces. It is being cultivated at FORFs Conifer Research Center, Baguio City.*^’^^^
  10070. E cology — Petroleum nut is reported to range from 600 to 2,400 m elevation, usually
  10071. in elfin or Benguet Pine Forest. Average of 7 climatic data sites where the Pittosporum
  10072. grows was close to 1,000 m, the range from ca. 550 to 2,000 m. Whether or not it can
  10073. stand frost, dry heat, and drought is questionable. Frequently, species of elfin forests have
  10074. very narrow ecological amplitudes and do not thrive in other vegetation types. Results of
  10075. transplants and trials are unavailable to me now. Reportedly, seed were introduced once,
  10076. at least to Hawaii. Thanks to Professors Ludivina S. de Padua, S. C. Hales, and Juan V.
  10077. Pancho of the Philippines, we now have a fairly good idea of the ecosystematic amplitudes
  10078. of the Pittosporum, an energy plant that has captured the imagination of many. Professor
  10079. de Padua checked off all the climatic data points (from our climatic data base) at which
  10080. Pittosporum resiniferum was growing, prior to its widespread introduction for potential
  10081. energy studies elsewhere in the Philippines. Ranging from Tropical Dry to Moist through
  10082. Subtropical Forest Life Zones, the petroleum nut grows where the annual precipitation ranges
  10083. from 15 to more than 50 dm (mean of 36 cases = 27 dm), annual temperature from 18 to
  10084. 28°C (mean of 17 cases = 26°C). Of 17 cases where both temperature and rainfall data
  10085. were available to us, 13 would suggest Tropical Moist Forest Life Zone, three would suggest
  10086. Tropical Dry, and one would suggest Subtropical Rain Forest Life Zones.
  10087. C ultivation — Seeds and cutting can be used to propagate the tree. Seeds may lose their
  10088. vitality rather rapidly. According to Juan V. Pancho (personal communication, 1982), “ from
  10089. my experience, the seed lost its viability after one month storage.”
  10090. H arvestin g — Currently, seeds are harvested from the wild.
  10091. Y ields and econ om ics — A single fruit yields 0.1 to 3.3 m€, averaging about 1.3 m€
  10092. oil. In general, the bigger the fruit, the larger the seed, and the greater the oil content.
  10093. It is reported^^ that a single tree from Mount Mariveles, Bataan, yielded 15 kg green fruits,
  10094. which yielded 800 cm^ of oil. The residue, ground up and distilled with steam, yielded 73
  10095. cm^ more. Another report gave 68 g per kg fresh nuts, suggesting about 1 kg oil per tree
  10096. yielding 15 kg.‘^ Currently, seeds are being sold at $2.00 per gram in 5-gram lots (ca. 40
  10097. seeds per g) by the FORI Seed Officer, Forest Research Institute College, Laguna, Phil­
  10098. ippines.
  10099. E n ergy — The plant was discovered as a hydrocarbon source just after 1900. Based on
  10100. the previous paragraph, it seems it would take 1,000 trees per ha to get one MT oil per
  10101. hectare from the fruits. Perhaps the resin in the leaves, twigs, etc. would equal or exceed
  10102. this; figures are not yet available. The oil derived from the fruits is quite sticky and rapidly
  10103. 246 Handbook of Nuts
  10104. turns resinous when laid thin. In an open dish, it bums strongly, although with a sooty
  10105. flame.C. A. Arroyo‘S notes that for home use as fuel, “ the husk of African oil palm nuts
  10106. could be much better than the petroleum nut that emits sooty smoke and strong smell.”
  10107. President Marcos was said to encourage each Philippine farmer to plant five trees in the
  10108. hopes that they could obtain 300 € of oil therefrom, per year. I saw nothing about this at
  10109. the Philippine exhibit at the World’s Fair in June 1982. However, if yields of 60 € of oil
  10110. per tree are possible, the tree should certainly be examined! In the January 1981 issue of
  10111. Canopy International, Generalao^®® lists petroleum nut at the top of a long list of potential
  10112. oil seeds including Pongamia pinnata, Sterculia foetida, Terminalia catappa, Sindora supa,
  10113. Calophyllum inophyllum, Canarium luzonicum, Aleurites moluccana, Aleurites trisperma,
  10114. Mallotus philippensis, Barringtonia asiatica, Sindora inermis, Pithecellobium dulce, Ta-
  10115. marindus indica, Chisocheton cumingianus, Jatropha curcas, and Euphorbia philippensis
  10116. to help the Philippines solve their energy problem (importing 85%). Presidential Decree
  10117. 1068 declares the imperative acceleration of research on energy alternatives. Editorial notes
  10118. in Canopy International suggest that the flammable element in petroleum nut is volatile,
  10119. evaporating quickly like acetone. Some chemists believe admixing another element will
  10120. stabilize the compound. One Hurov seed cataloghas very optimistic notes about the plant:
  10121. “ The Gasoline Tree produces masses of apricot-sized orange fruits which when cut and
  10122. touched with a match leap into flame and bum steadily. The fmits contain 46% of gasoline
  10123. type components (heptane, dihydroterpene, etc.), which are found in extensive networks of
  10124. large resin canals. If planted, the estimated yield would be about 45 tons of fmit or 2500
  10125. gallons of ‘gasoline’ per acre per
  10126. B iotic factors — No data available.
  10127. 247
  10128. PLATONIA ESCULENTA (Arr. Cam.) Rickett & Stafl. (CLUSIACEAE) — Bacury, Bacuri,
  10129. Pakuri, Parcouril, Piauhy, Wild Mammee (Guyana)
  10130. S yn .: Anstoclesia esculenta (A rr. C a m .) Stuntz; Platonia insignis M art.
  10131. Uses — Seeds are the source of Bacury Kernel Oil, a nondrying oil used in the manufacture
  10132. of candles and soaps. Fruits are used for pastry and preserves, and are highly esteemed in
  10133. the Amazon region for the delicious pulp from the large fruit, used in sweets and ice cream.
  10134. Extracts of the fruit are toxic to black carpet beetles, but not to the larvae of Aedes and
  10135. Anopheles. A yellow gum resin secreted by the bark is used in veterinary medicine. Wood,
  10136. brownish-yellow, turning black upon exposure to air, is durable, resistant to insect attacks;
  10137. resilient, rather fine-grained, easy to work, taking on a lustrous finish; used for flooring,
  10138. planks, fancy wood-work, and construction of buildings. Presently, wood is used for making
  10139. rum barrels, and cases or crates for shipping bananas; it is also excellent for cabinet work
  10140. and carpentry. Bark is white, exfoliating, fibrous, used for cordage, and yielding a black
  10141. viscous resin used for caulking boats.
  10142. F olk m ed icin e — No data available.
  10143. C h em istry — This is one of the few outstanding exceptions to the generally evenly
  10144. distributed glyceride structure of solid seed fats. In 1945, it was reported to have the unusually
  10145. high melting point of 51 to 52°C and contain 24% fully saturated glycerides, although its
  10146. component acids were approximately 56% saturated (palmitic and stearic) with 39% oleic
  10147. and 4% linoleic acid. Component acids reported are myristic 1.0, palmitic 55.1, stearic 6.4,
  10148. arachidic 0.3, hexadecenoic 3.2, oleic 31.7, and linoleic 2.3%, and the component glycer­
  10149. ides: fully saturated 20 (tripalmitin 15), oleodipalmitin 38, oleopalmitostearin 17, palmi-
  10150. todiolein 19, stearodiolein 6%. Apart from the fully saturated glyceride content, the rest of
  10151. 248 Handbook of Nuts
  10152. the fat is constituted on the usual lines, and bacury fat thus resembles laurel kernel fat in
  10153. that it is only the fully saturated glycerides which are abnormal. It is possible, but of course
  10154. not in any way proven, that such departures from the normal are caused by certain acids
  10155. (in this instance, palmitic) being produced in the seed at some stage of its development in
  10156. much greater proportions than the average content of the acid in the total seed fat at maturity;
  10157. if so, the departure from normality would be more apparent than real. Elsewhere, Hilditch
  10158. and Williams report among the saturated fatty acids 1.2% C14, 57.2% C,^, 6.0% Cjg, and
  10159. 0.2% C20 or above. Among the glycerides, 19% were trisaturated, 55% were disaturated,
  10160. 26% monosaturated.*^^
  10161. D escrip tion — Large trees with yellowish sap; trunk straight, cylindrical, 50 to 55 cm
  10162. in diameter (up to 1.3 m), free of branches 20 to 25 m up, with indistinct, low, thick
  10163. butresses; cortex dark-gray, with deep vertical cracks 1 to 3 cm apart, or with large scales
  10164. 5 to 25 mm thick; crown broad, flattened, with thick straight slightly slanting branches;
  10165. twigs straight and stout; entire plant glabrous except the inflorscence. Leaves remote at ends
  10166. of branches and in single pairs at ends of short lateral branchlets; petioles 1 to 2 cm long,
  10167. margined; blade elliptic, obovate or oblong to oblong-lanceolate, apex and base rounded,
  10168. acute or slightly acuminate, up to 15 cm long, coriaceous, glossy above, midrib flat or
  10169. impressed above, prominent to strongly prominent beneath; primary veins prominent on both
  10170. sides, connected by a submarginal vein. Inflorescence 1- to 3-flowered, terminating the leaf­
  10171. bearing branchlets; peduncle absent; pedicels 1 to 3 cm long, their bases surrounded by a
  10172. series of deltoid bracts 3 to 4 mm long, leaving transverse scars; flowers minutely pulverulent;
  10173. sepals ovate to broad semi-orbicular, 6 to 8 mm long; petals elliptic, 3.5 to 4 cm long, pink
  10174. outside, white inside; bud reddish. Fruit globose, 5 to 7.5 cm long, green, turning yellow;
  10175. mesocarp edible, often containing only 1 seed, rarely more, of pleasant flavor. Flowers
  10176. September to November; fruits March to May.^^*
  10177. G erm p lasm — Native to the South American Center of Diversity, bacury tolerates sand
  10178. and some waterlogging. Mors and Rizzini^^^ state “ it would be an ideal object of study for
  10179. plant breeders, who could increase the pulpy part at the expense of the very large seeds” .
  10180. Oilseed specialists might breed in the other direction.
  10181. D istrib u tion — Native to Brazil (Para, Maranhao, Ceara, Goyaz, Amazon) and Guyana.
  10182. E cology — Estimated to range from Subtropical Dry to Wet through Tropical Dry to Wet
  10183. Forest Life Zones, perhaps tolerating annual temperatures of 18 to 25°C, annual precipitation
  10184. of 5 to 40 dm, and pH of 4.5 to 8.0. On sandy, dry plains and in marshy regions, growing
  10185. scattered in tropical environment.^^®
  10186. C u ltivation — Trees grow naturally from seeds in the forests, and the tree is not known
  10187. to be cultivated.
  10188. H arvestin g — Trees are cut from the forest for timber. Fruits and seeds are collected by
  10189. natives and sold at trading centers. Most of the products are used locally by the natives.
  10190. Y ield s and econ om ics — No yield data available. Seeds and fruits are sold at local
  10191. markets in Brazil, French Guyana, and Surinam. Also lumber, dye wood, and fiber are sold
  10192. in some markets.
  10193. E n ergy — Prunings and falling leaves might provide 5 to 10 MT dry matter per ha per
  10194. yr, which could be diverted to energy production, for direct combustion or conversion into
  10195. alcohol or methane. With no yield data on the nuts, I cannot speculate as to how much
  10196. renewable oil, resin, and fuel wood this produces.
  10197. B iotic factors — No serious pests or diseases have been reported for this tree.
  10198. 249
  10199. PRUNUS DULCIS (MILL.) D.A. WEBB (ROSACEAE) — Almond
  10200. Uses — Almonds are cultivated for the nuts, used in candies, baked products, and
  10201. confectioneries, and for the oils obtained from the kernels. Oil is used as a flavoring agent
  10202. in baked goods, perfumery and medicines. Benzaldehyde may be used for almond flavoring,
  10203. being cheaper ($1.54/kg) than almond oil ($5.28 to $6.60/kg).^^^ Much valued in the orient
  10204. because it furnishes a very pleasant oil. In Tuscany, almond branches are used as divining
  10205. rods to locate hidden treasure. Modem English Jews reportedly still carry branches of
  10206. flowering almonds into the synagogue on spring festival days. There is the legendary story
  10207. of Charlemagne’s troops’ spears (almond) sprouting in the ground overnight and shading
  10208. the tents the next day. As essential oils go, there is only bitter almond oil. Sweet almond
  10209. oil is used for cosmetic creams and lotions, although in a crisis, it might conceivably be
  10210. used as an energy source. The gum exuded from the tree has been used as a substitute for
  10211. tragacanth.®^
  10212. F olk M ed icin e — According to Hartwell,the seed and/or its oil are used in folk
  10213. remedies for cancer (especially bladder, breast, mouth, spleen, and uterus), carcinomata,
  10214. condylomata, corns, indurations and tumors. Reported to be alterative, astringent, carmi­
  10215. native, cyanogenetic, demulcent, discutient, diuretic, emollient, laxative, lithotriptic, ner­
  10216. vine, sedative, stimulant and tonic, almond is a folk remedy for asthma, cold, corns, cough,
  10217. dyspnea, emptions, gingivitis, heartburn, itch, lungs, prurigo, skin, sores, spasms, sto­
  10218. matitis, and ulcers. The kernels are valued in diet, for peptic ulcers. It is no surprise that
  10219. the seeds and/or oil (containing amygdalin or benzaldehyde) are widely acclaimed as folk
  10220. cancer remedies, for all sorts of cancers and tumors, calluses, condylomata, and corns.
  10221. Lebanese extract the oil for skin trouble, including white patches on skin; used throughout
  10222. the Middle East for an emollient; also for itch. Raw oil from the bitter variety is used for
  10223. acne. Almond and honey was given for cough. Thin almond paste was added to wheat
  10224. porridge to pass gravel or stone. It is believed by the Lebanese to restore virility. Iranians
  10225. make an ointment from bitter almonds for furuncles. Bitter almonds, when eaten in small
  10226. quantity, sometimes produce nettle-rash. When taken in large quantity, they may cause
  10227. 250 Handbook of Nuts
  10228. poisoning. Ayurvedics consider the fruit, the seed and its oil aphrodisiac, using the oil for
  10229. biliousness and headache, the seed as a laxative. Unani use the seed for ascites, bronchitis,
  10230. colic, cough, delirium, earache, gleet, hepatitis, headache, hydrophobia, inflammation,
  10231. renitis, skin ailments, sore throat, and weak eyes.^'^^
  10232. C h em istry — Per 100 g, the seed is reported to contain 547 to 605 calories, 4.7 to 4.8
  10233. g H2O, 16.8 to 21.0 g protein, 54.1 to 54.9 g fat, 17.3 to 21.5 g total carbohydrate, 2.6
  10234. to 3.0 g fiber, 2.0 to 3.0 g ash, 230 to 282 mg Ca, 475 to 504 mg P, 4.4 to 5.2 mg Fe, 4
  10235. to 14 mg Na, 432 to 773 mg K, 0 to 5 |xg beta-carotene equivalent, 0.24 to 0.25 mg
  10236. thiamine, 0.15 to 0.92 mg riboflavin, 2.5 to 6.0 mg niacin, and traces of ascorbic acid.
  10237. According to WOI, the seeds contain 5.8 mg/100 g Na, 856 K, 247 Ca, 257 Mg, 4.23 Fe,
  10238. 0.14 Cu, 442 P, 145 S and 1.7 Cl. About 82% of the P is in phytic acid. Seeds contain
  10239. 0.45 ppm folic acid, 150 mg/kg alpha-tocopherol and 5 mg/kg gamma-tocopherol. The chief
  10240. protein is a globulin, amandin, which contains 11.9% arginine, 1.6% histidine,, 0.7% lysine,
  10241. 2.5% phenylalanine, 4.5% leucine, 0.2% valine, 1.4% tryptophane, 0.7% methionine, and
  10242. 0.8% cystine. The approximate fatty acid composition of the oil is 1% myristic, 5% palmitic,
  10243. 77% oleic, and 17% linoleic.Sweet almond oil from Kashmir showed 0.2% myristic, 8.9%
  10244. palmitic, 4.0% stearic, 62.5% oleic, and 24.4% linoleic. The essential oil is 81 to 93%
  10245. benzaldehyde, close kin to laetrile. The hulls (fleshy pericarp) contain: 7.5% moisture,
  10246. 25.6% total sugars, 7.2% reducing sugars, 4.4% tannin, 2.6 to 4.7% protein, 1.6% starch,
  10247. 2.4% pectin, 1.1 to 1.2% ether extract, 12.6% crude fiber, and 4.6 to 6.3% ash.^® The gum
  10248. which exudes from the trunk hydrolyses into 4 parts L-arabinose, 2 parts D-xylose, 3 parts
  10249. D-galactose, and 1 part D-glucuronic acid. The edible portion of the nuts contain 3.2 ppm
  10250. Al, 0.02 As, 0.001 Au, 18 B, 2.6 Ba, 20 Br, 2720 Ca, 0.02 Cd, 28 Cl, 0.2 Co, 1.7 Cr,
  10251. 0.1 Cs, 14 Cu, 0.1 Eu, 1.3 F, 54 Fe, 0.04 Hf, 0.1 Hg, 0.1 I, 6346 K, 0.03 La, 0.01 Lu,
  10252. 2297 Mg, 14 Mn, 0.3 Mo, 20 Na, 1.6 Ni, 0.4 Pb, 13 Rb, 3420 S, 0.1 Sb, 0.003 Sc, 0.02
  10253. Se, 960 Si, 0.1 Sm, 0.7 Sn, 16 Sr, 0.03 Ta, 0.2 Th, 3.5 Ti, 0.02 V, 0.1 W, 0.1 Yb, 32
  10254. ppm Zn dry weight. The normal concentration of some of these elements in land plants are
  10255. 50 ppm B, 14 Ba, 15 Br, 2000 Cl, 0.5 Co, 0.2 Cs, 14 Cu, 3.200 Mg, 630 Mn, 3 Ni, 20
  10256. Rb, 3,400 S, 26 Sr, and 0.2 ppm Se dry weight. They were higher in calcium and chromium
  10257. than any of the 12 nut species studied by Furr et al.*®^
  10258. D escrip tion — Tree to 10 m tall, the alternate leaves lanceolate to oblong lanceolate,
  10259. minutely serrate. Flowers solitary, white to pink, actinomorphic, 20 to 50 mm broad,
  10260. appearing with or before the foliage. Fruit an oblong drupe 30 to 60 mm long, pubescent,
  10261. the tough flesh splitting at maturity to expose the pitted stone; endocarp thin or thick; seed
  10262. flattened, longovoid, the seed coat brown.
  10263. G erm p lasm — Reported from the Central Asian and Near Eastern Centers of Diversity,
  10264. almond or cvs thereof is reported to tolerate drought, frost, high pH, heat, mycobacteria,
  10265. nematodes, slope, and wilt.^^ ‘Cavaliera’ is very early, ‘Nonpareil’ early, ‘Ferragnes’ me­
  10266. dium, ‘Marcona’ late, and ‘Texas’ very late. (2n = 16.)
  10267. D istrib u tion — Widely distributed in cultivation now, the sweet almond is said to have
  10268. wild types in Greece, North Africa, and West Asia. Almond was cultivated in China in the
  10269. 10th Century BC, in Greece in the 5th Century BC.
  10270. E cology — Ranging from Cool Temperate Moist to Wet through Subtropical Thom to
  10271. Moist Forest Life Zones, almond is reported to tolerate annual precipitation of 2.0 to 14.7
  10272. dm (mean of 11 cases = 7.5) annual temperature of 10.5 to 19.5°C (mean of 11 cases =
  10273. 14.8) and pH of 5.3 to 8.3 (mean of 7 cases = 7.3). Almond does well in the hot, dry
  10274. interior valleys of California, where the nuts mature satisfactorily. The leaves and nuts are
  10275. less subject to attack by disease-causing fungi in the hot, dry climate than under cooler and
  10276. more humid conditions. It has a low winter chilling requirement. Because of this low chilling
  10277. requirement (or short rest period), and the relatively low amount of heat required to bring
  10278. the trees into bloom, the almond is generally the earliest deciduous fruit or nut tree to flower,
  10279. 251
  10280. hence extremely subject to frost injury where moderately late spring frosts prevail. Almonds
  10281. need ample rainfall or irrigation water for maximum production of well-filled almond nuts.
  10282. Trees have been planted in certain areas where supplies of water are inadequate for other
  10283. fruit or nut crops; however, yields of nuts were low. In general, conditions favoring peach
  10284. production will also favor almonds. The almond tree has been successfully grown on a wide
  10285. range of soils. It is a deep-rooted tree and draws heavily on the soil, which should be deep,
  10286. fertile, and well drained. Sandy loams are best. Since sandy soils are often deficient in plant
  10287. food elements, careful attention must be paid to proper fertilization of the trees. Almond
  10288. trees have high N and P requirements. Sandy soils are easy to cultivate, and cover crops
  10289. are comparatively easy to grow on them provided they are properly fertilized.
  10290. C u ltivation — In India, trees are raised from seedlings, the seeds usually having a chilling
  10291. requirement. Seeds are sown in nurseries, the seedlings transplanted after about one year.
  10292. For special types, as in the U.S., scions are budded or grafted on to bitter or sweet almond,
  10293. apricot, myrobalan, peach, or plum seedlings. Trees are planted 6 to 8 m apart and irrigated,
  10294. in spite of their drought tolerance. Application of nitrogenous and/or organic fertilizers is
  10295. said to improve yield. Trees should be pruned to a modified leader system. All types are
  10296. self-sterile, so cvs or seedlings should be mixed.
  10297. H arvestin g — Fruits occur mainly on shoot spurs, which remain productive up to five
  10298. years. Bearing trees may be pruned of surplus branches to about 20% of the old-bearing
  10299. wood. Tree exhibiting decline may be severely cut back at the top. In India, the trees bear
  10300. from July to September. Fruits are harvested when the flesh splits open exposing the stone.
  10301. The flesh is then removed from the stones manually or by machine.
  10302. Y ield s and econ om ics — In 1971, commercial almond production in the U. S. was centered
  10303. in California, which produced more than 99% of the domestic marketed nuts. California’s
  10304. production of in-shell nuts during the 1960s nearly tripled. It reached about 140,000 in-shell
  10305. tons in 1970. Only sweet almonds are grown commercially. Imports, largely from Spain
  10306. and Italy, vary widely from year to year, ranging from about 280 to 1,700 tons on the in­
  10307. shell basis for the past 7 years. The U.S. imported 67,252 kg of bitter almond oil worth
  10308. $271,600 in 1981, 354 kg from Canada worth $1,300, 48,470 kg from France worth
  10309. $221,300, 998 kg from Haiti worth $2,600, 17,400 kg from Spain worth $46,000, and 30
  10310. kg from Switzerland worth $400. On August 2, 1982,^^^ posted prices were ca. $7.70/kg
  10311. of natural bitter almond, and $2.64/kg of sweet almond. Dealers in bitter almond oil include:
  10312. Berge Chemical Products, Inc. Florasynth, Inc.
  10313. 5 Lawrence Street 410 E. 62nd Street
  10314. Bloomfield, NJ 07003 New York, NY 10021
  10315. Hagelin & Co., Inc. International Sourcing, Inc.
  10316. 241 Cedar Knolls Road 555 Route 17 S.
  10317. Cedar Knolls, NJ 07927 Ridgewood, NJ 07450
  10318. Dealers in sweet almond oil include:
  10319. Berje Chemical Products, Inc. Lipo Chemicals, Inc.
  10320. 5 Lawrence Street 207 Nineteenth Avenue
  10321. Bloomfield, NJ 07003 Paterson, NJ 07504
  10322. Mutchler Chemical Co., Inc. PPF Norda Inc.
  10323. 99 Kinderkamack Road 140 Rt. 10
  10324. Westwood, NJ 07675 East Hanover, NJ 07936
  10325. 252 Handbook of Nuts
  10326. Energy — According to The W ealth o f I n d i a , average California yields are ca. 400
  10327. kg/ha, but they attain over 1,200 kg/ha. However, for Baluchistan, WOI reports 2,375 kg/ha,
  10328. basing this on an optimistic yield of 7.3 kg for each of 325 trees per ha. Yields of 2 to 3
  10329. kg per tree seem more realistic; Duke,®^ however, reports seed yields of 3000 kg/ha. With
  10330. an oil yield of 50 to 55%, it is easy to project oil yields of 1500 kg/ha. With recommended
  10331. pruning to 20% of the old-bearing wood, several MT firewood should be available from the
  10332. pruning. Analyzing 62 kinds of biomass for heating value, Jenkins and Ebeling*'^^ reported
  10333. a spread of 20.01 to 18.93 MJ/kg, compared to 13.76 for weathered rice straw to 23.28
  10334. MJ/kg for prune pits. On a percent DM basis, the orchard prunings of almond contained
  10335. 76.83% volatiles, 1.63% ash, 21.54% fixed carbon, 51.30% C, 5.29% H, 40.90% O, 0.66%
  10336. N, 0.01% S, 0.04% Cl, and undetermined residue. The hulls, showing a spread of 17.13
  10337. to 18.22 MJ/kg, contained 71.33% volatiles, 5.78% ash, 22.89% fixed carbon, 45.79% C,
  10338. 5.36% H, 40.60% O, 0.96% N, 0.01% S, 0.08% Cl, and undetermined residue. The shells,
  10339. with a spread of 18.17 to 19.38 MJ/kg, contained 73.45% volatiles, 4.81% ash, 21.74%
  10340. fixed carbon, 44.98% C, 5.97% H, 42.27% O, 1.16% N, 0.02% S, and undetermined
  10341. residue.
  10342. Biotic factors — Prominent diseases in India include “ shot hole” caused by C laster-
  10343. osporium carpophilum (Lev.) Aderh., “ white spongy rot” due to F om es lividus Kl, “ brown
  10344. patchy leaf rot’ ’ due to P h yllosticta pru nicola (Spiz) Sacc., ‘ ‘brown rot’ ’ due to Sphaerotheca
  10345. pannosa (Walk.) Lev. and a mosaic disease due to virus; all plague the almond. The
  10346. chrysomelid M im astra cyanura Hope and the almond weevil M ylloceru s laetivirens Marshall
  10347. feed on the leaves. The San Jose scale Q uadraspidiotus pern iciosu s Comstock is a minor
  10348. problem. The almond moth E phestia cautella Wlk. infests shelled almonds and dried apricot,
  10349. currant, date, fig, peach, and plum.
  10350. 253
  10351. QUERCUS SURER L. (FAGACEAE) Cork Oak
  10352. Syn.: Quercus occidentalis Gay
  10353. Uses — Bark provides the cork of commerce, used for bungs and stoppers for bottles
  10354. and other containers, life preservers, mats, ring buoys, floats, shoe inner-sole liners, artificial
  10355. limbs, sealing liners for bottle caps, novelties, switch-boxes, household appliances and
  10356. friction rolls, gaskets of various types for automobiles, electric motors, polishing wheels,
  10357. cork-board, and for insulation, acoustical, and machinery isolation purposes. It is also used
  10358. in the manufacture of linoleum. The hard wax extracted from the cork waste is used for
  10359. making shoe pastes.Acorns provide forage for hogs, and the orchards are profitably
  10360. grazed as well by sheep and goats.Acorns may be eaten, especially when roasted, in
  10361. cases of necessity.Acorns of all oaks can be converted into “ edible nuts” , but in the
  10362. bitter species much work is involved, compared to the “ sweet oaks” like Quercus prinos.
  10363. Folk medicine — No data available.
  10364. Chemistry — Age, growing conditions, and grades of the bark determine the chemical
  10365. composition of cork. A good specimen conforms to the following values: 3 to 7% moisture,
  10366. 20 to 38% fatty acids, 10 to 18% other acids, 2.0 to 6.5% tannins, 1.0 to 6.5% glycerin,
  10367. 12.6 to 18.0% lignin, 1.8 to 5.0% cellulose, 4.5 to 15.0% ceroids (waxes, stearins, etc.),
  10368. 0.1 to 4.0% ash, 8 to 21% other substances. Suberin, the characteristic constituent of cork,
  10369. is composed mainly of high-molecular polymerides of hydroxy fatty acids, the major com­
  10370. ponent being phellonic acid (22-hydroxy docosanoic). Other fatty acids present are phloionic
  10371. (9,10-dihydroxy octadecanediotic), phloionolic (9,10,18-trihydroxy octadecanoic) and its
  10372. stereoisomer (m.p. 133°), cis- and trans-9-octadecenoic, 18-hydroxy-9-octadecenoic, and
  10373. several unidentified acids. Crude cork wax contains cerin (chief constituent), friedelin,
  10374. steroids, acids, etc.^® Suberin is a mixture containing several acids, including phloionic acid
  10375. (C18H34O6), acid XX (C18H32O4), phloionolic acid (C18H36O5), acid XVIII (C18H34O3), acid
  10376. V (C18H34O4), phellonic acid (C22H44O3), and phellogenic acid (C22H42O4). The cork wax
  10377. is a mixture of esters and triterpenes (cerin C30H50O2; friedelin C30H50O; betulinic acid,
  10378. betulin, and suberindiol C28H46O2), also tannin, phlobaphen, cellulose, ligin, cyclitol, and
  10379. vanillin. Thus, synthetic vanilla could be a by-product of the cork industry. The bark
  10380. contains much silica.
  10381. 254 Handbook of Nuts
  10382. Toxicity — Exposure to the bark is reported to produce a respiratory disorder, suberosis,
  10383. which starts with rhinitis, cough, and dyspnea, and then proceeds to chronic bronchitic
  10384. changes or extrinsic allergic alveolitis.
  10385. Description — Large, subtropical, evergreen tree, to 20 m tall, the trunk circumference
  10386. to 10 m, with thick, corky bark; twigs tomentose. Leaves 3 to 7 cm long, ovate-oblong,
  10387. sinuate-dentate, dark-green above, gray-tomentose beneath; midrib sinuous; petiole 8 to 15
  10388. mm long. Male flowers in aments, female flowers in small clusters on short twigs. Fruit
  10389. ripening in the first year in spring-flowering trees, but some trees flower in autumn and
  10390. ripen their fruits late in the following summer; involucral scales long and patent, the lower
  10391. usually shorter and more appressed.^^®
  10392. Germplasm — Reported from the Mediterranean Center of Diversity, cork oak, or cvs
  10393. thereof, is reported to tolerate drought, high pH, poor soil, and sand.®^ Highly variable,
  10394. with only one type differing sufficiently to be regarded as a subspecies, i.e., Q. occidentalism
  10395. differing principally in its slower maturing acorns, known from the Iberian Peninsula,
  10396. southeastern France, and Corsica. Individual clones have been selected and cultivated in
  10397. many areas, including the (2n = 24.) Among the American oak species, acorns
  10398. of chestnut oak and white oak are most likely to serve as nuts.
  10399. Distribution — Native and forming extensive forests (in the past) from northwestern
  10400. Yugoslavia, west to Spain and Portugal, the islands of the western Mediterranean and north
  10401. Africa (Morocco and Algeria). Introduced and cultivated for cork in eastern India, Japan
  10402. (southern islands), and in southern California. Trees also planted from New Jersey to Florida
  10403. and westward to California for experimental purposes in the late 1940s.^^®
  10404. Ecology — Ranging from Cool Temperate Moist through Tropical Dry Forest Life Zones,
  10405. cork oak is reported to tolerate annual precipitation of 3.1 to 13.5 dm (mean of 10 cases
  10406. = 8.2), annual temperature of 9.7 to 26.5°C (mean of 10 cases = 16.3), and pH of 4.9
  10407. to 8.2 (mean of 9 cases = 6.9).®^ Hardy to Zone 7.^"^^ Subtropical climate is essential for
  10408. good bark formation. Trees have withstood temperatures of - 18°C in South Carolina. In
  10409. general, a mean annual temperature of not less than 5°C with range of not lower than 2°C
  10410. and maximum mean annual temperature of 21°C is best for growth. About 57% of cork is
  10411. grown in the 18 to 21 °C region. Trees are quite drought-resistant and do not require irrigation
  10412. after the first few years. Will grow well with 2.5 to 10 dm annual rainfall; optimum is 5 to
  10413. 10 dm/year. Grows best in neutral or slightly acid, sandy, well-drained, soils. Trees grow
  10414. from sea-level up to 1,300 m. Though granitic, clay, or slate soils are suggested,Srnith^’®
  10415. says, “ the poorer the soil, the better the cork” .
  10416. Cultivation — Best method of planting is by direct seeding. Ripe acorns are planted in
  10417. groups of 4 or 5 (about 625 groups per ha), each group in a shallow furrow covered to a
  10418. depth of 1.3 cm. The stand is later thinned so that one plant remains at each site. Seeds
  10419. may be germinated in seed-beds and transplanted later, but the seedlings should not be
  10420. disturbed after the taproot has become established. Viability of seeds is short, but can be
  10421. lengthened by wet cold storage at 0.5 to 1.5°C.^^® Requiring no stratification, the seeds
  10422. show 73 to 100% germination after 20 to 30 days at 2TC day and night temperatures.^
  10423. Trees may also be grafted on both evergreen or deciduous native oaks. Techniques for clonal
  10424. cuttings have been worked out.^‘® Older saplings should be thinned to avoid shading. At
  10425. age 50, trees should be thinned to ca. 500 per ha; at 75 years to about half that number; at
  10426. 120 years, there should be about 1(X) per ha. With such reduction, overcrowding is avoided
  10427. and cork production per ha is relatively stabilized.
  10428. Harvesting — Cork of commercial value is not produced by trees less than 30 years old.
  10429. Since transplanting of saplings and small trees should not be attempted, and direct seeding
  10430. is practiced, it is impossible to bring trees into production in less than 30 years. First stripping
  10431. of bark may occur when the tree is about 20 years old. This virgin bark or mascalage is
  10432. rough and coarse and of little commercial value. Its removal stimulates the growth of cork
  10433. 255
  10434. so that during the succeeding 2 or 3 years, much of the cork is produced. In Algeria, this
  10435. virgin or male bark is put back in place around the tree and held there by wires for 2 years
  10436. or so, thus protecting the new bark that is forming. This growth gradually decreases in rate
  10437. until after about 9 years scarcely any further thickening of the bark is perceptible, and at
  10438. the end of that period, the second stripping takes place. The second and all subsequent
  10439. strippings produce bark of commercial value. At around 120 years, decline sets in. Replanting
  10440. should follow. Harvest is rotated, with only a certain number of trees stripped each year.
  10441. Each tree is stripped, usually at 9-year intervals, but intervals may vary from 6 to 12 years,
  10442. depending on the conditions of growth. If pruning is necessary, trees should not be stripped
  10443. until 3 years after pruning. In North Africa, bark is stripped in winter; in other areas, in
  10444. spring, when the sap is rising to make bark removal easier. Cork stripping requires consid­
  10445. erable skill. Bark must be removed without injuring the inner-most layer, which must remain
  10446. to continue growth.Acorns may be borne at age 12, with good crops every 2 to 4 years.
  10447. Yields and economics — Mature trees yield good quantities of cork for 150 to 200 years
  10448. in the Mediterranean region. Trees yield about 1.3 kg of cork per stripping, in California.
  10449. In the Mediterranean, each tree yields from 20 to 240(to 300) kg at each stripping, depending
  10450. on age and size of tree.^^^ Trees are stripped at intervals of 9 to 12 years. About 12 € of
  10451. acorn will yield a kg of pork.^’® In Portugal, a cork oak forest is said to produce 34 kg/ha
  10452. pork compared to
  10453. 68 for a Q uercus ilex forest. “ Lard from acom-fed hogs is said not to
  10454. harden; hence they are sometimes finished on com for hardening the fat.’’^^® Portugal is the
  10455. largest producer of cork, supplying 46.2% of the world’s tonnage from 33.8% of the total
  10456. hectarage. There are about 69,000 ha of Portuguese cork oak forests, mainly in the south-
  10457. central portion of the country.Smith^‘® reports 400,000 ha in Portugal producing annually
  10458. 240 kg/ha. Between 1931 and 1948, cork was varying widely in price, from $30 to $600/ton.
  10459. Bigger and better trees can yield a ton in one stripping, following another ton 12 years
  10460. earlier. English owners of cork estates in Portugal estimate that acorns alone produce 1/2
  10461. to 2/3 of Portuguese pork. The USDA once said “ one gallon of acorns is equal to ten good
  10462. ears of com.” Pigs may graze the grass and acorns while sheep and goats may graze the
  10463. bushes and shrubs.^*®
  10464. Energy — Felled trees and bigger pmnings make excellent charcoal. With low energy
  10465. input on tough terrain, this seems to be an energy-efficient land-holding scenario yielding
  10466. cork, firewood, pork, and land stability.
  10467. Biotic factors — The following fungi have been reported on the cork oak: A rm illariella
  10468. m ellea, A scoch yta irpina, A spergillus terreus, A . w entii, A uricularia m esenterica, C halara
  10469. quercina, C litocybe olearia, C occom yces dentatus, C oriolus pergam enus, C. versicolor,
  10470. C yphella Candida, C ytospora m icrospora, D aedalea biennis, D iatrypella quercina, E ndothis
  10471. gyrosa, G anoderm a applanatum , H irneola auricula ju d a e, H ypoxy Ion m editerraneum , Irpex
  10472. deform is, Ithyphallus im perialis, /. im pudicis, L enzites quercina, L eptoporus adustus, L.
  10473. dichrous, L eucoporus brum alis, M erulium trem ellosus, M ucor ram annianus, M ycoleptodon
  10474. ochraceum , P anus conchatus, P eniphora corticalis, P hellinus igniarius, P . torulosus, Pho-
  10475. liota cylin dricea, P. spectabilis, Phom a quercella, P hysalospora elegans, P hytophthora
  10476. cinnam om i, P leurotu s lignatilis, P. ostreatus, P olyporu s giganteus, P o ria vaporaria. P ro ­
  10477. p o lis fa g in ea , R adulum quercinum , Schizophyllum com m une, Sebacina crozalsii, S eptoria
  10478. ocellata, S. qu ercicola, Sphaerotheca lanestris, Stereum fuscum , S. gausapatum , S. spad-
  10479. iceum, Tom entella fu sca , T. rubiginosa, Tom entellina bom bycina, T ram etes cam pestris, T.
  10480. cinnabarina, T. serialis var. resupinata, Ungulina fom en taria, U. ochroleuca, U redo qu er­
  10481. cus, V olvaria bom bycina, Vuillem inia com edens, X anthochrous cuticularis, X . ribis. The
  10482. following nematodes have been isolated from this oak: C aconem a radicicola and H eterodera
  10483. 256 Handbook of Nuts
  10484. RICINODENDRON HEUDELOTII Pierre (EUPHORBIACEAE) Manketti Nut, Sanga
  10485. Nut, Essang Nut, Ojuk Nut
  10486. Syn.: Ricinodendron africanum Muell. Arg.
  10487. Uses — Source of essang oil, seeds contain 35 to 55% oil, which has been recommended
  10488. in the drying oil industries. The nuts are consumed as food after boiling. Dried kernels are
  10489. ground and cooked with food, e,g., in the Cameroons. The kernels only account for ca.
  10490. 30% of the fruit, the hard shell is difficult to remove. Wild animals, including elephants,
  10491. are fond of the fallen fruits, leading hunters to lie in wait beneath the trees. Ashes of the
  10492. wood are used for salt and in the preparation of soap and indigo. Williams^"^ describes the
  10493. use of this species as living telegraph poles. Stakes 6 to 10 m long are cut and placed in
  10494. holes. During the rainy season, the stake quickly strikes root. Wires are placed on the poles
  10495. 6 or more meters above the ground as soon as they are firm. Branches tend to sprout only
  10496. at the summit, rarely interfering with the wires. The wood, quite light, has been suggested
  10497. as a substitute for balsa. Easily carved, it is used for utensils, masks, musical instruments,
  10498. boxes, coffins, etc. The hard seeds are used, like marbles, in games, rattles, etc. The very
  10499. light sawdust is suitable for life jackets and pith helmets.
  10500. Folk medicine — Nigerians use the root-bark, with pepper and salt, for constipation. On
  10501. 257
  10502. the Ivory Coast, the decoction is drunk for dysentery. Pounded and warmed bark is applied
  10503. locally for elephantiasis. The bark infusion is used in Liberia to relieve labor pains and
  10504. prevent miscarriage, in the belief that it prevents sterility. The pulped bark prevents abortion.
  10505. The bark decoction is used for gonorrhea; the leaf decoction as a beverage or bath in calming
  10506. fever."^^’^"^^
  10507. Chemistry — The seed fatty acids of R. africanum include ca. 50% eleostearic acid with
  10508. ca. 25% linoleic-, 10% oleic-, and 10% saturated acids.The seed, seed shell, and latex,
  10509. containing a resin, are used for diarrhea and gonorrhea.^^^
  10510. Description — Fast-growing, deciduous tree to 33 m or more high and up to 2.5 m girth;
  10511. buttresses very short, branches whorled. Leaves alternate, hairy when young, with stellate
  10512. hairs, digitately lobed, the 3 to 5 leaflets up to 25 x 15 cm, sessile, obovate-elliptic,
  10513. acuminate, narrowed to base, with 10 to 16 pairs of lateral nerves, petioles up to 20 cm
  10514. long, stipules persistent and leaf-like; flowers paniculate (December to April in Africa), the
  10515. inflorescence yellow-tomentose, white, falling readily. Fruits 3-celled, ca. 2.5 cm in di­
  10516. ameter. Seeds ovoid, rich in oil.
  10517. Germplasm — From the Africa Center of Diversity, the essang nut seems to tolerate
  10518. savanna, second growth, slopes, and weeds.
  10519. Distribution — Widespread in tropical Africa. Fast-growing native of the secondary
  10520. forests of the Belgian Congo and possibly also of Nigeria.Irvinedescribes it as common
  10521. in fringing, deciduous, and secondary forests, from Guinea to Angola and the Belgian Congo
  10522. to Sudan, Uganda, and East Africa.
  10523. Ecology — With no ecological data available to me, I speculate that this species ranges
  10524. from Subtropical Thom Woodland to Moist through Tropical Thom Woodland to Moist
  10525. Forest Life Zones, tolerating annual precipitation of 3 to 25 dm, annual temperature of 23
  10526. to 29°C, and pH of 6 to 8.^^ According to Williams,it requires a wet, humid climate.
  10527. Cultivation — Coppicing and rooting readily, this tree is often planted as cuttings for
  10528. vine stakes, living fences, and telephone poles.
  10529. Harvesting — Said to bear fmit in its 7th to 10th year.^^
  10530. Yields and economics — Irvine describes the nut yields as prolific.
  10531. Energy — The wood does not make good firewood, but “ it is much used for fuel” .
  10532. Seeds yield 45 to 47% oil which could be used for energy, but because of the high husk/kemel
  10533. ratio, the fmits yield only ca. 14% oil.
  10534. Biotic factors — According to a forester quoted by Menninger,^^ elephants eat the fmits
  10535. greedily, and “ seed will not germinate until it has spent a week in the elephant” , but even
  10536. the elephant’s digestive system barely affects the fmit and the enclosed kernel. “ The natives
  10537. of Rhodesia, therefore, follow the elephant, recover the hard-shelled nuts where they have
  10538. been dropped, clean and dry them, then crack the extremely hard shell, and find the contents
  10539. perfectly delicious. This story is a bit grizzly, but it is part of the nut story. The fungus
  10540. Fomes lignosus is reported to attack this species.
  10541. 258 Handbook of Nuts
  10542. RICINODENDRONRAUTANENII Schinz (EUPHORBIACEAE) — Mogongo Nut, Manketti
  10543. Uses — A much-prized species with edible fruits that are a staple food of Africans and
  10544. Bushmen, who eat them raw (fresh or fried), cooked, or fermented into a beer. The thin,
  10545. fleshy portion, under the tough skin, may be eaten raw or cooked into a sweet porridge.
  10546. The kernel has a sweet, milky, nutty flavor; eaten raw, pounded and fried, or mixed with
  10547. lean meat. The seeds can be roasted whole, cracked, and the kernels pounded into a coarse
  10548. meal, which is eaten dry, with meat, with other roots, or mixed with baobab pulp. It is the
  10549. main food (constituting half of the vegetable diet) of the Bushmen in the Dobe area. One
  10550. to three hundred nuts are consumed every day for all but a few months of the year. Also a
  10551. staple food of elephants. The timber is yellowish, light, and soft, and is used for carving
  10552. bowls, cups, ashtrays, and ornamental figures of animals and birds. Also used for floats,
  10553. dart and drawing boards, packing-cases, boxes, toys, insulating material, and coffins. Trees
  10554. are often hollow and collect life-saving water. It is believed, in South West Africa and
  10555. Botswana, that this species controls the weather, so that it is never struck by lightning.
  10556. During one study of the !Kung Bushmen, mongongo nuts contributed 56.7 g protein per
  10557. day per bushman, compared to 34.5 g from meat, and only 1.9 from other vegetable foods.
  10558. To the !Kung, the mongongo nut is “ basically the staff of life“ .*^"^ The light timber is used
  10559. for furniture, coffins, and an inferior paper.
  10560. Folk medicine — The fruits are astringent.
  10561. Chemistry — The average daily per capita consumption of 300 nuts weighs ca. 212.6 g
  10562. but contains the caloric equivalent of 1,134 g cooked rice and the protein equivalent of
  10563. 396.9 g lean beef. Watt and Breyer-Brandwijk^^^ say the fruits contain 7.9% protein and
  10564. no true starch. Fruits yield 30 to 40% oil, kernels 57 to 63%. Skins of the kernel yield 37%
  10565. oil. The oil cake has only 0.32 mg vitamin B^ and 0.7 mg calcium pantothenase per 100
  10566. g. The percentages of amino acid in the seed protein are calculated at 2.6% histidine, 4.1%
  10567. cystine, 7.9% isoleucine, 6.2% leucine, 5.1% lysine, 2.0% methionine, 4.6% phenylalanine,
  10568. 7.9% threonine, 1.2% tryptophane, and 7.1% valine.The seed fatty acids of the related
  10569. R. africanum (“ essang oil” ) include ca. 50% eleostearic acid with ca. 25% linoleic-, 10%
  10570. oleic-, and 10% saturated acids. The aromatic fruit contains a gum-resin and 31% saccharose.
  10571. Toxicity — The seed coat is nontoxic to rats when constituting 10% of diet, but it is an
  10572. unsuitable food because of its toughness and indigestibility.
  10573. Description — Spreading, deciduous, dioecious tree to 10(to 24) m tall, the trunk to 1
  10574. m in diameter; the bark greenish or goldish; twigs and branches, stubby with glabrescent
  10575. robust young twigs. Leaves alternate, stipulate, digitately compound, with 3 to 7 leaflets;
  10576. petioles pubescent, to 15 cm long; leaflets broadly lanceolate to ovate, apically blunt or
  10577. rounded, basally rounded or truncately inequilateral, marginally glandular denticulate, rarely
  10578. lobulate, 5 to 13 cm long, 2.5 to 9 cm broad; dark-green above, pale below, with stellate
  10579. hairs on both surfaces, the midribs and veins rufose; petiolules biglandular. Male flowers
  10580. in slender loose panicles, whitish, the female panicles shorter and few-flowered. Fruits plum­
  10581. shaped, to 4 cm long, hairy when young, the stone exceedingly hard, containing one or two
  10582. light-colored kernels.
  10583. Germplasm — Reported from the African Center of Diversity, mogongo nut, or cvs
  10584. thereof, is reported to tolerate sands and savannas.
  10585. Distribution — Northern southwest Africa, Botswana, Zimbabwe, and Mozambique,
  10586. and often tropical Africa; grows in groves or forests together on wooded hills and dunes,
  10587. and always on Kalahari sand. Makes almost pure forest in parts.
  10588. Ecology — With no ecological data available to me, I speculate that this species ranges
  10589. from Subtropical Thom Woodland to Moist through Tropical Thom Woodland to Moist
  10590. Forest Life Zones, tolerating annual precipitation of 3 to 25 dm, annual temperature of 23
  10591. to 29°C, and pH of 6 to 8.®^ Tending to flower in spring before rain.
  10592. 259
  10593. Cultivation — Not normally cultivated.
  10594. Harvesting — According to Harlan,'^'* women and children are primarily involved in
  10595. gathering plant materials among the !Kung Bushmen. But adults gather the mongongo nuts.
  10596. Over a 3-week study period, the Bushmen averaged 2V2 days a week (average 6 hr work
  10597. per day) devoted to subsistence activities. Compared to hunting, gathering is a low-risk,
  10598. high-return enterprise. Fruits ripen ca. February in southern Africa.
  10599. Yields and economics — Before the war of 1914-1918, Germans granted a concession
  10600. to exploit the forests near Tsumeb in Southwest Africa, which were estimated to yield 50,000
  10601. tons of nuts per year.^"*^
  10602. Energy — If there are forests with 50,000 tons^"^^ of edible nuts therein, the kernels
  10603. yielding 60% oil, one could theoretically obtain 30,(XX) tons of oil, and 20,0(X) tons defatted
  10604. edible nuts therefrom.
  10605. Biotic factors — Fruits greatly relished by elephants.
  10606. 260 Handbook of Nuts
  10607. SANTALUM ACUMINATUM A. DC. (SANTALACEAE) — Quandong Nut, Native Peach
  10608. Uses — It’s easier for me to remember the popular name Quandong than Eucarya,
  10609. Fusanus, or Santalum, the three generic names among which the quandong has been ca­
  10610. tegorized. Both the fruit or (“ peach” ) and nut (or “ quandong” ) are edible. The red flesh
  10611. is cooked in chutneys, jams, and pies. The nut is said to be quite tasty, slightly roasted,
  10612. and was a favored food of the aborigines. Pierced with a stick as a candle-nut, the seeds
  10613. will bum away with a clear light. Nuts are also made into bracelets, necklaces, and other
  10614. ornaments. The hard, durable close-grained timber is used for cabinet making and wood
  10615. engraving.
  10616. Folk medicine — The seed oil is used medicinally.
  10617. Chemistry — Per 100 g, the fmit is reported to contain 345 kJ, 76.7 g H2O, 1.7 g
  10618. protein, 0.2 g fat, 19.3 g carbohydrate, 2.1 g ash, 42 mg Ca, 40 mg Mg, 0.2 mg Zn, 0.2
  10619. mg Cu, 51 mg Na, and 659 mg Data in Menninger, no doubt reflecting dry nuts, report
  10620. 60% oil and 25% protein. The fmits are rich in vitamin C. Fatty acids in the seed contain
  10621. oleic, linoleic, and stearic acids, also santalbinic acid.^®^ Some estimates put the “ santalbic”
  10622. 261
  10623. content at 40 to 43%. Others say the seed fat is mostly oleic acid except for 3 to 4% palmitic
  10624. acid.*^® Wood contains 5% essential oil containing nerolidol.
  10625. Description — A tall shrub or a tree to 10 m. Leaves opposite, lanceolate, acute, or
  10626. sometimes when young with a short hooked point, mostly 5 to 7.5 cm long, tapering into
  10627. a petiole 4 to 6 mm long, coriaceous, with the lateral veins often prominent when old.
  10628. Flowers rather numerous, in a terminal pyramidal panicle scarcely longer than the leaves.
  10629. Perianth spreading to ca. 5 mm diameter, the lobes somewhat concave even when open.
  10630. Free margin of the disk very prominent, broadly rounded between the stamens which curve
  10631. over the notches. Anthers very short. Style exceedingly short and conical or scarcely any,
  10632. with deeply 2- or 3-lobed stigma. Fruit globular, 10 to 20 mm in diameter, with a succulent
  10633. epicarp, and bony pitted endocarp, the perianth-lobes persisting on the top until the fruit is
  10634. nearly or quite ripe.^^
  10635. Germplasm — Reported from the Australian Center of Diversity, Quandong, or cvs
  10636. thereof, is reported to tolerate arid conditions and drought.
  10637. Distribution — Endemic to Australia, especially northern Australia, and the southwest,
  10638. extending into the desert areas.
  10639. Ecology — No data available.
  10640. Cultivation — Rosengarten comments on an experimental plantation in Quom, Australia.
  10641. Kikuya grass was planted to serve as root host.
  10642. Harvesting — Some plantation trees have fruited in the third year.
  10643. Yields and economics — Rosengarten sums it up, “ Despite its captivating tang, the
  10644. quandong seems destined to remain a minor Australian nut.“ ^^"^
  10645. Energy — Serving as candle-nuts, quandongs are so abundant in part of Australia that
  10646. they might serve as oil-seeds in the future.
  10647. Biotic factors — No data available.
  10648. 262 Handbook of Nuts
  10649. SAPlUMSEBIFERUMiL.) Roxb. (EUPHORBIACEAE) — Chinese Tallow Tree, Vegetable
  10650. Tallow, White Wax Berry
  10651. S yn .: Carumbium sebiferum K u rz, Croton sebiferus L ., Excoecaria sebifera M u ell.,
  10652. Stillingia sebifera M ich x ., Triadica sebifera (L .) Sm all
  10653. Uses — Chinese Tallow Tree is cultivated for its seeds as a source of vegetable tallow,
  10654. a drying oil and protein food, and as an ornamental. Fruits yield two types of fats: outer
  10655. covering of seeds contain a solid fat with low iodine value, known as Chinese Vegetable
  10656. Tallow; kernels produce a drying oil with high iodine value, called Stillingia Oil. Tallow
  10657. is used for manufacturing candles, a layer of wax being placed over the tallow body to
  10658. prevent too-rapid burning; has excellent burning quality, and gives an inodorous, clear,
  10659. bright flame; also used for making soap, cloth dressing, and fuel. Pure tallow fat is known
  10660. in commerce as Pi-yu. Oil is used in making varnishes and native paints because of its
  10661. quick-drying properties, in machine oils and as a crude lamp oil. Pure oil expressed from
  10662. the inner part of the seeds is known in commerce as Ting-yu. Oil-cakes made from crushed
  10663. seeds with tallow and oil together is known as Mou-yu. Residual cake, after oil is expressed,
  10664. is used as manure, particularly for tobacco fields. Wood is white and close-grained, suitable
  10665. for carving and used for making blocks in Chinese printing; also used for furniture making
  10666. and incense. Chinese prepare a black dye by boiling leaves in alum water. Tree grows
  10667. rapidly, develops an attractive crown, and, as leaves turn red in fall, it is cultivated as a
  10668. shade or lawn tree about houses. It is used as a soil binder along roads and canals. Chinese
  10669. place an insect on the tree to feed; it lays eggs in the seed, making some of the “jumping
  10670. beans,” because of movements of larvae inside.
  10671. 263
  10672. Folk medicine — In Chinese medicine, oil is used as purgative and emetic, not as a
  10673. usual vegetable oil for humans. Overdose of native medicine probably would cause violent
  10674. sickness and perhaps death. Additionally, Chinese use the plant as an alexeteric, suppurative,
  10675. and vulnerary, especially for edema and skin ailments. Decoction of the root bark is used
  10676. for dyspepsia, considered tonic. Resin from root bark considered purgative. The latex is an
  10677. acrid and powerful vesicant.
  10678. Chemistry — The fatty acid composition of the oil is caprylic, 1.50; capric, 1.00; myristic,
  10679. 0.97; palmitic, 2.80; stearic, 1.00; oleic, 9.40; linoleic, 53.40; and linolenic, 30.00%. A
  10680. Hong Kong sample contained 26.8% oil, with: capric, traces; palmitic, 7; stearic, 3; 2,4-
  10681. decadienoic, 5; oleic, 7; linoleic, 24; and linolenic, 54%. Stillingia oil is considered superior
  10682. to linseed oil in its drying and polymerizing properties, probably due to the presence of 2,4-
  10683. decadienoic acid. Seed meal, left after the extraction of oil, possesses a high content of
  10684. protein, and is a valuable feed and fertilizer. It can be processed into a refined flour,
  10685. containing 75% protein, fit for human consumption. The amino acid composition of the
  10686. protein is as follows: arginine, 16.6; aspartic acid, 11.7; cistine, 1.3; glycine, 4.9; glutamic
  10687. acid, 17.3; histidine, 2.9; leucine, 7.4; lycine, 2.6; methionine, 1.6; tyrosine, 3.7; and
  10688. valine, 7.8%. The Vitamin B content of the flour compares favorably with that of wheat-
  10689. flour. The flour, supplemented with lysine and methionine, is reported to be superior to
  10690. wheat-flour. Ethanol extraction of powdered root bark yielded 0.1% phloracetophenone 2,4-
  10691. dimethylether, and methanol extraction gave xanthoxylin (C10H12O4). The bark also contains
  10692. moretenone, moretenol and a new triterpene, 3-epimoretenol (m.p., 223 to 24°). Leaves
  10693. contain gallic and ellagic acids, isoquercitrin, and tannin (5.5%).^^**^^’^^^
  10694. Description — Small to large deciduous tree, 10 to 13 m tall (in 30 years), often with
  10695. a gnarled trunk, bark gray to whitish-gray with vertical cracks; stem exudes a milky poisonous
  10696. juice. Leaves alternate, broad rhombic to ovate, 3.5 to 8.5 cm long, 4 to 9 cm wide, cordate-
  10697. acuminate at apex, usually round at base, turning orange to scarlet in autumn, falling early
  10698. in the cold season; petioles 1.5 to 7 cm long, with 2 conspicuous glands at apex and on
  10699. each side of scale-like bracts. Flowers monoecious, greenish-yellow, in terminal spikes, 5
  10700. to 10 cm long. Fruit a capsule, subglobose, 0.95 to 1.7 cm in diameter, 3-valved, with
  10701. three seeds coated with a white wax. Seeds half-ovate, 0.6 to 1.0 cm long, 0.43 to 0.6 cm
  10702. wide, 0.5 to 0.77 cm thick, with an acrid penetrating taste. Flowers April to June; fruit
  10703. ripens September to October.
  10704. Germplasm — Of the many cvs grown, more than 100 are found in Taiwan. Two main
  10705. types are ‘Eagle-Claw’ and ‘Grape’, varying according to form of fruit-spikes, fruit-sprigs,
  10706. fruit-stalks, and maturing period. Native to the China-Japan Center of Diversity, tallow tree
  10707. is reported to tolerate some frost, grazing, slopes, waterlogging, and weeds. (2n = 36,40.)®^*^^^
  10708. Distribution — Native to many provinces of central China, especially north of the Yangtze
  10709. Valley, and Japan. Chinese tallow tree is also cultivated there and on Hainan Island, Hong
  10710. Kong, Taiwan,and Korea. It has been introduced into Sri Lanka (where naturalized),
  10711. Indochina, Bengal, India, Sudan, Martinique, southern U.S. (S. California, S. Arizona, and
  10712. Texas to Florida, north to South Carolina), southern France and Algeria.
  10713. Ecology — Ranging from Warm Temperate Dry to Moist through Tropical Dry Forest
  10714. Life Zones, tallow tree is reported to tolerate annual precipitation of 6.6 to 15.2 dm (to 37)
  10715. (mean of 6 cases = 11.3), annual temperature of 14.7 to 24.3°C (mean of 6 cases = 18.1),
  10716. and pH of 5.5 to 7.8 (mean of 5 cases = 6.7).®^ Adapted for growing on canal banks, on
  10717. steep mountain slopes, granite hills, or sandy beaches, it grows in weakly alkaline soils,
  10718. saline or strongly acid soils. Said to thrive in alluvial forests, on low alluvial plains, and
  10719. on rich leaf-molds, growing best in well-drained clayey-peat soils. Favorable climatic con­
  10720. ditions are mean air temperatures of 12.5 to 30.1°C, and an annual precipitation from 13
  10721. to 37 dm. It is generally a subtropical to warm temperate plant, hardy and able to withstand
  10722. a few degrees of frost; unripened twigs are susceptible to frost injury. It grows at elevations
  10723. 100 to 800 m."'"’278
  10724. 264 Handbook of Nuts
  10725. Cultivation — Propagated by seed, cuttings, layering or top-grafting on seedling stock.
  10726. Seed usually sown in late autumn or early spring. Seedlings in the first year may grow 0.3
  10727. to 0.9 m in height and should be transplanted. When seedlings are about 1 m tall (in the
  10728. spring of the third year), they should be planted out in permanent areas. Tree grows rapidly,
  10729. 5 to 8.5 m tall with DBH of 13 to 17 cm in 10 years, and 10 to 13 m tall with DBH 30 to
  10730. 40 cm in 20 to 30 years. When cultivated, trees are grown in plantations or transplanted to
  10731. borders of fields or canals, so as not to interfere with the cultivation of the soil. Chinese
  10732. also make cuttings by breaking small branches and twigs, care being taken not to tear or
  10733. wound the bark. These are layered and rooted.
  10734. Harvesting — Fruits and seeds, about the size of a pea, are harvested by hand in November
  10735. and December when leaves have fallen. Plants require from 3 to 8 years to bear, but then
  10736. continue to bear for years, averaging 70 to 100 years. Trees attain full size in 10 to 12
  10737. years. Seed can be threshed from the tree and collected by hand (once estimated at less than
  10738. $.03/kg). Mechanical methods may be readily adapted to the harvest. When fruit is harvested
  10739. by hand in midwinter, they are cut off with their twigs with a sharp, crescent-shaped knife
  10740. attached to the end of a long pole, which is held in the hand and pushed upward against
  10741. the twigs. The capsules are pounded gently in a mortar to loosen the seeds from the shells,
  10742. from which they are separated by sifting.
  10743. Yields and economics — In plantations trees should be planted one rod apart each way,
  10744. giving 400 trees per hectare, and if trimmed to a convenient size for hand harvesting, would
  10745. yield 14 MT seed per ha, containing 2.6 MT oil, 2.8 MT tallow, 1.5 MT protein concentrate,
  10746. 1.1 MT fibrous coat, and 4.5 MT shell. Oil, tallow, and protein meal would bring about
  10747. $750 per hectare. This yield could increase with age. Scheld et al.^^^ report yields of 4,000
  10748. to 10,000 kg/ha (in excess of 11,000 kg/ha in VODF Seminar IP^^), and cite estimates of
  10749. 25 barrels of oil per year as a sustained energy yield. Tallow is separated by placing the
  10750. seed in hot water, thereby melting the tallow which floats on the surface, or by melting
  10751. tallow with steam and collecting it when it drips off. Solvent extraction of the tallow from
  10752. the seed is also used; tallow still adhering to the seed is removed by an alkali treatment.
  10753. The fairly thick hard shell prevents extraction of the oil inside, so that the seed is crushed
  10754. and Stillingia Oil is obtained by pressing or solvent extraction. According to one report,
  10755. seed contains about 20% oil, 24% tallow, 11% extracted meat, 8% fibrous coat, and 37%
  10756. shell. Yields of Stillingia Oil as high as 53% of the kernel have been reported in some
  10757. varieties. Seed yields vary with the variety and age-gradations of the trees — a tree averaging
  10758. at 5 years of age 0.453 kg, at 10 years, 3.379 kg, and at 20 years, 11.989 kg, with yields
  10759. gradually decreasing after that. White meal, obtained by the extraction of the kernel, has a
  10760. pleasant nut-like flavor, and contains 76% protein. Flour and protein of Chinese tallow nut
  10761. contain vitamin B (thiamine). In China and other Oriental countries, as in other regions of
  10762. the world, large quantities of tallow and oil are extracted annually from this tree. Tallow
  10763. mills are erected where the tree is extensively grown. In addition to its economic value
  10764. (from $750/ha for the oil, tallow, and protein), the tree is extensively propagated for or­
  10765. namental purposes alone in Houston, Texas.
  10766. Energy — Coppicing well, the tree grows rapidly, the mean annual girth increment 2.6
  10767. to 5.2 cm. The wood, weighing only 513 kg/m^ is used for fuel. With some tolerance to
  10768. salt, the tallow trees should be investigated as energy crops for saline situations. Scheld^^^
  10769. reports standing dry wood mass on 4-year plantations at >40 MT/ha, or more than 10
  10770. MT/ha/yr. Princen,^^^ assuming an annual oil yield of 25 barrels per hectare, estimates that
  10771. only 24 million hectares of oilseeds (like Sapium) would be required to produce a replacement
  10772. for the ca. 8% of our petroleum usage which goes into chemical production. That means
  10773. 300 million ha could replace all our petroleum usage (ca. 35% of Brazil, 108% of Argentina,
  10774. 32% of the U.S.). Specific gravity of the wood ranges from 0.37 to 0.48 (mean 0.44) in
  10775. samples from 18- to 24-year-old trees. Energy values range from 7,226 to 7,835 Btu/lb
  10776. 265
  10777. (mean 7,586). Rapidity of coppicing, taproot production, drought and salt tolerance, and
  10778. rapid growth rate are attributes leading Scheld and Cowles to regard the tree as a promising
  10779. biomass candidate (in the warm coastal region of the U.S.) which can be established over
  10780. large acreages by conventional agricultural planting methods and which can provide woody
  10781. biomass for direct burning or conversion to charcoal, ethanol, or methanol.
  10782. B iotic F actors — Flowers are favored by honey-bees, and fruits are readily eaten by
  10783. birds, including domestic fowl. It has been considered a desirable plant for bird-food. The
  10784. tree is remarkably free of insect pests. The root-knot nematode, M eloidogyne ja va n ica , has
  10785. been reported.Fungi known to attack this tree include: C ercospora stillin giae, C litocybe
  10786. tabescens, D endrophthoe fa lca ta , P hyllactina corylea, P hyllosticta stillin giae, and Phy-
  10787. m atotrichum om nivorum . ^^^ ^78
  10788. 266 Handbook of Nuts
  10789. SCHLEICHERA OLEOSA (Lour.) Merr. (SAPINDACEAE) — Lac Tree, Kusum Tree,
  10790. Malay Lac-Tree, Honey-Tree, Ceylon Oak
  10791. S yn .: Schleichera trijuga W illd ., Pistacia oleosa L our.
  10792. U ses — Seeds of the Lac tree are source of Macassar Oil, used in ointments, for candles,
  10793. for illumination, as a lubricant for machinery, and in Madura for Batik work. Seeds yield
  10794. about 40% of an edible oil or fat, sometimes used for culinary purposes and as a hair oil.
  10795. Seeds also are eaten raw or roasted. Unripe fruits are pickled, and fruit may be eaten when
  10796. other food supplies are scarce. The ripe fruits, often eaten during the summer, have whitish
  10797. pulp and pleasant, acidic taste. Young leaves are eaten with rice. Young shoots are eaten;
  10798. they are also lopped for fodder. Combined with wheat-straw and rape-cake, they make good
  10799. roughage. Wood is close-grained, very hard, heavy, resistant to moisture, whitish with
  10800. heartwood light reddish-brown, taking a fine finish, and used for making mortars, pestles,
  10801. axles and hubs, felloes, and stocks of cart wheels, agricultural implements, such as yokes,
  10802. plows, and teeth of harrows, shafts, violin bows,, screw rollers in sugar mills, in cotton
  10803. and oil presses, tool handles for hammers, axes, and picks. Treated lumber is used for
  10804. construction, cabinet work, beams, rafters, purlilns, trusses, posts, sleepers, and for wagon
  10805. building. In addition, it is used for road paving, block flooring in mills and warehouses,
  10806. pit-props, side-props in shafts and galleries in mines. Bark is employed in tanning; flowers
  10807. yield a dye. Trees serve as host for lac insects.
  10808. F olk m ed icin e — Reported to be anodyne, cyanogenetic, larvicide, and refrigerant, lac
  10809. tree is a folk remedy for acne, backache, bums, fever, inflammation, itch, malaria, neuralgia,
  10810. pleurisy, pneumonia, rheumatism, skin problems, and sores.The bark is reported to cure
  10811. leprosy, skin diseases, inflammation, and ulcers. The unripe fmit is heating to the body,
  10812. heavy to digest, causes biliousness, astringent to the bowels. The ripe fmit is digestible,
  10813. astringent to the bowels, heating, appetite stimulant. The seeds are tonic, increase appetite,
  10814. cure biliousness. The oil is considered a tonic, stomachic, anthelmintic, purgative, cure for
  10815. skin diseases and ulcers. The astringent bark is used as a cure for the itch when mbbed on
  10816. 267
  10817. with oil. Oil of the seeds is used as a stimulating agent for the scalp, both cleansing it and
  10818. promoting the growth of hair. The oil is also used as a purgative and as prophylactic against
  10819. cholera; used externally in massage for rheumatism, for the cure of headaches; for skin
  10820. disease. Powdered seeds are applied to ulcers of animals and for removing maggots. Bark
  10821. is applied to swollen glands and ripening boils.Bark is also used for pain in the back and
  10822. loins, inflammation, and ulcers.^®
  10823. Chemistry — Seeds are reported to contain 0.3% HCN; the oil is reported to contain
  10824. 1.6% palmitic-, 10.0% stearic-, 19.7% arachidic-, 0.9% palmitoleic-, 52.2% oleic-, 8.5%
  10825. gadoleic-, and 4.0% C22-acid. The oil-cake is reported to contain 5.57% moisture, 22.31%
  10826. protein, 48.53% fat, 14.43% soluble carbohydrates, 5.39% fiber, 3.40% soluble mineral
  10827. matter, 0.37% sand, 3.08% phosphoric acid (P2O5), and 1.3% potash (K2O). Green leaves
  10828. are reported to contain (ZMB) 10.37% crude protein, 1.93% ether extract, 32.34% crude
  10829. fiber, 49.21% N-free extract, 2.42% Ca, 0.71% P, 5.09% gallo-tannic acid. The bark is
  10830. reported to contain 9.4% tannin.^® Another source reports cotyledons to contain 65 to 70%
  10831. oil, with the glycerides composed of lauric-, palmitic-, arachic- (25%), oleic- (ca. 70%),
  10832. butyric-, and lignoceric-acid, and traces of benzaldehyde and hydrocyanic acid, and the bark
  10833. to contain 7% tannins.'®^
  10834. Toxicity — Presumably due to the presence of hydrocyanic acid, the seed and seed oil
  10835. induce symptoms similar to irritant poisons (giddiness, dilation of pupils, and syncope,
  10836. sometimes death).
  10837. Description — Trees 15 to 40 m tall, mostly gnarly and crooked, slow-growing; stems
  10838. furrowed; branches thin, finely short-hairy to subglabrous, leafing and flowering in early
  10839. spring. Leaves alternate, without stipules, 20 to 40 cm long, paripinnate; leaf-rachis sparingly
  10840. finely hairy, 5 to 14.5 cm long; leaflets 4 to 8, opposite, obovate-lanceolate, 2.5 to 25 cm
  10841. long, 1.6 to 11 cm broad, the lowest pair the smallest, obtuse or shortly acuminate, entire,
  10842. coriaceous, glabrescent; young leaves purple; petiolules very sparingly finely hairy to gla­
  10843. brous, 1 to 3 mm thick. Inflorescence 1.5 to 13 cm long, on pedicels 2.5 mm long, finely
  10844. short-hairy, the racemes glabrous, apiculate, smooth or spinose; calyx glabrous or nearly
  10845. so, about 1.5 mm in diameter, the segments erect, triangular, acute; disk glabrous, ovary
  10846. thinly pilose, style persistent, after anthesis indurate. Fruit broadly ellipsoid, glabrous with
  10847. thin, hard pericarp, indéhiscent, 1.6 to 2.5 cm long, 1-seeded; seed with a large chalaza;
  10848. aril pulpy, subacid, edible. Flowers spring; fruits fall; January to December in Java.^^*
  10849. Germplasm — Reported from the Hindustani Center of Diversity.®^ Lac tree is reported
  10850. to tolerate shade, frost, and drought. Seedlings should be protected in early stages as they
  10851. are frost-tender.
  10852. Distribution — Native and distributed all over Southeast Asia, from the sub-Himalayan
  10853. region to Nepal, and central and south India, Sri Lanka, Malaya, Burma, Timor, and Java.
  10854. Cultivated in many areas, e.g., near Calcutta and in Java. Introduced in southern California.
  10855. Ecology — Ranging from Tropical Dry to Moist Forest Life Zones, lac tree is reported
  10856. to tolerate annual precipitation of 9 to 15 (to 30) dm and annual temperature of 24 to 25°C.®^
  10857. Lac trees occur in tropical moist to wet evergreen and semi-evergreen forests and in moist
  10858. deciduous teak forests in India, as well as in dry deciduous forests. Trees are not particular
  10859. about soil structure or content. It grows best below 1,000 m altitude, in nature growing up
  10860. to 600 m in teak forests. Optimum temperature should be above 24°C, with precipitation
  10861. varying from 9 to 10 dm to 30 dm or more per annum.Lac tree is common on well-
  10862. drained boulder deposits, frequently in large numbers along ravines or on the edges of
  10863. terraces in the sub-Himalayan tract and the outer hills. Conunon on sides of ravines on
  10864. sandstone or on boulder beds in Siwalik range. Scattered near banks of streams in mixed
  10865. forests in central India. Prefers slightly acidic soils; thrives best on light well-drained, gravelly
  10866. or loamy soils; occurs on sandy and laterite soils.
  10867. Cultivation — Trees propagated by seed and root suckers, either naturally in the forest
  10868. 268 Handbook of Nuts
  10869. or under cultivation. Seeds viable only for a short period, but can be stored for 1 year in
  10870. gunny sacks or 2 years in sealed tins. Seeds are started in seed-beds, and young trees planted
  10871. out when 0.5 to 1 m tall. Once established, no special care is required. No special fertilizers
  10872. or soil pH are needed. Wild trees and those grown for boundaries may also be used for lac-
  10873. trees. When cultivated, trees are planted about 275/ha. Stump-planting seems to give better
  10874. results in moist climates. Stumps, with ca. 4 cm shoot and 23 cm root, are prepared from
  10875. seedlings which have attained 7 to 13 mm diameter. Trees should be protected from grazing
  10876. and weeded regularly for the first few years. Trees will tolerate only light pruning; apical
  10877. pruning is better than surface pruning.
  10878. Harvesting — Seeds are harvested in the autumn. Collectors climb trees and cut off fruit­
  10879. bearing branches. Fruits are depulped by keeping them in a heap for 2 to 4 days and rubbing
  10880. the decaying pericarp off with the hands. Seeds are then washed, dried, and stored. Kusum
  10881. bears a good crop of lac every second or third year.^°’^^®
  10882. Yields and economics — Average annual production of stick-lac varies from 1 to 1.5
  10883. kg per tree, to as much as 9 to 18 kg from well-cultivated trees.The quantity of lac
  10884. produced per tree varies with the size of the crown and the vigor of the shoots. Average
  10885. seed yields of about 28 to 37 kg in one season are reported, which translates to 7 to 13 kg
  10886. of easily expressed oil.^° India, Sri Lanka, and Java are the principle producers of the lac,
  10887. and the U.S. is the main consumer. Lac from trees from India and Sri Lanka command the
  10888. highest price.
  10889. Energy — The very heavy wood, specific gravity approximately 0.91 to 1.08, makes
  10890. good fuel and excellent charcoal. Sapwood has a calorific value of 4,950 calories (8,910
  10891. Btu); heartwood, 4,928 calories (8,872 Btu). Kernels (60 to 65% of the fresh fruit; 15.3%
  10892. of dried fruit) contain 59 to 72% oil, although yields are only 32 to 35% oil by boiling
  10893. decorticated seeds, 25 to 27% with ox-driven presses. With 275 trees per hectare, there
  10894. could be 1,925 to 3,575 kg oil per ha. The oil is used for candles and for illumination; the
  10895. oil-cake is also used as fuel.^°
  10896. Biotic factors — Monkeys and birds eat the seeds, thus interfering in their collection for
  10897. use for oil. The fungus M eliola capensis is known to attack trees, and D endrophthoe fa lca ta
  10898. sometimes parasitizes it.^’^^® Browne^^ lists the following as affecting lac tree: Fungi —
  10899. C orticium salm onicolor, R osellinia bunodes. Coleóptera — H olotrichia serrata, M yllocertus
  10900. cardoni, X yleboru s fo rn icatu s, X ylosandrus m origerus. Hemiptera — L accifer lacea. Lep-
  10901. idoptera — A scotis setenaria, C atach rysops strabo. C usíala raptaría, D asychira grotei,
  10902. E ctropis bhurm itra, H elioth is arm ígera, H yposidra successaria, H . talaca, R apala iarbus,
  10903. T halassodes fa lsa ria . In addition. The W ealth o f India^^ reports R osellina bunodes (stem
  10904. blight), P olyporu s w eberianus (yellow-cork-rot), D aedalea fla vid a (white spongy rot), H ex-
  10905. agonia apiaria (white spongy rot), Irpex fla vu s (white fibrous rot). Serinetha augus attacks
  10906. the seed. L accifer lacea, the lac insect, is considered the most important insect attacking
  10907. the tree.^®
  10908. 269
  10909. SCLEROCARYA CAFFRA Sond. (ANACARDIACEAE) — Manila Nut, Caffir Marvola Nut
  10910. Uses — Tree is important for shade and shelter as well as food to a variety of animals.
  10911. Fruits (or kernels, or both) edible, yet said to serve as an insecticide. Kernels of stones have
  10912. a delicious nut-like flavor, and are eaten raw, or dried and ground and added to soups or
  10913. stews. Fruits, the size of plums, have a pleasant flavor and are a source of food for parrots
  10914. and mammals. With a turpentine aroma, the fruit is juicy, tart, and thirst-quenching. Fruit
  10915. juice, boiled down, yields jelly or syrup used as sweetening agent. Fruit is also used by
  10916. natives to make a fermented beverage which is intoxicating. Elephants and monkeys ap­
  10917. parently become drunk from eating fermenting fruits. Seeds, extracted with difficulty, are
  10918. oily, nutrituous and high in vitamin C. Kernels contain about 60% oil, extracted by boiling
  10919. and used to preserve and soften skin shirts by Zulu women. Oil is used to treat meat which
  10920. is to be kept for up to a year. Oil is also used for cooking and as a base for cosmetic red
  10921. ochre. Pedi use the ground up kernels for making a porridge, the embryo as a condiment,
  10922. and the leaf as a relish. Bark is used to make a bitter brandy tincture, and is the source of
  10923. a red dye. Gum from the bark is mixed with soot and used for ink. Wood, pinkish white,
  10924. often with a greenish tinge, changing to a brown-red on exposure, is fairly soft, fairly
  10925. durable, saws well, and takes nails, and is used for making fruitboxes, canoes, furniture,
  10926. panelling, utensils, troughs, stamping blocks, structures, spoons, bowls, dishes, and drums.
  10927. Leaves are browsed by many animals; elephants eat the bark and roots.
  10928. 270 Handbook of Nuts
  10929. Folk medicine — Reported to be astringent, marula is a folk remedy for diarrhea,
  10930. dysentery, malaria, and proctitis. The bark decoction is used for diarrhea, dysentery, and
  10931. malaria, and to clean out wounds. The leaf juice is applied to gonorrhea. Europeans in South
  10932. Africa take the bark decoction both for the cure and prevention of malaria (but experiments
  10933. have not confirmed antimalarial activity). Zulu use the bark decoction to prevent gangrenous
  10934. rectitis. Fruits are believed to serve both as an aphrodisiac and contraceptive for females.
  10935. (African cattle, having partaken of too much fruit, have been observed to become both
  10936. aggressive and infertile.)®^ Europeans and Africans use the bark as a prophylactic and to
  10937. treat malaria, the steam for eye disorders. Because of their abundant fruits, the trees are
  10938. widespread fertility charms in Africa. The bark is thought to control the sex of unborn
  10939. children; bark of the male tree is administered if a son is desired, and of a female tree if a
  10940. daughter is desired.
  10941. Chemistry — Per 100 g, the fruit (ZMB) is reported to contain 361 calories, 6.0 g protein,
  10942. 1.2 g fat, 90.4 g total carbohydrate, 6.0 g fiber, 2.4 g ash, 72.3 mg Ca, 229 mg P, 1.2 mg
  10943. Fe, 0.36 mg thiamine, 0.60 mg riboflavin, 2.41 mg niacin, and 819 mg ascorbic acid. The
  10944. seed (ZMB) is reported to contain, per 100 g, 629 calories, 25.6 g protein, 59.8 g fat, 9.6
  10945. g total carbohydrate, 2.8 g fiber, 5.0 g ash, 149 mg Ca, 1299 mg P, 0.4 mg Fe, 0.04 mg
  10946. thiamine, 0.12 mg riboflavin, and 0.73 mg niacin.®^ Per 100 g, the fruit (APB) is reported
  10947. to contain 30 calories, 91.7 g H2O, 0.5 g protein, 0.1 g fat, 7.5 g total carbohydrate, 0.5
  10948. g fiber, 0.2 g ash, 6 mg Ca, 19 mg P, 0.1 mg Fe, 0.03 mg thiamine, 0.05 mg riboflavin,
  10949. 0.2 mg niacin, and 68 mg ascorbic acid. The seed (APB) is reported to contain 604 calories,
  10950. 3.9 g H2O, 24.6 g protein, 57.5 g fat, 9.2 g total carbohydrate, 2.7 g fiber, 4.8 g ash, 143
  10951. mg Ca, 1248 mg P, 0.4 mg Fe, 0.04 mg thiamine, 0.12 mg riboflavin, and 0.7 mg niacin.
  10952. Bark contains 3.5 to 10% tannin, leaves 20% tannin, a trace of alkaloids, and 10% gum.
  10953. Fruits contain citric and malic acid, sugar, and 54 mg vitamin C per 100 g. Seed oil (53 to
  10954. 60%) contains ca. 55 to 70% oleic acid. The pattern of the amino acids (particularly rich
  10955. in arginine, aspartic acid, and glutamic acid) in the mean differ only slightly from that in
  10956. human milk and eggs.®^ The juice contains 2 mg vitamin C per gram {South Africa Digest,
  10957. March 5, 1982).
  10958. Toxicity — One source lists it as a narcotic hallucinogen(?). In 1972, a flurry of newspaper
  10959. articles heralded the propensity of pachyderms to get pickled on the fruit. Elephants, baboons,
  10960. monkeys, warthogs, and humans may overindulge in Kruger Park (South Africa).®^
  10961. Description — Small to large much-branched dioecious, deciduous tree, up to 20 m tall,
  10962. with rounded crown with a spread of 10 m; trunk 30 to 90 cm in diameter; bark pale, nearly
  10963. smooth, peeling in disk-shaped flakes,which leave circular depressions. Leaves alternate,
  10964. crowded toward apex of stem, up to 30 cm long, compound with 3 to 8 pairs of opposite
  10965. leaflets; leaflets long-petiolulate, ovate or elliptic, blue-green; serrate on margin in juvenile
  10966. plants but smooth in older plants, glabrous, 3.7 to 5 cm long 2.5 to 3.3 cm wide, base
  10967. acute, cuspidate. Rowers unisexual, male and female on different trees; male flowers in
  10968. terminal reddish spikes or racemes, with 12 to 15 stamens, inserted around a fleshy, de­
  10969. pressed, entire disk; sepals 4, dark-crimson; petals 4, pinkish; female flowers long-peduncled,
  10970. borne singly or 2 or 3 together at ends of young shoots (rarely flowers are fully bisexual);
  10971. usually only female trees bear fruits, but frequently terminal flowers of male inflorescences
  10972. may develop fruits; ovary subglobose, 2- to 3-locular. Fruit a fleshy, obovoid, 2- to 3-celled,
  10973. yellow drupe, each cell containing a seed, and each cell with an “ eye” to permit the embryo
  10974. to grow out of the shell. Seed or stone about 2.5 cm long, 1.5 cm wide, weighing 3 to 4
  10975. g. Rowers August; fruits December to March in South Africa.^^®
  10976. Germplasm — Reported from the Africa Center of Diversity, marula, or cvs thereof, is
  10977. reported to tolerate drought, heat, insects, and sand.®^
  10978. Distribution — Native to South Africa, particularly to Natal and Transvaal, but wide­
  10979. spread in hotter drier regions, Bechuanaland and tropical Africa, north to Sudan and Ethiopia,
  10980. established at Miami, Rorida.^^®
  10981. 271
  10982. E cology — Ranging from Subtropical Dry through Tropical Dry to Wet Forest Life Zones,
  10983. marula is reported to tolerate annual precipitation of 6.7 to 43.0 dm (mean of 3 cases =
  10984. 21.6 dm), annual temperature of 20.6 to 27.4°C (mean of 3 cases = 24. TC), and pH of
  10985. 6.1.*^ One of the more common trees in the savannas of the Transvaal. It does not tolerate
  10986. frost. Thrives especially in hot dry regions, and is rarely found in higher rainfall areas.
  10987. Occurs mainly in woodlands from the coast up to about 700 m altitude, on sandy soils or
  10988. occasionally on sandy loams. Reported as growing in savanna grasslands where annual
  10989. elevation and rainfall are as follows: Mozambique — 200 to 900 m, 630 to 1000 mm; South
  10990. Africa-Mozambique — 300 to 1000 m, 250 to 500 mm; South Zimbabwe — 450 to 1000
  10991. m, 380 to 640 mm; Angola — 80 to 1000 m; 600 to 710 mm; South Africa — 600 to 1500
  10992. m, 380 to 640 mm. In Malagasy, it occurs in areas with 1,000 to 1,500 mm precipitation.^^®
  10993. C u ltivation — Common in the wild, marulas have grown very slowly under experimental
  10994. conditions, but grow quickly in natural conditions. Seeds germinate readily; the hard stones
  10995. should be sown intact. Trees may be propagated by truncheons, 10 to 12.5 cm thick, which
  10996. root freely if laid in during early spring. Trees grow fairly rapidly and are drought-resistant
  10997. when once established.^^® A project to breed marula was scheduled to begin in 1982 by the
  10998. Department of Horticulture at the University of Pretoria (South A frica D igest, March 12,
  10999. 1982).
  11000. H arvestin g — Trees are said to bear fruit more copiously than related species. Fruits are
  11001. collected from the ground or by climbing the trees. Natives regard these as the greatest
  11002. delicacy and store them carefully. A gift of marula kernels is valued as a mark of highest
  11003. friendship among natives.
  11004. Y ield s an d eco n o m ics — Trees are very plentiful in the forests where they grow spon­
  11005. taneously, and fruits are collected as needed. One tree yields up to 2 tons of fruit (South
  11006. A frica D ig est, March 5, 1982); 30 g of fruit produces 1 € of marula beer (South A frica
  11007. D igest, March 12, 1982). From a single tree, 91,000 fruits have been reported.Kernels
  11008. consist of nearly 88% hard shell, 12% kernel, the kernel yielding ca. 50% oil. Within the
  11009. fruit, the shell contains the small oily kemeUhat bums with a steady flame.^^® Because of
  11010. its local economic importance, trees are usually preserved by Bantu and others, even on
  11011. cultivated land. In Transvaal also, the trees are protected.
  11012. E n ergy — With two tons of fmit possible per tree, one might possibly obtain more than
  11013. 6,000 € of beer, distilling down to possibly 300 € ethanol per tree, or 3,000 liters assuming
  11014. 100 trees per hectare. The hard nut endocarp could be converted to charcoal, the kernel
  11015. yielding 50% oil. Sap of the tree could also be converted to ethanol. Prunings and by­
  11016. products could be used in pyrolysis.
  11017. B iotic factors — Fungi known to attack marula are C ercospora caffra and G loeosporium
  11018. sclerocaryae. Trees are host of a small beetle (P olydada) of which the highly poisonous
  11019. grubs are used by Bushmen as an ingredient for arrow poisons. Mopane Caterpillars also
  11020. grow on the tree, and are eaten after roasting by Bantu and Bushmen.^^® Water, which mns
  11021. off the tmnk and crown into holes — usually where a branch has broken off — is used by
  11022. mosquitoes for breeding. Larvae of G onim brasia helina sometimes breed on marula. But­
  11023. terflies and the green lunar moth breed on the foliage. Wood is very liable to blue discoloration
  11024. through fungi and beetle attacks.
  11025. 272 Handbook of Nuts
  11026. SIMMONDSIA CHINENSIS (Link) C. Schneid. (BUXACEAE) — Jojoba
  11027. Uses — Simmondsia is unique among plants in that its seeds contain an oil which is a
  11028. liquid wax. Oil of Simmondsia is obtained by expression or solvent extraction. It is light-
  11029. yellow, unsaturated, of unusual stability, remarkably pure, and need not be refined for use
  11030. as a transformer oil or as a lubricant for high-speed machinery or machines operating at
  11031. high temperatures. The oil does not become rancid and is not damaged by repeated heating
  11032. to temperatures over 295°C or by heating to 370°C for 4 days; the color is dispelled by
  11033. heating for a short time at 285°C, does not change in viscosity appreciably at high temper­
  11034. atures, and requires little refining to obtain maximum purity. Since Simmondsia oil resembles
  11035. sperm whale oil both in composition and properties, it should serve as a replacement for
  11036. the applications of that oil. The reports that a new oil from the fish known as orange
  11037. roughy is “ attempting to make inroads on the jojoba and sperm whale markets” . Jojoba oil
  11038. 273
  11039. can be easily hydrogenated into a hard white wax, with a melting point of about 73 to 74°C,
  11040. and is second in hardness only to camauba wax. The oil is a potential source of both saturated
  11041. and unsaturated long-chain fatty acids and alcohols. It is also suitable for sulfurization to
  11042. produce lubricating oil and a rubber-like material (factice) suitable for use in printing ink
  11043. and linoleum. The residual meal from expression or extraction contains 30 to 35% protein
  11044. and is acceptable as a livestock food. Seeds were said to be palatable and were eaten raw
  11045. or parched by Indians. Recent studies suggest they are toxic. They may also be boiled to
  11046. make a well-flavored drink similar to coffee, hence the name coffeeberry. It is an important
  11047. browse plant in California and Arizona, the foliage and young twigs being relished by cattle,
  11048. goafs, and deer, hence such names as goatnut.^^
  11049. Folk medicine — Indians of Baja California highly prized the fruit for food and the oil
  11050. as a medicine for cancer and kidney disorders. Indians in Mexico use the oil as a hair
  11051. restorer. According to H a rtw e ll,th e oil was used in folk remedies for cancer. Reported
  11052. to be emetic, jojoba is a folk remedy for cancer, colds, dysuria, eyes, head, obesity,
  11053. parturition, poison ivy, sores, sore throat, warts, and wounds. Seri Indians applied jojoba
  11054. to head sores and aching eyes. They drank jojoba-ade for colds and to facilitate parturition.®^’*^^
  11055. Chemistry — I was amazed to see, in searching through my massive files on jojoba,
  11056. that I had no conventional proximate analysis. It was not even included in two of my most
  11057. treasured resources, Hager’s Handbook and The Wealth of India. Pe r haps this is due
  11058. to the relative novelty of interest and the unique situation that the seed contains liquid wax
  11059. rather than oil, sort of unusual for the conventional analyses.Verbiscar and Banigan^^^
  11060. approximated a proximate analysis, some of which follows: per 100 g, the seed is reported
  11061. to contain 4.3 to 4.6 g H2O, 14.9 to 15.1 g protein, 50.2 to 53.8 g fat, 24.6 to 29.1 g total
  11062. carbohydrate, 3.5 to 4.2 g fiber, and 1.4 to 1.6 g ash. The amino acid composition of
  11063. deoiled jojoba seed meal is 1.05 to 1.11% lysine, 0.49% histidine, 1.6 to 1.8% arginine,
  11064. 2.2 to 3.1% aspartic acid, 1.1 to 1.2% threonine, 1.0 to 1.1% serine, 2.4 to 2.8% glutamic
  11065. acid, 1.0 to 1.1% proline, 1.4 to 1.5% glycine, 0.8 to 1.0% alanine, 1.1 to 1.2% valine,
  11066. 0.2% methionine, 0.8 to 0.9% isoleucine, 1.5 to 1.6% leucine, 1.0% tyrosine, 0.9 to 1.1%
  11067. phenyalanine, 0.5 to 0.8% cystine and cysteine, and 0.5 to 0.6% tryptophane. Detailed
  11068. analyses of the wax esters, free alcohols, and free acids, are reported in NAS.^^^ Per 100
  11069. g jojoba meal, there is 1.4 g lysine, 0.6 g histidine, 1.9 g arginine, 2.6 aspartic acid, 1.3
  11070. threonine, 1.3 serine, 3.2 glutamic acid, 1.5 proline, 2.4 glycine, 1.1 alanine, 0.6 cystine,
  11071. 1.5 valine, 0.1 methionine, 0.9 isoleucine, 1.8 leucine, 1.1 tyrosine, and 1.2 g phenylalanine.
  11072. The two major flavonoid constituents of the leaves are isorhamnetin 3-rutinoside (narcissin)
  11073. and isorhamnetin 3,7-dirhamnoside.^^
  11074. Toxicity — Simmondsin, a demonstrated appetite-depressant toxicant is contained in
  11075. seeds, 2.25 to 2.34%; seed hulls, 0.19%; core wood, 0.45; leaves, 0.19 to 0.23%; twigs,
  11076. 0.63 to 0.75%; and inflorescence, 0.22%. Three related cyanomethylenecyclohexyl glu-
  11077. cosides have also been isolated from the seed meal. The acute oral LD50 for crude jojoba
  11078. oil to male albino rats is higher than 21.5 m€/kg body weight. Strains of Lactobacillus
  11079. acidophilus can ameliorate this toxicity.
  11080. Description — Leafy, xerophytic, long-lived (100 to 200 years), evergreen dioecious
  11081. shrub, ca.0.5 to 1 m tall in the wild, but occasionally to 6 m tall; leaves thick, leathery,
  11082. bluish-green, oblong, opposite, 2.5 to 3.5 cm long, entire; flowers apetalous, the female
  11083. ones usually solitary in the axils, the male ones clustered with 10 to 12 stamens per flower;
  11084. female flowers with 5 greenish sepals, soft and hairy; the flowers on different plants, male
  11085. and female plants about equal in nature; fruits ovoid, usually dehiscent, with 1 to 3 peanut­
  11086. sized, brown seeds each, the endosperm scanty or absent; seeds about 750 to 5,150/kg,
  11087. about 50% oil.^^®
  11088. Germplasm — Reported from the Middle American Center of Diversity, jojoba, or cvs
  11089. thereof, is reported to tolerate alkali, drought, heat, high pH, and slope.Yermanos^"^®
  11090. 274 Handbook of Nuts
  11091. describes a monoecious strain which may lead to self-pollinating cvs. (n = 52, 56, ca.lOO.)
  11092. Distribution — Native to areas of northern Mexico, Lower California, on the Islands off
  11093. the coast of California, New Mexico, and Arizona. It inhabits the mountains bordering the
  11094. Saltón Sea basin in the Colorado Desert in California, and the southern portion of San Diego
  11095. County. In Arizona, it is found in the mountains around Tucson, near Phoenix, and north
  11096. of Yuma. In nature, it grows between 600 and 1500 m elevation in the desert, down to sea
  11097. level near the coast, between latitudes 25° and 31° N. There is a major effort underway in
  11098. the U.S., Mexico, and Israel to domesticate jojoba; e.g., there are reports that is has been
  11099. planted in Argentina, Australia, Brazil, Costa Rica, Egypt, Haiti, Israel, Paraguay, Rhodesia,
  11100. the Sahel, and South Africa. The Israeli examples are bearing fruit. We are anxious to hear
  11101. more success stories. There seems to be no major difficulty in growing the plant in frost-
  11102. free, arid, subtropical, and tropical zones, but not many success stories have materialized.
  11103. Ecology — Ranging from Warm Temperate Desert (with little or no frost) to Thom
  11104. through Tropical Desert Forest Life Zones, jojoba is reported to tolerate annual precipitation
  11105. of 2 to 11 dm, annual temperature of 16 to 26°C, and pH of 7.3 to 8.2.®^ Jojoba is usually
  11106. restricted to well-drained, coarse, well-aerated desert soils that are neutral to alkaline, with
  11107. an abundance of phosphoms. It grows best where the annual rainfall exceeds 30 cm, but
  11108. does exist where less then 12.5 cm occurs. Where rainfall is ca.75 mm, the jojoba grows
  11109. to ca.l m tall; where rainfall is 250 to 400 mm, it may attain 5 m. It tolerates full sun and
  11110. temperatures ranging from 0 to 47°C. Mature shmbs tolerate temperatures as low as - 10°C,
  11111. but seedlings are sensitive to light frosts just below freezing.
  11112. Cultivation — Jojoba seeds retain nearly 99% germinability after 6 months, and 38%
  11113. after 11 years stored in an open shed. Germination is good in alkaline sands at temperatures
  11114. of 27 to 38°C. Seedlings are frost sensitive. Field seeding can be done with a modified
  11115. cotton planter. Seedlings need two or three irrigations during the first summer and must be
  11116. protected from animals. Weeding is recommended after each irrigation. Adventitious roots
  11117. may form on 50 to 80% of the cuttings treated with growth-promoting substances. Plants
  11118. could start producing seeds in 5 years, but full production would not be attained for 8 to
  11119. 10 years. Using a 2 x 4 m spacing in planting would permit the planting of about 500
  11120. female and 50 male pollinating plants per hectare. Apomictic plants are known, lessening
  11121. the need for male nonfruiting plants in the orchard. Suggested methods for planting include:
  11122. Close spacing, ca. 15 cm apart, resulting in hedge-rows, with the seeds planted in flat borders
  11123. or in a slightly depressed ditch so as to keep them moist until they germinate (ca.lO to 14
  11124. days). Male plants should be thinned out to about a 5-1 ratio, finally allowing about 2,500
  11125. plants per hectare, with possible annual yields of 2.5 MT/ha seed. Propagation by cuttings
  11126. from selected shrubs could increase seed and/or oil yields. Generally, flowering nodes and
  11127. leaf nodes alternate, but some plants flower at nearly all nodes; some plants produce more
  11128. than one flower per node. Transplanted seedlings survive readily, if the roots are pruned.
  11129. Hence, cuttings could be made in a nursery for later transplanting in the field. The more
  11130. efficient spacing for this method of planting is in rows 4 m apart, and the bushes in the
  11131. rows 2 m apart. Male bushes should be interspersed throughout the grove (about 1,500
  11132. female and 250 male plants per hectare), possibly yielding ca. 2.75 MT/ha seed. When
  11133. softwood cuttings were treated with IBA, 4 mg/g of talc, they rooted 100% in 38 days.^^*
  11134. Harvesting — In the wild, the only method for harvesting has been hand-collecting from
  11135. under the plants, since mature seeds fall from the bush. Under cultivation, hedge-row, or
  11136. orchard-like plantations, without undergrowth, seeds could be raked from under the bushes
  11137. and then picked up by suction. Pruning the lower branches might be advantageous if this
  11138. method be used. A device could be designed to pick the seeds from the bush prior to the
  11139. time of falling. Cost of harvesting would depend on the method.
  11140. Yields and economics — Buchanan and Duke^^^ accept a figure near 2,250 kg/ha for
  11141. yields of jojoba. Individual plants may yield 5 kg (dry weight) seeds and more, of which
  11142. 275
  11143. 50% (43 to 56%) by weight is a colorless, odorless liquid wax commonly called “jojoba
  11144. oil” 230 Yermanos^"*^ suggested that a 5-year-old orchard should yield about 825 kg of nuts
  11145. per hectare, increasing to 4,125 kg/ha in the 12th year, suggesting a renewable “ oil” yield
  11146. of ca.2 MT/year. Such yields may be optimistic, even for well-managed plantations. Esti­
  11147. mates of the amount of wild nuts available each year range from 100 million to 1 billion
  11148. pounds, the plants growing over 100 million acres in California, Mexico, and Arizona.
  11149. Usually plants in cultivation yield oil in 6 to 7 years; the Israelis report their best specimens
  11150. yield 2 or more kg of seed in the 4th year; wild plants yield about 1 kg of nuts per year,
  11151. and cultivars should yield twice that amount or more. The seeds contain up to 50% “ oil” .
  11152. In 1958, long before the whale oil became endangered, the value of Simmondsia “ oil” as
  11153. a hard wax was estimated at $.55/kg. Because of the present demand for the wax and oil,
  11154. jojoba is being considered as a noncompetitive crop, that could replace wheat and cotton in
  11155. Texas and southern California, with as much as the yield from 70,000 hectares being absorbed
  11156. by industry. The Chemical Marketing Reporter^^' stated that jojoba prices doubled in 6
  11157. months to $200/gal. The cost of establishing a plantation can vary from $3,000/ha on land
  11158. with irrigation available to $5,600/ha on rough desert terrain .O n ce established, mainte­
  11159. nance costs are low — only ca. $200/year. One hectare can yield 1,125 to 2,250 kg oil per
  11160. year. (Recent prices have approached $50/kg, suggesting to the uninitiated yields of
  11161. $100,000/ha, right up there with the hyperoptimistic ginseng yields. In either case, a wait
  11162. of at least 5 years for the first return might seem interminable. Prices have gone down
  11163. considerably since this was sarcastically written.)
  11164. Energy — With 641 plants per hectare, the aerial phytomass (over 6% of total phytomass)
  11165. was 1,573 kg/ha and annual productivity only 327 kg/ha.Daugherty et al.^^ were optimistic,
  11166. but not so optimistic as Yérmanos about jojoba oil yields. They projected ca.500 kg/ha oil
  11167. for jojoba, ca.nearly 100 for cottonseed, ca.200 for flaxseed, ca.250 for soybean, and nearly
  11168. 300 for safflower (based on 10-year averages for the conventional oilseeds, speculation for
  11169. jojoba).
  11170. Biotic factors — One fungus {Sturnella sim m ondsiae Bonar) occurs on the leaves, calyxes,
  11171. and peduncles, but little damages the plant in this country. P hytophthora p a ra sitica and
  11172. Pythium aphaniderm atum may cause root rot in jojoba plantations. Cuttings are sensitive to
  11173. A lternaría tenuis, seedlings to Sclerotium bataticola and Fusarium oxysporum , A scale
  11174. insect that inhabits the leaves also is not detrimental. There is a harmful pest, probably a
  11175. microlepidopoterous insect, that destroys a large part of the wild crop by consuming the
  11176. very young ovules. One spraying at the proper time might eliminate this damage. The scale
  11177. Situlaspis yu ccae and the unique mealybug P uto sim m ondsia have been reported.
  11178. 276 Handbook of Nuts
  11179. TELFAIRIA OCCIDENTALIS Hook.f. (CUCURBITACEAE) — Fluted Pumpkin, Oyster
  11180. Nut
  11181. Uses — Young shoots and leaves are used as a pot-herb. Leaves are much sought after
  11182. by sheep and goats. Seeds are eaten and are said to have a pleasant almond-like flavor, but
  11183. the bitter seed-coat must be discarded. Seeds are boiled and eaten or put in soups, or used
  11184. as the source of a nondrying oil for native cookery and soap-making. Seeds are also used
  11185. for polishing native earthenware pots. Dry shell of the fruit is sometimes used for utensils.
  11186. Dried seeds are powdered and used to thicken soups. Dried fiber from macerated stems is
  11187. used like loofa for paper.^^’^^^^^®
  11188. Folk medicine — No data available.
  11189. Chemistry — Per 100 g, the seed (ZMB) is reported to contain 579 calories, 21.9 g
  11190. protein, 48.0 g fat, 25.1 g total carbohydrate, 2.3 g fiber, 5.6 g ash, 89.6 mg Ca, and 610
  11191. mg P. Per 100 g, the leaf (ZMB) is reported to contain 346 calories, 21.2 to 21.3 g protein,
  11192. 12.9 to 13.2 g fat, 51.5 to 52.0 g total carbohydrates, 12.5 to 12.8 g fiber, and 13.9 to
  11193. 14.0 g ash.^^ BurkilP^ reports that the oil contains 37% oleic acid, 21% palmitic acid, 21%
  11194. stearic acid, 15% linoleic acid. Seeds contain a trace of alkaloid, while none has been
  11195. detected in the roots.On a wet weight basis, the pulped leaves contain 11 mg beta-carotene,
  11196. juice 9, fiber 1, supernatant 1, and wet LPC 8 mg beta-carotene per 100 g. Under stored
  11197. conditions, the LPC lost 82% beta-carotene and 58% xanthophyll over 12 months.Ca.70%
  11198. of the total N and 63% of the protein N was extracted; the potential protein extractability
  11199. is ca.90%. The oil, by weight, contains 16% palmitic-, 3% stearic-, 23% oleic-, 23% linoleic-
  11200. and 19% alpha-eleostearic-acids. Seeds of T. occidentalis contain fairly large amounts of
  11201. alpha-eleostearic and no linolenic glycerides, while the seed fat of T. pedata derives from
  11202. the usual mixture of saturated, oleic, linoleic, and linoleic acids.
  11203. Description — Perennial, dioecious liana, up to 33 m long; stems herbaceous, ribbed,
  11204. glabrous or pubescent, becoming thickened when old. Leaves petiolate, 3- to 5-foliolate;
  11205. median leaflet elliptic, acuminate, acute, tapered into the petiolule, entire or shallowly
  11206. sinuate-toothed, glabrous or sparsely hairy or punctate, 3-veined from near base with 2 well-
  11207. developed ascending lateral veins, 6 to 17 cm long, 3 to 10 cm broad; lateral leaflets similar,
  11208. with petiolules 0.2 to 2 cm long, petiole 1.9 to 8 cm long, pubescent; probracts 5 to 8 mm
  11209. long. Male flowers in racemes 10 to 30 cm long, the bracts 2.5 to 8 mm long, 1.5 to 3 mm
  11210. broad, pedicels 8 to 35 mm long, receptacle-tube campanulate, 2.5 to 3.5 mm long, densely
  11211. glandular-hairy inside above; lobes triangular, glandular-dentate, 2 to 4 mm long; petals
  11212. about 2.5 cm long, 1.2 cm broad, white with dark-purple marks at base inside, or creamy
  11213. white with red-purple spot (eye); stamens 3, anthers coherent in center of flower; female
  11214. flowers stalked. Fruit pale glaucous green or whitish with waxy bloom when ripe, flesh
  11215. yellowish, ellipsoid, tapering at both ends, rather sharply 10-ribbed, up to 60 (to 90) cm
  11216. long. Seeds numerous, very broadly and asymmetrically ovate, 3.2 to 3.6 cm long, 3.3 to
  11217. 3.7 cm broad, and 1.0 to 1.2 cm thick; testa smooth with endocarpic fibrous sheath poorly
  11218. developed or a b s e n t.F lo w e rs and fruits year-round.
  11219. Germplasm — Reported from the African Center of Diversity, the fluted pumpkin, or
  11220. CVS thereof, is reported to tolerate drought, low pH, poor soil, and shade.Very similar to
  11221. the following species, which is the commercial source of true oyster nut oil.^^ The true
  11222. oyster nut has purplish-pink flowers, whereas the fluted pumpkin has white flowers with a
  11223. purplish eye. (2n = 24.)
  11224. Distribution — Native to tropical Africa from Sierra Leone to Angola, the Congo Area;
  11225. Fernando Po, U ganda.Introduced to tropical America.
  11226. Ecology — Ranging from Warm Temperate Moist through Tropical Dry to Wet Forest
  11227. Life Zones, the fluted pumpkin is reported to tolerate annual precipitation of 13.6 to 22.8
  11228. dm (mean of 2 cases = 18.2), annual temperature of 24.4 to 26.2°C (mean of 2 cases =
  11229. 277
  11230. 25.3°C), and pH of 5.0 to 5.0 (mean of 2 cases = 5.0).®^ Thrives best in closed-forest
  11231. country,ca. 1,200 m above sea level.Apparently best adapted to a hot, humid climate
  11232. (e.g., TMF), common in littoral hedges, and lowland rain-forests up to about 1,200 m.^^®
  11233. Its occurrence at the edges of forests may be the consequence of previous cultivation. It
  11234. thrives in plantings in Talamanca, Costa Rica.
  11235. Cultivation — Cultivated in some places, especially S. Nigeria and by some tribes in
  11236. Ghana. Grown on stakes or trained up trees.Propagated by seeds either planted near trees
  11237. upon which to climb, or more often allowed to sprawl over the ground, as is done in Nigeria.
  11238. Once established, plants are perennial for several years. Grows well in any good garden
  11239. soil where there is plenty of heat and moisture.
  11240. Harvesting — Leaves and shoots are picked continuously as the plant grows.Fruits
  11241. are collected whenever ripe and needed. No special season, as plants flower and fruit
  11242. yearround, and the fruits are gradually ripened throughout the year.^^®
  11243. Yields and economics — Often cultivated for the seeds by natives in West Tropical
  11244. Africa, East Tropical Africa, and Southeast Asia; and probably elsewhere in the hot, humid
  11245. tropics. Mainly used for the seeds as a vegetable and for oil, and the stem for the fibers for
  11246. making paper.
  11247. Energy — This plant climbed up trees in Talamanca like kudzu does in tropical America,
  11248. and fruited copiously. Its relatively high seed-oil content suggests that this is as promising
  11249. an energy species as China’s Hodgsonia. No doubt the foliage could provide LPC (leaf
  11250. protein concentrate) and the seeds oil, with the residues being used as by-products for energy
  11251. production.
  11252. Biotic factors — No serious pests or diseases have been reported.
  11253. 278 Handbook of Nuts
  11254. TELFAIRIA PEDATA (Sm. ex Sims) Hook.f. (CUCURBITACEAE) — Oyster nut, Zanzibar
  11255. Oilvine, Telfairia nuts, Jikungo
  11256. Uses — Oyster nut is cultivated for its edible seeds^^"^ and oil yield (about 62%). The
  11257. fruits are used in soups, and the nuts are used in confectionery and chocolates, either alone
  11258. or as a partial substitute for Brazil nuts or almonds, and are quite palatable fresh or roasted,
  11259. as well as pickled. The seeds are the source of Castanha Oil, used in manufacture of soaps,
  11260. cosmetics, salad dressings, paints, and candles. One quote from an unpublished W. E. Bailey
  11261. typescript, “ Possibly the oil can be converted into explosives, just as the Germans have
  11262. done with Romanian soy beans. The oil is almost indistinguishable from olive oil. The nuts
  11263. may be pounded, cooked in water, and eaten as a cereal (porridge). The kernel has a high
  11264. vitamin content, and residue from the kernel after the oil has been extracted can be used
  11265. for livestock feed.^^® However, Watt and Breyer-Brandwijk^^^ describe the seed-cake as
  11266. “ useless for stock feeding on account of its bitterness” .
  11267. Folk medicine — Medicinally, oyster nuts have laxative properties, and women in Usa-
  11268. mabar eat the nut immediately after childbirth to cause early contraction of the pelvis,
  11269. increase the flow of milk, and insure an early return of their strength so they can return to
  11270. normal duties in a day or two.^^* East Africans use the seed oil for stomach ailments and
  11271. rheumatism, the leaf as a bitter tonic. Chagga use the seed as a puerperal tonic and lactagogue.
  11272. The plant reportedly has taenifuge properties, especially the seed.
  11273. Chemistry — Per 100 g, the seed (ZMB) is reported to contain 31.1 g protein, 66.2 g
  11274. fat, 2.7 g ash, 10.5 mg Ca, 596 mg P, and 4.3 mg Fe.*^ Per 100 g, the kernel (51 to 60%
  11275. of seed) is reported to contain 4.4 g H2O, 29.7 g protein, 63.3 g fat, 2.6 g ash, 10 mg Ca,
  11276. 279
  11277. 570 mg P, and 4.1 mg Fe.^® An unpublished London Fruit Exchange report on file in the
  11278. Germplasm Introduction and Evaluation Laboratory, gives 6.56% moisture, 19.63% protein,
  11279. 36.02% fat, 28.45% N-free extract, 7.3% fiber, and 2.04% ash. The oil is yellowish with
  11280. a brownish fluorescence, practically odorless, with a low acid value, and possesses a pleasant,
  11281. slightly sweet taste. Somewhat viscous, it is liquid at room temperature, deposits stearine
  11282. on standing, saponifies readily, and contains stearic, palmitic, and telfairic acids, as well
  11283. as about 27% protein (as compared to 40% in soy beans). The shell, especially the bast,
  11284. contains abundant tannin and a bitter crystalline substance. Seed husks contain three antitumor
  11285. compounds, Cucurbitacin B, D, and E, as well as tannin.
  11286. Toxicity — Watt and Breyer-Brandwijk attribute headaches to eating the fruits.
  11287. Description — Perennial dioecious, herbaceous vine, to 30 m long; the stem herbaceous,
  11288. ribbed, glabrous. Leaves alternate, digitate, 5- to 7-foliolate, the leaflets lanceolate, elliptic
  11289. or narrowly ovate or obovate, penninerved, obscurely sinuate-toothed, to 13 x 6 cm. Male
  11290. flowers pinkish purple, in racemes on long stems, opening in sequence, female flower single
  11291. on shorter stem. Fruit a green gourd-like ellipsoid pepo, 32 to 45 cm long, 16 to 25 cm in
  11292. diameter, bluntly 10-ribbed, weighing up to 30 kg, filled with a dense fleshy pulp in which
  11293. seeds are embedded (difficult to separate seed from pulp). Seeds 60 to 200, to 35 mm in
  11294. diameter, kidney-bean shaped, rich in oil, tasting like almond; kernel protected by two shells,
  11295. the outer tough, fibrous, the inner hard and brittle; outer shell removed by peeling or burning,
  11296. the inner one splits with a blow, sometimes a machine known as a belt sander is used to
  11297. open the nuts.^^^-^^'^
  11298. Germplasm — Reported from the African Center of Diversity, oyster nut, or cvs thereof,
  11299. is reported to tolerate drought, high pH, laterite, poor soil, and shade.
  11300. Distribution — Native to East Tropical Africa, especially in Mauritius, Zanzibar, Tan­
  11301. zania, Pemba, and Mozambique. Cultivated throughout the area; especially in Kenya, Masai
  11302. District, Ngong, and formerly in the Mascarene Islands.
  11303. Ecology — Ranging from Subtropical Dry to Moist through Tropical Dry Forest and
  11304. wetter Life Zones, oyster nut is reported to tolerate annual precipitation of 5.2 to 15.3 dm
  11305. (mean of 4 cases = 11.1), annual temperature of 8.4 to 24.2°C (mean of 4 cases = 17.4°C),
  11306. and pH of 5.5 to 7.0 (mean of 3 cases = 6.3).®^ Oyster nut grows at the edges of forests,
  11307. enveloping the trees with its branches, while its trunk frequently attains a diameter of 45
  11308. cm. In Africa, it ranges from 0 to 11(X) m altitude in lowland rain forest and riverine forest.
  11309. It grows well in a sheltered position with an eastern exposure, but without strong winds or
  11310. cold temperatures. It requires medium loams with good drainage, is deep-rooted and drought
  11311. resistant. It grows well up to 2000 m elevation in Kenya and Tanzania.^^^
  11312. Cultivation — Oyster nut is propagated by seeds, which should be planted within 3
  11313. months, as the oil dries out of the kernel, causing deterioration of the germ. Seeds, after
  11314. being soaked in water for 5 days, are planted in a nursery. They germinate in about 21 days.
  11315. When the seedlings are about 5 cm tall (2 to 3 months old), they are transplanted to the
  11316. base of trees which they will climb over and often kill — a fast grower, exceeding 20 m
  11317. in 15 months, if not pruned. The nursery offers protection to the seeds and small plants
  11318. which are eaten by insects and wild animals; also, the plants are easier to water in dry
  11319. seasons. Female plants are readily rooted from cuttings. If seed is sown directly in the field,
  11320. 880 seeds per hectare, at 2 m apart, in double rows, spaced 4 m apart, is recommended.
  11321. Seed should be planted at half their eventual spacing, since there is no way of distinguishing
  11322. between the male and female plants until flowering takes place; 10 to 15 male vines needed
  11323. per hectare. Sometimes trellises are used, these 2 m high, erected 4 to 5 m apart, and
  11324. connected for the double rows of plants which are trained in opposite directions. This method
  11325. is expensive, mainly due to the cost of the trellises, and is suitable only to mountainous
  11326. regions where the posts would not be attacked by white ants. Green manures, compost, or
  11327. barnyard manure should be used freely from the time of planting. Also bone and fish manures
  11328. 280 Handbook of Nuts
  11329. are used, these promoting good growth and fruiting. Lime is used to help control nematodes.
  11330. Vines should be kept weed free for the first year or so after planting on trellises. After that,
  11331. the plants will take care of themselves.^^^
  11332. Harvesting — The crop begins to bear in 2 years, and continues for 20 to 25 years.
  11333. However, the plants will die out the third year in a poor soil. About 4 months are required
  11334. from flower to mature fruit. Plants produce 1 to 2 crops yearly, and may bear almost mature
  11335. fruits while they are flowering. The fruits are picked by hand as they are needed.Nuts
  11336. are soaked in water for about 8 hr in 3 changes of water to remove bitterness.
  11337. Yields and economics — Assuming 160 vines per ha, a conservative 10 fruits per vine,
  11338. each fruit with 140 nuts, each weighing ca.l2 g, the hectare could yield 2685 kg per seed.
  11339. Average yields of the nuts are 1000 to 2000 kg/ha. The oil content of the seed is about 62%
  11340. of its weight, or approximately 35% of the entire weight of the whole nut. This would
  11341. suggest an oil yield up to 700 kg/ha. Dr. T. W. Whitaker (personal communication, June
  11342. 1982) suggests that this should be a promising species, but not so exciting as the Asian
  11343. H odgsonia of the cucurbit family. USDA germplasm teams to China should negotiate for
  11344. some of this subtropical species.
  11345. Energy — From the descriptions, the oyster nut would appear to have aerial biomass
  11346. attributes similar to or higher than our American weed, kudzu, often over 10 MT DM/ha.
  11347. One vine reached 12 m tall and 5 cm in diameter in 15 months.
  11348. Biotic factors — The major fungi attacking oyster nut are A rm illaria m ellea, C olleto­
  11349. trichum sp., D id y m ella ly copers i d , and O idiopsis taurica. Virgin forests should be thor­
  11350. oughly burned before planting to prevent disease. The main nematode, H eterodera m arioni,
  11351. is controlled by the natives using a lime dressing, as the seeding stage is most often attacked.
  11352. In Kenya, the major pests are ground squirrels and porcupines, which dig up recently planted
  11353. seed, and bucks and grasshoppers, which eat the sprouting seed. Mealy bugs, taken from
  11354. coffee trees and put on oyster nut vines, died.^^^
  11355. 281
  11356. TERMINALIA CATAPPA L. (COMBRETACEAE) — Indian Almond, Myrobalan, Badam,
  11357. Almendro, Bengal almond, Kotamba, Tropical Almond
  11358. Uses — Indian almond is widely planted in the tropics and subtropics for ornamental,
  11359. shade, timber purposes, and for the edible nuts. It is cultivated mainly for the edible kernels,
  11360. used as substitute for almonds (e.g., in Chinese “ chicken and almonds” in Trinidad). Kernels
  11361. contain 50 to 55% colorless oil of excellent flavor, like almond oil in flavor, odor, and
  11362. specific gravity, highly esteemed in the Orient. Seeds may be eaten raw. Leaves are the
  11363. food of Tasar Silkworms, and are used as wrapping paper for small shop articles. Roots,
  11364. bark, and fruits are used in tanning. Fruits are a source of a black dye used in some parts
  11365. of eastern India to color teeth black. Wood chips in water give a yellow dye. Trees contain
  11366. a gum, which is the source of a black dye, a source of ink, and a cosmetic. Oil is used as
  11367. a substitute for groundnut- (Arachis), cottonseed- (Gossypium), and silk-cottonseed- (Bom-
  11368. bax) oils. Flowers yield a nectar.
  11369. Folk medicine — Reported to be anodyne, astringent, cardiotonic, collyrium, diuretic,
  11370. emetic, lactagogue, pectoral, purgative, sedative, stimulant, sudorific, tonic, and vermifuge,
  11371. Indian almond is a folk remedy for arthritis, bugbites, colic, condylomata, cough, diarrhea,
  11372. dysentery, ear ailments, eruptions, fever, gastritis, glossitis, headache, hemoptysis, insom­
  11373. nia, leprosy, lumbago, neuroses, pyorrhea, rheumatism, scabies, skin ailments, sore throat.
  11374. 282 Handbook of Nuts
  11375. stomach-ache, stomatitis, swellings, thrush, ulcers, wounds, and yaws.^*’^"^^ Ayurvedics
  11376. consider the fruits antibilious, antibronchitic, aphrodisiac, and astringent. In southern India,
  11377. the juice of the young leaves is put in an ointment for leprosy, scabies, and other skin
  11378. diseases; also used for colic and headache. Indochinese use the leaves with Dacrydium chips
  11379. and nutgrass rhizomes for dysentery; the fruit, with beeswax, for foul ulcers and hemato-
  11380. chezia. Indonesians apply the leaves to swollen rheumatic joints, using the kernel for a
  11381. laxative and lactagogue. Philippines use the leaf juice, cooked with the kernel oil, for leprosy;
  11382. and rubbed onto the breast for pain and numbness; or applied to rheumatic joints. Red leaves
  11383. are believed vermifuge. In the Solomon Islands, leaves, bark, and fruit are used for yaws.^"^^
  11384. Nigerians apply the leaves, macerated in palm oil, for tonsilitis. Cubans take the leaf or
  11385. fruit decoction for hemoptysis, adding crushed leaves to the bath for skin rash. Haitians take
  11386. the bark decoction for bilious fevers. Costa Ricans used the bark decoction for crushed
  11387. nipples and uterorrhagia. Brazilians take the bark decoction for asthma, diarrhea, dysentery,
  11388. and fever. Colombians take the seed emulsion as pectoral.The root bark is given for
  11389. diarrhea and dysentery in French Guiana, the stem bark for bilious fevers. Mexicans make
  11390. a powder from the stems for condylomata.*^^
  11391. Chemistry — Per 100 g, the seeds are reported to contain 574 to 607 calories, 2.7 to
  11392. 6.0 g H2O, 19.1 to 25.4 g protein, 52 to 56 g fat, 14.9 to 17.2 g total carbohydrate, 1.8
  11393. to 14.6 g fiber, 2.4 to 4.0 g ash, 32 to 497 mg Ca, 789 to 957 mg P, 2.4 to 9.2 mg Fe,
  11394. 70 mg Na, 784 mg K, 0.32 to 0.71 mg thiamine, 0.08 to 0.28 mg riboflavin, 0.6 to 0.7
  11395. mg niacin, and 0 mg ascorbic acid. According to Leung, Butrum, and C h a n g , 94% of
  11396. the as-purchased nut is refuse, the husk only containing 35 calories, 0.4% moisture, 1.2 g
  11397. protein, 3.2 g fat, 1.0 g total carbohydrate, 0.1 g fiber, 0.2 g ash, 2 mg Ca, 47 mg P, 0.6
  11398. mg Fe, 4 mg Na, 47 mg K, 0.02 mg thiamine, traces of riboflavin, and niacin, and no
  11399. ascorbic acid. Amino acid values are given as 14.7 arginine, — cystine, 1.7 histidine, 3.4
  11400. isoleucine, 7.4 leucine, 2.3 lysine, 7.2 aspartic acid, 24.3 glutamic acid, 4.0 alanine, 6.3
  11401. glycine, 4.2 proline, 4.1 serine, 0.9 methionine, 4.2 phenylalanine, 2.9 threonine, —
  11402. tryptophane, 3.2 tyrosine, and 4.8 valine.Unfortunately, the refuse figures do not add
  11403. up to 100. Air-dried kernels contain 3.51% moisture, 52.02% fat, 25.4% protein, 14.6%
  11404. fiber, 5.98% sugars (as glucose). The seed oil contains 1.62% myristic-, 55.49% palmitic,
  11405. 6.34% stearic-, 23.26% oleic-, and 7.55% linoleic-acids. The oil-cake (7.88% N) contains
  11406. 8% albumin, 15% globulin, negligible prolamine, and 7.5% gluten. The shell contains
  11407. ca. 25% pentosans, and hence, is a good source for making furfural. The leaves and fruits
  11408. contain corilagin, gallic acid, ellagic acid, and brevifolin carboxylic acid, whereas the bark
  11409. and wood contain ellagic acid, gallic acid, ( + )catechin, (-)epicatechin, and ( + )leuco-
  11410. cyanidin.^^
  11411. Description — Handsome, spreading, pagodiform, deciduous tree, medium- to large­
  11412. sized, 13 to 27 m tall, 1 to 1.5 m diameter, with horizontal whorls of branches about 1 to
  11413. 2 m apart; bark smooth, brownish-gray; leaves opposite, simple, leathery, green, turning
  11414. red before falling, shining, shedding leaves twice a year (February and September), 12 to
  11415. 30 cm long, 7.5 to 15 cm wide, obovate, tip rounded or somewhat acute, base narrowed,
  11416. slightly auriculate, petioles about 2.5 cm long; flowers small, greenish-white, arranged
  11417. crowded in short spikes 15 to 20 cm long, arising in axils of leaves, malodorous; stamens
  11418. 10 to 12, in staminal flowers towards the apex; fruits yellow-green or reddish, hard, an
  11419. angular drupe, size of a plum, slightly compressed on 2 sides, broadly oval in outline,
  11420. elliptical and 2-winged in transverse section, 3.5 to 7 cm long, with thin fleshy pericarp,
  11421. edible, but with a hard corky interior; seeds slender, pointed, oblong elliptical, 3 to 4 cm
  11422. long, 3 to 5 mm thick. Germination phanerocotylar, the cotyledons convolute. Flowers June
  11423. to August, fruits June to November, bearing two crops of fruit annually before dropping
  11424. leaves.
  11425. Germplasm — Reported from the Indochina-Indonesia Center of Diversity, Indian al­
  11426. 283
  11427. mond, or cvs thereof, is reported to tolerate full sunlight, high pH, laterite, lime, low pH,
  11428. mine-spoil, poor soil, salt spray, sand, shade, slope, waterlogging, and wind.^^*^^^’^^^
  11429. Distribution — Indigenous to Andaman Islands and islands of Malay Peninsula, now
  11430. widely cultivated in the tropics of the Old and New Worlds. Extensively planted in tropical
  11431. India and Sri Lanka, in West Africa from Senegal to Cameroons, Madagascar, Malaysia,
  11432. and East Indies. Now pantropical.^^^
  11433. Ecology — Ranging from Subtropical Dry to Moist through Tropical Very Dry to Wet
  11434. Forest Life Zones, Indian almond is reported to tolerate annual precipitation of 4.8 to 42.9
  11435. dm (mean of 92 cases = 17.7), annual temperature of 20.4 to 29.9 (mean of 66 cases =
  11436. 25.2), and pH of 4.5 to 8.78 (mean of 13 cases = 6.1).®^ Though it grows well in sand or
  11437. shingle, it also thrives in marl and permeable siliceous limestone. It volunteers only in loose
  11438. sand, muck, or marl.^^^ Tolerant of sand and salt, it has been used to stabilize beaches.
  11439. Indian almond thrives in coastal forests in most tropical areas, from sea level to 1,000 m
  11440. altitude, preferring coastal soils or light loamy soils. It has been recommended for tropical
  11441. land soils. According to
  11442. M orton,it grows equally well in medium shade or full sun, and
  11443. is highly wind resistant.
  11444. Cultivation — Propagated exclusively from seeds, which remain viable for at least one
  11445. year. In India, whole fruits, exhibiting 25% germination, are planted. Seeds germinate in
  11446. 2 to 4 weeks. The tree is extensively planted for the red foliage, as few other trees in the
  11447. tropics develop colored foliage. The tree competes well with weeds.
  11448. Harvesting — Rotations of 10 to 15 years are average. Fruits are harvested as they ripen.
  11449. They have a very hard shell, which is easier to crack after the nuts are dry, often cracked
  11450. between stones. In India, there are two crops a year, spring (April to May) and fall (October
  11451. to November). There is more-or less constant fruiting in the Caribbean. Perhaps the crop
  11452. would be desirable to harvest if mechanical means of cracking and cleaning the nuts were
  11453. devised. Kernels yield nearly 55% oil by extraction and 35% by expression.
  11454. Yields and economics — Trees may attain 6 m height in 3 years. A lO-year-old plantation
  11455. is expected to yield 2.25 to 3.6 MT/ha/year.^^^ Grown as a shade tree for cardamon, Indian
  11456. almond contributed annually 9,300 kg/ha leaf m ulch.In Jamaica, nuts run $0.02 to $0.10
  11457. each, normally selling for $0.05 each in 1976.^^^
  11458. Energy — The wood (sp. gr. 0.59) is often employed as fuel. Erroneously equating
  11459. Term inalia catappa a synonym of B ucida bu ceras, Cannell^^ suggests that the annual litterfall
  11460. is only 1.7 MT/ha in the Guanica Forest of Puerto Rico, the current annual increment only
  11461. 2 MT for a forest with 2,160 trees >5 cm DBH, averaging 7.8 m, basal area of 10.7 m%a
  11462. and standing aerial biomass of 39.1 MT/ha, 36.9 in wood, bark, and branches, 1.7 in fruits
  11463. and foliage.
  11464. Biotic factors — Browne^^ lists the following fungi as affecting this species: C ercospora
  11465. catappae, D ip lo d ia catappae, F om es durissim us, F. fa stu o sa s, M yxorm ia term inaliae, P hel-
  11466. linus gilvas, P h yllosticta catappae, P olyrhizon term inaliae, S clerotiam rolfsii, and Spha-
  11467. celom a term inaliae. Also listed are D endrophthoe fa lca ta (Angiospermae); A m blyrhinus
  11468. p o rico llis. A po d era s tranquebaricus, A racceru s fa scic a la tu s, O ncideres cingulata (Coleóp­
  11469. tera); C occu s hesperidum , S aissetia coffeae, S. nigra (Hemiptera); A crocercops erioplaca,
  11470. A . ordin atella, A . supplex, A . term inaliae, A n th eraeapaph ia, D asych ira m endosa, E u proctis
  11471. scintillans, L ym antria am pia, M etanastria hyrtaca, P a ra sa lepida, S clepa celtis, T rabala
  11472. vishnoa, Trypanophora semihyalina (Lepidoptera); and Rhipiphorothrips cruentatus, R. karna
  11473. (Thysanoptera). In India, parakeets steal much of the crop. According to Reed^^® the flowers
  11474. yield a nectar for honey, which is difficult to collect by bees. In addition, he lists the fungi
  11475. C ercospora catappae, G nom ia sp., H arknessia term inaliae, P h om opsis term inaliae, P oly-
  11476. p o ru s calcutensis, and S clerotiam rolfsii. It is also attacked by the nematode, R otylenchas
  11477. reniformis.^^'^^^ For Puerto Rico, Stevenson^®® lists F usiococcum m icrosperm um , R hyti-
  11478. dhysterium rafalam , and T ram etes corragata.
  11479. 284 Handbook of Nuts
  11480. TRAP A NATANS L. and other species (TRAPACEAE) — Water-Chestnut, Jesuit Nut, Water
  11481. Caltrops
  11482. Uses — Water-chestnuts are used as a nut, fresh or roasted, made into a flour, served as
  11483. a cooked vegetable, or made into a confection, candied much as true chestnuts in Europe.
  11484. According to Rosengarten,^®^ they have been consumed in central Europe since neolithic
  11485. time. Fresh or boiled nuts are good in salads, having a floury texture and an agreeable nutty
  11486. flavor. Nuts are often made into rosaries. Roast seed are sometimes used as a coffee substitute.
  11487. Since water-chestnuts resemble water hyacinths, it has been suggested that they might be
  11488. used to supplant the water hyacinth, an economic approach to biological control.
  11489. Folk medicine — Reported to be alterative, astringent, refrigerant, and tonic, various
  11490. species of Trapa are used in folk remedies for anasarca, bronchitis, cancer, cough, diarrhea,
  11491. dropsy, fever, flux, rinderpest, and sunstroke.^’ In Japan, the fruits are used in folk remedies
  11492. for esophageal, gastric, gastrointestinal, lung, stomach, and uterine cancers. Ayurvedics
  11493. use fruits of T. bispinosa (figured) for biliousness, blood disorders, erysipelas, fractures,
  11494. fatigue, inflammations, leprosy, strangury, and urinary disorders. Yunani, who consider the
  11495. fruit aperitif, aphrodisiac, and febrifuge, use the fruit for bad teeth, biliousness, bronchitis,
  11496. fever, lumbago pain, sore throat, and thirst. Cambodians use the infusion of the rind of the
  11497. fruit for asthenia due to malaria or some other type of fever.
  11498. 285
  11499. Chemistry — Per 100 g, the fruit of T. bispinosa is reported to contain 348 calories,
  11500. 12.2 g protein, 1.2 g fat, 82.7 g total carbohydrate, 2.4 g fiber, 3.9 g ash, 160 mg Ca, 339
  11501. mg P, 3.6 mg Fe, 62.5 mg Na, 1345 mg K, 0.0 ¡ig beta-carotene equivalent, 0.39 mg
  11502. thiamine, 0.18 mg riboflavin, 5.95 mg niacin, and 20.8 mg ascorbic acid. The seed of 7.
  11503. bispinosa, per 100 g, is reported to contain 15.7 g protein, 1.0 g fat, 79.7 g total carbohydrate,
  11504. 2.0 g fiber, 3.7 g ash, 66.7 mg Ca, 500 mg P, 2.7 mg Fe, 163 mg Na, 2166 mg K, 0.17
  11505. mg thiamine, 0.23 mg riboflavin, 2.00 mg niacin, and 30.0 mg ascorbic acid. Per 100 g,
  11506. the fruit of 7. natans is reported to contain 11.9 g protein and 1.0 g f a t . The W ealth o f
  11507. India^^ reports that the kernels contain: moisture, 70.0; protein, 4.7; fat, 0.3; fiber, 0.6;
  11508. other carbohydrates, 23.3; and mineral matter, 1.1%; calcium 20; phosphorus, 150; and
  11509. iron, 0.8 mg/100 g. Other minerals reported are copper, 1.27; manganese, 5.7; magnesium,
  11510. 38; sodium, 49; and potassium, 650 mg/100 g. Iodine (50.6 |x/l(X) g) is also present. The
  11511. vitamin contents are thiamine, 0.05; riboflavin, 0.07; nicotinic acid, 0.6; and vitamin C, 9
  11512. mg/100 g; vitamin A, 20 IU/100 g. Kernels contain 15.8 mg/100 g oxalates (dry wt). Beta-
  11513. amylase and much phosphorylase have been reported in the kernels. The nutritive value of
  11514. flour, prepared from dried kernels, is as follows: moisture, 10.6; protein, 8.0; fat, 0.6; and
  11515. minerals, 2.6%, calcium, 69; phosphorus, 343; iron, 2.8; and thiamine, 0.44 mg/100 g.
  11516. The starch, isolated from the flour, consists of 15% amylose, 85% amylopectin.^® According
  11517. to Hager’s Handbook, the nut (7. natans) contains 37% water, 8 to 10% crude protein,
  11518. 0.7% fat, 1.3% crude fiber, 49% N-free extract (52% starch, 3.2% dextrose). The fruit husk
  11519. contains 10% tannin.
  11520. Description — Hardy aquatic annual or perennial herbs, rooted in the mud, with un­
  11521. branched stems 0.5 to 2 m long. Plants usually floating with submerged sessile leaves, the
  11522. lowest opposite, the others alternate, pinnatifid, often functioning as roots; floating leaves
  11523. in a large rosette, often beautifully variegated, rhombic to nearly orbicular, glabrous above,
  11524. pubescent at least along the veins beneath, about 7.5 cm in diameter, petioles to 17 cm
  11525. long, pubescent, often with a fusiform swelling. Flowers solitary, tetramerous, in axils of
  11526. floating leaves, borne centrally on short stalks above the surface of the water, small incon­
  11527. spicuous, 1 to 2 cm across, white; sepals narrowly triangular, keeled accrescent and indurated
  11528. in fruit, persistent and forming 2, 3, or 4 horns; petals white, about 8 mm long, caducous.
  11529. Nut solitary, indéhiscent, 2 to 3.5 cm long, 2 to 5.5 cm wide; roots abundant, much-
  11530. branched. Flowers June to July; fruits autumn.
  11531. Germplasm — Reported from the China-Japan Center of Diversity, water-chestnut, or
  11532. CVS thereof, is reported to tolerate weeds and waterlogging.®^ Although many species and
  11533. varieties have been described, I am inclined to accept the opinion of The W ealth o f India,
  11534. “ the more prevalent view seems to be that T rapa is a monotypic genus represented by 7.
  11535. natans Linn, a polymorphic species’’. Great variation is found in size of fruit and in number
  11536. and development of the horns. Some variations seem to be due to edaphic factors, as
  11537. abnormally high calcium or low potassium and nitrogen concentrations of the water in which
  11538. they grow.^^® The related 7. bicornis, the Chinese Ling, is locally important as a food crop.
  11539. 7. bispinosa is widely cultivated in India and Kashmir, as the “ Singhara Nut’’. (2n = 36,
  11540. 40, 48).®^*^'^*^®^
  11541. Distribution — Native to central and eastern Europe and Asia, water-chestnuts have been
  11542. used for food since Neolithic times. They were introduced in 19th century America. The
  11543. plants spread and became established in the eastern U.S., often choking waterways or
  11544. crowding out other plants.^^®
  11545. Ecology — Ranging from Cool Temperate Moist to Wet through Subtropical Moist Forest
  11546. Life Zones, water-chestnut is reported to tolerate annual precipitation of 4.3 to 13.2 dm
  11547. (mean of 5 cases = 8.1), annual temperature of 8.3 to 21.0°C (mean of 5 cases = 11.4°C),
  11548. and pH of 5.9 to 7.2 (mean of 3 cases = 6.7).®^ Hardy to Zone 5; average annual minimum
  11549. temperature of -23.3 to -20.6°C ( - 10 to -5^).^"^^ T rapa natans is more hardy than the
  11550. 286 Handbook of Nuts
  11551. Ling (r. bicornis). The former thrives in ponds and lakes, along slow streams and in stagnant
  11552. waters, growing best in nutrient-rich but not strongly calcareous waters. It is mainly temperate
  11553. in climatic requirements.
  11554. Cultivation — Water-chestnut is propagated by seed, which must be kept in water before
  11555. they are sown. They lose their power to germinate quickly if out of water. Seeds are sown
  11556. in mud. Plants grown in pools or tubs in eastern North America with 5 to 10 cm of loamy
  11557. soil and filled with water. Plants may also be simply laid on the surface of the water, and
  11558. they adapt themselves to the situation.
  11559. Harvesting — Harvesting the fruits (nuts or seeds) is by hand-picking, sometimes by
  11560. boat, depending on the size of the field or pond.^^^ In India, fruits are ready for harvest
  11561. about 3 weeks after flowering, i.e., from September to December (to February). At first
  11562. nuts are harvested once every 2 weeks, then every week, and then nearly every day from
  11563. November onward.
  11564. Yields and economics — Biomass yields of 10 MT/ha seem reasonable. Yields of singhara
  11565. nut run 4.8 to 6.2 MT/ha. The W ealth o f India reports yields of 1,760 to 4,440 (to 13,200)
  11566. kg nut per ha.^°
  11567. Energy — In Japan, the maximum biomass in a floating water-chestnut community was
  11568. 3 MT/ha at two seasonal peaks, dipping below 1 MT/ha between peaks. But the total dead
  11569. material may add up to nearly 8 MT/ha, indicating annual biomass potential (life expectancy
  11570. of the leaves averaged less than 1 month).
  11571. Biotic factors — The following fungi are known to attack water-chestnut: S eptoria tra-
  11572. paen atan tis and T richoderm a flavum.^'^^ A leafspot, caused by B ipolar is tetram era, seriously
  11573. affects India’s crop. Captan is reported to control the spread. The Singhara beetle, G alerucella
  11574. birm anica is an important widespread pest, controlled in India with 5% BHC.^® Dusting
  11575. tobacco or Pyrodust 40(X) at 44 kg/ha kills adults and grubs. Chironomid larvae, feeding on
  11576. petioles and pedicels, may induce malformation of the fruits. H altica cyanea, the blue beetle,
  11577. feeds and breeds on the leaves. B agous trapae damages soft submerged stems. The aphid
  11578. R hopalosiphum nym pheae occurs on upper leaves, sometimes in large numbers, and often
  11579. in company with the coccinellid beetles P ullus nobilus and P. piescen s. Larvae of N ym phula
  11580. gan geticalis excavate shelters in the swollen petioles. B agous vicinus and N anophyes rufipes
  11581. also bore into the petiole.^®’
  11582. 287
  11583. TRECULIA AFRICANA Decne. (MORACEAE) — African Breadfruit, African Boxwood,
  11584. Okwa, Muzinda, Ukwa
  11585. Uses — Seeds are removed from the pulp of African breadfruit by macerating with water,
  11586. and then eaten cooked, or ground into a meal or flour, or used in soups. Conversely, the
  11587. seeds can be roasted until the testa becomes brittle for easy removal, the cotyledons then
  11588. consumed. According to Makinde et al.,*^® the seeds are widely consumed only among the
  11589. Igbo of Nigeria. “ Almond Milk” is a beverage made from this meal. Seeds may be roasted
  11590. or boiled, peeled and eaten as a dessert nut, or fried in oil. Seeds, with a groundnut flavor,
  11591. also yield an edible oil. Seeds or oil are put in soaps. Seeds are also used to flavor alcoholic
  11592. beverages. Heartwood is golden-yellow or yellow-brown (though the very narrow sapwood
  11593. is yellow-white), very dense and heavy, faintly elastic and flexible, of fine even structure;
  11594. usable for furniture, wood carving, inlay work and turnery; timber usually marketed as
  11595. African Boxwood.
  11596. Folk medicine — Reported to be laxative, tonic, and vermifuge, African breadfruit is a
  11597. folk remedy for cough, fever, leprosy, neck ailments, tooth extraction, roundworms, and
  11598. swelling.Nigerians use the bark decoction for constipation and coughs. Medicinally, a
  11599. root decoction is used as febrifuge and vermifuge, or drunk as a tonic after illness. It is
  11600. used for roundworms in children. Bark is used for coughs and as a laxative, and for leprosy
  11601. Chemistry — Per 1(X) g, the seed (ZMB) is reported to contain 415 calories, 13.9 g
  11602. protein, 6.2 g fat, 77.5 g total carbohydrate, 1.8 g fiber, 2.4 g ash, 140 mg Ca, and 349
  11603. mg Seeds contain ca.4 to 7% total lipids, Makinde et al.^^® reporting 5% oil, 13% crude
  11604. protein. Of the protein extracted, glutelins constituted 53.3%, 23.8% albumins, and 33.8%
  11605. globulins. Makinde et al.^^® give the amino acid composition shown in Table 1. Table 2*^®
  11606. compares defatted ukwa protein with other foods. Remember that defatted seeds are not
  11607. directly comparable to the usual seed analysis (defatted ukwa seeds contain 19%, cf. 13%
  11608. 288 Handbook of Nuts
  11609. Table 1
  11610. AMINO ACID COMPOSITION OF T.
  11611. AFRICAN A (UKWA) PROTEIN*’»
  11612. m&16 g mg46 g
  11613. Amino acids of N Amino acids of N
  11614. Aspartic acid 105 Isoleucine 56
  11615. Threonine 52 Leucine 74
  11616. Serine 67 Tyrosine 56
  11617. Glutamic acid 137 Phenylalanine 76
  11618. Proline 47 Lysine 62
  11619. Glycine 72 Histidine 38
  11620. Alanine 40 Ammonia 18
  11621. Half-cystine 8 Arginine 79
  11622. Valine 61 Tryptophan 2
  11623. Methionine 9
  11624. Table 2
  11625. ESSENTIAL AMINO ACID CONTENT OF DEFATTED UKWA SEED PROTEIN
  11626. COMPARED TO SOME OTHER SEED PROTEINS, MAIZE, AND EGG*’»
  11627. mg of amino acid per 16 g of nitrogen
  11628. Defatted
  11629. Ukwa FACVWHO NAS^RC Harosoy Whole Kidney
  11630. Amino acids seed (1973) (1980) soybean Cowpeas maize beans
  11631. Egg
  11632. Histidine 38 17 26 29 23 24 26
  11633. Isoleucine 56 40 42 42 40 40 63 42
  11634. Leucine 74 70 70 80 76 196 88 81
  11635. Lysine 62 55 51 65 68 25 67 67
  11636. Total SAA 17 35 26 10 10 19 60 9
  11637. Total arom. A A 132 60 73 49 53 44 99 53
  11638. Threonine 52 40 35 37 37 47 51
  11639. 42
  11640. Valine 61 50 48 46 48 54 68
  11641. 51
  11642. Tryptophan 2 10 11 18 14 6 34
  11643. 15
  11644. CP for whole seed). The seed fat contains 24.1% palmitic-, 11.7% stearic-, 46% oleic-,
  11645. and 18% linoleic-acids. Edet et al.^’^ report the seeds to contain 7.8% moisture in terms of
  11646. wet weight; and in terms of dry weight, 13.4% protein, 18.9% fat, 1.4% fiber, 2.1% ash,
  11647. 58.1% carbohydrate, 3.0% oxalate, and per 100 g, 7 mg Na, 184 mg Mg, 18 mg Ca, 585
  11648. mg K, 382 mg P, 3.9 mg Cu, 1.6 mg Fe, 0.20 mg Cr, 7.5 mg Zn, 6.0 mg beta-carotene,
  11649. 0.5 mg thiamin, 0.3 mg riboflavin, 45 mg ascorbic acid.
  11650. Toxicity — Sap of the male tree is caustic and toxic, and if applied on cotton to a carious
  11651. tooth, will cause it to fall out. No evidence supports the idea that leaves falling into water-
  11652. holes are poisonous to horses.
  11653. Description — Unbuttressed medium-to-large tree, up to 27 m tall and 3 m in girth, bole
  11654. cylindrical or squarish, fluted at base up to 7 m, bark pale-gray, smooth, latex white;
  11655. branchlets purple-gray, pithy. Leaves alternate, simple, glabrous, glossy above, elliptic to
  11656. ovate-elliptic, 20 to 25 cm long, 7.5 to 12 cm wide, sometimes larger, apex shortly pointed,
  11657. base unequally rounded, petiole very short. Flowers dioecious, male and female flowers in
  11658. separate inflorescences; male flower-heads globular, 5 cm in diameter, brownish-yellow,
  11659. very shortly pedunculate, stamens 3. Fruits spherical, up to 45 cm in diameter, and 16 kg
  11660. in weight, subsessile on the trunk and main limbs, covered with coarse, spine-like tubercles,
  11661. becoming yellow-brown and soft when ripe. Seeds very numerous, over 1,500 per fruit.
  11662. 289
  11663. smooth, ellipsoid, buried in spongy pulp, ca.1.25 cm long. Flowers January to February
  11664. fruits February to March (Africa).
  11665. Germplasm — Reported from the African Center of Diversity, African breadfruit, or cvs
  11666. thereof, is reported to tolerate drought, low pH, and waterlogging.^^
  11667. Distribution — Native of West Africa (Guinea, Ivory Coast, Gold Coast, Nigeria, Ca-
  11668. meroons. Sierra Leone, Ghana), from Senegal to Angola, Uganda and Nile Land.^^®
  11669. Ecology — Ranging from Subtropical Moist through Tropical Dry to Moist Forest Life
  11670. Zones, African breadfruit is reported to tolerate annual precipitation of 13.6 to 24.1 dm
  11671. (mean of 3 cases = 18.3), annual temperature of 23.5 to 26.6°C (mean of 3 cases =
  11672. 25.4°C), and pH of 5.0 to 5.3 (mean of 2 cases = 5.2).®^ Evergreen and deciduous forests.
  11673. Tree of tropical forests in comparatively dry zones and in villages where planted. Soil under
  11674. the tree is moist throughout the dry season from condensation. It is usually found near
  11675. streams or in swampy forests.
  11676. Cultivation — Frequently planted in villages and about homesteads.
  11677. Harvesting — No data available.
  11678. Yields and economics — Uses for the fruit and lumber are mainly local but widespread
  11679. in Tropical Africa.
  11680. Energy — The wood is used for firewood.
  11681. Biotic factors — Fruits are eaten by antelopes and large forest snails.
  11682. 290 Handbook of Nuts
  11683. VIROLA SEBIFERA Aubl. (MYRISTICACEAE) — Virola Nut, Red Ucuuba
  11684. Uses — The seeds are the source of Virola fat, a nutmeg-scented fat which soon becomes
  11685. rancid. It is used for making aromatic candles and soaps. Seeds are pierced onto sharp sticks
  11686. as candle-nuts. The light, soft, pale-brown wood is easy to work but sap stains badly. It is
  11687. considered suitable for boxes, crates, concrete forms, plywood, and cheap interior construc­
  11688. tion. Duke^® notes that some of the economic uses (including narcotic uses) ascribed to this
  11689. species may be due to confusion with other species in the taxonomically perplexing genus.
  11690. The jungle names ucachuba, ucahuba, ucauba, uchuhuba, ucuiba, and ucuuba are some of
  11691. many possible orthographic variants.
  11692. Fold medicine — The liniments made from V. sebifera are used in folk remedies for
  11693. tumors. Reported to be a fumitory, the virola is a folk remedy for fever.^* Brazilians use
  11694. the fat as a poultice and for rheumatism. The kino-like resin is used for aphtha, angina,
  11695. caries, and erysipelas. Homeopathically, it is used for abscesses, furuncles, lymphadenitis,
  11696. and pyodermy. As a tea, the leaves are used for colic and dyspepsia.
  11697. Chemistry — Fatty acids of the nuts contain 5 to 13.3% lauric acid, 66.6 to 73% myristic
  11698. acid, 8.9 to 11% palmitic acid, 6.6 to 11% oleic acid, and up to 3.0% linoleic acid.^^^
  11699. Hager’s Handbook*®^ lists N,N-dimethyltryptamine and beta-sitosterol for the husk. Lopes,
  11700. Yoshida, and Gottlieb‘S report lignans from this species, (2R, 3S)-3-(3,4-dimethyoxyben-
  11701. zyl)-2-(3, 4-methylenedioxybenzyl)-butyrolactone was isolated from the seeds and (2R, 3R)-
  11702. 3-(3,4-dimethyoxybenzyl)-2-(3, 4-methylenedioxybenzyl)-butyrolactone, (2R, 3R)-2,3-di-
  11703. (3,4-dimethoxybenzyl)-butyrolactone, and (2R, 3R)-2,3-di-(3,4-methylenedioxybenzyl)-bu-
  11704. tyrolactone were isolated from the pericarp.
  11705. Description — Dioecious, often buttressed trees to 40 m, the younger branchlets per­
  11706. sistently tomentose or glabrescent. Leaf blades glabrous above, with persistent, ochraceous
  11707. stalked-stellate hairs below, coriaceous, oblong to elliptic-ovate or obovate, acute to acu­
  11708. minate, cordate, truncate or acute, 10 to 47 cm long, 4 to 15 cm broad; secondary veins 10
  11709. to 28 per side, averaging less than 1/cm along the midrib, the tertiary veins rather prominent
  11710. 291
  11711. below; petioles canaliculate, 8 to 25 mm long, 2 to 5 mm broad. Staminate flowers in much-
  11712. branched panicles; pedicels 0 to 3 mm long; bracts inconspicuous or absent; perianth tardily
  11713. 3- (to 5-) lobed, 1.3 to 3.0 mm long; anthers 3 (to 5), 0.7 to 1.5 mm long, usually connate
  11714. to the apex, the infra-antheral portion of the androecium 0.2 to 1.0 mm long. Pistillate
  11715. flowers solitary or clustered in racemes 3 to 7 cm long, 2 to 7 cm broad; pedicels 1 to 4
  11716. mm long; tepals partially connate, with subpinnate ochraceous pubescence; ovary 1-carpel-
  11717. late, with a sessile, obscurely 2-lobed stigma. Fruits 10 to 30 per inflorescence, the velutinous
  11718. ligneous pericarp ultimately dehiscing longitudinally into 2 valves, subglobose, the aril
  11719. laciniate.^® Germination cryptocotylar but epigeal, the eophylls supracotyledonary.^^
  11720. Germplasm — Reported from the South and Central American Centers of Diversity,
  11721. virola nut, or cvs thereof, is reported to tolerate waterlogging, but not to the extent that
  11722. Virola surinamensis tolerates flooding.
  11723. Distribution — Nicaragua to Bolivia, Brazil, and Peru.^^
  11724. Ecology — Ranging from Subtropical (Premontane) Wet to Rain through Tropical Moist
  11725. to Rain Forest Life Zones, virola nut is estimated to tolerate annual precipitation of 20 to
  11726. 45 dm, annual temperature of 23 to 27°C, and pH of 6.0 to 8.0.
  11727. Cultivation — Rarely, if ever, cultivated. The cryptocotylar seedlings may be moved
  11728. from beneath the parent tree.
  11729. Harvesting — In Panama, Croat^^ speculates that species flowers twice a year, though
  11730. mature fruits are seen nearly all year. The length of fruit maturation period is unknown.
  11731. Gordon**^ describes an unusual collecting method in Brazil. The small subspheroid seeds
  11732. fall to the forest floor in alluvial forest. When the floods come, the seeds float and go
  11733. downstream, with the flood, to be scooped up with hand-nets by women and children.
  11734. Yields and economics — In 1942, Gordon,referring to both V. sebifera and V.
  11735. surinamensis, notes that 4,0(X) to 5,0(X) tons are harvested per year in Brazil. According to
  11736. Markley,^^ in Brazil, “ Production of oil has varied between 650 and 1,600 MT/year, and,
  11737. like other soap oils derived from wild plants, production remains static or is declining,
  11738. maximum production having occurred in 1941.“
  11739. Energy — Virola candle-nuts are a poor man’s source of energy in many tropical de­
  11740. veloping countries. The trees offer both fire-wood, leaf litter at the rate of ca. 5 MT/ha,
  11741. and candle-nuts for energy purposes.
  11742. Biotic factors — The wood is subject to pinhole borer injury, if cut logs are allowed to
  11743. lie after cutting in the forest.^ Merulius lacrymans is reported on V. merendonis.^^^
  11744. 292
  11745. Handbook of Nuts
  11746. VIROLA SURINAMENSIS (Rol.) Warb. (MYRISTICACEAE) — Ucahuba Nut, White Ucu-
  11747. uba
  11748. Uses — Seeds are the source of Ucahuba or Ucuiba Butter, a solid resembling Cacao
  11749. butter. The seeds are threaded onto wooden spikes and used as candle-nuts by various
  11750. Amerindian groups. The wood, moderately hard, is easily worked.
  11751. Folk medicine — Ucahuba is a folk remedy for rheumatism.
  11752. Chemistry — The fatty acids of the nut are 0.7% decanoic, 13.0% lauric, 69.7% myristic,
  11753. 3.0% palmitic, 7.7% oleic, and 5.1% linoleic. Of the saturated fatty acids, 17.6% are C12
  11754. or below, 72.9% are C14, and 4.4% are Cj^, for a total of 94.9%. Of the glycerides, 85%
  11755. are trisaturated, 15% are disaturated, and none are monosaturated. Another breakdown shows
  11756. 0.7% capric-, 16.9% lauric-, 72.9% myristic, 4.4% palmitic, and 5.1% linoleic-acids.*^*
  11757. Description — Dioecious tree, to 30 m or more tall and ca. 60 cm dbh, often moderately
  11758. buttressed; outer bark coarse, hard, shallowly fissured, reddish-brown; inner bark tan, reddish
  11759. on its outer surface; branches often spiraled or clustered, extending nearly horizontally; parts
  11760. when young bearing ferruginous, sessile, stellate, pubescence, glabrate in age; sap red,
  11761. lacking distinctive odor. Petioles canaliculate, 5 to 10 mm long; leaf blades oblong, acu­
  11762. minate, rounded to acute at base, 9 to 16 cm long, 1.5 to 4.5 cm wide, coriaceous; major
  11763. lateral veins in 20 to 30 pairs. All parts of inflorescences densely short-pubescent, the
  11764. trichomes mostly stellate; pedicels ca. 1.5 mm long; perianth ca. 2 mm long, 3- or 4-lobed
  11765. usually to middle or beyond, the lobes thick, acute to rounded at apex, spreading at anthesis;
  11766. staminate flowers in fascicles on panicles to 4 cm long; anthers mostly (2)3(6), connate to
  11767. apex. Pistillate flowers in clusters of 3 to many, in racemes to 5 cm long; ovary 1-carpellate,
  11768. ± ovate; stigma sessile, 2-cleft. Capsules ovoid-ellipsoid, thick-walled, light-orange, 3 to
  11769. 3.5 cm long, bearing dense, short, stellate pubescence; valves 2, woody, ca. 5 mm thick,
  11770. splitting widely at maturity. Seed 1, ellipsoid, ca. 2 cm long, the aril deeply laciniate, red
  11771. at maturity (white until just before maturity), fleshy, tasty but becoming bitter after being
  11772. chewed.^^
  11773. Germplasm — Reported from the South and Central American Centers of Diversity,
  11774. ucahuba nut, or cvs thereof, is reported to tolerate waterlogging. Natives of the Hyalea
  11775. distinguish V. surinamensis as “ ucuuba branca” from V. sebifera as “ ucuuba vermelha” .^^^
  11776. But in the market, both are sold as ucuhuba fat.
  11777. Distribution — Costa Rica and Panama to the Guianas and Brazil and the lesser Antilles.
  11778. Duke^* did not include V. surinamensis in the Flora of Panama. In the Brazilian Hyalea,
  11779. the trees grow along river banks.
  11780. Ecology — Ranging from Subtropical (Premontane) Moist to Wet through Tropical Moist
  11781. to Wet Forest Life Zones, ucahuba nut is estimated to tolerate annual precipitation of 20 to
  11782. 40 dm, annual temperature of 23 to 27°C, and pH of 6.0 to 8.0.®^
  11783. Cultivation — Not usually cultivated.
  11784. Harvesting — In Panama, flowers from June to March (peaking November to February),
  11785. maturing fruits from February to August.^^ In the Hyalea of Brazil, the fruits, falling into
  11786. the water (February to July), float and are gathered with nets made out of bark.^^^
  11787. Yields and economics — According to information in Mors and Rizzini,^^^ a single tree
  11788. yields ca. 25 kg ucuuba fat per year. According to Markley,^°® in Brazil, “ Production of
  11789. oil has varied between 650 and 1,600 m tons a year, and, like other soap oils derived from
  11790. wild plants, production remains static or is declining, maximum production having occurred
  11791. in 1941.“
  11792. Energy — Candlenuts are a poor man’s source of energy in many tropical developing
  11793. countries. The trees offer fire-wood, leaf litter at the rate of ca. 5 MT/ha, and candle-nuts
  11794. for energy purposes.
  11795. Biotic factors — No data available.
  11796. 293
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  12470. Multipurpose Indian Vegetable, Econ. Bot., 34(3), 276, 1980.
  12471. 385. Mahajan, S. and Sharma, Y. K., Production of Rayon Grade Pulp from Moringa oleifera, Indian Forester,
  12472. 386. Grabow, W. O. K., Slabbert, J.L., Morgan, W. S. G., and Jahn, S. A. A., Toxicity and Mutagenicity
  12473. Evaluation of Water Coagulated with Moringa oleifera Seed Preparations Using Fish, Protozoan, Bacterial,
  12474. Coliphage, Enzyme, and Ames Salmonella Assays, Water S.A., 11(2), 9, 1985.
  12475. 387. Price, M., The Benzolive Tree, ECHO, 1 1 ,7 , 1986.
  12476. 388. Iyer, R. I., Nagar, P. K., and Sircar, P. K., Auxins in Moringa pterygosperma Gaertn. Fruits, Indian
  12477. J. Exp. Biol., 19(5), 487, 1981.
  12478. 389. Girija, V., Sharada, D., and Pushpamma, P., Bioavailability of Thiamine, Riboflavin, and Niacin from
  12479. Commonly Consumed Green Leafy Vegetables in the Rural Areas of Andhra Pradesh in India, Int. J. Vitam.
  12480. Nutr. Res., 52(1), 9, 1982.
  12481. 390. Dahot, M. U. and Memon, A. R., Nutritive Significance of Oil Extracted from Moringa oleifera Seeds,
  12482. J. Pharm. Univ. Karachi 3(2), 75, 1985.
  12483. 391. Bhattacharya, S. B., Das, A. K., and Banerji, N., Chemical Investigations on the Gum Exudate from
  12484. Sanja Mormga oleifera, Carbohydr. Res., 102(0), 253, 1982.
  12485. 304 Handbook of Nuts
  12486. 392. Kareem, A. A., Sadakathulla, S., and Subramaniam, T. R., Note on the Severe Damage of Moringa
  12487. Fruits by the Fly Gitona sp., South Indian Hort., 22(1/2), 71, 1974.
  12488. 393. UHasa, B. A. and Rawal, R. D., Papaver rhoeas and Moringa oleifera, Two New Hosts of Papaya
  12489. Powdery Mildew, Curr. Sci., India, 53(14), 754, 1984.
  12490. 394. Milne-Redhead, E. and Polhill, R. M., Eds., Flora of Tropical East Africa, Crown Agents for Overseas
  12491. Governments and Administrations, London (Cucurbitaceae, by C. Jeffrey, 1967), 1968, 156.
  12492. 395. Edet, E. E., Eka, O. U ., and Ifon, E. T ., Chemical Evaluation of the Nutritive Value of Seeds of African
  12493. Breadfruit Treculia africana. Food Chem., 17(1), 41, 1985.
  12494. 396. Blackmon, W. J. and Reynolds, B. D., The Crop Potential of Apios americana — Preliminary Evaluations,
  12495. HortSci., 21(6), in press.
  12496. 397. Kovoor, A., The Palmyrah Palm; Potential and Perspectives, FAO Plant Production and Protection Paper
  12497. 52, 77, 1983.
  12498. 398. Hemsiey, J. H., Sapotaceae, in Flora of Tropical East Africa, Milne-Redhead, E. and Polhill, R. M .,
  12499. Eds., 1968, 78.
  12500. 399. Eggeling, W . J., The Indigenous Trees of the Uganda Protectorate, rev. by I. R. Dale, The Government
  12501. Printer, Entebbe, 1951, 491.
  12502. 400. Duke, J. A., Handbook of Northeastern Indian Medicinal Plants, Quarterman Publications, Lincoln, Mass.,
  12503. 1986, 212.
  12504. 401. Frey, D., The Hog Peanut, TIPSY, 86, 74, 1986.
  12505. 402. Marshall, H.H., (Research Station, Morden Manitoba, Canada), correspondence with Noel Vietmeyer,
  12506. 1977.
  12507. 403. Duke, J. A., The Case of the Annual “ Perennial” , Org. Card., submitted.
  12508. 404. Polhill, R. M. and Raven, P. H., Eds., Advances in Legume Systematics, in 2 parts, Vol. 2 of the
  12509. Proceedings of the International Legume Conference, Kew, July 24-29, 1978, 1981.
  12510. 405. Gallaher, R. N. and Buhr, K. L., Plant Nutrient and Forage Quality Analysis of a Wild Legume Collected
  12511. from the Highland Rim Area of Middle Tennessee, Crop Sci., 24(6), 1200, 1984.
  12512. 406. Turner, B. L. and Fearing, O. S., A Taxonomic Study of the Genus Amphicarpaea (Leguminosae),
  12513. Southwest. Nat., 9(4), 207, 1964.
  12514. 407. Dore, W. G., (Ottawa, Ontario, Canada), typescript and correspondence with Noel Vietmeyer, 1978.
  12515. 408. Foote, B. A., Biology of Rivella pallida Diptera Platystomatidae — a Consumer of the Nitrogen-fixing
  12516. Root Nodules of Amphicarpa bracteata Leguminosae, J. Kans. Entomol. Soc., 58(1), 27, 1985.
  12517. 409. Schnee, B. K. and Waller, D. M., Reproductive Behavior of Amphicarpaea bracteata (Leguminosae), an
  12518. Amphicarpic Annual, Am. J. Bot., 73(3), 376, 1986.
  12519. 410. Serrano, R. G., Current Developments on the Propagation and Utilization of Philippine Rattan, NSTA
  12520. Technol. J., 9, 76, 1984.
  12521. 411. Lapis, A. B., Some Identifying Characters of 12 Rattan Species in the Philippines, Canopy Int., April, 3,
  12522. 1983.
  12523. 412. Anon., Big Break for Rattan, Canopy Int., September, 2, 1979.
  12524. 413. Borja, B., MNR-FORI Rattan Research, Canopy Int., 5(9), 1, 1979.
  12525. 414. Conelly, W. T., Copal and Rattan Collecting in the Philippines, Econ. Bot., 3(1), 39, 1985.
  12526. 415. Wong, K. M. and Manokaran, N ., Eds., Proceedings of the Rattan Seminar, Oct. 2-4, 1984, Kuala
  12527. Lumpur, Malaysia, The Rattan Information Centre, Forest Research Institute, Kepong, Malaysia, 1985.
  12528. 416. Garcia, P. R. and Pasig, S. D., Domesticating Rattan Right at Your Backyard, Canopy Int., April, 10,
  12529. 1983.
  12530. 417. Monachino, J., Chinese Herbal Medicine — Recent Studies, Econ. Bot., 10, 42, 1956.
  12531. 418. Dallimore, W. and Jackson, A. B., A Handbook of Coniferae and Ginkgoaceae, 4th ed., rev. by S. G.
  12532. Harrison, Edward Arnold, Ltd., London, 1966, 728.
  12533. 419. Balz, J. P., Conditions for Cultivation of Ginkgo biloba, personal communication, 1981.
  12534. 420. Wilbur, R. L., The Leguminous Plants of North Carolina, The North Carolina Experiment Station, Agric.
  12535. Exp. Station, 1963, 294.
  12536. 421. D egener, O ., Flora Hawaiiensis or The New Illustrated Flora of the Hawaiian Islands, 1957-1963 (published
  12537. by the author).
  12538. 422. Weber, F. R., Reforestation in Arid Lands, VITA Manual Series Number 37E, 1977, 224.
  12539. 423. Descourtilz, M. E ., Flore Pittoresque et Medicate des Antilles, 8th ed., Paris, 1829.
  12540. 424. Sargent, C. S., The Silva of North America, Riverside Press, Cambridge, Mass., 1895.
  12541. 425. Bedell, H. G., Laboratory Manual — Botany 212 — Vascular Plant Taxonomy, 1st ed.. Ulus, by Peggy
  12542. Duke, Department of Botany, University of Maryland, College Park, 1984, 159.
  12543. 426. Little, E. L., Jr. and Wadsworth, F. H., Common Trees of Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands, Agriculture
  12544. Handbook No. 249, Forest Service, U .S. Department of Agriculture, Washington, D .C ., 1964, 548.
  12545. 427. Louis, J. and Leonard, J., Olacaceae, in Flore du Congo Beige et du Ruanda-Urundi, Robyns, W ., Ed.,
  12546. Inst. Nat. I’Etude Agron. Congo (INEAC), Brussels, 1948, 249.
  12547. Handbook of Nuts 305
  12548. 428. Reed, C. R., Selected Weeds of the United States, Agriculture Handbook No. 366, Forest Service, U.S.
  12549. Department of Agriculture, Washington, D .C ., 1970, 463.
  12550. 429. Agan, J. E., Guaraña, Bull. Pan Am. Union, September 268, 1920.
  12551. 430. Little, E. L., Jr., Important Forest Trees of the United States, Agriculture Handbook No. 519, Forest
  12552. Service, U.S. Department of Agriculture, Washington, D .C ., 1978.
  12553. 431. Bakker, K. and van Steenis, C. G. G. J., Pittosporaceae, in Flora Malesiana, Vol. 5, Rijksherbarium,
  12554. Leiden, 1955-1958, 345.
  12555. 432. Duke, J. A., Survival Manual II: South Viet Nam, Missouri Botanical Garden, St. Louis, 1963, 44.
  12556. 433. Maiden, J. H., The Forest Flora of New South Wales, 2 vols., William Applegate Gullick, Government
  12557. Printer, Sydney, 1904.
  12558. 434. Li, H. L. and Huang, T. C ., Eds., Flora of Taiwan, 6 vols.. Epoch Publishing, Taipei, 1979.
  12559. 435. Fernandes, R. and Fernandes, A., Anacardiaceae, in Flora Zambesiaca, Vol. 2(2), Exell, A. W .,
  12560. Fernandes, A ., and Wild, H., Eds., University Press, Glasgow, 1966, 550.
  12561. 436. Cribb, A. B. and Cribb, J. W., Useful Wild Plants in Australia, William Collins, Ltd., Sydney, 1981,
  12562. 269.
  12563. 437. Petrie, R. W., personal communication, August 6 , 1987.
  12564. 438. Saul, R., Ghidoni, J. J., Molyneux, R. J., and Elbein, A. D., Castanospermine inhibits alpha-glucosidase
  12565. activities and alters glycogen distribution in animals, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sei. U.S.A., 82, 93, 1985.
  12566. 439. Snader, K. M., National Cancer Institute, personal communication, July 22, 1987.
  12567. 440. Threatened Plants Newsletter, No. 17, November 1986.
  12568. 441. Walker, B. D., Kowalski, M., Gob, W. C., Kozarsky, K., Krieger, M., Rosen, C., Rohrschneider,
  12569. L. R., Haseltine, W. A., and Sodrowski, J., Proc. Natl. Acad. Sei. U.S.A., 84, 8121, 1987.
  12570. 442. Walker, B. D., Kozarsky, K., Gob, W. C., Rohrschneider, L. R., and Haseltine, W. A., Inti. Conf.
  12571. on AIDS, Washington, D .C ., June 15, 1987.
  12572. 443. Hutchinson, J. and Dalziel, J. M., Flora of West Tropical Africa, Vol. 1, part 2, 2nd ed., revised by
  12573. Keay, R. M. J., 1958, 392.
  12574. 307
  12575. FIGURE CREDITS
  12576. With a master’s degree in botany from the University of North Carolina (1956), comple­
  12577. mented by 30 years of experience as an illustrator, Peggy K. Duke is excellently qualified
  12578. to prepare the figures for this handbook. Peggy and I were pleased and amazed at how
  12579. generous authors and administrators have been with us, at granting permission to use their
  12580. published illustrations. Thanks to these fine people, as well as several U.S. Department of
  12581. Agriculture (USDA) public domain publications, and the curators of the collections at the
  12582. U.S. National Seed Collection, the National Agricultural Library, and the Smithsonian
  12583. Institution Botany Department, we have been able to piece together illustrations for the
  12584. majority of genera treated in this book. Our special thanks go to:
  12585. P. Kumar P. H. Raven
  12586. M. J. Balick
  12587. H. L. Li C. F. Reed
  12588. H. G. Bedell
  12589. E. L. Little
  12590. E. A. Bell J. L. Reveal
  12591. M. L. Brown P. M. Mazzeo A. Robyns
  12592. R. G. Brown S. A. Mori C. G. G. J. Van Steenis
  12593. O. Degener W. Mors R. L. Wilbur
  12594. E. Forrero G. W. Patterson J. J. Wurdack
  12595. H. Garcia-Barriga G. T. Prance
  12596. C. R. Gunn T. Plowman
  12597. Photographs from the USDA and New York Botanical Gardens collections were consulted
  12598. in concert with published photographs and illustrations, especially Menninger’s and Rosen-
  12599. garten’s, in the publications cited at the end of this book. Mrs. Duke confirmed and/or
  12600. altered details based on seed specimens of the U.S. National Seed Collection, courtesy C.
  12601. R. Gunn; and herbarium specimens at the University of Maryland, courtesy J. L. Reveal;
  12602. the Botany Department of the Smithsonian Institution, courtesy J. J. Wurdack; and the U.S.
  12603. National Arboretum, courtesy P. M. Mazzeo.
  12604. F IG U R E C R E D IT L IS T
  12605. Credit (with permission)
  12606. Scientífíc name
  12607. Acrocomia sclerocarpa Peggy Duke
  12608. Adhatoda vasica After Little***
  12609. After Ochse^^* (courtesy A. Asher & C o., Amsterdam)
  12610. Aleurites moluccana
  12611. Amphicarpaea bracteata After Wilbur^^«
  12612. After Ochse^^* (courtesy A. Asher & C o., Amsterdam)
  12613. Anacardium occidentale
  12614. Apios americana Peggy Duke
  12615. Areca catechu Peggy Duke
  12616. Arenga pianata Peggy Duke
  12617. After Degener*^*
  12618. Artocarpus altilis
  12619. Peggy Duke
  12620. Balanites aegyptiaca
  12621. Peggy Duke
  12622. Barringtonia procera
  12623. Peggy Duke
  12624. Bertholletia excelsa
  12625. After Weber^^^ (courtesy F. R. Weber and Volunteers in Technical As­
  12626. Borassus flabellifer
  12627. sistance (VITA), Rosslyn, Virginia)
  12628. Brosimum alicastrum After Descourtilz'*^^
  12629. Bruguiera gymnorrhiza After Little***
  12630. Buchanania lanzan After Kirtikar and Basu*®^
  12631. After Hemsley^’* (reproduced with permission of the Director, Royal Bo­
  12632. Butyrospermum paradoxum
  12633. tanic Garden, Kew)
  12634. Peggy Duke, after Lapis'***
  12635. Calamus ornatus
  12636. 308 Handbook of Nuts
  12637. FIGURE CREDIT LIST (continued)
  12638. Scientific name Credit (with permission)
  12639. Canarium indicum After Kirtikar and Basu‘^^
  12640. Carya illinoensis Peggy Duke, after Sargenf*^"^
  12641. Caryocar villosum After Prance and da Silva^^ (courtesy New York Botanical Garden)
  12642. Caryodendron orinocense After PIRB^^^ and Garcia-Barriga‘°^ (courtesy Universidad Nacional, Bo­
  12643. gota)
  12644. Castanea mollissima Peggy Duke in BedelP^^
  12645. Castanospermum australe Peggy Duke, after Masefield et al.,^^ courtesy Oxford University Press
  12646. Ceiba pentandra Ochse^^* (courtesy A. Asher & Co., Amsterdam)
  12647. Cocos nucifera After Little and Wadsworth'^^^ and Masefield et al.,^^ courtesy Oxford
  12648. University Press
  12649. Cola acuminata Peggy Duke
  12650. Cordeauxia eduli s Peggy Duke
  12651. Corylus americana Peggy Duke in BedelP^^
  12652. Coula edulis After Louis and Leonard'*^^ (redrawn from “ Flore du Congo Belgique et
  12653. du Ruanda-Urundi” , Bruxelles, LN.E.A.C.
  12654. Cycas rumphii After Ochse^^* (courtesy A. Asher & C o., Amsterdam)
  12655. After Reed"^^*
  12656. Cyperus esculentus
  12657. Detarium senegalensis After Weber^^^ (courtesy F. R. Weber and Volunteers in Technical As­
  12658. sistance (VITA), Rosslyn, Virginia)
  12659. Elaeis guineensis Peggy Duke, after Masefield et al.,^^ courtesy Oxford University Press
  12660. Eleocharis dulcis Peggy Duke
  12661. Fagus grandifolia Peggy Duke in BedelP^^
  12662. Ginkgo biloba Peggy Duke in BedelP^^
  12663. Gnetum gnemon After Ochse^^* (courtesy A. Asher & Co., Amsterdam)
  12664. Helianthus annuus Peggy Duke
  12665. Hyphaene thebaica After Webef*^^ (courtesy F. R. Weber and Volunteers in Technical As­
  12666. sistance (VITA), Rosslyn, Virginia)
  12667. Inocarpus edulis Peggy Duke
  12668. Jatropha curcas After Ochse^^® (courtesy A. Asher & Co., Amsterdam)
  12669. Jessenia bataua After PIRB^^^ (courtesy Universidad Nacional, Bogota)
  12670. Juglans nigra Peggy Duke in BedelP^^
  12671. Lecythis ollaria After Prance and Mori^^^ (courtesy New York Botanical Gardens
  12672. Licania rigida Peggy Duke
  12673. Macadamia spp. Peggy Duke, after Degener^^*
  12674. Madhuca longifolia Peggy Duke
  12675. After Little and Wadsworth'^^^
  12676. Moringa oleifera
  12677. Nelumbo nucifera Peggy Duke, after Reed'^^®
  12678. Nypa fruticans Peggy Duke
  12679. Orbignya martiana Peggy Duke
  12680. Pachira aquatica
  12681. After Garcia-Barriga*^^ (courtesy Universidad Nacional, Bogota)
  12682. Paullinia cupana
  12683. Peggy Duke
  12684. Phytelephas macrocarpa
  12685. Peggy Duke
  12686. Pinus edulis
  12687. After Little''^®
  12688. Pistacia vera Peggy Duke
  12689. Pittosporum resiniferum
  12690. After Bakker and van Steenis"^^* (courtesy Flora Malesiana)
  12691. Platonia esculenta Peggy Duke
  12692. Prunus dulcis After Kirtikar and Basu‘^^
  12693. Quercus súber Peggy Duke
  12694. Ricinodendron heudelotii After Eggerling,^^ and Flora of West Tropical Africa!^^ (reproduced with
  12695. permission of the Director, Royal Botanic Garden, Kew) (seed of R.
  12696. rautaneninii)
  12697. Santalum acuminatum Peggy Duke
  12698. Sapium se bife rum After Li and Huang'^^'^ (Flora of Taiwan, with permission)
  12699. Schleichera oleosa After Ochse^^* (courtesy A. Asher & Co., Amsterdam)
  12700. Sclerocarya caffra After Fernandes and Femandes'^^^ (reproduced with permission of the Di­
  12701. rector, Royal Botanic Garden, Kew)
  12702. 309
  12703. FIGURE CREDIT LIST (continued)
  12704. Credit (with permission)
  12705. Scientific name
  12706. Simmondsia chinensis Peggy Duke
  12707. After Jeffrey^^'^ (reproduced with permission of the Director, Royal Botanic
  12708. Telfairia pedata
  12709. Garden, Kew)
  12710. Peggy Duke
  12711. Terminalia calappa
  12712. After Kirtikar and Basu*^^
  12713. Trapa bispinosa
  12714. Peggy Duke
  12715. Treculia africana
  12716. Peggy Duke (after Duke^*)
  12717. Virola sebifera
  12718. 311
  12719. INDEX
  12720. Cyperus rotundus, 142
  12721. Fagus sylvatica, 160
  12722. Moringa oleifera, 216
  12723. Acacetin, 164
  12724. Acanthaceae, 5— 7, see also specific species Paullinia cupana, 232
  12725. Acetic acid, 97, 158, 222 Phytelephas macrocarpa, 235
  12726. Achotillo, see Caryocar amygdaliferum Sclerocarya caffra, 270
  12727. Acids, see spiecific types Alko, 276
  12728. Acid V, 253 Allantoic acid, 23
  12729. Acid XVIII, 253 Allantoin, 23, 60
  12730. Allegany chinkapin, see Castanea pumila
  12731. Acid XX, 253
  12732. Acrocomia aculeata, see Acrocomia sclerocarpa Almendro, see Terminalia calappa
  12733. Almond, see Prunus dulcis
  12734. Acrocomia sclerocarpa, 1— 2
  12735. Acrocomia totai, 3— 4 Bengal, see Terminalia calappa
  12736. Adenine, 232 cuddapah, see Buchanania lanzan
  12737. Adhatoda vasica, 5— 7 Indian, see Terminalia calappa
  12738. Adhatodine, 6 java-, see Canarium indicum
  12739. Adji, see Cycas rumphii tropical, see Terminalia calappa
  12740. Adotodai, see Adhatoda vasica Almondette, see Buchanania lanzan
  12741. African boxwood, see Treculia africana Almond wood, see Coula edulis
  12742. African breadfruit, see Treculia africana Aluminum, 44
  12743. Amandin, 250
  12744. African oil palm, see Elaeis guineensis
  12745. American beech, see Fagus grandifolia
  12746. African walnut, see Coula edulis
  12747. Akor, see Cycas rumphii American chestnut, see Castanea dentata
  12748. Alanine American filber, see Corylus americana
  12749. Artocarpus altilis, 35 American hazelnut, see Corylus americana
  12750. Bosimum alicastrum, 51 American oil palm, see Elaeis oleifera
  12751. Cordeauxia edulis, 114 Amino acids, see also specific types
  12752. Fagus sylvatica, 160 Apios americana, 23
  12753. Simmondsia chinensis, 273 Buchanania lanzan, 58
  12754. Cordeauxia edulis, 114
  12755. Terminalia calappa, 282
  12756. Jessenia bataua, 181
  12757. Albumens, 53, 175, see also specific types
  12758. Albuminoids, 140, 154, see also specific types Moringa oleifera, 215
  12759. Albumins, see also specific types Ricinodendron rautanenii, 258
  12760. Artocarpus altilis, 35 Sapium sebiferum, 263
  12761. Cordeauxia edulis, 114 Simmondsia chinensis, 273
  12762. Terminalia calappa, 282 Terminalia calappa, 282
  12763. Treculia africana, 287 Aminobutyric acid, 16— 18, 160
  12764. Alcohols, see also specific types Amylase, 285
  12765. Amylopectin, 285
  12766. Anacardium occidentale, 20
  12767. Apios americana, 23 Amylose, 285
  12768. Borassus flabellifer, 47 Amyrin, 60, 178
  12769. Corylus avellana, 119 Anacardiaceae, 14— 15, 19— 21, 57— 58, 269— 271,
  12770. Fagus grandifolia, 158 see also specific species
  12771. Ginkgo biloba, 164 Anacardic acid, 19— 21
  12772. Madhuca longifolia, 2 1 1 Andropogon dulce, see Eleocharis dulcis
  12773. Paullinia cupana, 232 Anethole, 65
  12774. Simmondsia chinensis, 273 Anhydrides, 97, see also specific types
  12775. Aleurites f ordii, 8 — 11 Animals, see also specific types
  12776. Aleurites moluccana, 12— 13 Acrocomia totai, 3
  12777. Aleurites montana, 14— 15 Adhatoda vasica, 1
  12778. Aleurites triloba, see Aleurites moluccana Butyrospermum paradoxum, 61
  12779. Alfonsia oleifera, see Elaeis oleifera Carya illinoensis, 72
  12780. Alkaloids, see also specific types Castanospermum australe, 93
  12781. Adhatoda vasica, 5 ,6 Corylus avellana, 121
  12782. Areca catechu, 26 Elaeis guineensis, 151
  12783. Cola acuminata, 108 Fagus sylvatica, 162
  12784. Cordeauxia edulis, 114 JTelianthus annuus, 171
  12785. 312 Handbook of Nuts
  12786. Lecythis minor, 199 Artocarpetin, 37
  12787. Lecythis pisonis, 203
  12788. Artocarpin, 35, 37
  12789. Nypa fruticans, 223
  12790. Artocarpus altilis, 34— 36
  12791. Pinus edulis, 237 Artocarpus communis, see Artocarpus altilis
  12792. Ricinodendron heudelotii, 257 Artocarpus heterophyllus, 37— 39
  12793. Ricinodendron rautanenii, 259 Artocarpus integra, see Artocarpus heterophyllus
  12794. Schleichera oleosa, 268 Artostenone, 37
  12795. Telfairia pedata, 280 Ascorbic acid
  12796. Treculia africana, 289 Aleurites moluccana, 13
  12797. Anisotinine, 6
  12798. Anacardium occidentale, 20
  12799. Anthocyanin, see also specific types Areca catechu, 27
  12800. Anthocyanins, 211
  12801. Artocarpus altilis, 35
  12802. Apigenin, 164
  12803. Artocarpus heterophyllus, 37
  12804. Apios americana, 22— 25 Balanites aegyptiaca, 41
  12805. Araban, 119
  12806. Bertho llé tia excelsa, 44
  12807. Arabinose, 20, 160, 215, 250 Borassus flabellifer, 47
  12808. Arachic acid, 267 Bosimum alicastrum, 50, 51
  12809. Arachidic acid Calamus rotang, 62
  12810. Carya illinoensis, 69 Cañarium ovatum, 67
  12811. Ceiba pentandra, 97 Carya illinoensis, 69
  12812. Cocos nucifera, 102
  12813. Castanea crenata, 80
  12814. Cyperus esculentus, 140 Castanea mollissima, 85
  12815. Elaeis oleiferi, 152
  12816. Cocos nucifera, 102
  12817. Helianthus annuus, 169 Cola acuminata, 107, 108
  12818. Jatropha curcas, 178 Corylus avellana, 119
  12819. Macadamia integrifolia, 207 Cyperus esculentus, 140
  12820. Platonia esculenta, 247 Cyperus rotundus, 142
  12821. Schleichera oleosa, 267 De tar ium senegalense, 145, 146
  12822. Arachidonic acid, 41 Elaeis guineensis, 148
  12823. Arachidylalcohol, 160 Eleocharis dulcis, 154
  12824. Arachinalcohol, 160 Ginkgo biloba, 164
  12825. Araginose, 211 Helianthus annuus, 169
  12826. Arbol de Nuez, see Caryodendron orinocense Inocarpus edulis, 175
  12827. Arceaceae, 1— 2, see also specific species Jug Ians regia, 194
  12828. Areaceae, 224, see also specific species Macadamia integrifolia, 207
  12829. Areca, see Areca catechu Madhuca Ion gifo lia, 2 1 1
  12830. Arecaaine, 26 Moringa oleifera, 215
  12831. Areca catechu, 26— 29 Nelumbo nucifera, 219
  12832. Arecaceae, 3—4, 26— 33, 4 7 ^ 9 , 62— 64, 100— Pachira aquatica, 229
  12833. 106, 147— 153, 173— 174, 180— 183, 222—
  12834. Pistacia vera, 240
  12835. 223, 225— 228, 234— 235, see also specific
  12836. Prunus dulcis, 250
  12837. species Sclerocarya caffra, 270
  12838. Areca-nut, see Areca catechu Terminalia catappa, 282
  12839. Arecolidine, 26 Trapa natans, 285
  12840. Arecoline, 26 Treculia africana, 288
  12841. Arenga pinnata, 30— 33 Ash
  12842. Arenga saccharifera, see Arenga pinnata Acrocomia totai, 3, 4
  12843. Arginine Aleurites moluccana, 13
  12844. Artocarpus altilis, 35 Anacardium occidentale, 20
  12845. Bosimum alicastrum, 51 Apios americana, 23
  12846. Butyrospermum paradoxum, 60 Areca catechu, 21
  12847. Cordeauxia edulis, 114 Arenga pinnata, 31
  12848. Fagus sylvatica, 160 Artocarpus altilis, 35
  12849. Moringa oleifera, 215 Artocarpus heterophyllus, 37
  12850. Prunus dulcis, 250 Balanites aegyptiaca, 41
  12851. Sapium sebiferum, 263 Bertholletia excelsa, 44
  12852. Sclerocarya caffra, 270 Borassus flabellifer, 47, 48
  12853. Simmondsia chinensis, 273 Bosimum alicastrum, 50, 51
  12854. Terminalia catappa, 282 Butyrospermum paradoxum, 59
  12855. Aristoclesia esculenta, see Platonia esculenta Calamus rotang, 62
  12856. Antacarpanone, 37 Cañar ium indicum, 65
  12857. 313
  12858. Cañarium ovatum, 67 Anacardium occidentale, 21
  12859. Carya illinoensis, 69 Areca catechu, 29
  12860. Castanea crenata, 80 Cocos nucífera, 105— 106
  12861. Castanea dentata, 82 Corylus avellana, 122
  12862. Castanea mollissima, 85 Corylus colurna, 125
  12863. Corylus maxima, 130
  12864. Castanea sativa, 90
  12865. Ceiba pentandra, 97 Fagus sylvatica, 162
  12866. Helianthus annuus, 172
  12867. Cocos nucífera, 101, 102
  12868. Cola acuminata, 107, 108 Juglans ailanthifoda, 185
  12869. Cordeauxia edulis, 114 Juglans hindsii, 189
  12870. Corylus americana, 116 Juglans regia, 19
  12871. Corylus avellana, 119 Nelumbo nucífera, 221
  12872. Coula edulis, 131 Bacuri, see Platonia esculenta
  12873. Cyperus esculentus, 140 Bacury, see Platonia esculenta
  12874. Cy perU S rotundus, 142 Badam, see Terminada catappa
  12875. Detarium senegalense, 145 Balanites aegyptiaca, 40— 42
  12876. Eleocharis dulcís, 154 Balanitestin, 41
  12877. Fagus grandifolia, 158 Balsam, see Balanites aegyptiaca
  12878. Barcelona nut, see Corylus avellana
  12879. Ginkgo biloba, 164
  12880. G ne turn gnemon, 166 Barium, 44
  12881. Helianthus annuus, 169 Barringtonia procera, 43
  12882. Hyphaene thebaica, 174 Basak, see Adhatoda vasica
  12883. Inocarpus edulis, 175 Basseol, 60, see also Madhuca longifoda
  12884. Jatropha curcas, 178 Bats
  12885. Juglans cinerea, 186 Cañar ium indicum, 6 6
  12886. Juglans nigra, 191 Caryocar amygdadferum, 73
  12887. Juglans regia, 194 Caryocar villosum, 11
  12888. Macadamia integrifolia, 207 Ceiba pentandra, 99
  12889. Nelumbo nucífera, 219 Lecythis minor, 199
  12890. Orbignya martiana, 226 Lecythis pisonis, 203
  12891. Pachira aquatica, 229 Bayin, 93
  12892. Phytelephas macrocarpa, 234 Bayogenin, 93
  12893. Pinus edulis, 236 Beaked filbert, see Corylus cornuta
  12894. Pistacia vera, 240 Beech, see Fagus grandifolia; Fagus sylvatica
  12895. Prunus dulcis, 250 Bees
  12896. Quercus súber, 253 Aleurites f ordii, 10
  12897. Apios americana, 25
  12898. Santalum acuminatum, 260
  12899. Sclerocarya caffra, 270 Ceiba pentandra, 99
  12900. Simmondsia chinensis, 273 Cyperus esculentus, 141
  12901. Telfairia occidentalis, 276 Elaeis oleifera, 153
  12902. Telfairia pedata, 278, 279 Helianthus annuus, 171
  12903. Terminada catappa, 282 Lecythis minor, 199
  12904. Trapa natans, 285 Lecythis pisonis, 203
  12905. Treculia africana, 287, 288 Pauldnia cupana, 233
  12906. Asparagine, 23, 114, 160, 164 Sapium sebiferum, 265
  12907. Aspartic acid Terminada catappa, 283
  12908. Bosimum alicastrum, 51
  12909. Beetles, see Insects
  12910. Sap ium sebiferum, 263 Behenic acid, 135, 169, 207, 215
  12911. Sclerocarya caffra, 270 Belgium walnut, see Aleurites moluccana
  12912. Simmondsia chinensis, 273
  12913. Bengal almond, see Terminada catappa
  12914. Terminada catappa, 282 Benzaldehyde, 250, 267
  12915. Benzolive tree, see Moringa oleifera
  12916. Asteraceae, 168— 172, see also specific species
  12917. Attalea cohune, see Orbignya cohune Bergapten, 41
  12918. Bertholletia excelsa, 44— 46
  12919. Australian nut, see Macadamia integrifoda
  12920. Azaleatin, 69 Betaine
  12921. Adhatoda vasica, 6
  12922. Cola acuminata, 108
  12923. B
  12924. Cola nitida, 110
  12925. Babassu, see Orbignya martiana Fagus sylvatica, 160
  12926. Bacteria Madhuca longifoda, 211
  12927. Aleurites f ordii, 10— 11 Betel-nut palm, see Areca catechu
  12928. 314 Handbook of Nuts
  12929. Betulaceae, 116— 130, see also specific species
  12930. Cyperus rotundus, 143— 144
  12931. Betulin, 119, 160, 253
  12932. Detarium senegalense, 146
  12933. Betulinic acid, 253
  12934. Elaeis guineensis, 151
  12935. Betulinol, 119 Elaeis oleifera, 153
  12936. Bilobol, 164 Eleocharis dulcis, 156
  12937. Biotic factors, see also specific types Fagus grandifolia, 159
  12938. Acrocomia sclerocarpa, 2 Fa g US Sylva tica, 161— 162
  12939. Acrocomia totai, 3 Ginkgo biloba, 165
  12940. Adhatoda vasica, 1 Gnetum gnemon, 167
  12941. Aleurites fordii, 10— 11
  12942. Helianthus annuus, 171— 172
  12943. Aleurites moluccana, 13 Hyphaene thebaica, 174
  12944. Aleurites montana, 15
  12945. Inocarpus edulis, 176
  12946. Amphicarpaea hracteata, 18
  12947. Jatropha curcas, 179
  12948. Anacardium occidentale, 21
  12949. Jessenia bataua, 182
  12950. Apios americana, 25
  12951. Juglans ailanthifolia, 185
  12952. Areca catechu, 29
  12953. Juglans cinerea, 187— 188
  12954. Arenga pianata, 33 Juglans hindsii, 189
  12955. Artocarpus altilis, 36 Juglans nigra, 193
  12956. Artocarpus heterophyllus, 38— 39 Juglans regia, 196— 197
  12957. Balanites aegyptiaca, 42 Lecythis minor, 199
  12958. Barringtonia procera, 43 Lecythis ollaria, 201
  12959. Bertholletia excelsa, 46 Lecythis pi soni s, 203
  12960. Borassus flahellifer, 49 Licania rigida, 206
  12961. Bosimum alicastrum, 52 Mac adamia inte gr ifo lia, 209
  12962. Brosimum utile, 54 Madhuca longifolia, 213
  12963. Bruguiera gymnorhiza, 56 Moringa oleifera, 217
  12964. Buchanania lanzan, 58 Nelumbo nucifera, 221
  12965. Butyrospermum paradoxum, 61 Nypa fruticans, 223
  12966. Calamus rotang, 64
  12967. Orbignya cohune, 224
  12968. Canarium indicum, 6 6 Orbignya martiana, 228
  12969. Canarium ovatum, 6 8 Fachiro aquatica, 230
  12970. Carya illinoensis, 12 Paullinia cupana, 233
  12971. Caryocar amygdaliferum, 73 Phytelephas macrocarpa, 235
  12972. Caryocar nuciferum, 74 Pinus edulis, 237
  12973. Caryocar villosum, 11 P inus quadrifolia, 239
  12974. Caryodendron orinocense, 79 Pistacia vera, 243
  12975. Castanea crenata, 81 Pittosporum resinferum, 246
  12976. Castanea dentata, 84 Platonia esculenta, 248
  12977. Castanea mollissima, 87 Prunus dulcis, 252
  12978. Castanea pumila, 89 Quercus súber, 255
  12979. Castanea sativa, 92 Ricinodendron heudelotii, 251
  12980. Castanospermum australe, 95 Ricinodendron rautanenii, 259
  12981. Ceiba pentandra, 99 Santalum acuminatum, 261
  12982. Cocos nucifera, 105— 106 Sapium sebiferum, 265
  12983. Cola acuminata, 109 Schleichera oleosa, 268
  12984. Cola nitida, 111— 112 Sclerocarya coffra, 211
  12985. Cola verticillata, 113 Simmondsia chinensis, 215
  12986. Cordeauxia edulis, 115 Telfairia occidentalis, 211
  12987. Corylus americana, 118 Telfairia pedata, 280
  12988. Corylus avellana, 121— 122 Terminano catappa, 283
  12989. Corylus chinensis, 123 Trapa notons, 286
  12990. Corylus colurna, 125 Treculia africana, 289
  12991. Corylus cornuta, 127 Virola sebifera, 291
  12992. Corylus ferox, 128 Virola surinamensis, 292
  12993. Biotin, 211
  12994. Corylus heterophylla, 129
  12995. Birds
  12996. Corylus maxima, 130
  12997. Acrocomia totai, 3
  12998. Coula edulis, 132
  12999. Corylus avellana, 121
  13000. Cycas circinalis, 134
  13001. Elaeis guineensis, 151
  13002. Cycas revoluta, 136
  13003. Cycas rumphii, 138 Helianthus annuum, 172
  13004. Cyperus esculentus, 141 Sapium sebiferum, 265
  13005. 315
  13006. Schleichera oleosa, 268 Butyrospermum paradoxum, 59
  13007. Terminalia catappa, 283 Calamus rotang, 62
  13008. Black bean tree, see Castanospermum australe Canarium ovatum, 67
  13009. Black sugar palm, see Arenga pinnata Carya illinoensis, 69
  13010. Black walnut, see Juglans hindsii; Juglans nigra Castanea crenata, 80
  13011. Bombacaceae, 96— 99, 229— 230, see also specific Castanea mollissima, 85
  13012. species Castanea sativa, 90
  13013. Bomhax pentandrum, see Ceiba pentandra Ceiba pentandra, 97
  13014. Borassus aethiopum, see Borassus /labellifer Cocos nucífera, 101, 102
  13015. Borassus flabellifer, 47— 49 Cola acuminata, 107, 108
  13016. Borassus flabelliformis, see Borassus flabellifer Cordeauxia edulis, 114
  13017. Bosimum alicastrum, 50— 52 Cory lus avellana, 119
  13018. Boxwood, African, see Treculia africana Coula edulis, 131
  13019. Brab tree, see Borassus flabellifer Cyperus esculentus, 140
  13020. Cyperus rotundus, 142
  13021. Brazilian cocoa, see Paullinia cupana
  13022. Brazil nut, see Bertholletia excelsa Detarium senegalense, 145
  13023. Breadfruit, see Artocarpus altilis; Treculia africana Elaeis guineensis, 148
  13024. Breadnut, see Bosimum alicastrum Eleocharis dulcis, 154
  13025. Brevifolin carboxylic acid, 282 Ginkgo biloba, 164
  13026. Bromine, 44 Helianthus annuus, 169
  13027. Brosimum galactodendron, see Brosimum utile Hyphaene thebaica, 174
  13028. Brosimum utile, 53— 54 Juglans nigra, 191
  13029. Bruguiera conjugata, see Bruguiera gymnorhiza Juglans regia, 194
  13030. Bruguiera gymnorhiza, 55— 56 Macadamia integrifolia, 207
  13031. Buchanania lanzan, 57— 58 Madhuca longifolia, 2 1 1
  13032. Buchanania latifolia, see Buchanania lanzan Moringa oleifera, 215
  13033. Burma mangrove, see Bruguiera gymnorhiza Nelumbo nucífera, 219
  13034. Burseraceae, 65— 68, see also specific species Pistacia vera, 240, 241
  13035. Butternut, see Caryocar nuciferum; Juglans cinerea Prunus dulcis, 250
  13036. Butterseed, see Butyrospermum paradoxum Santalum acuminatum, 260
  13037. Butyric acid, 47, 267 Sclerocarya caffra, 270
  13038. Butyrospermum paradoxum, 59— 61 Telfairia occidentalis, 276
  13039. Butyrospermum parkii, see Butyrospermum Telfairia pedata, 21S
  13040. paradoxum Terminalia catappa, 282
  13041. Buxaceae, 272— 275, see also specific species Treculia africana, 287, 288
  13042. Calcium pantothenase, 258
  13043. California walnut, see Juglans hindsii
  13044. Calories
  13045. Cacay, see Caryodendron orinocense Aleurites moluccana, 13
  13046. Cadmium, 44 Areca catechu, 27
  13047. Caesalpiniaceae, 114— 115, 145— 146, see also Arenga pinnata, 31
  13048. specific species Artocarpus altilis, 34
  13049. Caffeic acid, 97, 160, 194 Artocarpus heterophyllus, 37
  13050. Caffeine, 108, 110, 113, 232 Balanites aegyptiaca, 41
  13051. Caffir marvola nut, see Sclerocarya caffra Bertholletia excelsa, 44
  13052. Borassus flabellifer, 47
  13053. Cagui, see Caryocar amygdaliferum
  13054. Calamus rotang, 62— 64 Bosimum alicastrum, 50, 51
  13055. Calcium Butyrospermum paradoxum, 59
  13056. Acrocomia total, 3, 4 Calamus rotang, 62
  13057. Aleurites moluccana, 13 Canarium ovatum, 67
  13058. Amphicarpaea bracteata, 17 Carya illinoensis, 69
  13059. Anacardium occidentale, 20 Castanea crenata, 80
  13060. Areca catechu, 27 Castanea mollissima, 85
  13061. Arenga pinnata, 31 Castanea sativa, 90
  13062. Artocarpus altilis, 35 Ceiba pentandra, 97
  13063. Artocarpus heterophyllus, 37 Cocos nucífera, 101
  13064. Balanites aegyptiaca, 41 Cola acuminata, 107, 108
  13065. Bertholletia excelsa, 44 Cordeauxia edulis, 114
  13066. Borassus flabellifer, 47 Corylus americana, 116
  13067. Bosimum alicastrum, 50, 51 Corylus avellana, 119
  13068. Buchanania lanzan, 58 Coula edulis, 131
  13069. 316 Handbook of Nuts
  13070. Cyperus esculentus, 140 Canarium ovatum, 67
  13071. Cyperus rotundus, 142 Carya illinoensis, 69
  13072. Detarium senegalense, 145 Castanea crenata, 80
  13073. Elaeis guineensis, 148
  13074. Castanea dentata, 82
  13075. Eleocharis dulcís, 154
  13076. Castanea mollissima, 85
  13077. Fagus grandifolia, 158
  13078. Castanea sativa, 90
  13079. Ginkgo biloba, 164
  13080. Ceiba pentandra, 97
  13081. Helianthus annuus, 169
  13082. Cocos nucífera, 101, 102
  13083. Hyphaene thebaica, 174 Cola acuminata, 107, 108
  13084. Inocarpus edulis, 175 Cordeauxia edulis, 114
  13085. Juglans cinerea, 186 Corylus americana, 116
  13086. Jug Ians nigra, 191 Corylus avellana, 119
  13087. Juglans regia, 194 Coula edulis, 131
  13088. Macadamia integrifolia, 207 Cyperus esculentus, 140
  13089. Nelumbo nucífera, 219 Cyperus rotundus, 142
  13090. Pachira aquatica, 229 Detarium senegalense, 145
  13091. Pinus edulis, 236
  13092. Elaeis guineensis, 148
  13093. Pistacia vera, 240, 241
  13094. Eleocharis dulcís, 154
  13095. Prunus dulcís, 250
  13096. Fagus grandifolia, 158
  13097. Ricinodendron rautanenii, 258
  13098. Ginkgo biloba, 164
  13099. Sclerocarya caffra, 270 Gnetum gnemon, 166
  13100. Telfairia occidentalis, 276 Helianthus annuus, 169
  13101. Terminaba catappa, 282 Hyphaene thebaica, 174
  13102. Trapa natans, 285 Inocarpus edulis, 175
  13103. Treculia africana, 287 Jatropha curcas, 178
  13104. Caltrops, see Trapa natans Juglans cinerea, 186
  13105. Campesterol, 178 Juglans nigra, 191
  13106. Camphorol, 35, 97 Juglans regia, 194
  13107. Canarium amboinense, see Canarium indicum
  13108. Macadamia integrifolia, 207
  13109. Canarium commune, see Canarium indicum Madhuca longifolia, 211
  13110. Canarium grandistipulatum, see Canarium indicum
  13111. Moringa oleifera, 215
  13112. Canarium indicum, 65— 66
  13113. Nelumbo nucífera, 219
  13114. Canarium mehenbethene, see Canarium indicum
  13115. Nypa fruticans, 222
  13116. Canarium moluccanum, see Canarium indicum Orbignya martiana, 226
  13117. Canarium nungi, see Canarium indicum Pachira aquatica, 229
  13118. Canarium ovatum, 67— 68 Phytelephas macrocarpa, 234
  13119. Canarium polyphyllum, see Canarium indicum Pinus edulis, 236
  13120. Canarium shortlandicum, see Canarium indicum Pistacia vera, 240, 241
  13121. Canarium subtruncatum, see Canarium indicum Prunus dulcís, 250
  13122. Candleberry, see Aleurites moluccana Santalum acuminatum, 260
  13123. Candlenut oil tree, see Aleurites moluccana Schleichera oleosa, 267
  13124. Canes, see Calamus rotang Sclerocarya caffra, 270
  13125. Caoutchouc, 37, 212 Simmondsia chinensis, 273
  13126. Capomo, see Bosimum alicastrum Telfairia occidentalis, 276
  13127. Capric acid, 69, 102, 263, 292 Terminaba catappa, 282
  13128. Caproic acid, 102 Trapa natans, 285
  13129. Caprylic acid, 102, 164, 263 Trecuba africana, 287, 288
  13130. Carbohydrates, see also specific types Cardol, 20
  13131. Aleurites moluccana, 13 Carotene
  13132. Anacardium occidentale, 20 Acr acomia scier ocarpa, 1
  13133. Apios americana, 23 Aleurites moluccana, 13
  13134. Areca catechu, 26, 27
  13135. Anacardium occidentale, 20
  13136. Arenga pinnata, 31 Artocarpus altilis, 35
  13137. Artocarpus altilis, 35
  13138. Artocarpus heterophyllus, 37
  13139. Artocarpus heterophyllus, 37 Balanites aegyptiaca, 41
  13140. Balanites aegyptiaca, 41
  13141. Bertholletia excelsa, 44
  13142. Bertholletia excelsa, 44
  13143. Bosimum alicastrum, 50, 51
  13144. Borassus flabellifer, 47, 48
  13145. Canarium ovatum, 67
  13146. Bosimum alicastrum, 50, 51
  13147. Carya illinoensis, 69
  13148. Butyrospermum paradoxum, 59
  13149. Castanea mollissima, 85
  13150. Calamus rotang, 62 Cocos nucífera, 101, 102
  13151. 317
  13152. Corylus avellana, 119
  13153. Cola acuminata, 107, 108
  13154. Corylus avellana, 119 Orbignya martiana, 225
  13155. Elaeis guineensis, 148 Quercus súber, 253
  13156. Eleocharis dulcís, 154 Cerin, 253
  13157. Helianthus annuus, 169 Cerium, 44
  13158. Juglans regia, 194 Ceroids, 253, see also specific types
  13159. Macadamia inte gr if olia, 207 Cerotic acid, 35, 37
  13160. Madhuca longifolia, 2 1 1 Cerotonic acid, 160
  13161. Moringa oleifera, 215 Ceryl alcohol, 164
  13162. Cesium, 44
  13163. Nelumbo nucífera, 219
  13164. Ceylon oak, see Schleichera oleosa
  13165. Pachila aquatica, 229
  13166. Pistacia vera, 240 Chalmagra, see Caryocar amygdaliferum
  13167. Prunus dulcís, 250 Charcoal, 97
  13168. Treculia africana, 288 Chemicals, see specific types
  13169. Carpathian walnut, see Juglans regia Cheronjee, see Buchanania lanzan
  13170. Carumhium sehiferum, see Sapium sehiferum Chestnut
  13171. Carya illinoensis, 69— 71 American, see Castanea dentata
  13172. Carya oliviformis, see Carya illinoensis Chinese hairy, see Castanea mollissima
  13173. Carya pecan, see Carya illinoensis Chinese water, see Eleocharis dulcís
  13174. European, see Castanea sativa
  13175. Caryatin, 69
  13176. Italian, see Castanea sativa
  13177. Caryocaraceae, 73— 77, see also specific species
  13178. Cary ocar amygdaliferum, 73 Japanese, see Castanea crenata
  13179. Caryocar brasiliense, see Caryocar villosum Malabar, see Pachira aquatica
  13180. Caryocar coriaceum, see Caryocar villosum Moretón Bay, see Castanospermum australe
  13181. Caryocar nuciferum, 74 Otaheite, see I nocarpus edulis
  13182. Caryocar villosum, 75— 77 Polynesia, see Inocarpus edulis
  13183. Caryodendron orinocense, 78— 79 Spanish, see Castanea sativa
  13184. Caryopitys edulis, see Pinus edulis sweet, see Castanea dentata; Castanea sativa
  13185. Cashew, see Anacardium occidentale Tahiti, see Inocarpus edulis
  13186. water, see Eleocharis dulcís; Trapa natans
  13187. Castañas, see Bertholletia excelsa
  13188. Castanea americana, see Castanea dentata Chinese filbert, see Corylus chinensis
  13189. Castanea bungeana, see Castanea mollissima Chinese hairy chestnut, see Castanea mollissima
  13190. Castanea castanea, see Castanea sativa Chinese tallow tree, see Sapium sebiferum
  13191. Castanea crenata, 80— 81 Chinese water chestnut, see Eleocharis dulcís
  13192. Castanea dentata, 82— 84 Chinkapin, Allegany, see Castanea pumila
  13193. Castanea formosana, see Castanea mollissima Chinquapin, see Castanea pumila
  13194. Chirauli nut, see Buchanania lanzan
  13195. Castanea japónica, see Castanea crenata
  13196. Castanea mollissima, 85— 87 Chironjii, see Buchanania lanzan
  13197. Castanea pubinervis, see Castanea crenata Chlorine, 194
  13198. Castanea pumila, 88— 89 Chloroform, 191
  13199. Castanea sativa, 90— 92, see also Castanea Chlorogenic acid, 160
  13200. mollissima Choline, 102, 160, 232
  13201. Castanea stricta, see Castanea crenata Chromium, 250, 288
  13202. Castanea vesca, see Castanea sativa Chufa, see Cyperus esculentus
  13203. Castanea vulgaris, see Castanea sativa Cica, see Cycas circinalis
  13204. Castanhado para, see Bertholletia excelsa Cineole, 142
  13205. Castanospermum australe, 93— 95 Cistine, 263
  13206. Catechin Citric acid, 160, 270
  13207. Anacardium occidentale, 20 Clusiaceae, 247— 248, see also specific species
  13208. Carya illinoensis, 69 Cnarotee, 164
  13209. Cola acuminata, 108 Cobalt, 44, 194
  13210. Cola nitida, 110 Cobnut, see Corylus avellana
  13211. Cocoa, Brazilian, see Paullinia cupana
  13212. Nelumbo nucífera, 219
  13213. Coco de Catarro, see Acrocomia sclerocarpa
  13214. Paullinia cupana, 232
  13215. Terminaba catappa, 282 Coco de mono, see Lecythis minor
  13216. Coconut, see Borassus flabellifer; Cocos nucífera
  13217. Catechutannic acid, 232
  13218. Coco-palm, see Acrocomia total
  13219. Ceiba pentandra, 96— 99
  13220. Cocos nucífera, 100— 106
  13221. Cellulose
  13222. Cohune palm, see Orbignya cohune
  13223. Ceiba pentandra, 97
  13224. Cola, see Cola acuminata; Cola verticillata
  13225. Cola acuminata, 108
  13226. Cola nitida, 110 Cola acuminata, 107— 109
  13227. 318 Handbook of Nuts
  13228. Cola johnsonii, see Cola verticillata Bertholletia excelsa, 45
  13229. Colalipase, 110 Borassus flabellifer, 48
  13230. Cola nitida, 110— 112 Bosimum alicastrum, 51
  13231. Colaoxydase, 110 Brosimum utile, 53
  13232. Cola verticillata, 113 Bruguiera gymnorhiza, 56
  13233. Combretaceae, 281— 283, see also specific species Buchanania lanzan, 58
  13234. Concavalin A, 37
  13235. Butyrospermum paradoxum, 60
  13236. Constantinople nut, see Corylus colurna
  13237. Calamus rotang, 63
  13238. Copper
  13239. Canarium indicum, 6 6
  13240. Amphicarpaea hracteata, 17 Canarium ovatum, 67
  13241. Bertholletia excelsa, 44 Carya illinoensis, 70— 71
  13242. Madhuca longifolia, 2 1 1 Caryocar amygdaliferum, 73
  13243. Moringa oleifera, 215 Caryocar nuciferum, 74
  13244. Pistacia vera, 241 Caryocar villosum, 11
  13245. Santalum acuminatum, 260 Caryodendron orinocense, 78
  13246. Trapa natans, 285 Castanea crenata, 80— 81
  13247. Treculia africana, 288
  13248. Castanea dentata, 83
  13249. Cordeauxia edulis, 114— 115
  13250. Castanea mollissima, 8 6 , 87
  13251. Cordeauxione, 114 Castanea pumila, 89
  13252. Corilagin, 282 Castanea sativa, 91— 92
  13253. Cork oak, see Quercus súber Castanospermum australe, 94
  13254. Corozo, see Elaeis oleifera Ceiba pentandra, 98
  13255. Corozo oleifera, see Elaeis oleifera Cocos nucífera, 103— 104
  13256. Corylin, 119 Cola acuminata, 109
  13257. Corylus americana, 116— 118
  13258. Cola nitida, 111
  13259. Corylus avellana, 119— 122 Cola verticillata, 113
  13260. Corylus chinensis, 123
  13261. Cordeauxia edulis, 115
  13262. Corylus colurna, 124— 125, see also Corylus Corylus americana, 117
  13263. chinensis Corylus avellana, 120— 121
  13264. Corylus cornuta, 126— 127 Corylus chinensis, 123
  13265. Corylus ferox, 128, see also Corylus ferox Corylus colurna, 124— 125
  13266. Corylus heterophylla, 129 Corylus cornuta, 126— 127
  13267. Corylus maxima, 130 Corylus ferox, 128
  13268. Corylus rostrata, see Corylus cornuta Corylus heterophylla, 129
  13269. Corylus tihetica, see Corylus ferox
  13270. Corylus maxima, 130
  13271. Corylus tubulosa, see Corylus maxima
  13272. Coula edulis, 132
  13273. Coula edulis, 131— 132 Cycas circinalis, 134
  13274. /7-Coumaric acid, 160, 194 Cycas revoluta, 135
  13275. Cow tree, see Brosimum utile Cycas rumphii, 138
  13276. Creme nut, see Bertholletia excelsa Cyperus esculentus, 141
  13277. Croton moluccanus, see Aleurites moluccana Cyperus rotundas, 143
  13278. Croton sebiferus, see Sapium sebiferum Detarium senegalense, 146
  13279. Crozier cycas, see Cycas circinalis Elaeis guineensis, 149— 150
  13280. Cucurbitaceae, 276— 280, see also specific species Elaeis oleifera, 153
  13281. Cuddapah almond, see Buchanania lanzan Eleocharis dulcis, 155
  13282. Cultivation Fagus grandifolia, 159
  13283. Acrocomia sclerocarpa, 2 Fagus sylvatica, 161
  13284. Acrocomia total, 3 Ginkgo biloba, 165
  13285. Adhatoda vasica, 6 — 7 Gnetum gnemon, 167
  13286. Aleurites f ordii, 9— 10
  13287. Helianthus annuus, 170
  13288. Aleurites moluccana, 13 Hyphaene thebaica, 174
  13289. Aleurites montana, 14— 15 I nocarpus edulis, 176
  13290. Amphicarpaea bracteata, 18 Jatropha curcas, 179
  13291. Anacardium occidentale, 20— 21 Jessenia bataua, 182
  13292. Apios americana, 24
  13293. Juglans ailantbifolia, 185
  13294. Areca catechu, 28 Juglans cinerea, 187
  13295. Arenga pinnata, 31— 32
  13296. Juglans hindsii, 189
  13297. Artocarpus altilis, 36
  13298. Juglans nigra, 192
  13299. Artocarpus heterophyllus, 38
  13300. Juglans regia, 195— 196
  13301. Balanites aegyptiaca, 42
  13302. Lecythis minor, 199
  13303. Barringtonia procera, 43
  13304. Lecythis ollaria, 2 0 1
  13305. 319
  13306. Lecythis pisonis, 203 Bosimum alicastrum, 51
  13307. Butyrospermum paradoxum, 60
  13308. Licania rigida, 205
  13309. Fagus sylvatica, 160
  13310. Macadamia integrifolia, 208— 209
  13311. Prunus dulcis, 250
  13312. Madhuca longifolia, 212
  13313. Moringa oleifera, 216 Ricinodendron rautanenii, 258
  13314. Nelumbo nucífera, 220 Simmondsia chinensis, 273
  13315. Nypa fruticans, 223 Terminaba catappa, 282
  13316. Orhignya cohune, 224 Cytotoxic acid, 219
  13317. Orhignya martiana, 221
  13318. Pachira aquatica, 230
  13319. D
  13320. Paullinia cupana, 233
  13321. Phytelephas macrocarpa, 235 Date, desert, see Balanites aegyptiaca
  13322. Decadienoic acid, 263
  13323. Pinus edulis, 237
  13324. Decanoic acid, 292
  13325. Pinus quadrifolia, 238
  13326. Pistacia vera, 242 Deoxyribonucleic acid, 164
  13327. Pittosporum resinferum, 245 Deoxyvasicine, 6
  13328. Platonia esculenta, 248 Desert date, see Balanites aegyptiaca
  13329. Prunus dulcís, 251 Detaric acid, 145
  13330. Quercus súber, 254 Detarium heudelotianum, see Detarium senegalense
  13331. Ricinodendron heudelotii, 257 Detarium senegalense, 145— 146
  13332. Ricinodendron rautanenii, 259 Dextrin, 51
  13333. Dextrose, 285
  13334. Santalum acuminatum, 261
  13335. Sapium sebiferum, 264 Diapalmitostearin, 148
  13336. Dihydroterpene, 244
  13337. Schleichera oleosa, 267— 268
  13338. Sclerocarya cajfra, 271 3,4-Dihydroxy benzoic acid, 69
  13339. Dimethyltryptamine, 290
  13340. Simmondsia chinensis, 274
  13341. Telfairia occidentalis, 211 Dioleopalmitin, 58
  13342. Telfairia pedata, 279— 280 Diosgenin, 41
  13343. Terminaba catappa, 283 Dipalmitolein, 58
  13344. Trapa natans, 286 Dipalmitostearins, 2 11
  13345. Treculia africana, 289 Diseases, see also specific types
  13346. Virola sebifera, 291 Acrocomia total, 3
  13347. Virola surinamensis, 292 Aleurites f ordii, 10— 11
  13348. Curcasin, 178 Amphicarpaea bracteata, 18
  13349. Anacardium occidentale, 21
  13350. Curcin, 178
  13351. Cyanadin, 194 Apios americana, 25
  13352. Cyanomachurin, 37 Areca catechu, 29
  13353. Cyanomaclurin, 37 Arenga pinnata, 33
  13354. Cyasin, 135 Borassus flabelbfer, 49
  13355. Cycadaceae, 133— 138, see also specific species Brosimum utile, 54
  13356. Cycad nut, see Cycas circinalis; Cycas revoluta Cañarium ovatum, 6 8
  13357. Cycas, see Cycas circinalis Carya ilbnoensis, 12
  13358. Caryocar amygdaliferum, 73
  13359. Cycas circinalis, 133— 134
  13360. Castanea dentata, 84
  13361. Cycasin, 135
  13362. Cycas revoluta, 135— 136 Castanea mollissima, 87
  13363. Cycas rumphii, 137— 138 Castanea pumila, 89
  13364. Cyclitol, 253 Castanea sativa, 92
  13365. Cycloartocarpin 37 Cocos nucífera, 106
  13366. Cyclopropenoid acids, 229 Corylus americana, 118
  13367. Cyperaceae, 139— 144, 154— 156, see also specific Corylus avellana, 122
  13368. aspects; specific species Corylus chinensis, 123
  13369. Cyperene-1, 142 Cyperus rotundus, 143— 144
  13370. Cyperene-2, 142 Elaeis guineensis, 151
  13371. Cyperenone, 142 Elaeis oleifera, 153
  13372. Cyperone, 142 Fagus grandifoba, 159
  13373. Cyperus esculentus, 139— 141 Fagus sylvatica, 161— 162
  13374. Cyperus rotundus, 142— 144 Ginkgo biloba, 165
  13375. Cystathionine, 200 Helianthus annuus, 172
  13376. Cysteine, 114, 273 Jatropha curcas, 179
  13377. Cystine Juglans ailanthifolia, 185
  13378. Artocarpus altilis, 35 Juglans cinerea, 187— 188
  13379. 320 Handbook of Nuts
  13380. Juglans hindsii, 189
  13381. Castanea mollissima, 8 6
  13382. Juglans nigra, 193 Castanea pumi la, 89
  13383. Lecythis ollaria, 201
  13384. Castanea sativa, 91
  13385. Macadamia integrifolia, 209
  13386. Castanospermum australe, 94
  13387. Madhuca longifolia, 213
  13388. Ceiba pentandra, 98
  13389. Moringa oleifera, 217
  13390. Cocos nucífera, 102— 103
  13391. Nelumbo nucífera, 221
  13392. Cola acuminata, 109
  13393. Orhignya cohune, 224
  13394. Cola nitida, 1 10
  13395. Paullinia cupana, 233 Cola verticillata, 113
  13396. Pinus edulis, 237 Cordeauxia edulis, 115
  13397. Pistacia vera, 243 Corylus americana, 117
  13398. Platonia esculenta, 248
  13399. Corylus avellana, 120
  13400. Prunus du le is, 252
  13401. Corylus chinensis, 123
  13402. Quercus suher, 255
  13403. Corylus colurna, 124
  13404. Ricinodendron heudelotii, 257
  13405. Corylus cornuta, 126
  13406. Schleicher a oleosa, 268
  13407. Corylus ferox, 128
  13408. Sclerocarya caffra, 271
  13409. Corylus heterophylla, 129
  13410. Simmondsia chinensis, 275 Corylus maxima, 130
  13411. Telfairia occidentalis, 211
  13412. Coula edulis, 132
  13413. Telfairia pedata, 280
  13414. Cycas circinalis, 134
  13415. Trapa natans, 286 Cycas revoluta, 135
  13416. Distribution, see Geographical distribution Cycas rumphii, 138
  13417. Docosanol, 160 Cyp e rus esculentus, 140— 141
  13418. Doum palm, see Hyphaene thebaica Cyperus rotundus, 143
  13419. Drumstick tree, see Moringa oleifera Detarium senegalense, 146
  13420. Elaeis guineensis, 149
  13421. Elaeis oleifera, 152— 153
  13422. Eleocharis dulcís, 155
  13423. Eastern black walnut, see Juglans nigra
  13424. Fagus grandifolia, 158— 159
  13425. Ecology
  13426. Fagus sylvatica, 161
  13427. Acrocomia scleracarpa, 1— 2
  13428. Ginkgo biloba, 164— 165
  13429. Acrocomia total, 3
  13430. Gnetum gnemon, 167
  13431. Adhatoda vasica, 6
  13432. Helianthus annuus, 170
  13433. Ale uri tes fardi i, 8 — 9
  13434. Hyphaene thebaica, 174
  13435. Aleurites moluccana, 13 I nocarpus edulis, 176
  13436. Aleurites montana, 14
  13437. Jatropha curcas, 178— 179
  13438. Amphicarpaea bracteata, 17— 18 Jesse nia bataua, 181
  13439. Apios americana, 24 Juglans allant bifolia, 184, 185
  13440. Areca catechu, 21 Juglans cinerea, 187
  13441. Arenga pinnata, 31 Juglans hindsii, 189
  13442. Artocarpus altilis, 35— 36 Juglans nigra, 191
  13443. Artocarpus heterophyllus, 38 Juglans regia, 195
  13444. Balanites aegyptiaca, 41 Lecythis minor, 199
  13445. Barringtonia procera, 43 Lecythis ollaria, 201
  13446. Bertholletia excelsa, 45 Lecythis pisonis, 203
  13447. Borassus flabellifer, 48 Licania rigida, 205
  13448. Bosimum alicastrum, 51 Macadamia integrifolia, 208
  13449. Brosimum utile, 53 Madhuca longifolia, 212
  13450. Bruguiera gymnorhiza, 56 Moringa oleifera, 216
  13451. Buchanania lanzan, 58 Nelumbo nucífera, 220
  13452. Butyrospermum paradoxum, 60 Nypa fruticans, 223
  13453. Calamus rotang, 63
  13454. Orbignya cohune, 224
  13455. Canarium indicum, 6 6
  13456. Orbignya martiana, 227
  13457. Cañarium ovatum, 67
  13458. Pachira aquatica, 230
  13459. Carya illinoensis, 70
  13460. Paullinia cupana, 232— 233
  13461. Caryocar amygdaliferum, 73
  13462. Phytelephas macrocarpa, 235
  13463. Caryocar nuciferum, 74
  13464. Pinus edulis, 237
  13465. Caryocar villosum, 11
  13466. Pinus quadrifolia, 238
  13467. Caryodendron orinocense, 78
  13468. Pistacia vera, 241— 242
  13469. Castanea crenata, 80
  13470. Pittosporum resinferum, 245
  13471. Castanea dentata, 83
  13472. Platonia esculenta, 248
  13473. 321
  13474. Prunas dulcís, 250— 251
  13475. Corylus colurna, 125
  13476. Quercus súber, 254
  13477. Corylus cornuta, 127
  13478. Ricinodendron heudelotii, 257 Corylus ferox, 128
  13479. Ricinodendron rautanenii, 258 Corylus heterophylia, 129
  13480. Santalum acuminatum, 261 Corylus maxima, 130
  13481. Sapium sebiferum, 263 Coula edulis, 132
  13482. Sclerocarya caffra, 271 Cycas circinalis, 134
  13483. Simmondsia chinensis, 21A Cycas revoluta, 136
  13484. Telfairia occidentalis, 276— 277 Cycas rumphii, 138
  13485. Telfairia pedata, 279
  13486. Cyperus esculentus, 141
  13487. Terminaba catappa, 283
  13488. Cyperus rotundas, 143
  13489. Trapa natans, 285— 286
  13490. Detarium senegalense, 146
  13491. Treculia africana, 289
  13492. Elaeis guineensis, 150
  13493. Virola sebifera, 291
  13494. Elaeis oleifera, 153
  13495. Virola surinamensis, 292
  13496. Eleocharis dulcís, 155
  13497. Economics Fagus grandifolia, 159
  13498. Acrocomia sclerocarpa, 2 Fagus sylvatica, 161
  13499. Acrocomia totai, 3 Ginkgo biloba, 165
  13500. Adhatoda vasica, 1 Gnetum gnemon, 167
  13501. Aleurites fordii, 10 Helianthus annuus, 170— 171
  13502. Aleurites moluccana, 13 Hyphaene thebaica, 174
  13503. Aleurites montana, 15 1 nocarpus edulis, 176
  13504. Amphicarpaea bracteata, 18 Jatropha curcas, 179
  13505. Anacardium occidentale, 21 Jessenia bataua, 182
  13506. Apios americana, 25 Juglans ailanthifolia, 185
  13507. Areca catechu, 28— 29 Juglans cinerea, 187
  13508. Arenga pinnata, 32
  13509. Juglans hindsii, 189
  13510. Artocarpus altilis, 36
  13511. Juglans nigra, 192— 193
  13512. Artocarpus heterophyllus, 38 Juglans regia, 196
  13513. Balanites aegyptiaca, 42 Lecythis minor, 199
  13514. Barringtonia procera, 43 Lecythis ollaria, 201
  13515. Bertholletia excelsa, 45 Lecythis pisonis, 203
  13516. Borassus flabellifer, 49 Licania rigida, 206
  13517. Bosimum alicastrum, 52 Macadamia integrifolia, 209
  13518. Brosimum utile, 54 Madhuca longifolia, 213
  13519. Bruguiera gymnorhiza, 56 Moringa oleifera, 216
  13520. Buchanania lanzan, 58 Nelumbo nucífera, 221
  13521. Butyrospermum paradoxum, 61 Nypa fruticans, 223
  13522. Calamus rotang, 63— 64 Orbignya cohune, 224
  13523. Canarium indicum, 6 6 Orbignya martiana, 227
  13524. Canarium ovatum, 6 8 P achira aquatica, 230
  13525. Carya illinoensis, 1 1
  13526. Paullinia cupana, 233
  13527. Caryocar amygdaliferum, 73
  13528. Phytelephas macrocarpa, 235
  13529. Caryocar nuciferum, 74 Pinus edulis, 237
  13530. Caryocar villosum, 77
  13531. Pinus quadrifolia, 238
  13532. Caryodendron orinocense, 79 Pistacia vera, 242
  13533. Castanea crenata, 81
  13534. Pittosporum resinferum, 245
  13535. Castanea dentata, 84 Platonia esculenta, 248
  13536. Castanea mollissima, 87 Prunus dulcís, 251
  13537. Castanea pumila, 89 Quercus súber, 255
  13538. Castanea sativa, 92 Ricinodendron heudelotii, 257
  13539. Castanospermum australe, 94— 95 Ricinodendron rautanenii, 259
  13540. Ceiba pentandra, 99 Santalum acuminatum, 261
  13541. Cocos nucífera, 105 Sapium sebiferum, 264
  13542. Cola acuminata, 109 Schleichera oleosa, 268
  13543. Cola nitida, 111 Sclerocarya cajfra, 271
  13544. Cola verticillata, 113 Simmondsia chinensis, 21A— 275
  13545. Cordeauxia edulis, 115 Telfairia occidentalis, 211
  13546. Corylus americana, 118 Telfairia pedata, 280
  13547. Corylus avellana, 121 Terminaba catappa, 283
  13548. Corylus chinensis, 123 Trapa natans, 286
  13549. 322 Handbook of Nuts
  13550. Treculia africana, 289 Cola verticillata, 113
  13551. Virola schiferà, 291 Cordeauxia edulis, \\5
  13552. Virola surinamensis, 292 Corylus americana, 118
  13553. Eicosenoic acid, 169 207 Corylus avellana, 121
  13554. /z-Eicosylalcohol, 160 Corylus chinensis, 123
  13555. Elaeis guineensis, 147— 151 Corylus colurna, 125
  13556. Elaeis melanococca, see Elaeis guineensis; Elaeis Corylus cornuta, 127
  13557. oleifera Corylus ferox, 128
  13558. Elaeis oleifera, 152— 153 Corylus heterophylla, 129
  13559. Eleocharis dulcís, 154— 156 Corylus maxima, 130
  13560. Eleocharis plantaginea, see Eleocharis dulcis
  13561. Coula edulis, 132
  13562. Eleocharis tuberosa, see Eleocharis dulcis
  13563. Cycas circinalis, 134
  13564. Eleostearic acid
  13565. Cycas revoluta, 136
  13566. Aleurites fordii, 8 Cycas rumphii, 138
  13567. Aleurites montana, 14 Cyperus esculentus, 141
  13568. Licania rigida, 204 Cyperus rotundus, 143
  13569. Ricinodendron heudelotii, 257 Detarium senegalense, 146
  13570. Ricinodendron rautanenii, 258 Elaeis guineensis, 150— 151
  13571. Telfairia occidentalis, 276 Elaeis oleifera, 153
  13572. Ellagic acid, 263, 282 Eleocharis dulcis, 155— 156
  13573. Energy Fagus grandifolia, 159
  13574. Acrocomia sclerocarpa, 2 Fagus sylvatica, 161
  13575. Acrocomia totai, 3 Ginkgo biloba, 165
  13576. Adhatoda vasica, 1 Gnetum gnemon, 167
  13577. Aleurites fordii, 10 Helianthus annuus, 171
  13578. Aleurites moluccana, 13 Hyphaene thebaica, 174
  13579. Aleurites montana, 15
  13580. Inocarpus edulis, 176
  13581. Amphicarpaea hracteata, 18 Jatropha curcas, 179
  13582. Anacardium occidentale, 21 Jessenia hataua, 182
  13583. Apios americana, 25 Juglans ailantbifolia, 185
  13584. Areca catechu, 29 Juglans cinerea, 187
  13585. Arenga pinnata, 33 Juglans hindsii, 189
  13586. Artocarpus altilis, 36 Juglans nigra, 193
  13587. Artocarpus heterophyllus, 38 Juglans regia, 196
  13588. Balanites aegyptiaca, 42 Lecythis minor, 199
  13589. Barringtonia procera, 43 Lecythis ollaria, 201
  13590. Bertholletia excelsa, 46 Lecythis pisonis, 203
  13591. Borassus flabellifer, 49 Licania rigida, 206
  13592. Bosimum alicastrum, 52 Macadamia integrifolia, 209
  13593. Brosimum utile, 54 Madhuca longifolia, 213
  13594. Bruguiera gymnorhiza, 56 Moringa oleifera, 216— 217
  13595. Buchanania lanzan, 58 Nelumbo nucifera, 221
  13596. Butyrospermum paradoxum, 61 Nypa fruticans, 223
  13597. Calamus rotang, 64 Orbignya cohune, 224
  13598. Cañarium indicum, 6 6 Orbignya martiana, 221— 228
  13599. Canarium ovatum, 6 8 Pachira aquatica, 230
  13600. Carya illinoensis, 71— 72 Paullinia cupana, 233
  13601. Caryocar amygdaliferum, 73 Phytelephas macrocarpa, 235
  13602. Caryocar nuciferum, 74 Pinus edulis, 237
  13603. Caryocar villo sum, 11 Pinus quadrifolia, 239
  13604. Caryodendron orinocense, 79 Pistacia vera, 242— 243
  13605. Castanea crenata, 81 Pittosporum resinferum, 245— 246
  13606. Castanea dentata, 84 Platonia esculenta, 248
  13607. Castanea mollissima, 87 Prunus dulcis, 252
  13608. Castanea pumila, 89 Quercus súber, 255
  13609. Castanea sativa, 92
  13610. Ricinodendron heudelotii, 257
  13611. Castanospermum australe, 95
  13612. Ricinodendron rautanenii, 259
  13613. Ceiba pentandra, 99 Santalum acuminatum, 261
  13614. Cocos nucifera, 105 Sapium sebiferum, 264— 265
  13615. Cola acuminata, 109
  13616. Schleichera oleosa, 268
  13617. Cola nitida, 111
  13618. Sclerocarya coffra, 21 ì
  13619. 323
  13620. Simmondsia chinensis, 275 Cordeauxia edulis, 114
  13621. Telfairia occidentalis, 211 Corylus americana, 116
  13622. Telfairia pedata, 280 Corylus avellana, 119
  13623. Terminalia catappa, 283 Coula edulis, 131
  13624. Trapa natans, 286 Cycas revoluta, 135
  13625. Treculia africana, 289 Cyperus esculentus, 140
  13626. Virola schiferà, 291
  13627. Cyperus rotundas, 142
  13628. Virola surinamensis, 292
  13629. Detarium senegalense, 145
  13630. English petroleum nut, see Pittosporum resinferum Elaeis guineensis, 148
  13631. English walnut, see Juglans regia Eleocharis dulcis, 154
  13632. Enzymes, see specific types Fagus grandifolia, 158
  13633. Epicatechin, 20, 108, 110, 282 Ginkgo biloba, 164
  13634. Epimoretenol, 263 Gnetum gnemon, 166
  13635. Eriodendron anfractuosum, see Ceiba pentandra Helianthus annuus, 169
  13636. Essang nut, see Ricinodendron heudelotii Hyphaene thebaica, 174
  13637. Estrogens, 215, see also specific types Inocarpus edulis, 175
  13638. Ethyl cinamate, 211 Jatropha curcas, 178
  13639. Euorpean beech, see Fagus sylvatica
  13640. Juglans cinerea, 186
  13641. Euphorbiaceae, 8— 13, 78— 79, 177— 179, 256— Juglans nigra, 191
  13642. 259, 262— 265, see also specific species Juglans regia, 194
  13643. European chestnut, see Castanea sat iva Lecythis pisonis, 202
  13644. European filbert, see Corylus avellana Li cania rigida, 204
  13645. Excoecaria schiferà, see Sapium sehiferum Madhuca longifolia, 2 1 1
  13646. Moringa oleifera, 215
  13647. Nelumbo nucífera, 219
  13648. Orhignya cohune, 224
  13649. Fabaceae, 16— 17, 21— 25, 93— 95, 175— 176, see Orhignya martiana, 225
  13650. also specific species P achira aquatica, 229
  13651. Fagaceae, 80— 92, 157— 162, 253— 255, see also Phytelephas macrocarpa, 234
  13652. specific species Pinus edulis, 236
  13653. Fagine, 160 Pistacia vera, 240, 241
  13654. Fagus americana, see Fagus grandifolia Platonia esculenta, 248
  13655. Fagus atropurpuea, see Fagus grandifolia Prunus dulcis, 250
  13656. Fagus ferruginea, see Fagus graruiifolia Santalum acuminatum, 260
  13657. Fagus grandifolia, 157— 159 Schleichera oleosa, 267
  13658. Fagus sylvatica, 160— 162 Sclerocarya coffra, 270
  13659. Fats, see also specific types Simmondsia chinensis, 273
  13660. Acrocomia totai, 3 Telfairia occidentalis, 276
  13661. Aleurites moluccana, 13 Telfairia pedata, 278, 279
  13662. Anacardium occidentale, 20 Terminalia catappa, 282
  13663. Apios americana, 23 Trapa natans, 285
  13664. Areca catechu, 26, 27 Treculia africana, 287, 288
  13665. Arenga pinnata, 31 Fatty acids, see also specific types
  13666. Artocarpus altilis, 35 Acrocomia sclerocarpa, 1
  13667. Artocarpus heterophyllus, 37
  13668. Acrocomia totai, 4
  13669. Balanites aegyptiaca, 41
  13670. Buchanania lanzan, 58
  13671. Bertholletia excelsa, 44 Caryocar villosum, 76
  13672. Borassus fiabeIlifer, 47, 48
  13673. Ceiba pentandra, 91
  13674. Bosimum alicastrum, 50, 51
  13675. Corylus avellana, 119
  13676. Butyrospermum paradoxum, 59 Cycas revoluta, 135
  13677. Calamus rotang, 62
  13678. Cyperus esculentus, 140
  13679. Canarium indicum, 65 Elaeis oleifera, 152
  13680. Canarium ovatum, 67 Ginkgo biloba, 164
  13681. Carya illinoensis, 69, 70 Lecythis pisonis, 202
  13682. Castanea crenata, 80 Madhuca longifolia, 2 1 1
  13683. Castanea dentata, 82 Moringa oleifera, 215
  13684. Castanea sativa, 90 Pistacia vera, 240
  13685. Ceiba pentandra, 91 Platonia esculenta, 248
  13686. Cocos nucífera, 101, 102 Prunus dulcis, 250
  13687. Cola acuminata, 107, 108 Quercus súber, 253
  13688. Cola nitida, 110 Ricinodendron heudelotii, 257
  13689. 324 Handbook of Nuts
  13690. Ricinodendron rautanenii, 258
  13691. Trapa natans, 285
  13692. Santalum acuminatum, 260
  13693. Treculia africana, 287, 288
  13694. Sapium se bife rum, 263
  13695. Fibrin, 53
  13696. Virola sebifera, 290
  13697. Filbert
  13698. Virola surinamensis, 292 American, see Corylus americana
  13699. Fatty oils, 110, 194, 211, 215, see also specific types beaked, see Corylus cornuta
  13700. Ferulic acid, 160 Chinese, see Corylus chinensis
  13701. Fiber European, see Corylus avellana
  13702. Acrocomia total, 3, 4 giant, see Corylus maxima
  13703. Anacardium occidentale, 20 Himalayan, see Corylus ferox
  13704. Apios americana, 23
  13705. Lambert’s, see Corylus maxima
  13706. Areca catechu, 21
  13707. Siberian, see Corylus heterophylla
  13708. Arenga pinnata, 31
  13709. Tibetan, see Corylus ferox
  13710. Artocarpus altilis, 35
  13711. Turkish, see Corylus colurna
  13712. Artocarpus heterophyllus, 37 Flavonoids, 142, see also specific types
  13713. Balanites aegyptiaca, 41 Fluted pumpkin, see Telfairia occidentalis
  13714. Bertholletia excelsa, 44 Folic acid, 191, 211, 250, see also Vitamin B
  13715. Borassus flabellifer, 47 Folk medicine
  13716. Bosimum alicastrum, 50, 51 Acrocomia sclerocarpa, 1
  13717. Butyrospermum paradoxum, 59 Acrocomia total, 3
  13718. Calamus rotang, 62
  13719. Adhatoda vasica, 5
  13720. Canarium ovatum, 67
  13721. Aleurites f ordii, 8
  13722. Carya illinoensis, 69
  13723. Aleurites moluccana, 12
  13724. Castanea crenata, 80 Aleurites montana, 14
  13725. Castanea dentata, 82 Amphicarpaea bracteata, 16
  13726. Castanea sativa, 90 Anacardium occidentale, 19
  13727. Ceiba pentandra, 97 Apios americana, 22
  13728. Cocos nucífera, 1 0 1 , 1 0 2 Areca catechu, 26
  13729. Cola acuminata, 107, 108
  13730. Arenga pinnata, 30— 31
  13731. Cordeauxia edulis, 114 Artocarpus altilis, 34
  13732. Corylus avellana, 119
  13733. Artocarpus heterophyllus, 37
  13734. Coula edulis, 131
  13735. Balanites aegyptiaca, 41
  13736. Cyperus esculentus, 140
  13737. Barringtonia procera, 43
  13738. Cyperus rotundus, 142
  13739. Bertholletia excelsa, 44
  13740. Detarium senegalense, 145 Borassus flabellifer, 47
  13741. Elaeis guineensis, 148 Bosimum alicastrum, 50
  13742. Eleocharis dulcís, 154 Brosimum utile, 53
  13743. Fagus grandifolia, 158 Bruguiera gymnorhiza, 55
  13744. Ginkgo biloba, 164
  13745. Buchanania lanzan, 57— 58
  13746. Gnetum gnemon, 166
  13747. Calamus rotang, 62
  13748. Helianthus annuus, 169
  13749. Canarium indicum, 65
  13750. Hyphaene thebaica, 174
  13751. Canarium ovatum, 67
  13752. Inocarpus edulis, 175 Carya illinoensis, 69
  13753. Jatropha curcas, 178
  13754. Caryocar amygdaliferum, 73
  13755. Juglans regia, 194
  13756. Caryocar nuciferum, 74
  13757. Macadamia integrifolia, 207
  13758. Caryocar villosum, 75
  13759. Madhuca longifolia, 2 1 1
  13760. Caryodendron orinocense, 78
  13761. Moringa oleifera, 215
  13762. Castanea crenata, 80
  13763. Nelumbo nucífera, 219 Castanea dentata, 82
  13764. Orbignya martiana, 226 Castanea mollissima, 85
  13765. Pachira aquatica, 229 Castanea pumila, 8 8
  13766. Phytelephas macrocarpa, 234 Castanea sativa, 90
  13767. Pinus edulis, 236 Castanospermum australe, 93
  13768. Pistacia vera, 240, 241 Ceiba pentandra, 97
  13769. Prunus dulcís, 250 Cocos nucífera, 101
  13770. Schleicher a oleosa, 267 Cola acuminata, 107
  13771. Sclerocarya cajfra, 270 Cola nitida, 110
  13772. Simmondsia chinensis, 273 Cola verticillata, 113
  13773. Telfairia occidentalis, 276 Cordeauxia edulis, 114
  13774. Telfairia pedata, 279 Corylus americana, 116
  13775. Terminalia calappa, 282 Corylus avellana, 119
  13776. 325
  13777. Cory lus chinensis, 123 Trapa natans, 284
  13778. Corylus colurna, 124 Treculia africana, 287
  13779. Corylus cornuta, 126 Virola sebifera, 290
  13780. Corylus ferox, 128 Virola surinamensis, 292
  13781. Corylus heterophyIla, 129 Formaldehyde, 135
  13782. Formic acid, 164
  13783. Corylus maxima, 130
  13784. Friedelin, 253
  13785. Coula edulis, 131
  13786. Cycas circinalis, 133 Fructose, 142, 178,211
  13787. Fungi
  13788. Cycas revoluta, 135
  13789. Cycas rumphii, 137 Acrocomia total, 3
  13790. Cyperus esculentus, 139— 140 Adhatoda vasica, 1
  13791. Cyperus rotundas, 142 Aleurites moluccana, 13
  13792. Detarium senegalense, 145 Aleurites montana, 15
  13793. Elaeis guineensis, 148 Anacardium occidentale, 21
  13794. Elaeis oleifera, 152 Areca catechu, 29
  13795. Eleocharis dulcis, 154 Arenga pinnata, 33
  13796. Artocarpus altilis, 36
  13797. Fagus grandifolia, 157— 158
  13798. Artocarpus heterophyllus, 38— 39
  13799. Fagus sylvatica, 160
  13800. Ginkgo biloba, 163— 164 Balanites aegyptiaca, 42
  13801. Gnetum gnemon, 166 Borassus flabellifer, 49
  13802. Helianthus annuus, 168— 169 Bosimum alicastrum, 52
  13803. Hyphaene thebaica, 173— 174 Buchanania lanzan, 58
  13804. I nocarpus edulis, 175 Butyrospermum paradoxum, 61
  13805. Jatropha curcas, 177— 178 Calamus rotang, 64
  13806. Jessenia bataua, 181 Canarium indicum, 66
  13807. Juglans ailanthifolia, 184 Carya illinoensis, 12
  13808. Castanea crenata, 81
  13809. Juglans cinerea, 186
  13810. Castanea dentata, 84
  13811. Juglans hindsii, 189
  13812. Juglans nigra, 190 Castanea sativa, 92
  13813. Juglans regia, 194 Castanospermum australe, 95
  13814. Lecythis minor, 198 Ceiba pentandra, 99
  13815. Lecythis ollaria, 200 Cocos nucífera, 105— 106
  13816. Lecythis pisonis, 202 Cola acuminata, 109
  13817. Licania rigida, 204 Cola nitida, 112
  13818. Macadamia integrifolia, 207 Cola verticillata, 113
  13819. Madhuca longifolia, 2 1 1 Corylus americana, 118
  13820. Moringa oleifera, 215 Corylus avellana, 122
  13821. Nelumbo nucífera, 218— 219 Corylus colurna, 125
  13822. Nypa fruticans, 222 Corylus cornuta, 127
  13823. Orbignya cohune, 224 Corylus maxima, 130
  13824. Orbignya mart lana, 225 Cyperus esculentus, 141
  13825. Pachira aquatica, 229 Cyperus rotundus, 143
  13826. Paullinia cupana, 231— 232 Elaeis guineensis, 151
  13827. Phytelephas macrocarpa, 234 Eleocharis dulcis, 156
  13828. Pinus edulis, 236 Fagus grandifolia, 159
  13829. Pinus quadrifolia, 238 Fagus sylvatica, 162
  13830. Pistacia vera, 240 Helianthus annuus, 172
  13831. Pittosporum resinferum, 244 Juglans ailanthifolia, 185
  13832. Platonia esculenta, 247 Juglans cinerea, 187— 188
  13833. Prunus dulcis, 249— 250 Juglans hindsii, 189
  13834. Quercus súber, 253 Juglans regia, 196— 197
  13835. Ricinodendron heudelotii, 256— 257 Madhuca longifolia, 213
  13836. Ricinodendron rautanenii, 258 Moringa oleifera, 217
  13837. Santalum acuminatum, 260 Nelumbo nucífera, 221
  13838. Sapium sebiferum, 263 Orbignya cohune, 224
  13839. Schleichera oleosa, 266— 267 Paullinia cupana, 233
  13840. Sclerocarya coffra, 270 Pinus quadrifolia, 239
  13841. Simmondsia chinensis, 273 Pistacia vera, 243
  13842. Telfairia occidentalis, 216 Quercus súber, 255
  13843. Telfairia pedata, 278 Ricinodendron heudelotii, 257
  13844. Terminaba catappa, 281— 282 Sapium sebiferum, 265
  13845. 326 Handbook of Nuts
  13846. Schleichera oleosa, 268 Cordeauxia edulis, 115
  13847. Sclerocarya cajfra, 271 Corylus americana, 116
  13848. Simmondsia chinensis, 275 Corylus avellana, 120
  13849. Telfairia pedata, 280 Corylus chinensis, 123
  13850. Terminalia catappa, 283 Corylus colurna, 124
  13851. Trapa natans, 286 Corylus cornuta, 126
  13852. Furfural, 191
  13853. Corylus ferox, 128
  13854. Corylus heterophylla, 129
  13855. Corylus maxima, 130
  13856. Coula edulis, 132
  13857. Gabon nut, see Coula edulis
  13858. Cycas circinalis, 134
  13859. Gadoleic acid, 267 Cycas revoluta, 135
  13860. Galactan, 119 Cycas rumphii, 138
  13861. Galactodendron utile, see Brosimum utile Cyperus esculentus, 140
  13862. Galactose, 20, 135, 160, 178, 215, 235, 250 Cyperus rotundas, 143
  13863. Gallic acid, 1, 240, 263, 282 Detarium senegalense, 146
  13864. Gallocatechin, 219 Elaeis guineensis, 149
  13865. Gallotanic acid, 240, 267 Elaeis oleifera, 152
  13866. Gbanja kola, see Cola nitida
  13867. Eleocharis dulcis, 155
  13868. Geographical distribution
  13869. Fagus grandifolia, 158
  13870. Acrocomia scleracarpa, 1
  13871. Fagus sylvatica, 161
  13872. Acrocomia totai, 3
  13873. Ginkgo biloba, 164
  13874. Adhatoda vasica, 6
  13875. Gnetum gnemon, 167
  13876. Aleurites fordii, 8 Helianthus annuus, 169
  13877. Aleurites moluccana, 13 Hyphaene thebaica, 174
  13878. Aleurites montana, 14 I nocarpus edulis, 176
  13879. Amphicarpaea hracteata, 17 Jatropha curcas, 178
  13880. Anacardium occidentale, 20 Jessenia bataua, 181
  13881. Apios americana, 24 Juglans ailanthifolia, 184
  13882. Areca catechu, 27 Juglans cinerea, 187
  13883. Arenga pianata, 31 Juglans hindsii, 189
  13884. Artocarpus altilis, 35 Juglans nigra, 191
  13885. Artocarpus heterophyllus, 38
  13886. Juglans regia, 195
  13887. Balanites aegyptiaca, 41
  13888. Lecythis minor, 198— 199
  13889. Barringtonia procera, 43
  13890. Lecythis ollaria, 201
  13891. Bertholletia excelsa, 45
  13892. Lecythis pisonis, 203
  13893. Borassus flabellifer, 48
  13894. Licania rigida, 205
  13895. Bosimum alicastrum, 51 Macadamia integrifolia, 208
  13896. Brosimum utile, 53 Madhuca longifolia, 2 1 2
  13897. Bruguiera gymnorhiza, 56 Moringa oleifera, 216
  13898. Buchanania lanzan, 58 Nelumbo nucifera, 220
  13899. Butyrospermum paradoxum, 60 Nypa fruticans, 223
  13900. Calamus rotang, 63 Orbignya cohune, 224
  13901. Canarium indicum, 6 6 Orbignya martiana, 227
  13902. Canarium ovatum, 67 Pachira aquatica, 230
  13903. Carya illinoensis, 70 Paullinia cupana, 232
  13904. Caryocar amygdaliferum, 73 Phytelephas macrocarpa, 235
  13905. Caryocar nuciferum, 74
  13906. Pinus edulis, 237
  13907. Caryocar villosum, 77
  13908. Pinus quadrifolia, 238
  13909. Caryodendron orinocense, 78
  13910. Pistacia vera, 241
  13911. Castanea crenata, 80
  13912. Pittosporum resinferum, 245
  13913. Castanea dentata, 82— 83
  13914. Platonia esculenta, 248
  13915. Castanea mollissima, 8 6
  13916. Prunus dulcis, 250
  13917. Castanea pumila, 88— 89
  13918. Quercus súber, 254
  13919. Castanea sativa, 91
  13920. Ricinodendron heudelotii, 257
  13921. Castanospermum australe, 94
  13922. Ricinodendron rautanenii, 258
  13923. Ceiba pentandra, 98 Santalum acuminatum, 261
  13924. Cocos nucifera, 102 Sapium sebiferum, 263
  13925. Cola acuminata, 109 Schleichera oleosa, 267
  13926. Cola nitida, 110 Sclerocarya cajfra, 270
  13927. Cola verticillata, 113
  13928. Simmondsia chinensis, 274
  13929. 327
  13930. Telfairia occidentalis, 276 Cyperus rotundas, 143
  13931. Te If airia pedata, 279
  13932. Detarium senegalense, 146
  13933. Terminalia calappa, 283 Elaeis guineensis, 148— 149
  13934. Trapa natans, 285 Elaeis oleifera, 152
  13935. Treculia africana, 289 Eleocharis dulcis, 155
  13936. Virola schiferà, 291 Fagus grandifolia, 158
  13937. Germplasm Fagus sylvatica, 160— 161
  13938. Acrocomia sclerocarpa, 1 Ginkgo biloba, 164
  13939. Acrocomia totai, 3 G ne turn gnemon, 167
  13940. Adhatoda vasica, 6
  13941. Helianthus annuus, 169
  13942. Aleurites fordii, 8
  13943. Hyphaene thebaica, 174
  13944. Aleurites moluccana, 13
  13945. Inocarpus edulis, 176
  13946. Aleurites montana, 14
  13947. Jatropha curcas, 178
  13948. Amphicarpaea bracteata, 17 Jessenia bataua, 181
  13949. Anacardium occidentale, 20 Juglans ailanthifolia, 184
  13950. Apios americana, 24 Juglans cinerea, 186— 187
  13951. Areca catechu, 27 Juglans hindsii, 189
  13952. Arenga pinnata, 31 Juglans nigra, 191
  13953. Artocarpus altilis, 35 Juglans regia, 195
  13954. Artocarpus heterophyllus, 38 Lecythis minor, 198
  13955. Balanites aegyptiaca, 41 Lecythis ollaria, 2 0 1
  13956. Barringtonia procera, 43 Lecythis pisonis, 202— 203
  13957. Bertholletia excelsa, 45
  13958. Licania rigida, 205
  13959. Borassus flabellifer, 48
  13960. Macadamia integrifolia, 208
  13961. Bosimum alicastrum, 5 1
  13962. Madhuca longifolia, 2 1 2
  13963. Brosimum utile, 53 Moringa oleifera, 216
  13964. Bruguiera gymnorhiza, 56 Nelumbo nucifera, 220
  13965. Buchanania lanzan, 58 Nypa fruticans, 223
  13966. Butyrospermum paradoxum, 60 Orbignya cohune, 224
  13967. Calamus rotang, 63 Orbignya martiana, 227
  13968. Canarium indicum, 6 6 Pachira aquatica, 230
  13969. Canarium ovatum, 67 Paullinia cupana, 232
  13970. Carya illinoensis, 70 Phytelephas macrocarpa, 235
  13971. Caryocar amygdaliferum, 73 Pinus edulis, 236— 237
  13972. Caryocar nuciferum, 74 Pinus quadrifolia, 238
  13973. Caryocar villosum, 77 Pistacia vera, 241
  13974. Caryodendron orinocense, 78 Pittosporum resinferum, 245
  13975. Castanea crenata, 80
  13976. Platonia esculenta, 248
  13977. Castanea dentata, 82
  13978. Prunus dulcis, 250
  13979. Castanea mollissima, 8 6 Quercus súber, 254
  13980. Castanea pumila, 8 8 Ricinodendron heudelotii, 257
  13981. Castanea sativa, 90— 91 Ricinodendron rautanenii, 258
  13982. Castanospermum australe, 94 Santalum acuminatum, 261
  13983. Ceiba pentandra, 98 Sapium sebiferum, 263
  13984. Cocos nucifera, 102 Schleicher a oleosa, 267
  13985. Cola acuminata, 109 Sclerocarya caffra, 270
  13986. Cola nitida, 110 Simmondsia chinensis, 273— 274
  13987. Cola verticillata, 113 Telfairia occidentalis, 276
  13988. Cordeauxia edulis, 115 Telfairia pedata, 279
  13989. Corylus americana, 116 Terminalia catappa, 282— 283
  13990. Corylus avellana, 119— 120 Trapa natans, 285
  13991. Corylus colurna, 124 Treculia africana, 289
  13992. Corylus cornuta, 126 Virola sebifera, 291
  13993. Corylus ferox, 128
  13994. Giant filbert, see Corylus maxima
  13995. Gìnkgetin, 164
  13996. Corylus heterophylla, 129
  13997. Corylus maxima, 130 Ginkgic acid, 164
  13998. Coula edulis, 132 Ginkgo, see Ginkgo biloba
  13999. Cycas circinalis, 134 Ginkgoaceae, 163— 165, see also specific species
  14000. Cycas revoluta, 135 Ginkgo biloba, 163— 165
  14001. Cycas rumphii, 137 Ginkgol, 164
  14002. Cyperus esculentus, 140 Ginkgolic acid, 164
  14003. 328 Handbook of Nuts
  14004. Ginnol, 164 Hanga, see Pittosporum resinferum
  14005. Globulins, 35, 114, 250, 282, 287, see also specific Harvesting
  14006. types Acrocomia sclerocarpa, 2
  14007. Glucoluteolin, 219 Acrocomia totai, 3
  14008. Glucose Adhatoda vasica, 1
  14009. Balanites aegyptiaca, 41 Aleurites fordii, 10
  14010. Borassus flabellifer, 48 Aleurites moluccana, 13
  14011. Bosimum alicastrum, 51 Aleurites montana, 15
  14012. Cola nitida, 110 Amphicarpaea hracteata, 18
  14013. Anacardium occidentale, 21
  14014. Cycas revoluta, 135
  14015. Apios americana, 25
  14016. Cyperus rotundas, 142
  14017. Jatropha curcas, 178 Areca catechu, 28
  14018. Madhuca longifolia, 211 Arenga pinnata, 32
  14019. Phytelephas macrocarpa, 235 Artocarpus alti lis, 36
  14020. Glucosidases, 94, see also specific types Artocarpus heterophyllus, 38
  14021. Glucosides, 114, see also specific types Balanites aegyptiaca, 42
  14022. Glucuronic acid, 215, 250 Barringtonia procera, 43
  14023. Glutamic acid, 35, 263, 270, 273, 282 Bertholletia excelsa, 45
  14024. Glutamine, 23, 114, 160 Borassus flabellifer, 48— 49
  14025. Glutathione, 219 Bosimum alicastrum, 52
  14026. Glutelins, 35, see also specific types Brosimum utile, 53— 54
  14027. Gluten, 282 Bruguiera gymnorhiza, 56
  14028. Glyceim, 253 Buchanania lanzan, 58
  14029. Glycerides, see also specific types Butyrospermum paradoxum, 60— 61
  14030. Aleurites moluccana, 13 Calamus rotang, 63
  14031. Aleurites montana, 14 Canarium indicum, 6 6
  14032. Canarium ovatum, 67— 68
  14033. Anacardium occidentale, 20
  14034. Bertholletia excelsa, 44 Carya illinoensis, 1 1
  14035. Caryocar amygdaliferum, 73
  14036. Buchanania lanzan, 58
  14037. Caryocar nuciferum, 74
  14038. Caryocar villosum, 75, 76
  14039. Caryocar villosum, 77
  14040. Elaeis guineensis, 148
  14041. Madhuca longifolia, 211 Caryodendron orinocense, 79
  14042. Platonia esculenta, 247, 248 Castanea crenata, 81
  14043. Schleichera oleosa, 267 Castanea dentata, 83— 84
  14044. Telfairia occidentalis, 276 Castanea mollissima, 87
  14045. Virola surinamensis, 292 Castanea pumila, 89
  14046. Glycine, 35, 51, 114, 160, 263, 273, 282 Castanea sativa, 92
  14047. Glycoproteins, 94, see also specific types Castanospermum australe, 94
  14048. Glycosides, 110, 133, 142, see also specific types Ceiba pentandra, 98— 99
  14049. Gnetaceae, 166— 167, see also specific species Cocos nucifera, 104— 105
  14050. Gnetum gnemon, 166— 167 Cola acuminata, 109
  14051. Gossypol, 97 Cola nitida, 111
  14052. Groundnut, see Apios americana Cola verticillata, 113
  14053. Gru-gru nut, see Acrocomia sclerocarpa; Acrocomia Cordeauxia edulis, 115
  14054. totai Corylus americana, 117— 118
  14055. Guaiacol, 158 Corylus avellana, 121
  14056. Guanine, 232 Corylus chinensis, 123
  14057. Guanosine, 119 Corylus colurna, 125
  14058. Guaraña, see Paullinia cupana Corylus cornuta, 127
  14059. Guaranine, 232 Corylus ferox, 128
  14060. Guilandina moringa, see Moringa oleifera Corylus heterophylla, 129
  14061. Gums, 20, 53, 108, 110, 160, 215, 258, 270, see also
  14062. Corylus maxima, 130
  14063. Coula edulis, 132
  14064. specific types
  14065. Cycas circinalis, 134
  14066. Guru, see Cola acuminata
  14067. Gutta, 211 Cycas revoluta, 135— 136
  14068. Guvacine, 26 Cycas rumphii, 138
  14069. Guvacoline, 26 Cyperus esculentus, 141
  14070. Cyperus rotundas, 143
  14071. Detarium senegalense, 146
  14072. H
  14073. Elaeis guineensis, 150
  14074. Hadji, see Cycas rumphii Elaeis oleifera, 153
  14075. 329
  14076. Eleocharis dulcís, 155 Histamine, 114
  14077. Fagus grandifolia, 159 Histidine
  14078. Fagus sylvatica, 161 Artocarpus altilis, 35
  14079. Ginkgo biloba, 165 Bosimum alicastrum, 51
  14080. Gnetum gnemon, 167 Fagus sylvatica, 160
  14081. Helianthus annuus, 170 Moringa oleifera, 215
  14082. Hyphaene thebaica, 174 Prunus dulcis, 250
  14083. I nocarpus edulis, 176 Ricinodendron rautanenii, 258
  14084. Jatropha curcas, 179 Sapium sebiferum, 263
  14085. Jessenia bataua, 182 Simmondsia chinensis, 273
  14086. Juglans ailanthifolia, 185 Terminalia catappa, 282
  14087. Hog peanut, see Amphicarpaea brat teata
  14088. Juglans cinerea, 187
  14089. Juglans hindsii, 189 Honey tree, see Schleichera oleosa
  14090. Juglans nigra, 192 Horseradish tree, see Moringa oleifera
  14091. Juglans regia, 196 Hydrocyanic acid, 267
  14092. Lecythis minor, 199 Hydroxybenzoic acid, 160
  14093. Lecythis ollaria, 201 Hydroxyglutamic acid, 160
  14094. Lecythis pisonis, 203 Hydroxy-9-octadecenoic acid, 253
  14095. Licania rigida, 205— 206 Hydroxyproline, 160
  14096. Macadamia integrifolia, 209 Hyperin, 194
  14097. Madhuca longifolia, 212— 213 Hyperoside, 219
  14098. Moringa oleifera, 216 Hyphaene thebaica, 173— 174
  14099. Nelumbo nucífera, 220 Hypoxanthine, 232
  14100. Nypa fruticans, 223
  14101. Orbignya cohune, 224
  14102. I
  14103. Orbignya martiana, 227
  14104. Pachira aquatica, 230 Idalin, 160
  14105. Paullinia cupana, 233 Illupei tree, see Madhuca longifolia
  14106. Inche, see Caryodendron orinocense
  14107. Phytelephas macrocarpa, 235
  14108. Pinus edulis, 237 Indian almond, see Terminalia catappa
  14109. Pinus quadrifolia, 238 Indian lotus, see Nelumbo nucífera
  14110. Pistacia vera, 242 Indian walnut, see Aleurites moluccana
  14111. Pittosporum resinferum, 245 Indoleacetic acid, 215
  14112. Platonia esculenta, 248 Indole acetonitrile, 215
  14113. Prunus dulcís, 251 Inocarpus edulis, 175— 176
  14114. Quercus súber, 254— 255 I nocarpus fagifer us, see Inocarpus edulis
  14115. Ricinodendron heudelotii, 257 Inositol, 69, 160, 191,211
  14116. Ricinodendron rautanenii, 259 Insects, see also specific types
  14117. Santalum acuminatum, 261 Acrocomia totai, 3
  14118. Sapium sebiferum, 264 Adhatoda vasica, 1
  14119. Schleichera oleosa, 268 Aleurites f ordii, 10, 11
  14120. Sclerocarya cajfra, 271 Amphicarpaea bracteata, 18
  14121. Simmondsia chinensis, 21A Anacardium occidentale, 21
  14122. Telfairia occidentalis, 277 Apios americana, 25
  14123. Telfairia pedata, 280 Areca catechu, 29
  14124. Terminaba catappa, 283 Arenga pinnata, 33
  14125. Trapa natans, 286 Butyrospermum paradoxum, 61
  14126. Treculia africana, 289 Carya illinoensis, 12
  14127. Castanea mollissima, 87
  14128. Virola sebifera, 291
  14129. Castanospermum australe, 95
  14130. Virola surinamensis, 292
  14131. Hasu, see Nelumbo nucífera Ceiba pentandra, 99
  14132. Hazelnut, see Corylus americana, Corylus avellana, Cocos nucífera, 106
  14133. Corylus colurna Cola nitida, 112
  14134. Heartnut, see Juglans ailanthifolia Cordeauxia edulis, 115
  14135. Helianthus annuus, 168— 172 Corylus americana, 118
  14136. Heptane, 244, 245 Corylus avellana, 122
  14137. Hexacosanol, 160 Corylus cornuta, 127
  14138. Hexadecenoic acid; 152, 247 Cyperus esculentus, 141
  14139. Hicoria pecan, see Carya illinoensis Cyperus rotundas, 143— 144
  14140. Himalayan filbert, see Corylus ferox Detarium senegalense, 146
  14141. Hind’s black walnut, see Juglans hindsii Elaeis guineensis, 151
  14142. 330 Handbook of Nuts
  14143. Elaeis oleifera, 153 Moringa oleifera, 215
  14144. Fagus sylvatica, 162 Nelumbo nucífera, 219
  14145. Ginkgo biloba, 165 Pachira aquatica, 229
  14146. Helianthus annuus, 171— 172 Pistacia vera, 240, 241
  14147. Hyphaene thebaica, 174 Prunas dulcis, 250
  14148. Juglans nigra, 193 Sclerocarya caffra, 270
  14149. Juglans regia, 197 Telfairia pedata, 278, 279
  14150. Lecythis minor, 199 Terminaba catappa, 282
  14151. Lecythis pisonis, 203 Trapa natans, 285
  14152. Licania rigida, 206 Trecuba africana, 288
  14153. Macadamia integrifolia, 209 Isoguvacine, 26
  14154. Madhuca longifolia, 213 Isoleucine, 35, 51, 114, 215, 258, 273, 282
  14155. Moringa oleifera, 217 Isolicanic acid, 204
  14156. Orbignya cohune, 224
  14157. Isoquercitrin, 160, 219, 263
  14158. Orbignya martiana, 228
  14159. Isorhamnetin 3,7-dirhamnoside, 273
  14160. Pachira aquatica, 230 Isorhamnetin 3-rutinoside, 273
  14161. Paullinia cupana, 233 Isovitexin, 178
  14162. Phytelephas macrocarpa, 235 Italian chestnut, see Castanea sativa
  14163. Pistacia vera, 243 Ivory nut palm, see Phytelephas macrocarpa
  14164. Prunas dulcis, 252
  14165. Sapium sebiferum, 265
  14166. Schleicher a oleosa, 268
  14167. Sclerocarya caffra, 271 Jackfruit, see Artocarpus heterophyllus
  14168. Simmondsia chinensis, 275 Jagua, see Jessenia bataua
  14169. Telfairia pedata, 280 Japanese chestnut, see Castanea crenata
  14170. Terminaba catappa, 283 Japanese walnut, see Juglans ailanthifoba
  14171. Trapa natans, 286 Jatropha curcas, 177— 179
  14172. Virola sebifera, 291 Java-almond, see Canarium indicum
  14173. Iodine, 1,4, 241, 285 Jericho balsam, see Balanites aegyptiaca
  14174. Ipuranol, 164 Jessenia bataua, 180— 183
  14175. Iron Jessenia poly car pa, see Jessenia bataua
  14176. Aleurites moluccana, 13
  14177. Jesuit nut, see Trapa natans
  14178. Amphicarpaea bracteata, 17 Jikungo, see Telfairia pedata
  14179. Anacardium occidentale, 20
  14180. Jojoba, see Simmondsia chinensis
  14181. Areca catechu, 27 Juglandaceae, 69— 71, 184— 197, see also specific
  14182. Artocarpus altilis, 35 species
  14183. Artocarpus heterophyllus, 37 Juglandic acid, 186
  14184. Bert hollé tia excelsa, 44 Juglandin, 186
  14185. Borassus flabellifer, 47 Juglans ailanthifoba, 184— 185
  14186. Bosimum alicastrum, 50, 51 Juglans allardiana, see Juglans ailanthifoba
  14187. Butyrospermum paradoxum, 60
  14188. Juglans cabfornica, see Juglans hindsii
  14189. Calamus rotang, 62 Juglans cinerea, 186— 188
  14190. Canarium ovatum, 67 Juglans coarctata, see Juglans ailanthifoba
  14191. Carya illinoensis, 69 Juglans hindsii, 189
  14192. Castanea crenata, 80 Juglans lavallei, see Juglans ailanthifoba
  14193. Castanea mollissima, 85 Juglans mirabunda, see Juglans ailanthifoba
  14194. Castanea sativa, 90 Juglans nigra, 190— 193
  14195. Cocos nucifera, 101, 102 Juglans regia, 194— 197
  14196. Cola acuminata, 107 Juglans sachalinensis, see Juglans ailanthifoba
  14197. Cordeauxia edulis, 114 Juglans sieboldiana, see Juglans ailanthifoba
  14198. Corylus avellana, 119 Juglone, 186, 191
  14199. Cyperus esculentus, 140 Juri, see Castanea crenata
  14200. Cyperus rotundas, 142
  14201. Elaeis guineensis, 148
  14202. Eleocharis dulcis, 154
  14203. Ginkgo biloba, 164 Kaempferol, 160, 194, 219
  14204. Helianthus annuus, 169 Kaempferol-3-arabinoside, 194
  14205. Juglans cinerea, 186 Kakari taccy nut, see Caryodendron orinocense
  14206. Juglans nigra, 191 Kanari, see Canarium indicum
  14207. Juglans regia, 194 Kaong, see Arenga pinnata
  14208. Madhuca longifolia, 211 Kapok, see Ceiba pentandra
  14209. 331
  14210. Kenari, see Canarium indicum Bertholletia excelsa, 44
  14211. Kola, Gbanja, see Cola nitida Buchanania lanzan, 58
  14212. Kola nut, see Cola acuminata Butyrospermum paradoxum, 60
  14213. Kotamba, see Terminalia catappa Canarium indicum, 65
  14214. Kusum tree, see Schleichera oleosa
  14215. Carya illinoensis, 69, 70
  14216. Caryocar villosum, 76
  14217. Castanea sativa, 90
  14218. Ceiba pentandra, 97
  14219. Lactic acid, 160 Cocos nucifera, 102
  14220. Lac tree, see Schleichera oleosa Corylus avellana, 119
  14221. Lambert’s filbert, see Corylus maxima Cyperus esculentus, 140
  14222. Lapachol, 211 Cyperus rotundus, 142
  14223. Lapachones, 211, see also specific types Elaeis guineensis, 148
  14224. Laurie acid Elaeis oleifera, 152
  14225. Cary a illinoensis, 69 Fagus sylvatica, 160
  14226. Cocos nucifera, 102 Helianthus annuus, 169
  14227. Fagus sylvatica, 160 Jatropha curcas, 178
  14228. Helianthus annuus, 169 Jug Ians regia, 194
  14229. Macadamia integrifolia, 207 Lecythis pisonis, 202
  14230. Schleichera oleosa, 267 Licania rigida, 204
  14231. Virola sehifera, 290 Macadamia inte grif olia, 207
  14232. Virola surinamensis, 292 Madhuca longifolia, 211
  14233. Lectins, 17, see also specific types Pachira aquatica, 229
  14234. Pistacia vera, 240, 241
  14235. Lecythidaceae, 198— 203, see also specific species
  14236. Lecythis elliptica, see Lecythis minor Platonia esculenta, 247
  14237. Lecythis minor, 198— 199 Prunus dulcis, 250
  14238. Lecythis ollaria, 200— 201 Ricinodendron heudelotii, 257
  14239. Lecythis pisonis, 202— 203 Ricinodendron rautanenii, 258
  14240. Leucine Santalum acuminatum, 260
  14241. Artocarpus altilis, 35 Sapium sebiferum, 263
  14242. Bosimum alicastrum, 51 Telfairia occidentalis, 276
  14243. Butyrospermum paradoxum, 60 Terminalia catappa, 282
  14244. Cordeauxia edulis, 114
  14245. Treculia africana, 288
  14246. Fagus sylvatica, 160
  14247. Virola sebifera, 290
  14248. Prunus dulcis, 250 Virola surinamensis, 292
  14249. Ricinodendron rautanenii, 258 Linolenic acid
  14250. Sapium sebiferum, 263 Aleurites moluccana, 13
  14251. Simmondsia chinensis, 273 Amphicarpaea bracteata, 17
  14252. Terminalia catappa, 282 Canarium indicum, 65
  14253. Leucocyanadine, 20
  14254. Carya illinoensis, 69, 70
  14255. Leucocyanidin, 160, 219, 282 Elaeis oleifera, 152
  14256. Leucodelphinidin, 160, 219 Ginkgo biloba, 164
  14257. Licania rigida, 204— 206 Helianthus annuus, 169
  14258. Licanic acid, 204 Juglans regia, 194
  14259. Ligin, 253 Madhuca longifolia, 211
  14260. Lignans, 290, see also specific types Sapium sebiferum, 263
  14261. Lignin, 253 Lipids, 4, 287, see also specific types
  14262. Lignoceric acid, 20, 97, 169, 215, 267 Liriodenine, 219
  14263. Lignoceryl alcohol, 119 Lotus, see Nelumbo nucifera
  14264. Lignocerylalcohol, 119 Lotus root, see Nelumbo nucifera
  14265. Lignone, 97 Lucine, 215
  14266. Limonene, 142, 245 Lumbang oil, see Aleurites moluccana
  14267. Linoceric acid, 140 Lupeol, 60
  14268. Linoleic acid Lutelins, 287, see also specific types
  14269. Acrocomia scleracarpa, 1 Luteolin, 219
  14270. Acrocomia totai, 4 Luteolin-7-glucoside, 219
  14271. Aleurites moluccana, 13 Lycine, 263
  14272. Aleurites montana, 14 Lysine
  14273. Amphicarpaea bracteata, 17 Bosimum alicastrum, 51
  14274. Anacardium occidentale, 20 Buchanania lanzan, 58
  14275. Balanites aegyptiaca, 41 Cordeauxia edulis, 114
  14276. 332 Handbook of Nuts
  14277. Moringa oleifera, 215
  14278. Fagus syhatica, 160
  14279. Jessenia hataua, 181 Prunus dulcis, 250
  14280. Moringa oleifera, 215 Ricinodendron rautanenii, 258
  14281. Prunas dale is, 250 Sapium sebiferum, 263
  14282. Ricinodendron rautanenii, 258 Simmondsia chinensis, 273
  14283. Sapium sehiferum, 263 Terminada catappa, 282
  14284. Simmondsia chinensis, 273 Methylaminopropionic acid, 133
  14285. Terminada catappa, 282 Methylcorypalline, 219
  14286. Methylpentosane, 160
  14287. Microorganisms, 3, 10— 11, 18 see also specific
  14288. M
  14289. types
  14290. Macadamia integrifolia, 207— 209 Mil pesos, see Jessenia bataua
  14291. Macadamia nut, see Macadamia integrifolia Minerals, see specific types
  14292. Macadamia tetraphylla, 207— 209 Mites, 25,29, 118, 162
  14293. Macauba, see Acrocomia sclerocarpa Mogongo nut, see Ricinodendron rautanenii
  14294. Macrozaniin, 135 Monkey pod, see Lecythis ollaria
  14295. Madhuca indica, see Madhuca longifolia Monkey pot, see Lecythis ollaria
  14296. Madhuca longifolia, 2 10— 213 Monoglycerides, 60, see also specific types
  14297. Magnesium Moraceae, 34— 39, 50— 54, 287— 289, see also
  14298. Amphicarpaea hracteata, 17 specific species
  14299. Moretenol, 263
  14300. Bertholletia excelsa, 44
  14301. Cocos nucífera, 102 Moretenone, 263
  14302. Jug Ians regia, 194 Moreton bay chestnut, see Castanospermum australe
  14303. Madhuca longifolia, 211 Morin, 37
  14304. Prunas dulcís, 250 Moringa, see Moringa oleifera
  14305. Santalum acuminatum, 260 Moringaceae, 214— 217, see also specific species
  14306. Trapa natans, 285 Moringa nux-ben, see Moringa oleifera
  14307. Treculia africana, 288 Moringa oleifera, 214— 217
  14308. Mahua, see Madhuca longifolia Moringa pterygosperma, see Moringa oleifera
  14309. Maidenhair tree, see Ginkgo biloba Mucaja, see Acrocomia sclerocarpa
  14310. Malabar chestnut, see Pachira aquatica Mucilage cola, see Cola verticillata
  14311. Malabar nut, see Adhatoda vasica Mu-oil tree, see Aleurites montana
  14312. Malay lac-tree, see Schleichera oleosa Murunga-Kai, see Moringa oleifera
  14313. Muscilage, 51
  14314. Malic acid, 160,211,270
  14315. Malindjo, see Gnetum gnemon Mutacone, 142
  14316. Maltose, 211 Muzinda, see Treculia africana
  14317. Mammee, wild, see Platonia esculenta Myrcene, 244
  14318. Manganese, 17, 44, 194, 241, 285 Myricetin, 160, 204, 211
  14319. Mani, see Caryocar amygdaliferum Myricetin-3-O-L-rhamnoside, 211
  14320. Manindjo, see Gnetum gnemon Myricitrin, 119
  14321. Manketti, see Ricinodendron rautanenii; Ricinoden­ Myricitroside, 119
  14322. dron heudelotii Myristicaceae, 290— 292, see also specific species
  14323. Mannan, 119, 234, 235 Myristic acid
  14324. Manninotriose, 119, 124 Bertholletia excelsa, 44
  14325. Mannitol, 174 Buchanania lanzan, 58
  14326. Mannose, 48, 174, 235 Carya illinoensis, 69
  14327. Maranhau nut, see Pachira aquatica Caryocar villosum, 76
  14328. Marmesin, 41 Cocos nucífera, 102
  14329. Manila nut, see Sclerocarya caffra Corylus avellana, 119
  14330. Marvola nut, see Sclerocarya caffra Cyperus esculentus, 140
  14331. Masico, see Bosimum alicastrum Cyperus rotundas, 142
  14332. Mawra butter tree, see Madhuca longifolia Elaeis guineensis, 148
  14333. Mbocaya, see Acrocomia total Fagus sylvatica, 160
  14334. Melibiose, 119, 124
  14335. Jatropha curcas, 178
  14336. Methanol, 263
  14337. Macadamia integrifolia, 207
  14338. Methionine
  14339. Moringa oleifera, 215
  14340. Artocarpus altilis, 35 Pistacia vera, 241
  14341. Bosimum alicastrum, 51 Platonia esculenta, 247
  14342. Buchanania lanzan, 58 Prunus dulcis, 250
  14343. Cordeauxia edulis, 114 Sapium sebiferum, 263
  14344. Fagus sylvatica, 160 Terminada catappa, 282
  14345. 333
  14346. Virola sebifera, 290 Cocos nucífera, 102
  14347. Virola surinamensis, 292 Cola acuminata, 107, 108
  14348. Myrobalan, see Terminalia calappa Corylus avellana, 119
  14349. Myrtaceae, 43— 46, see also specific species Cyperus esculentus, 140
  14350. Cyperus rotundus, 142
  14351. Detarium senegalense, 145
  14352. N
  14353. Elaeis guineensis, 148
  14354. Nambi, see Caryodendron orinocense Eleocharis dulcis, 154
  14355. Naphthaquinone, 211 Ginkgo biloba, 164
  14356. Narcissin, 273 Helianthus annuus, 169
  14357. Native peach, see Santalum acuminatum Juglans nigra, 191
  14358. Nelumbium nelumbo, see Nelumbo nucífera Juglans regia, 194
  14359. Nelumbium speciosum, see Nelumbo nucífera Macadamia integrifolia, 207
  14360. Nelumbonaceae, 218— 221, see also specific species Madhuca longifolia, 211
  14361. Nelumbo nelumbo, see Nelumbo nucífera Moringa oleifera, 215
  14362. Nelumbo nucífera, 218— 221 Nelumbo nucífera, 219
  14363. Nematodes Pachira aquatica, 229
  14364. Aleurites fordii, 11 Pistacia vera, 240
  14365. Prunus dulcis, 250
  14366. Apios americana, 25
  14367. Areca catechu, 29 Sclerocarya caffra, 270
  14368. Artocarpus altilis, 36 Terminalia catappa, 282
  14369. Artocarpus heterophyllus, 39 Trapa natans, 285
  14370. Bertholletia excelsa, 46 Nickel, 44
  14371. Ceiba pentandra, 99 Nicotine, 191
  14372. Cocos nucífera, 106 Nicotinic acid, 215, 241, 285
  14373. Cola nitida, 112 Ñipa palm, see Nypa fruticans
  14374. Corylus avellana, 122 Nitrates, 23, see also specific types
  14375. Cyperus esculentus, 141 Nitrogen, 4, 17, 23, 97, 164, 276
  14376. Cyperus rotundas, 143 n-Nonacosan, 119, 160
  14377. Elaeis guineensis, 151 Nonane, 245
  14378. Eleocharis dulcis, 156 Nomuciferine, 219
  14379. Nua nut, see Barringtonia procera
  14380. Helianthus annuus, 172
  14381. Juglans ailanthifolia, 185 Nuciferine, 219
  14382. Nut pine, see Pinus edulis
  14383. Juglans cinerea, 188
  14384. Juglans nigra, 193 Nutrients, see spiecific types
  14385. Juglans regia, 197 Nutsedge, see Cyperus esculentus; Cyperus rotundus
  14386. Macadamia integrifolia, 209 Nymphaea nelumbo, see Nelumbo nucífera
  14387. Pistacia vera, 243 Nypa fruticans, 222— 223
  14388. Quercus súber, 255
  14389. Sapium sebiferum, 265
  14390. o
  14391. Telfairia pedata, 280
  14392. Terminalia calappa, 283 Oak, see Quercus súber; Schleichera oleosa
  14393. Neochlorogenic acid, 219 Ocimene, 244
  14394. Neocycasin A, 135 Octadecatrienic acid, 204
  14395. Neocycasin B, 135 Octadeconoic acid, 253
  14396. Nerolidol, 261 Oil nut, see Juglans cinerea
  14397. Neurine, 160 Oil palm, see Elaeis guineensis; Elaeis oleifera
  14398. Niacin Oils, see also specific types
  14399. Anacardium occidentale, 20 Aleurites fordii, 8
  14400. Areca catechu, 27 Aleurites montana, 14
  14401. Arenga pinnata, 31 Amphicarpaea bracteata, 17
  14402. Artocarpus heterophyllus, 2n Bosimum alicastrum, 51
  14403. Bertholletia excelsa, 44 Buchanania lanzan, 58
  14404. Borassus flabellifer, 47 Canarium indicum, 65
  14405. Bosimum alicastrum, 50, 51 Caryocar nuciferum, 74
  14406. Calamus rotang, 62 Caryocar villosum, 75
  14407. Canarium ovatum, 67 Caryodendron orinocense, 78
  14408. Carya illinoensis, 69 Castanea dentata, 82
  14409. Castanea crenata, 80 Ceiba pentandra, 91
  14410. Castanea mollissima, 85 Cola acuminata, 107
  14411. Castanea sativa, 90 Cola nitida, 110
  14412. 334 Handbook of Nuts
  14413. Cory lus avellana, 119 Juglans regia, 194
  14414. Coula edulis, 131 Lecythis pisonis, 202
  14415. Cycas revoluta, 135 Licania rigida, 204
  14416. Cyperus eseulentus, 140 Macadamia integrifolia, 207
  14417. Cyperus rotundus, 142 Madhuca longifolia, 211
  14418. Elaeis guineensis, 148 Maringa oleifera, 215
  14419. Elaeis oleifera, 152 Pachira aquatica, 229
  14420. Ginkgo biloba, 164 Pistacia vera, 240, 241
  14421. Helianthus annuus, 169 Platonia esculenta, 247
  14422. Jatropha curcas, 178
  14423. Prunus dulcis, 250
  14424. Jessenia bataua, 181
  14425. Ricinodendron heudelotii, 257
  14426. Juglans cinerea, 186 Santalum acuminatum, 260, 261
  14427. Juglans regia, 194 Sapium sebiferum, 263
  14428. Lecythis pisonis, 202 Schleichera oleosa, 267
  14429. Macadamia integrifolia, 207 Sclerocarya caffra, 270
  14430. Madhuca longifolia, 211 Telfairia occidentalis, 276
  14431. Moringa oleifera, 215 Terminalia catappa, 282
  14432. Orbignya martiana, 225, 226 Treculia africana, 288
  14433. Pistacia vera, 240 Virola sebifera, 290
  14434. Pittosporum resinferum, 244 Virola surinamensis, 292
  14435. Prunus dulcis, 250
  14436. Oleodipalmitins, 76, 148, 211, 247, see also specific
  14437. Ricinodendron rautanenii, 258
  14438. types
  14439. Santalum acuminatum, 260, 261
  14440. Oleodisaturated glycerides, 76, see also specific
  14441. Sapium se bife rum, 263
  14442. types
  14443. Schleichera oleosa, 267 Oleopalmitostearins, 211, 247, see also specific types
  14444. Simmondsia chinensis, 273 Oleo-resin, 240
  14445. Telfairia occidentalis, 276 Olla de mona, see Lecythis ollaria
  14446. Treculia africana, 287 Orbignya cohune, 224
  14447. Olivine, see Telfairia pedata Orbignya martiana, 225— 228
  14448. Oiticica, see Licania rigida Orbignya oleifera, see Orbignya martiana
  14449. Ojuk nut, see Ricinodendron heudelotii Orbignya speciosa, see Orbignya martiana
  14450. Okwa, see Treculia africana Otaheite chestnut, see I nocarpus edulis
  14451. Olacaceae, 131— 132, see also specific species Owe cola, see Cola verticillata
  14452. Oleic acid Oxalic acid, 160
  14453. Acrocomia sclerocarpa, 1
  14454. Oxlate, 288
  14455. Acrocomia totai, 4
  14456. Oxoushinsunine, 219
  14457. Aleurites f ordii, 8 Oyster nut, see Telfairia occidentalis; Telfairia
  14458. Aleurites moluccana, 13 pedata
  14459. Aleurites montana, 14
  14460. Amphicarpaea bracteata, 17
  14461. Balanites aegyptiaca, 41
  14462. Bertholletia excelsa 44 Pachira aquatica, 229— 230
  14463. Buchanania lanzan, 58 Pahoo hadji, see Cycas rumphii
  14464. Butyrospermum paradoxum, 60 Pakis adji, see Cycas rumphii
  14465. Canarium indicum, 65 Pakoeine, 133
  14466. Carya illinoensis, 69, 70 Pakoo adji, see Cycas rumphii
  14467. Caryocar villosum, 76 Pakuri, see Platonia escalenta
  14468. Castanea sativa, 90 Palm
  14469. Ceiba pentandra, 97
  14470. betel-nut, see Areca catechu
  14471. Cocos nucifera, 102
  14472. black sugar, see Arenga pinnata
  14473. Cory lus avellana, 119
  14474. coco-, see Acrocomia totai
  14475. Coula edulis, 131
  14476. cohune, see Orbignya cohune
  14477. Cycas revoluta, 135
  14478. doum, see Hyphaene thebaica
  14479. Cyperus esculentus, 140 ivory nut, see Phytelephas macrocarpa
  14480. Cyperus rotundus, 142 nipa, see Nypa fruticans
  14481. Elaeis guineensis, 148 palmyra, see Borassus flabellifer
  14482. Elaeis oleifera, 152 sugar, see Arenga pinnata
  14483. Fagus sylvatica, 160 Palmae, 147— 151, see also specific species
  14484. Helianthus annuus, 169 Palmitic acid
  14485. Jatropha curcas, 178 Amphicarpaea bracteata, 17
  14486. Jessenia bataua, 181 Anacardium occidentales, 20
  14487. 335
  14488. Balanites aegyptiaca, 41 Pecan, see Carya illinoensis
  14489. Bertholletia excelsa, 44 Pectin, 142, 250
  14490. Buchanania lanzan, 58 Pentosane, 160
  14491. Butyrospermum paradoxum, 60 Pentosans, 97, 164, 282, see also specific types
  14492. Canarium indicum, 65 Pequi, see Caryocar villosum
  14493. Carya illinoensis, 69, 70 Persian walnut, see Juglans regia
  14494. Caryocar villosum, 76 Pests, see specific types
  14495. Castanea saliva, 90 Petroleum nut, see Pittosporum resinferum
  14496. Ceiba pentandra, 97 Phellogenic acid, 253
  14497. Cocos nucifera, 102 Phellonic acid, 253
  14498. Corylus avellana, 119 Phenylalanine
  14499. Coula edulis, 131 Artocarpus altilis, 35
  14500. Cycas revoluta, 135 Bosimum alicastrum, 51
  14501. Cyperus esculentus, 140 Butyrospermum paradoxum, 60
  14502. Elaeis guineensis, 148 Cordeauxia edulis, 114
  14503. Elaeis oleifera, 152 Fagus sylvatica, 160
  14504. Fagus sylvatica, 160 Moringa oleifera, 2 15
  14505. Helianthus annuus, 169 Prunus dulcis, 250
  14506. Jatropha cureas, 178 Ricinodendron rautanenii, 258
  14507. Jug Ians regia, 194 Simmondsia chinensis, 273
  14508. Lecythis pisonis, 202 Terminalia calappa, 282
  14509. Licania rigida, 204 Philippine hanga, see Pittosporum resinferum
  14510. Macadamia integrifolia, 207 Philippine nut, see Canarium ovatum
  14511. Madhuca longifolia, 2 1 1 Phlobaphen, 253
  14512. Moringa oleifera, 215 Phloionic acid, 253
  14513. Pistacia vera, 241 Phloionolic acid, 253
  14514. Platonia esculenta, 247, 248 Phloracetophenone 2,4-dimethylether, 263
  14515. Prunus dulcis, 250 Phloroglucin, 69
  14516. Santalum acuminatum, 261 Phosphoric acid, 97, 164, 212, 267
  14517. Sapium sebiferum, 263 Phosphorus
  14518. Schleichera oleosa, 267 Acrocomia total, 3, 4
  14519. Telfairia occidentalis, 276 Aleurites moluccana, 12, 13
  14520. Telfairia pedata, 279 Anacardium occidentale, 20
  14521. Terminalia calappa, 282 Areca catechu, 27
  14522. Treculia africana, 288 Arenga pinnata, 31
  14523. Virola sebifera, 290 Artocarpus altilis, 35
  14524. Virola surinamensis, 292
  14525. Artocarpus heterophyllus, 37
  14526. Palmitodioleins, 76, 148, 211, 247, see also specific Balanites aegyptiaca, 41
  14527. types Bertholletia excelsa, 44
  14528. Palmitoleic acid, 207, 267 Borassus flabellifer, 47
  14529. Palm oil, 74, 76 Bosimum alicastrum, 50, 51
  14530. Palmyra palm, see Borassus flabellifer Buchanania lanzan, 58
  14531. Palo de vaca, see Brosimum utile Butyrospermum paradoxum, 59
  14532. Pamitic acid, 8 Calamus rotang, 62
  14533. Pana, see Artocarpus altilis Canarium ovatum, 67
  14534. Pantothenic acid, 211 Carya illinoensis, 69
  14535. Papayotin, 35
  14536. Castanea crenata, 80
  14537. Paraguay coco-palm, see Acrocomia total
  14538. Castanea mollissima, 85
  14539. Para nut, see Bertholletia excelsa Castanea sativa, 90
  14540. Ceiba pentandra, 97
  14541. Parasites, 99, 172, 213, 217, 239, see also specific
  14542. types Cocos nucifera, 101, 102
  14543. Parcouril, see Platonia esculenta Cola acuminata, 107
  14544. Parkeol, 60 Cordeauxia edulis, 114
  14545. Parry’s pine nut, see Pinus quadrifolia Corylus avellana, 119
  14546. Pataba, see Jessenia bataua Coula edulis, 131
  14547. Pataua, see Jessenia bataua Cyperus esculentus, 140
  14548. Paullinia cupana, 231— 232 Cyperus rotundas, 142
  14549. Paullinia sorbilis, see Paullinia cupana Detarium senegalense, 145
  14550. Pavettia, see Adhatoda vasica Elaeis guineensis, 148
  14551. Peach, native, see Santalum acuminatum Eleocharis dulcis, 154
  14552. Peanut, see Amphicarpaea bracteata Ginkgo biloba, 164
  14553. 336 Handbook of Nuts
  14554. Helianthus annuus, 169 Castanea sativa, 90
  14555. Hyphaene thebaica, 174 Cocos nucífera, 102
  14556. Jug Ians nigra, 191 Corylus avellana, 119
  14557. Jug Ians regia, 194 Eleocharis dulcis, 154
  14558. Macadamia integrifolia, 207 Ginkgo biloba, 164
  14559. Madhuca longifolia, 2 1 1
  14560. Helianthus annuus, 169
  14561. Moringa oleifera, 215
  14562. Jug Ians nigra, 191
  14563. Nelumbo nucífera, 219
  14564. Juglans regia, 194
  14565. Pachira aquatica, 229 Macadamia integrifolia, 207
  14566. Pistacia vera, 240, 241 Nelumbo nucífera, 219
  14567. Prunus dulcís, 250 Pistacia vera, 240, 241
  14568. Sclerocarya cajfra, 270 Prunus dulcis, 250
  14569. Telfairia occidentalis, 276 Santalum acuminatum, 260
  14570. Telfairia pedata, 278, 279 Terminaba catappa, 282
  14571. Terminaba catappa, 282
  14572. Trapa natans, 285
  14573. Trapa natans, 285
  14574. Treculia africana, 288
  14575. Treculia africana, 287 Proanthocyanadine leucocyanadine, 20
  14576. Phosphorylase, 285 Procyanidin, 110
  14577. Physic nut, see Jatropha curcas Prolamine, 114, 282
  14578. Phytelephas macrocarpa, 234— 235 Prolamins, 35, see also specific types
  14579. Phytic acid, 194, 250 Proline, 35, 51, 160, 273, 282
  14580. Phytohemagglutinins, 114, see also specific types Pronuciferine, 219
  14581. Phytosterin, 133 Proteaceae, 207— 209, see also specific species
  14582. Phytosterols, 8, 69, 119, see also specific types
  14583. Proteins, see also specific types
  14584. Piauhy, see Platonia esculenta
  14585. Acrocomia total, 3, 4
  14586. Pigments, 37, see also specific types Aleurites moluccana, 12, 13
  14587. Pili nut, see Canarium ovatum Amphicarpaea bracteata, 17
  14588. Pinaceae, 236— 239, see also specific species Anacardium occidentale, 20
  14589. Pine, see Pinus edulis Apios americana, 23
  14590. Pinene, 244 Areca catechu, 26, 27
  14591. Pine nut, see Pinus edulis, Pinus quadrifolia Arenga pinnata, 31
  14592. Pinon, see Pinus edulis; Pinus quadrifolia Artocarpus altibs, 35
  14593. Pinus cembroides, see Pinus edulis Artocarpus heterophyllus, 37
  14594. Pinus edulis, 236— 237
  14595. Balanites aegyptiaca, 41
  14596. Pinus par rayana, see Pinus quadrifolia
  14597. Bertholletia excelsa, 44
  14598. Pinus quadrifolia, 238— 239 Borassus flabellifer, 47, 48
  14599. Pistachio, see Pistacia vera Bosimum abcastrum, 50, 51
  14600. Pistaciaceae, 240— 243, see also specific species Buchanania lanzan, 58
  14601. Pistacia oleosa, see Schleichera oleosa Butyrospermum paradoxum, 59, 60
  14602. Pistacia vera, 240— 243 Calamus rotang, 62
  14603. Pittosporaceae, 244— 246, see also specific species Canarium indicum, 65
  14604. Pittosporum resinferum, 244— 246
  14605. Canarium ovatum, 67
  14606. Platonia esculenta, 247— 248
  14607. Carya illinoensis, 69
  14608. Platonia insignis, see Platonia esculenta Castanea crenata, 80
  14609. Pleragina umbresissima, see Licania rigida Castanea dentata, 82
  14610. Polymerides, 253, see also specific types Castanea mollissima, 85
  14611. Polynesia chestnut, see ¡nocarpus edulis Castanea sativa, 90
  14612. Polyphenols, 142, see also specific types Castanospermum australe, 94
  14613. Potash, 97, 169, 212, 267
  14614. Ceiba pentandra, 97
  14615. Potassium
  14616. Cocos nucífera, 101, 102
  14617. Acrocomia total, 3, 4 Cola acuminata, 107, 108
  14618. Aleurites moluccana, 12 Cola nitida, 110
  14619. Amphicarpaea bracteata, 17 Cordeauxia edulis, 114
  14620. Anacardium occidentale, 20 Corylus americana, 116
  14621. Areca catechu, 27 Corylus avellana, 119
  14622. Arenga pinnata, 31 Coula edulis, 131
  14623. Artocarpus altilis, 35 Cycas revoluta, 135
  14624. Artocarpus heterophyllus, 37 Cyperus esculentus, 140
  14625. Bertholletia excelsa, 44 Cyperus rotundas, 142
  14626. Canarium ovatum, 67 Detarium senegalense, 145
  14627. Carya illinoensis, 69 Elaeis guineensis, 148
  14628. 337
  14629. Eleocharis dulcís, 154 Resin
  14630. Fagas grandifolia, 158
  14631. Artocarpus heterophyllus, 37
  14632. Ginkgo biloba, 164 Bosimum alicastrum, 51
  14633. G ne turn gnemon, 166 Brosimum utile, 53
  14634. Helianthus annuus, 169 Ceiba pentandra, 97
  14635. Hyphaene thebaica, 174 Cyperus rotundas, 142
  14636. Inocarpus edulis, 175 Madhuca longifolia, 211, 212
  14637. Jatropha curcas, 178 Paullinia cupana, 232
  14638. Jessenia bataua, 181 Pistacia vera, 240
  14639. Juglans cinerea, 186
  14640. Ricinodendron heudelotii, 257
  14641. Juglans nigra, 191
  14642. Ricinodendron rautanenii, 258
  14643. Juglans regia, 194
  14644. Rhamnose, 20, 41, 160, 215
  14645. Lecythis pisonis, 202 Rhizome, 219
  14646. Licania rigida, 204 Rhizophoraceae, 55— 56, see also specific species
  14647. Macadamia integrifolia, 207 Riboflavin, see also Vitamin B
  14648. Madhuca longifolia, 211 Anacardium occidentale, 20
  14649. Moringa oleifera, 215 Areca catechu, 27
  14650. Nelumbo nucífera, 219 Arenga pianata, 31
  14651. Orbignya cohune, 224
  14652. Artocarpus altilis, 35
  14653. Orbignya martiana, 225, 226 Artocarpus heterophyllus, 37
  14654. Pachira aquatica, 229 Bertholletia excelsa, 44
  14655. Phytelephas macrocarpa, 234 Borassus flabellifer, 47
  14656. Pinus edulis, 236 Bosimum alicastrum, 50, 51
  14657. Pistacia vera, 240, 241 Calamus rotang, 62
  14658. Prunas dulcís, 250 Cañarium ovatum, 67
  14659. Ricinodendron rautanenii, 258 Carya illinoensis, 69
  14660. Santalum acuminatum, 260 Castanea crenata, 80
  14661. Sapium sebiferum, 263 Castanea mollissima, 85
  14662. Schleichera oleosa, 267
  14663. Castanea sativa, 90
  14664. Sclerocarya caffra, 270 Cocos nucífera, 102
  14665. Simmondsia chinensis, 273 Cola acuminata, 107, 108
  14666. Telfairia occidentalis, 276 Corylus avellana, 119
  14667. Telfairia pedata, 278, 279 Cyperus esculentus, 140
  14668. Terminaba catappa, 282 Cyperus rotundus, 142
  14669. Trapa natans, 285 Detarium senegalense, 145
  14670. Treculia africana, 287, 288 Elaeis guineensis, 148
  14671. Provision tree, see Pachira aquatica Eleocharis dulcís, 154
  14672. Prunas dulcís, 249— 252
  14673. Ginkgo biloba, 164
  14674. Pterygospermin, 215
  14675. Helianthus annuus, 169
  14676. Pumpkin, fluted, see Telfairia occidentalis Juglans nigra, 191
  14677. Purging nut, see Jatropha curcas Juglans regia, 194
  14678. Purple nutsedge, see Cyperus rotundas Macadamia inte grifo lia, 207
  14679. Pyroligenous acid, 97 Nelumbo nucífera, 219
  14680. Pachira aquatica, 229
  14681. Pistacia vera, 241
  14682. Prunus dulcís, 250
  14683. Quandong nut, see Santalum acuminatum
  14684. Sclerocarya caffra, 270
  14685. Quercetin, 35, 97, 160, 194, 219 Terminaba catappa, 282
  14686. Trecuba africana, 288
  14687. Quercetin-3-arabinoside, 194
  14688. Quercitrin, 194 Ribose, 41
  14689. Quercus occidentalis, see Quercus saber Ricinodendron africanum, see Ricinodendron
  14690. Quercus saber, 253— 255
  14691. heudelotii
  14692. Ricinodendron heudelotii, 256— 257
  14693. Ricinodendron rautanenii, 258— 259
  14694. R
  14695. Robinin, 219
  14696. Raffinose, 119, 124, 164, 178, 219 Roemerine, 219
  14697. Ramon, see Bosimum alicastrum Rosaceae, 204— 206, 249— 252, see also specific
  14698. Rattan cane, see Calamus rotang species
  14699. Red ucuuba, see Virola sebifera Rotang cane, see Calamus rotang
  14700. 338 Handbook of Nuts
  14701. Rubidium, 44 Sitosterol glucoside, 41
  14702. Rutin, 219 Slippery cola, see Cola verticillata
  14703. Snakes, 49, 136
  14704. Soapberry tree, see Balanites aegyptiaca
  14705. Sodium
  14706. Saba nut, see Pachira aquatica Anacardium occidentale, 20
  14707. Saccharides, 142, see also specific types Areca catechu, 27
  14708. Saccharose, 178, 258 Arenga pianata, 31
  14709. Sacred lotus, see Nelumho nucífera Artocarpus altilis, 35
  14710. Salicylic acid, 142 Artocarpus heterophyllus, 37
  14711. Sanga nut, see Ricinodendron heudelotii Bertho llé tia excelsa, 44
  14712. Santalaceae, 260— 261, see also specific species Canarium ovatum, 67
  14713. Santalbic acid, 260 Carya illinoensis, 69
  14714. Santalbinic acid, 260 Castanea crenata, 80
  14715. Santalum acuminatum, 260— 261
  14716. Cocos nucífera, 102
  14717. Sapindaceae, 231— 232, 266— 268, see also specific Eleocharis dulcís, 154
  14718. species Ginkgo biloba, 164
  14719. Sapium sebiferum, 262— 265 Helianthus annuus, 169
  14720. Sapogenins, 41, see also specific types Juglans nigra, 191
  14721. Saponins, 8, 23, 160, 232, see also specific types Juglans regia, 194
  14722. Sapotaceae, 59— 61, 210— 213, see also specific Pachira aquatica, 229
  14723. species Prunus dulcís, 250
  14724. Sapucaia, see Lecythis pisonis Santalum acuminatum, 260
  14725. Saturated acids, 140, 169, see also specific types Trapa natans, 285
  14726. Schleichera oleosa, 266— 268 Treculia africana, 288
  14727. Schleichera trijuga, see Schleichera oleosa Sodium selenite, 45
  14728. Scirpus plantagineus, see Eleocharis dulcís
  14729. Sohnja, see Moringa oleifera
  14730. Scirpus plantaginoides, see Eleocharis dulcís
  14731. Sotesu nut, see Cycas revoluta
  14732. Scirpus tuberosus, see Eleocharis dulcís Spanish chestnut, see Castanea sativa
  14733. Sclerocarya caffra, 269— 271 Squalene, 69
  14734. Scorpions, 49 Stachyose, 124, 178, 219
  14735. Seje, see Jessenia bataua Starches, see also specific types
  14736. Selenium, 44, 200, 202 Anacardium occidentales, 20
  14737. Selenomethionine, 45 Apios americana, 23
  14738. Seliene, 142 Buchanania lanzan, 58
  14739. Sequoyitol, 133 Castanea dentata, 82
  14740. Serine, 35, 51, 114, 160, 273, 282 Cola acuminata, 108
  14741. Sesquiterpene, 211 Cola nitida, 110
  14742. Sesquiterpene alcohol, 211 Cordeauxia edulis, 114
  14743. Shea nut, see Butyrospermum paradoxum
  14744. Cycas circinalis, 133
  14745. Shikimic acid, 164, 241
  14746. Cycas revoluta, 135
  14747. Shikimin, 164
  14748. Cyperus esculentus, 140
  14749. Siberian filbert, see Corylus heterophylla Cyperus rotundus, 142
  14750. Siebold walnut, see Juglans ailanthifolia
  14751. Eleocharis dulcís, 154
  14752. Silica, 212, 253 Ginkgo biloba, 164
  14753. Silk cotton tree, see Ceiba pentandra Inocarpus edulis, 175
  14754. Silver pine, see Pinus edulis
  14755. Nypa fruticans, 222
  14756. Simarubaceae, 40— 42, see also specific species Orbignya martiana, 225
  14757. Simmondsia chinensis, 272— 275 Prunus dulcís, 250
  14758. Sinapic acid, 160
  14759. Ricinodendron rautanenii, 258
  14760. Sitosterol Trapa natans, 285
  14761. Anacardium accidéntale, 20 Stearic acid
  14762. Anacardium occidentales, 20 Aleurites fordii, 8
  14763. Balanites aegyptiaca, 41 Amphicarpaea bracteata, 17
  14764. Corylus avellana, 119 Anacardium occidentales, 20
  14765. Fagus sylvatica, 160 Balanites aegyptiaca, 41
  14766. Ginkgo biloba, 164 Bertholletia excelsa, 44
  14767. Jatropha curcas, 178 Buchanania lanzan, 58
  14768. Moringa oleífera, 215 Butyrospermum paradoxum, 60
  14769. Nelumbo nucífera, 219 Canarium indicum, 65
  14770. Virola sebifera, 290 Carya illinoensis, 69, 70
  14771. 339
  14772. Caryocar villosum, 76 Hyphaene thebaica, 174
  14773. Ceiba pentandra, 97 Madhuca longifolia, 211
  14774. Cocos nucífera, 102 Nypa fruticans, 222
  14775. Orbignya martiana, 225
  14776. Corylus avellana, 119
  14777. Coula edulis, 131 Phytelephas macrocarpa, 235
  14778. Cyperus esculentus, 140 Pistacia vera, 240
  14779. Cyperus rotundas, 142 Prunus dulcis, 250
  14780. Elaeis guineensis, 148 Sclerocarya caffra, 270
  14781. Fagus sylvatica, 160 Terminalia catappa, 282
  14782. Helianthus annuus, 169 Sulfur, 194
  14783. Jatropha curcas, 178 Sunflower, see Helianthus annuus
  14784. Sweet chestnut, see Castanea dentata; Castanea
  14785. Lecythis pisonis, 202
  14786. sat iva
  14787. Licania rigida, 204
  14788. Macadamia integrifolia, 207
  14789. Madhuca longifolia, 211
  14790. Moringa oleifera, 215
  14791. Tagua, see Phytelephas macrocarpa
  14792. Pachira aquatica, 229
  14793. Pistacia vera, 241 Tahit chestnut, see I nocarpus edulis
  14794. Platonia esculenta, 247 Tallow tree, see Detarium senegalense; Sapium
  14795. Ricinodendron heudelotii, 257 sebiferum
  14796. Santalum acuminatum, 260 Tangkil, see Gnetum gnemon
  14797. Sapium sebiferum, 263 Tannic acid, 82, 108, 119, 160, 267
  14798. Schleichera oleosa, 267 Tannic glycosides, 110, see also specific types
  14799. Telfairia occidentalis, 276 Tannins, see also specific types
  14800. Telfairia pedata, 279 Acrocomia sclerocarpa, 1
  14801. Terminaba catappa, 282 Aleurites fordii, 8
  14802. Aleurites moluccana, 13
  14803. Treculia africana, 288
  14804. Apios americana, 23
  14805. Stearins, 253, see also specific types
  14806. Areca catechu, 26
  14807. Stearodioleins, 211, 247, see also specific types
  14808. Artocarpus heterophyllus, 37
  14809. Stearodipalmitin, 76
  14810. Sterculia acuminata, see Cola acuminata Bruguiera gymnorhiza, 55
  14811. Sterculiaceae, 107— 113, see also specific species Buchanania lanzan, 58
  14812. Sterculia verticilata, see Cola verticillata Carya illinoensis, 69
  14813. Steroids, 41, 253, see also specific types Castanea dentata, 82
  14814. Steroketone artosternone, 37 Ceiba pentandra, 97
  14815. Sterols, 164, see also specific types Fagus sylvatica, 160
  14816. Stigmasterol, 178 Licania rigida, 204
  14817. Stillingia sebifera, see Sapium sebiferum Madhuca longifolia, 211
  14818. Strontium, 44 Nypa fruticans, 222
  14819. Suari nut, see Caryocar nuciferum Pachira aquatica, 229
  14820. Paullinia cupana, 232
  14821. Suberin, 253
  14822. Pistacia vera, 240, 241
  14823. Suberindiol, 253
  14824. Prunus dulcis, 250
  14825. Succinic acid, 211
  14826. Quercus súber, 253
  14827. Sucrose, 119, 164,211,222
  14828. Sapium sebiferum, 263
  14829. Sugar palm, see Arenga pinnata
  14830. Sugars, see also specific types Schleichera oleosa, 267
  14831. Acrocomia totai, 3, 4 Sclerocarya caffra, 270
  14832. Anacardium occidentale, 20 Telfairia pedata, 279
  14833. Trapa natans, 285
  14834. Anacardium occidentales, 20
  14835. Tar, 97
  14836. Borassus flabellifer, 47, 48
  14837. Tarxerol, 119
  14838. Bosimum alicastrum, 51
  14839. Telfairia nuts, see Telfairia pedata
  14840. Brosimum utile, 53
  14841. Telfairia occidentalis, 276— 277
  14842. Buchanania lanzan, 58
  14843. Telfairia pedata, 278— 280
  14844. Cola acuminata, 108
  14845. Terminalia catappa, 281— 283
  14846. Cola nitida, 110
  14847. Termites, 95, 132, 146
  14848. Cordeauxia edulis, 114
  14849. Cycas circinalis, 133 Terpenes, 65, see also specific types
  14850. Cyperus rotundus, 142 Terpineol, 211
  14851. Eleocharis dulcís, 154 Tetracosanol, 160
  14852. Fagus sylvatica, 160 Theobromine, 108, 110, 232
  14853. Ginkgo biloba, 164 Theophylline, 6, 232
  14854. 340 Handbook of Nuts
  14855. Thiamine, see also Vitamin B Bertholletia excelsa, 45
  14856. Aleurites moluccana, 13 Borassus flabellifer, 48
  14857. Anacardium occidentale, 20 Bruguiera gymnorhiza, 55
  14858. Areca catechu, 27 Calamus rotang, 62
  14859. Artocarpus altilis, 35 Carya illinoensis, 70
  14860. Artocarpus heterophyllus, 37 Castanospermum australe, 94
  14861. Bertholletia excelsa, 44 Ceiba pentandra, 97
  14862. Borassus flabellifer, 47 Cola acuminata, 108
  14863. Bosimum alicastrum, 50, 51 Coula edulis, 131
  14864. Butyrospermum paradoxum, 60
  14865. Cycas circinabs, 133
  14866. Calamus rotang, 62
  14867. Cyperus esculentus, 140
  14868. Canarium ovatum, 67 Detarium senegalense, 146
  14869. Carya illinoensis, 69 Fagus grandifolia, 158
  14870. Castanea crenata, 80 Fagus sylvatica, 160
  14871. Castanea mollissima, 85 Ginkgo biloba, 164
  14872. Castanea sativa, 90 Gnetum gnemon, 166
  14873. Cocos nucifera, 102 Jatropha curcas, 178
  14874. Cola acuminata, 107, 108 Juglans cinerea, 186
  14875. Corylus avellana, 119 Jug Ians nigra, 191
  14876. Cyperus esculentus, 140 Lecythis minor, 198
  14877. Cyperus rotundus, 142 Lecythis ollaria, 200
  14878. Detarium senegalense, 145 Madhuca longifoba, 212
  14879. Elaeis guineensis, 148 Orbignya cohune, 224
  14880. Eleocharis dulcis, 154 Paulbnia cupana, 232
  14881. Ginkgo biloba, 164 Quercus súber, 254
  14882. Helianthus annuus, 169 Ricinodendron rautanenii, 258
  14883. Inocarpus edulis, 175 Schleichera oleosa, 267
  14884. Jug Ians nigra, 191 Sclerocarya caffra, 270
  14885. Jug Ians regia, 194 Simmondsia chinensis, 273
  14886. Macadamia integrifolia, 207 Trecuba africana, 288
  14887. Nelumbo nucifera, 219 Trapaceae, 284— 286, see also specific species
  14888. Pachira aquatica, 229 Trapa natans, 284— 286
  14889. Pistacia vera, 240, 241 Trecuba africana, 287— 289
  14890. Prunus dulcis, 250 Triacosan, 119
  14891. Sclerocarya caffra, 270 Triadica sebifera, see Sapium sebiferum
  14892. Terminaba catappa, 282 Tribydroxystigmasterol, 119
  14893. Trapa natans, 285 Trimethy lamine, 160
  14894. Treculia africana, 288 Triolein, 58
  14895. Threonine Tripalmitin, 76, 148, 247
  14896. Tristearin, 76
  14897. Artocarpus altilis, 35
  14898. Bosimum alicastrum, 51 Triterpene, 263
  14899. Cordeauxia edulis, 114 Tropical almond, see Terminaba catappa
  14900. Fagus sylvatica, 160 Tryptophane
  14901. Moringa oleifera, 215 Bosimum alicastrum, 51
  14902. Ricinodendron rautanenii, 258 Butyrospermum paradoxum, 60
  14903. Simmondsia chinensis, 273 Ginkgo biloba, 164
  14904. Terminaba catappa, 282 Jessenia bataua, 181
  14905. Tibetan filbert, see Corylus ferox Juglans nigra, 191
  14906. Tigemut, see Cyperus esculentus Moringa oleifera, 215
  14907. Timbonine, 232 Prunus dulcis, 250
  14908. Tin, 44 Ricinodendron rautanenii, 258
  14909. Titanium, 45 Simmondsia chinensis, 273
  14910. Tocophenol, 169, 250 Terminaba catappa, 282
  14911. Tocopherol, see Vitamin E Tung-oil tree, see Aleurites f ordii
  14912. Toxicity Turkish filbert, see Corylus colurna
  14913. Adhatoda vasica, 6 Turkish hazelnut, see Corylus colurna
  14914. Aleurites ford H, 8 Tyrosine, 35, 51, 114, 160, 263, 273, 282
  14915. Aleurites moluccana, 13
  14916. Aleurites montana, 14
  14917. u
  14918. Anacardium occidentale, 20
  14919. Areca catechu, 27 Uabano, see Paulbnia cupana
  14920. 341
  14921. Ucahuba nut, see Virola surinamensis
  14922. Cycas rumphii, 137
  14923. Ucuuba, see Virola schiferà; Virola surinamensis Cyp er US esculentus, 139
  14924. Ukwa, see Treculia africana Cyperus rotundus, 142
  14925. Unsaturated acids, 140, see also specific types Detarium senegalense, 145
  14926. Ureides, 23, see also specific types Elaeis guineensis, 147— 148
  14927. Uric acid, 23 Elaeis oleifera, 152
  14928. Uronic anhydrides, 97 Eleocharis dulcís, 154
  14929. Uses Fagus grandifolia, 157
  14930. Acrocomia sclerocarpa, 1
  14931. Fagus sylvatica, 160
  14932. Acrocomia totai, 3 Ginkgo biloba, 163
  14933. Adhatoda vasica, 5 Gnetum gnemon, 166
  14934. Aleurites fordii, 8 Helianthus annuus, 168
  14935. Aleurites moluccana, 12 Hyphaene thehaica, 173
  14936. Aleurites montana, 14 I nocarpus edulis, 175
  14937. Amphicarpaea hracteata, 16 Jatropha curcas, 177
  14938. Anacardium occidentale, 19 Jessenia hataua, 180
  14939. Apios americana, 22 Juglans ailanthifolia, 184
  14940. Areca catechu, 26 Juglans cinerea, 186
  14941. Arenga pinnata, 30 Juglans hindsii, 189
  14942. Artocarpus altilis, 34 Juglans nigra, 190
  14943. Artocarpus heterophyllus, 37 Juglans regia, 194
  14944. Balanites aegyptiaca, 40— 41 Lecythis minor, 198
  14945. Barringtonia procera, 43 Lecythis ollaria, 200
  14946. Bertholletia excelsa, 44 Lecythis pisonis, 202
  14947. Borassus flabellifer, 47 Licania rigida, 204
  14948. Bosimum alicastrum, 50 Macadamia integrifolia, 207
  14949. Brosimum utile, 53 Madhuca longifolia, 210
  14950. Bruguiera gymnorhiza, 55 Moringa oleifera, 2 1A— 215
  14951. Buchanania lanzan, 57 Nelumbo nucífera, 218
  14952. Butyrospermum paradoxum, 59 Nypa fruticans, 222
  14953. Calamus rotang, 62 Orbignya cohune, 224
  14954. Cañarium indicum, 65 Orbignya martiana, 225
  14955. Canarium ovatum, 67 Pachira aquatica, 229
  14956. Carya illinoensis, 69 Paullinia cupana, 231
  14957. Caryocar amygdaliferum, 73 Phytelephas macrocarpa, 234
  14958. Caryocar nuciferum, 74 Pinus edulis, 236
  14959. Caryocar villosum, 75 Pinus quadrifolia, 238
  14960. Caryodendron orinocense, 78 Pistacia vera, 240
  14961. Castanea crenata, 80 Pittosporum resinferum, 244
  14962. Castanea dentata, 82 Platonia esculenta, 241
  14963. Castanea mollissima, 85 Prunus dulcís, 249
  14964. Castanea pumila, 88 Quercus súber, 253
  14965. Castanea sativa, 90 Ricinodendron heudelotii, 256
  14966. Castanospermum australe, 93 Ricinodendron rautanenii, 258
  14967. Ceiba pentandra, 96 Santalum acuminatum, 260
  14968. Cocos nucífera, 100— 101 Sapium sebiferum, 262
  14969. Cola acuminata, 107 Schleichera oleosa, 266
  14970. Cola nitida, 110 Sclerocarya coffra, 269
  14971. Cola verticillata, 113 Simmondsia chinensis, 272— 273
  14972. Cordeauxia edulis, 114 Telfairia occidentalis, 276
  14973. Corylus americana, 116 Telfairia pedata, 278
  14974. Corylus avellana, 119 Terminano catappa, 281
  14975. Corylus chinensis, 123 Trapa notons, 284
  14976. Corylus colurna, 124 Treculia africana, 287
  14977. Corylus cornuta, 126 Virola sebifera, 290
  14978. Corylus ferox, 128 Virola surinamensis, 292
  14979. Corylus heterophylla, 129
  14980. Corylus maxima, 130
  14981. Coula edulis, 131
  14982. Valine
  14983. Cycas circinalis, 133
  14984. Bosimum alicastrum, 51
  14985. Cycas revoluta, 135
  14986. 342 Handbook of Nuts
  14987. Butyrospermum paradoxum, 60 Wood-oil tree, see Aleurites montana
  14988. Cordeauxia edulis, 114
  14989. Fagus sylvatica, 160
  14990. Moringa oleifera, 215
  14991. Xanthine, 232
  14992. Prunus dulcis, 250
  14993. Ricinodendron rautanenii, 258 Xanthophyll, 276
  14994. Xanthoxylin, 263
  14995. Sapium sebiferum, 263
  14996. Xylan, 119, 164
  14997. Simmondsia chinensis, 273
  14998. Terminalia catappa, 282 Xylose, 20, 41, 135, 160, 215, 250
  14999. Vanillic acid, 160 Xylosidase, 94
  15000. Vanillin, 253
  15001. Vanilloside, 160
  15002. Varnish tree, see Aleurites moluccana
  15003. Vasakin, 6 Yamogenin, 41
  15004. Vasicine, 6 Yeheb nut, see Cordeauxia edulis
  15005. Yellow nutsedge, see Cyperus esculentus
  15006. Vasicinine, 6
  15007. Vasicinol, 6 Yields
  15008. Vasicinone, 6 Acrocomia sclerocarpa, 2
  15009. Vasicoline, 6 Acrocomia totai, 3
  15010. Vasicolinone, 6 Adhatoda vasica, 1
  15011. Vegetable tallow, see Sapium sebiferum Aleurites f ordii, 10
  15012. Virola nut, see Virola sebifera Aleurites moluccana, 13
  15013. Virola sebifera, 290— 291 Aleurites montana, 15
  15014. Amphicarpaea bracteata, 18
  15015. Virola surinamensis, 292
  15016. Anacardium occidentale, 21
  15017. Viruses, 25, 99, 106, 141, 143, 172, 185, 252
  15018. Vitamin A, 26, 148, 215, 241, 285 Apios americana, 25
  15019. Vitamin B, 215, 263, see also Folic acid; Riboflavin; Areca catechu, 28— 29
  15020. Thiamine Arenga pinnata, 32
  15021. Vitamin C, see Ascorbic acid Artocarpus altilis, 36
  15022. Vitamin E, 148, 169, 215 Artocarpus heterophyllus, 38
  15023. Vitamins, see specific types Balanites aegyptiaca, 42
  15024. Vitexin, 178 Barringtonia procera, 43
  15025. Bertholletia excelsa, 45
  15026. Borassus flabellifer, 49
  15027. w
  15028. Bosimum alicastrum, 52
  15029. Walnut, see Aleurites moluccana Brosimum utile, 54
  15030. African, see Coula edulis Bruguiera gymnorhiza, 56
  15031. California, see Juglans hindsii Buchanania lanzan, 58
  15032. Carpathian, see Juglans regia Butyrospermum paradoxum, 61
  15033. eastern black, see Juglans nigra Calamus rotang, 63— 64
  15034. English, see Juglans regia Cañarium indicum, 66
  15035. Canarium ovatum, 68
  15036. Hind’s black, see Juglans hindsii
  15037. Carya illinoensis, 71
  15038. Japanese, see Juglans ailanthifolia
  15039. Caryocar amygdaliferum, 73
  15040. Persian, see Juglans regia
  15041. Caryocar nuciferum, 74
  15042. Siebold, see Juglans ailanthifolia
  15043. Caryocar villosum, 11
  15044. white, see Juglans cinerea
  15045. Wanepala, see Adhatoda vasica
  15046. Caryodendron orinocense, 79
  15047. Water caltrops, see Trapa natans Castanea crenata, 81
  15048. Castanea dentata, 84
  15049. Water chestnut, see Eleocharis dulcis; Trapa natans
  15050. Watemut, see Eleocharis dulcis Castanea mollissima, 87
  15051. Wax berry, white, see Sapium sebiferum Castanea pumila, 89
  15052. Waxes, 51, 53, 97, 135, 160, 253, 273, see also Castanea sativa, 92
  15053. specific types Castanospermum australe, 94— ^95
  15054. Weevils, 87, 115, 118, 127, 151 Ceiba pentandra, 99
  15055. White ucuuba, see Virola surinamensis Cocos nucifera, 105
  15056. White walnut, see Juglans cinerea Cola acuminata, 109
  15057. White wax berry, see Sapium sebiferum Cola nitida, 111
  15058. Wild mammee, see Platonia esculenta Cola verticillata, 113
  15059. Wild peanut, see Amphicarpaea bracteata Cordeauxia edulis, 115
  15060. Woman’s coconut, see Borassus flabellifer Corylus americana, 118
  15061. 343
  15062. Cory lus avellana, 121 Madhuca longifolia, 213
  15063. Corylus chinensis, 123 Moringa oleifera, 216
  15064. Corylus caluma, 125 Nelumbo nucífera, 221
  15065. Nypa fruticans, 223
  15066. Corylus cornuta, 127
  15067. Corylus ferox, 128 Orbignya cohune, 224
  15068. Corylus heterophylla, 129 Orbignya martiana, 227
  15069. Corylus maxima, 130 Pachira aquatica, 230
  15070. Coula edulis, 132 Paullinia cupana, 233
  15071. Cycas circinalis, 134 Phytelephas macrocarpa, 235
  15072. Cycas revoluta, 136 Pinus edulis, 237
  15073. Cycas rumphii, 138 Pinus quadrifolia, 238
  15074. Cyperus esculentus, 141 Pistacia vera, 242
  15075. Pittosporum resinferum, 245
  15076. Cyperus rotundus, 143
  15077. Platonia esculenta, 248
  15078. Detarium senegalense, 146
  15079. Elaeis guineensis, 150 Prunus dulcis, 251
  15080. Elaeis oleifera, 153 Quercus súber, 255
  15081. Eleocharis dulcis, 155 Ricinodendron heudelotii, 257
  15082. Fagus grandifolia, 159 Ricinodendron rautanenii, 259
  15083. Fagus sylvatica, 161 Santalum acuminatum, 261
  15084. Ginkgo biloba, 165 Sapium sebiferum, 264
  15085. Gnetum gnemon, 167 Schleichera oleosa, 268
  15086. Helianthus annuus, 170— 171 Sclerocarya caffra, 271
  15087. Hyphaene thebaica, 174 Simmondsia chinensis, 274— 275
  15088. Telfairia occidentalis, 277
  15089. Inocarpus edulis, i l 6
  15090. Jatropha tur cas, 179 Telfairia pedata, 280
  15091. Jessenia bataua, 182 Terminaba catappa, 283
  15092. Juglans ailanthifolia, 185 Trapa natans, 286
  15093. Juglans cinerea, 187 Treculia africana, 289
  15094. Juglans hindsii, 189 Virola sebifera, 291
  15095. Juglans nigra, 192— 193 Virola surinamensis, 292
  15096. Juglans regia, 196 Ytterbium, 45
  15097. Lecythis minor, 199
  15098. Lecythis ollaria, 201
  15099. Lecythis pisonis, 203
  15100. Licania rigida, 206 Zanzibar oilvine, see Telfairia pedata
  15101. Macadamia integrifolia, 209 Zinc, 17, 44, 194, 260, 288