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Asimina triloba

Asimina triloba, the American papaw, pawpaw, paw paw, or paw-paw, among many regional names, is a small deciduous tree native to the eastern United States and Canada, producing a large, yellowish-green to brown fruit.[3][4][5] Asimina is the only temperate genus in the tropical and subtropical flowering plant family Annonaceae, and Asimina triloba has the most northern range of all.[6] Well-known tropical fruits of different genera in family Annonaceae include the custard-apple, cherimoya, sweetsop, ylang-ylang, and soursop.

Asimina triloba
Asimina triloba in fruit

Secure (NatureServe)[2]
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Plantae
Clade: Tracheophytes
Clade: Angiosperms
Clade: Magnoliids
Order: Magnoliales
Family: Annonaceae
Genus: Asimina
Species:
A. triloba
Binomial name
Asimina triloba
Natural range of Asimina triloba

The pawpaw is a patch-forming (clonal) understory tree of hardwood forests, which is found in well-drained, deep, fertile bottomland and also hilly upland habitat.[7] It has large, simple leaves with drip tips, more characteristic of plants in tropical rainforests than within this species' temperate range.[8] Pawpaw fruits are the largest edible fruit indigenous to the United States[9][10] (not counting gourds, which are typically considered vegetables rather than fruit for culinary purposes, although in botany they are classified as fruit).[3]

Pawpaw fruits are sweet, with a custard-like texture, and a flavor somewhat similar to banana, mango, and pineapple. They are commonly eaten raw, but are also used to make ice cream and baked desserts. The bark, leaves, and seeds contain the insecticidal neurotoxin annonacin.[11]

Names

 
Asimina triloba flower parts and stages (from female at bottom to pollen-rich male at right)
 
Ripe fruit of Asimina triloba, cut open to reveal the large seeds

This plant's scientific name is Asimina triloba. The genus name Asimina is adapted from the Native American (probably Miami-Illinois[12]) name assimin or rassimin[13] through the French colonial asiminier.[14] The specific epithet triloba in the species' scientific name refers to the flowers' three-lobed calyx (green in photo at right) and doubly three-lobed corollas,[13] the shape not unlike a tricorne hat.

The common name of this species is variously spelled pawpaw, paw paw, paw-paw, and papaw. It probably derives from the Spanish papaya, an American tropical and subtropical fruit (Carica papaya) sometimes also called "papaw",[15] perhaps because of the superficial similarity of their fruits and the fact that both have very large leaves. The name pawpaw or papaw, first recorded in print in English in 1598, originally meant the giant herb Carica papaya or its fruit (as it still commonly does in many English-speaking communities, including Australia, New Zealand, and South Africa). Daniel F. Austin's Florida Ethnobotany[16] states that:

The original "papaw" ... is Carica papaya. By 1598, English-speaking people in the Caribbean were calling these plants "pawpaws" or "papaws" ... [yet later, when English-speakers settled in] the temperate Americas, they found another tree with a similarly aromatic, sweet fruit. It reminded them of the "papaya", which had already become "papaw", so that is what they called these different plants ... By 1760, the names "papaw" and "pawpaw" were being applied to A. triloba.

Yet A. triloba has had numerous local common names, many of which compare it to a banana rather than to Carica papaya. These include: wild banana, prairie banana, Indiana banana, Hoosier banana, West Virginia banana, Kansas banana, Kentucky banana, Michigan banana, Missouri banana, Appalachian banana, Ozark banana, Indian banana, banango, and the poor man's banana, as well as American custard apple, asimoya,[17] Quaker delight, and hillbilly mango.[18]

Due to increased interest in the foraging and locavore food movement during the late 2010s and the COVID-19 pandemic,[19] the pawpaw has been referred to tongue-in-cheek as the "hipster banana".[20]

Several tribes of Native Americans have terms for the pawpaw such as riwahárikstikuc (Pawnee),[21] tózhaⁿ hu (Kansa),[22] and umbi (Choctaw).[23]

Description

 
Pawpaw blossoms as new leaves just begin to emerge

A. triloba is a large shrub or small tree growing to a height of 35 ft (11 m), rarely as tall as 45 ft (14 m), with trunks 8–12 in (20–30 cm) or more in diameter. The large leaves of pawpaw trees are clustered symmetrically at the ends of the branches, giving a distinctive imbricated appearance to the tree's foliage.[13][24]

The leaves of the species are simple, alternate and spirally arranged, entire, deciduous, obovate-lanceolate, 10–12 in (25–30 cm) long, 4–5 in (10–13 cm) broad, and wedge-shaped at the base, with an acute apex and an entire margin, with the midrib and primary veins prominent. The petioles are short and stout, with a prominent adaxial groove. Stipules are lacking. The expanding leaves are conduplicate, green, covered with rusty tomentum beneath, and hairy above; when fully grown they are smooth, dark green above, and paler beneath. When bruised, the leaves have a disagreeable odor similar to a green bell pepper. In autumn, the leaves are a rusty yellow, allowing pawpaw groves to be spotted from a long distance.[3][13][24]

Pawpaw flowers are perfect, about 1–2 in (3–5 cm) across, rich red-purple or maroon when mature, with three sepals and six petals. They are borne singly on stout, hairy, axillary peduncles. The flowers are produced in early spring at the same time as or slightly before the new leaves appear, and have a faint fetid or yeasty smell.[3][13][24][25]

The fruit of the pawpaw is a large, yellowish-green to brown berry, 2–6 in (5–15 cm) long and 1–3 in (3–8 cm) broad, weighing from 0.7–18 oz (20–510 g), containing several brown or black seeds 12–1 in (15–25 mm) in diameter embedded in the soft, edible fruit pulp. The conspicuous fruits begin developing after the plants flower; they are initially green, maturing by September or October to yellow or brown. When mature, the heavy fruits bend the weak branches down.[3][13][24]

Other characteristics:

  • Calyx: Sepals three, valvate in bud, ovate, acuminate, pale green, downy[13][24]
  • Corolla: Petals six, in two rows, imbricate in the bud; inner row acute, erect, nectariferous; outer row broadly ovate, reflexed at maturity; petals at first are green, then brown, and finally become dull purple or maroon and conspicuously veiny[13][24]
  • Stamens: Indefinite, densely packed on the globular receptacle; filaments short; anthers extrorse, two-celled, opening longitudinally[24]
  • Pollen: Shed as permanent tetrads[26]
  • Pistils: Several, on the summit of the receptacle, projecting from the mass of stamens; ovary one-celled; stigma sessile; ovules many[24]
  • Branchlets: Light brown, tinged with red, marked by shallow grooves[24]
  • Winter buds: Small, of two kinds, the leaf buds pointed and closely appressed to the twigs, and the flower buds round, brown, and fuzzy[13]
  • Bark: Light gray, sometimes blotched with lighter gray spots, sometimes covered with small excrescences, divided by shallow fissures; inner bark tough, fibrous; bark with a very disagreeable odor when bruised[13][24]
  • Wood: Pale, greenish yellow, sapwood lighter; light, soft, coarse-grained and spongy with a specific gravity of 0.3969 and a density of 24.74 pounds per cubic foot (396.3 kg/m3)[13][24]
  • Longevity of fruit production: Undetermined[27]

Range and ecology

 
Stems of pawpaw at a wild patch in Michigan in early spring
 
Pawpaw forms wild patches by growing shallow outward stems.

The pawpaw is native to the Eastern, Southern, and Midwestern United States and adjacent Ontario, Canada, from New York west to southeastern Nebraska, and south to northern Florida and eastern Texas.[3][28][29]

The tree is commonly found in the wild within floodplains and shady, rich bottomlands,[30] but it requires somewhat elevated slopes because it has a deep-reaching taproot. Owing to its shallow, horizontally spreading stems (rhizomes), the species tends to become a clonal patch of small, leaning trees through time. (See photos at right.)

Pawpaws are not the first to colonize a disturbed site, but because they are capable of growing in deep shade, they can establish from seed beneath mature hardwood trees and then spread into a subcanopy patch. They may even become dominant through time by depriving native canopy trees from re-establishing via seed after tree-fall, owing to the dense shade within a pawpaw patch. Under such circumstances, the pawpaw subcanopy becomes the forest canopy.[31] Accessing full sunlight, the patch is then capable of producing more fruit.[32]

The fruits of the pawpaw are eaten by a variety of mammals, including raccoons, gray foxes, opossums, squirrels, and black bears.[31]

 
Downward-hanging pawpaw flowers attract many kinds of insects that are not effective cross-pollinators.

The strong-smelling leaves, twigs, and bark of pawpaws contain natural insecticides known as acetogenins.[33] Pawpaw leaves and twigs are seldom consumed by rabbits, deer, or goats,[34] or by many insects.[3] However, mules have been seen eating pawpaw leaves in Maryland.[35]

Larvae of the zebra swallowtail (Protographium marcellus), a butterfly, feed exclusively on young leaves of A. triloba and various other pawpaw (Asimina) species, but never occur in great numbers on the plants.[34] Chemicals in the pawpaw leaves confer protection from predation throughout the butterflies' lives, as trace amounts of acetogenins remain present, making them unpalatable to birds and other predators.[36]

Other insects which have evolved the ability to consume pawpaws include Talponia plummeriana, the pawpaw peduncle borer, whose larvae can be found in flowers, and Omphalocera munroei, the asimina webworm, whose larvae mostly feed upon leaves.[37]

Pollination

 
Pawpaw flowers begin with the female receptive stage at the central tip of the flower (top), then conclude with pollen production by ripened anthers (bottom).

The floral scent of Asimina triloba has been described as "yeasty," which is one of several features that signify a "beetle pollination syndrome."[38] Other floral features of pawpaw indicative of beetle pollination include petals that curve over the downward-pointing flower center, along with food-rich fleshy bases of the inner whorl of petals. A "pollination chamber" is thereby created at a depth that only small beetles can access during the initial female-receptive stage of floral bloom. As with other well-studied species of Annonaceae, the delay in the shift from female to male floral stage offers beetles a secure, and possibly thermogenic, residence in which not only to feed but also to mate.[39] Receptive stigmas at their arrival, followed by pollen-shedding stamens during pollinator departure is regarded as an early form of mutualism (biology) evolved between plants and insects that is still dominant in the most ancient lineages of flowering plants, including the Magnoliids (of which Annonaceae is the most species-rich taxonomic family).[40]

 
Glischrochilus quadrisignatus, "Four-spotted sap beetle," is one of two tiny beetle species documented deep inside pawpaw flowers in Michigan.[41]

Beetles are the dominant form of pollinator ascribed for genera and species within Family Annonaceae. However, two species of genus Asimina (Asimina triloba and Asimina parviflora) bear a floral character that has given rise to an alternative hypothesis that carrion or dung flies are their effective pollinators. That floral characteristic is the dark maroon color of the petals.[42][43] Hence, while no scholarly papers have documented carrion or dung flies as effective pollinators in field observations, the strength of this hypothesis has led to placement of carrion during the bloom time in pawpaw orchards by some horticultural growers.[8][44]

Professional papers on genus Asimina and its species have warned of the difficulties in discerning whether insects observed on or collected from flowers are effective pollinators or merely casual and thus opportunistic visitors.[43][45][46]

Conservation status

 
All the stems in view are part of a wild pawpaw patch in Michigan.

On a global (range-wide) scale, the common pawpaw (A. triloba) has a NatureServe global conservation rank of G5 (very common). The species is, however, listed for conservation concern in the northernmost parts of its range, owing to the happenstance of where governmental boundaries exist. In the United States, the species has an N5 (very common), but is considered a threatened species in New York, and an endangered species in New Jersey. In Canada, where the species is found only in portions of southern Ontario, it has a rank of N3 (vulnerable), and a NatureServe subnational conservation rank of S3 (vulnerable) in Ontario. The Ontario Ministry of Natural Resources has given the species a general status of "Sensitive", and its populations there are monitored.

In areas in which deer populations are dense, pawpaws appear to be becoming more abundant locally, since the deer avoid them, but consume seedlings of most other woody plants.[35][47]

History

The natural seed dispersal of the common pawpaw in North America, prior to the ice ages and lasting until roughly 10,000 years ago, occurred via the dung of certain megafauna (such as mastodons, mammoths, and giant ground sloths) until they became extinct during the Quaternary extinction event[48] — a parallel case in North America to that of the avocado in South and Central America.[49][50] After the arrival of humans and the subsequent extinction of megafauna that were distributing A. triloba, the probable distribution of these large fruit-bearing plants has been by humans.[30][51][52][53]

Indigenous peoples value pawpaw not only for its fruit but also for its bark. The bark has traditionally been used as a fiber source. Now that the exotic emerald ash borer beetle is destroying black ash trees (Fraxinus nigra), a basketmaker of the Little Traverse Bay Bands of Odawa Indians in northern Michigan has begun planting pawpaw seeds on tribal lands several hundred miles north of pawpaw's historically native range.[54]

The earliest documented mention of pawpaws is in the 1541 report of the Spanish de Soto expedition, who found Native Americans east of the Mississippi River cultivating what some have identified as the pawpaw.[55] The tree's scientific name (Asimina triloba) comes from the Powhatan word Assimina, which a Jamestown settler transcribed in 1612 as “wheat plum".[56] The Lewis and Clark Expedition consumed pawpaws during their travels.[55] Thomas Jefferson planted it at Monticello, his plantation in Virginia.[55] Legend has it that chilled pawpaw fruit was a favorite dessert of George Washington.[57]

Research

Kentucky State University (KSU) has the only full-time pawpaw research program in the world; it was started in 1990 with the aim of developing pawpaw as a new tree-fruit crop for Kentucky. Pawpaw is the largest native fruit in North America and has very few diseases compared to other orchard crops. KSU is the site of the USDA National Clonal Germplasm Repository for Asimina species and the pawpaw orchards at KSU contain over 1,700 trees. Research activities include germplasm collection and variety trials, and efforts are directed towards improving propagation, understanding fruit ripening and storage, and developing orchard management practices. Cultivation is best in hardiness zones 5-9 and trees take 7–8 years from seedling to fruiting. KSU has created the three cultivars KSU-'Atwood', KSU-'Benson', and KSU-'Chappell', with foci on better flavors, higher yields, vigorous plants, and low seed-to-pulp ratios.[58][9][59][60][61][62]

Cultivation

 
A row of pawpaw cultivars in a Michigan orchard. (A tall sugar maple and evergreen conifers in background.)

Cultivation is best in hardiness zones 5-9[9] and trees take 7–8 years from seedling to fruiting. Cross-pollination of at least two different genetic varieties of the plant is recommended.[3] Scholarly research is insufficient for horticulturalists to adopt best methods for attracting insect pollinators, as effective pollinators have not yet been distinguished from casual insect visitors.[43][45][46] Therefore, some growers resort to hand pollination or use pollinator attractants, such as spraying fish emulsion or hanging chicken necks or other meat near the open flowers to attract pollinators.[8][44]

While pawpaws are larval hosts for the zebra swallowtail butterfly, these caterpillars are usually present only at low density, and not detrimental to the foliage of the trees.[34]

Pawpaws have not been cultivated for their fruits on the scale of apples or peaches, primarily because pawpaw fruits ripen to the point of fermentation soon after they are picked, and only frozen fruit stores or ships well. Other methods of preservation include dehydration, production of jams or jellies, and pressure canning (using the numerical values for bananas). Methods of separating seeds from the pulp are still in the experimental phase. Mechanical methods are most efficient, but any splitting or injury of seeds can contaminate the remaining pulp with seed poisons.

Cultivation of pawpaws for fruit production has attracted interest, particularly among organic growers, as a fruit with few to no pests that can successfully be grown in its native environment without pesticides. The commercial cultivation and harvesting of pawpaws is strong in southeastern Ohio[63] and also being explored in Kentucky[3] and Maryland,[35] as well as various areas outside the species' native range, including California,[34] the Pacific Northwest,[34] and Massachusetts.[64] The pawpaw is used for landscaping due to its distinctive growth habit, the appeal of its fresh fruit, and its relatively low maintenance needs once established.[25]

Propagation

 
Germinating pawpaw in a shallow pot results in the seed rising up into the air, as the growing taproot keeps pushing against the bottom.

Trees are easily grown from seed. Seeds should not be permitted to dry, as they lose viability if they dehydrate to 5% moisture.[65] The seeds need to be stratified by moist cold storage for 60–100 days at 35–45 °F (2–7 °C) (some publications suggest 90–120 days).[65][61][60] They will lose their viability if stored for 3 years or more; some seeds survive if stored for 2 years. Germination is hypogeal and cotyledons remain within the seed coat. Strictly speaking, hypogeal means the cotyledons stay in the soil, acting as a food store for the seedling until the plumule emerges from the soil on the epicotyl or true stem. Because the large seeds contain enough energy to produce a long taproot prior to seeking photosynthetic opportunities above ground, the seed itself will be pushed upward and into the air if germinated in standard pots. (See photo at right.)

Propagation using cuttings has generally not been successful.[65][61]

Desirable cultivars are propagated by chip budding or whip grafting onto a root stock. Pawpaw seeds do not grow "true to type" — each individual seed in a fruit is genetically different from the others and from its parent tree. Purchased cultivars do not produce seeds true to type, either, which is why cultivars are all grafted trees. Root sucker seedlings, however, are all genetically identical to their host.[61][60]

Commercial nurseries usually ship seedlings in containers, usually grafted cultivars, but other nurseries such as the Kentucky Division of Forestry ship bareroot seedlings for reforestation projects and area homeowners.[66][60]

Harvesting seedlings from the forest floor is tricky because most forest-floor seedlings are actually root suckers with few roots, and those seedlings that did grow from a seed have deep taproots.[61][60]

Cultivars

Over the years, many cultivars of A. triloba have been developed or discovered.[67] Many have been lost and are no longer available commercially.[55][68][62]

The named varieties producing large fruit and performing well in Kentucky per research trials are 'NC-1', 'Overleese', 'Potomac', 'Shenandoah', 'Sunflower', 'Susquehanna', 'Wabash', KSU-'Atwood', KSU-'Benson', and KSU-'Chappell'.[60]

Habitat restoration

Pawpaws are sometimes included in ecological restoration plantings, since this tree grows well in wet soil and has a strong tendency to form well-rooted clonal thickets.

Uses

 
A. triloba is often called wild banana, Indiana banana, or prairie banana because of its banana-like creamy texture and flavor.
Paw paw, raw with skin
Nutritional value per 100 g (3.5 oz)
18.8 g
Dietary fiber2.6 g
1.2 g
1.2 g
VitaminsQuantity
%DV
Vitamin A equiv.
11%
87 μg
Thiamine (B1)
1%
0.01 mg
Riboflavin (B2)
8%
0.09 mg
Niacin (B3)
7%
1.1 mg
Vitamin C
22%
18.3 mg
MineralsQuantity
%DV
Calcium
6%
63 mg
Iron
54%
7 mg
Magnesium
32%
113 mg
Manganese
124%
2.6 mg
Phosphorus
7%
47 mg
Potassium
7%
345 mg
Zinc
9%
0.9 mg

Analysis from Kentucky State University Pawpaw Program
Percentages are roughly approximated using US recommendations for adults.

Fruits

As described by horticulturist Barbara Damrosch, the fruit of the pawpaw "looks a bit like mango, but with pale yellow, custardy, spoonable flesh and black, easy-to-remove seeds."[64] Wild-collected pawpaw fruits, ripe in late August to mid-September, have long been a favorite treat throughout the tree's extensive native range in eastern North America, and on occasion are sold locally at farmers' markets.[3][64] Pawpaw fruits have a sweet, custard-like flavor somewhat similar to banana, mango, and cantaloupe,[3][13] varying significantly by source or cultivar,[3] with more protein than most fruits.[3] Nineteenth-century American agronomist E. Lewis Sturtevant described pawpaws as

... a natural custard, too luscious for the relish of most people[35]

Ohio botanist William B. Werthner noted that

The fruit ... has a tangy wild-wood flavor peculiarly its own. It is sweet, yet rather cloying to the taste and a wee bit puckery – only a boy can eat more than one at a time.[13]

Fresh fruits of the pawpaw are commonly eaten raw, either chilled or at room temperature. However, they can be kept only 2–3 days at room temperature, or about a week if refrigerated.[25][69] The easily bruised pawpaw fruits do not ship well unless frozen.[3][64] Where pawpaws grow, the fruit pulp is also often used locally in baked dessert recipes, with pawpaw often substituted with volumetric equivalency in many banana-based recipes. Pawpaws may also be blended into ice cream[25] or included in pancakes.[25]

Nutrition

According to a report from the KSU Pawpaw Program (right table), raw pawpaw (with skin) is 19% carbohydrates, 1% protein, 1% fat, and 79% water (estimated). In a 100-g reference amount, the raw fruit provides 80 Calories and is a rich source (20% or more of the Daily Value, DV) of vitamin C (22% DV), magnesium (32% DV), iron (54% DV), and manganese (124% DV). The fruit also contains a moderate amount of vitamin A (11% DV).

Phytochemicals

 
Zebra swallowtail butterflies (Eurytides marcellus) with pawpaw foliage

Phytochemical extracts of the leaves and fruit contain acetogenins, including the neurotoxin annonacin.[70] The seeds and bark contain the chemical asimitrin[71] and other acetogenins, including asimin, asiminacin and asiminecin.[70][72]

Effect on insects

Due to the presence of acetogenins, the leaves, twigs, and bark of pawpaw trees can be used to make an organic insecticide.[33] The only insect species immune to these insecticidal compounds is the zebra swallowtail butterfly (Protographium marcellus), whose larvae feed on the leaves of various species of Asimina, conferring protection from predation throughout the butterflies' lives, as trace amounts of acetogenins remain present, making them unpalatable to birds and other predators.[36]

Historical uses

The tough, fibrous inner bark of the pawpaw was used by Native Americans and settlers in the Midwest for making ropes, fishing nets, and mats,[13][35] and for stringing fish.[14]

Pawpaw logs have been used for split-rail fences in Arkansas.[13]

The hard, brown, shiny lima-bean-sized seeds were sometimes carried as pocket pieces in Ohio.[13]

Cultural significance

Old song

A traditional American folk song portrays wild harvesting of pawpaws; Arty Schronce of the Georgia Department of Agriculture gives these lyrics:[25]

Where, oh where is dear little Nellie?
Where, oh where is dear little Nellie?
Where, oh where is dear little Nellie?
Way down yonder in the pawpaw patch

Pickin' up pawpaws, puttin' 'em in your pocket
Pickin' up pawpaws, puttin' 'em in your pocket
Pickin' up pawpaws, puttin' 'em in your pocket
Way down yonder in the pawpaw patch

He notes that "picking up pawpaws" refers to gathering the ripe, fallen fruit from beneath the trees, and that the "pocket" in the song is that of an apron or similar tie-on pocket, not a modern pants or blue-jeans pocket, into which pawpaws would hardly fit.[25] A "pawpaw patch" refers to the plant's characteristic patch-forming clonal growth habit.

Place names

The pawpaw is the basis for various place and school names in the United States, almost all using the older spelling variant "paw paw".

Art

 
Yellow-billed Cuckoo (Audubon)

Other

  • The third Thursday in September has been designated as National Pawpaw Day by the National Day Calendar.[79] It was announced on September 19, 2019,[80] at Kentucky State University's monthly sustainable agriculture workshop, the Third Thursday Thing.[81]
  • The pawpaw was designated as Ohio's state native fruit in 2009.[82]
  • Since 1999, the Ohio Pawpaw Growers' Association has sponsored an annual Ohio Pawpaw Festival at Lake Snowden, near Albany, Ohio.[83]
  • Since 2012, Delaware's Alapocas Run State Park has hosted an annual Pawpaw Folk Festival featuring tastings of the fruit.[84]
  • The larva of the Pawpaw sphinx moth feeds on pawpaw fruit.
  • Since 2019, the pawpaw has been the official state fruit tree of Missouri.[85]

See also

References

  1. ^ "Asimina triloba". The IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. IUCN. 208. e.T135958357A135958359. 2018. doi:10.2305/IUCN.UK.2018-2.RLTS.T135958357A135958359.en. S2CID 242070317.
  2. ^ "NatureServe Explorer 2.0". explorer.natureserve.org. Retrieved April 27, 2022.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Jones, Snake C.; Layne, Desmond R. (2019). . Kentucky State University Cooperative Extension Program. Archived from the original on December 30, 2019. Retrieved December 30, 2019.
  4. ^ "Asimina triloba". College of Agriculture and Life Sciences, North Carolina State University. from the original on April 6, 2018. Retrieved December 19, 2018.
  5. ^ Layne, DR (February 24, 1998). "Pawpaw". NewCrop Factsheet, Purdue University. from the original on July 11, 2019. Retrieved December 19, 2018.
  6. ^ Huang, Hongwen; Layne, Desmond; Kubisiak, Thomas (July 2000). "RAPD Inheritance and Diversity in Pawpaw (Asimina triloba)". Journal of the American Society for Horticultural Science. 125 (4): 454–459. doi:10.21273/JASHS.125.4.454.
  7. ^ "Native Pawpaw Tree". North Carolina State University. Retrieved October 6, 2022.
  8. ^ a b c Pankau, Ryan. "Pawpaw". Illinois Extension Service. University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign. Retrieved October 6, 2022.
  9. ^ a b c Pomper, Kirk W.; Layne, Desmond R.; Peterson, R. Neal (1999). "The Pawpaw Regional Variety Trial". hort.purdue.edu. from the original on April 14, 2015. Retrieved September 26, 2019.
  10. ^ Matthews, Elizabeth (September 21, 2021). "Pawpaw: Small Tree, Big Impact". U.S. National Park Service. Retrieved December 16, 2021.
  11. ^ Avalos, J; Rupprecht, J. K.; McLaughlin, J. L.; Rodriguez, E (1993). "Guinea pig maximization test of the bark extract from pawpaw, Asimina triloba (Annonaceae)". Contact Dermatitis. 29 (1): 33–5. doi:10.1111/j.1600-0536.1993.tb04533.x. PMID 8365150. S2CID 41590523.
  12. ^ Chamberlain, Alexander F. (December 1, 1902). "Algonkian Words in American English: A Study in the Contact of the White Man and the Indian". The Journal of American Folklore. American Folklore Society. 15 (59): 240–267. doi:10.2307/533199. ISSN 0021-8715. JSTOR 533199.
  13. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Werthner, William B. (1935). Some American Trees: An intimate study of native Ohio trees. New York: The Macmillan Company. pp. xviii + 398 pp.
  14. ^ a b Sargent, Charles Sprague (1933). Manual of the trees of North America (exclusive of Mexico). Boston and New York: Houghton Mifflin Company: The Riverside Press Cambridge. pp. xxvi + 910.
  15. ^ Harper, Douglas. "papaya". Online Etymology Dictionary. Retrieved October 28, 2012.
  16. ^ CRC Press, 2004, p.122.
  17. ^ "The Asimoya". The Archives of the Rare Fruit Council of Australia. November 1, 1996. from the original on March 29, 2018. Retrieved November 26, 2017.
  18. ^ Schweitzer, Ally (September 15, 2017). "This Once-Obscure Fruit Is On Its Way To Becoming PawPaw-Pawpular". NPR. NPR. from the original on April 5, 2018. Retrieved April 4, 2018.
  19. ^ Haupt, Angela (September 17, 2021). "Four ways to learn about fungi and foraging in the D.C. area". The Washington Post. ISSN 0190-8286. Retrieved September 17, 2021.
  20. ^ Schweitzer, Ally (September 12, 2017). "Once An Obscure Local Fruit, The Pawpaw Has A New Nickname: The Hipster Banana". WAMU. Retrieved September 11, 2021.
  21. ^ "American Indian Studies Research Institute". zia.aisri.indiana.edu. from the original on December 13, 2018. Retrieved December 18, 2018.
  22. ^ "English to Kanza Dictionary" (PDF). kawnation.com. (PDF) from the original on October 11, 2016. Retrieved December 18, 2018.
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Further reading

External links

  •   Media related to Asimina triloba at Wikimedia Commons
  •   Data related to Asimina triloba at Wikispecies
  • Kentucky State University Pawpaw Program
  • The Pawpaw: Foraging For America's Forgotten Fruit
  • "The Native Pawpaw Tree". Penn State Extension. Retrieved December 16, 2021.
  • Pawpaw Ecological Survey in Michigan, October 2021

asimina, triloba, this, article, about, common, pawpaw, eastern, north, america, unrelated, tropical, papaya, fruit, often, called, papaw, pawpaw, carica, papaya, other, uses, disambiguation, american, papaw, pawpaw, among, many, regional, names, small, decidu. This article is about the common pawpaw of eastern North America For the unrelated tropical papaya fruit often called papaw or pawpaw see Carica papaya For other uses see Paw Paw disambiguation Asimina triloba the American papaw pawpaw paw paw or paw paw among many regional names is a small deciduous tree native to the eastern United States and Canada producing a large yellowish green to brown fruit 3 4 5 Asimina is the only temperate genus in the tropical and subtropical flowering plant family Annonaceae and Asimina triloba has the most northern range of all 6 Well known tropical fruits of different genera in family Annonaceae include the custard apple cherimoya sweetsop ylang ylang and soursop Asimina trilobaAsimina triloba in fruitConservation statusLeast Concern IUCN 3 1 1 Secure NatureServe 2 Scientific classificationKingdom PlantaeClade TracheophytesClade AngiospermsClade MagnoliidsOrder MagnolialesFamily AnnonaceaeGenus AsiminaSpecies A trilobaBinomial nameAsimina triloba L DunalNatural range of Asimina trilobaThe pawpaw is a patch forming clonal understory tree of hardwood forests which is found in well drained deep fertile bottomland and also hilly upland habitat 7 It has large simple leaves with drip tips more characteristic of plants in tropical rainforests than within this species temperate range 8 Pawpaw fruits are the largest edible fruit indigenous to the United States 9 10 not counting gourds which are typically considered vegetables rather than fruit for culinary purposes although in botany they are classified as fruit 3 Pawpaw fruits are sweet with a custard like texture and a flavor somewhat similar to banana mango and pineapple They are commonly eaten raw but are also used to make ice cream and baked desserts The bark leaves and seeds contain the insecticidal neurotoxin annonacin 11 Contents 1 Names 2 Description 3 Range and ecology 4 Pollination 5 Conservation status 6 History 7 Research 8 Cultivation 8 1 Propagation 8 2 Cultivars 8 3 Habitat restoration 9 Uses 9 1 Fruits 9 1 1 Nutrition 9 2 Phytochemicals 9 3 Effect on insects 9 4 Historical uses 10 Cultural significance 10 1 Old song 10 2 Place names 10 3 Art 10 4 Other 11 See also 12 References 13 Further reading 14 External linksNames Edit Asimina triloba flower parts and stages from female at bottom to pollen rich male at right Ripe fruit of Asimina triloba cut open to reveal the large seeds This plant s scientific name is Asimina triloba The genus name Asimina is adapted from the Native American probably Miami Illinois 12 name assimin or rassimin 13 through the French colonial asiminier 14 The specific epithet triloba in the species scientific name refers to the flowers three lobed calyx green in photo at right and doubly three lobed corollas 13 the shape not unlike a tricorne hat The common name of this species is variously spelled pawpaw paw paw paw paw and papaw It probably derives from the Spanish papaya an American tropical and subtropical fruit Carica papaya sometimes also called papaw 15 perhaps because of the superficial similarity of their fruits and the fact that both have very large leaves The name pawpaw or papaw first recorded in print in English in 1598 originally meant the giant herb Carica papaya or its fruit as it still commonly does in many English speaking communities including Australia New Zealand and South Africa Daniel F Austin s Florida Ethnobotany 16 states that The original papaw is Carica papaya By 1598 English speaking people in the Caribbean were calling these plants pawpaws or papaws yet later when English speakers settled in the temperate Americas they found another tree with a similarly aromatic sweet fruit It reminded them of the papaya which had already become papaw so that is what they called these different plants By 1760 the names papaw and pawpaw were being applied to A triloba Yet A triloba has had numerous local common names many of which compare it to a banana rather than to Carica papaya These include wild banana prairie banana Indiana banana Hoosier banana West Virginia banana Kansas banana Kentucky banana Michigan banana Missouri banana Appalachian banana Ozark banana Indian banana banango and the poor man s banana as well as American custard apple asimoya 17 Quaker delight and hillbilly mango 18 Due to increased interest in the foraging and locavore food movement during the late 2010s and the COVID 19 pandemic 19 the pawpaw has been referred to tongue in cheek as the hipster banana 20 Several tribes of Native Americans have terms for the pawpaw such as riwaharikstikuc Pawnee 21 tozhaⁿ hu Kansa 22 and umbi Choctaw 23 Description Edit Pawpaw blossoms as new leaves just begin to emerge A triloba is a large shrub or small tree growing to a height of 35 ft 11 m rarely as tall as 45 ft 14 m with trunks 8 12 in 20 30 cm or more in diameter The large leaves of pawpaw trees are clustered symmetrically at the ends of the branches giving a distinctive imbricated appearance to the tree s foliage 13 24 The leaves of the species are simple alternate and spirally arranged entire deciduous obovate lanceolate 10 12 in 25 30 cm long 4 5 in 10 13 cm broad and wedge shaped at the base with an acute apex and an entire margin with the midrib and primary veins prominent The petioles are short and stout with a prominent adaxial groove Stipules are lacking The expanding leaves are conduplicate green covered with rusty tomentum beneath and hairy above when fully grown they are smooth dark green above and paler beneath When bruised the leaves have a disagreeable odor similar to a green bell pepper In autumn the leaves are a rusty yellow allowing pawpaw groves to be spotted from a long distance 3 13 24 Pawpaw flowers are perfect about 1 2 in 3 5 cm across rich red purple or maroon when mature with three sepals and six petals They are borne singly on stout hairy axillary peduncles The flowers are produced in early spring at the same time as or slightly before the new leaves appear and have a faint fetid or yeasty smell 3 13 24 25 The fruit of the pawpaw is a large yellowish green to brown berry 2 6 in 5 15 cm long and 1 3 in 3 8 cm broad weighing from 0 7 18 oz 20 510 g containing several brown or black seeds 1 2 1 in 15 25 mm in diameter embedded in the soft edible fruit pulp The conspicuous fruits begin developing after the plants flower they are initially green maturing by September or October to yellow or brown When mature the heavy fruits bend the weak branches down 3 13 24 Other characteristics Calyx Sepals three valvate in bud ovate acuminate pale green downy 13 24 Corolla Petals six in two rows imbricate in the bud inner row acute erect nectariferous outer row broadly ovate reflexed at maturity petals at first are green then brown and finally become dull purple or maroon and conspicuously veiny 13 24 Stamens Indefinite densely packed on the globular receptacle filaments short anthers extrorse two celled opening longitudinally 24 Pollen Shed as permanent tetrads 26 Pistils Several on the summit of the receptacle projecting from the mass of stamens ovary one celled stigma sessile ovules many 24 Branchlets Light brown tinged with red marked by shallow grooves 24 Winter buds Small of two kinds the leaf buds pointed and closely appressed to the twigs and the flower buds round brown and fuzzy 13 Bark Light gray sometimes blotched with lighter gray spots sometimes covered with small excrescences divided by shallow fissures inner bark tough fibrous bark with a very disagreeable odor when bruised 13 24 Wood Pale greenish yellow sapwood lighter light soft coarse grained and spongy with a specific gravity of 0 3969 and a density of 24 74 pounds per cubic foot 396 3 kg m3 13 24 Longevity of fruit production Undetermined 27 Range and ecology Edit Stems of pawpaw at a wild patch in Michigan in early spring Pawpaw forms wild patches by growing shallow outward stems The pawpaw is native to the Eastern Southern and Midwestern United States and adjacent Ontario Canada from New York west to southeastern Nebraska and south to northern Florida and eastern Texas 3 28 29 The tree is commonly found in the wild within floodplains and shady rich bottomlands 30 but it requires somewhat elevated slopes because it has a deep reaching taproot Owing to its shallow horizontally spreading stems rhizomes the species tends to become a clonal patch of small leaning trees through time See photos at right Pawpaws are not the first to colonize a disturbed site but because they are capable of growing in deep shade they can establish from seed beneath mature hardwood trees and then spread into a subcanopy patch They may even become dominant through time by depriving native canopy trees from re establishing via seed after tree fall owing to the dense shade within a pawpaw patch Under such circumstances the pawpaw subcanopy becomes the forest canopy 31 Accessing full sunlight the patch is then capable of producing more fruit 32 The fruits of the pawpaw are eaten by a variety of mammals including raccoons gray foxes opossums squirrels and black bears 31 Downward hanging pawpaw flowers attract many kinds of insects that are not effective cross pollinators The strong smelling leaves twigs and bark of pawpaws contain natural insecticides known as acetogenins 33 Pawpaw leaves and twigs are seldom consumed by rabbits deer or goats 34 or by many insects 3 However mules have been seen eating pawpaw leaves in Maryland 35 Larvae of the zebra swallowtail Protographium marcellus a butterfly feed exclusively on young leaves of A triloba and various other pawpaw Asimina species but never occur in great numbers on the plants 34 Chemicals in the pawpaw leaves confer protection from predation throughout the butterflies lives as trace amounts of acetogenins remain present making them unpalatable to birds and other predators 36 Other insects which have evolved the ability to consume pawpaws include Talponia plummeriana the pawpaw peduncle borer whose larvae can be found in flowers and Omphalocera munroei the asimina webworm whose larvae mostly feed upon leaves 37 Pollination Edit Pawpaw flowers begin with the female receptive stage at the central tip of the flower top then conclude with pollen production by ripened anthers bottom The floral scent of Asimina triloba has been described as yeasty which is one of several features that signify a beetle pollination syndrome 38 Other floral features of pawpaw indicative of beetle pollination include petals that curve over the downward pointing flower center along with food rich fleshy bases of the inner whorl of petals A pollination chamber is thereby created at a depth that only small beetles can access during the initial female receptive stage of floral bloom As with other well studied species of Annonaceae the delay in the shift from female to male floral stage offers beetles a secure and possibly thermogenic residence in which not only to feed but also to mate 39 Receptive stigmas at their arrival followed by pollen shedding stamens during pollinator departure is regarded as an early form of mutualism biology evolved between plants and insects that is still dominant in the most ancient lineages of flowering plants including the Magnoliids of which Annonaceae is the most species rich taxonomic family 40 Glischrochilus quadrisignatus Four spotted sap beetle is one of two tiny beetle species documented deep inside pawpaw flowers in Michigan 41 Beetles are the dominant form of pollinator ascribed for genera and species within Family Annonaceae However two species of genus Asimina Asimina triloba and Asimina parviflora bear a floral character that has given rise to an alternative hypothesis that carrion or dung flies are their effective pollinators That floral characteristic is the dark maroon color of the petals 42 43 Hence while no scholarly papers have documented carrion or dung flies as effective pollinators in field observations the strength of this hypothesis has led to placement of carrion during the bloom time in pawpaw orchards by some horticultural growers 8 44 Professional papers on genus Asimina and its species have warned of the difficulties in discerning whether insects observed on or collected from flowers are effective pollinators or merely casual and thus opportunistic visitors 43 45 46 Conservation status Edit All the stems in view are part of a wild pawpaw patch in Michigan On a global range wide scale the common pawpaw A triloba has a NatureServe global conservation rank of G5 very common The species is however listed for conservation concern in the northernmost parts of its range owing to the happenstance of where governmental boundaries exist In the United States the species has an N5 very common but is considered a threatened species in New York and an endangered species in New Jersey In Canada where the species is found only in portions of southern Ontario it has a rank of N3 vulnerable and a NatureServe subnational conservation rank of S3 vulnerable in Ontario The Ontario Ministry of Natural Resources has given the species a general status of Sensitive and its populations there are monitored In areas in which deer populations are dense pawpaws appear to be becoming more abundant locally since the deer avoid them but consume seedlings of most other woody plants 35 47 History EditThe natural seed dispersal of the common pawpaw in North America prior to the ice ages and lasting until roughly 10 000 years ago occurred via the dung of certain megafauna such as mastodons mammoths and giant ground sloths until they became extinct during the Quaternary extinction event 48 a parallel case in North America to that of the avocado in South and Central America 49 50 After the arrival of humans and the subsequent extinction of megafauna that were distributing A triloba the probable distribution of these large fruit bearing plants has been by humans 30 51 52 53 Indigenous peoples value pawpaw not only for its fruit but also for its bark The bark has traditionally been used as a fiber source Now that the exotic emerald ash borer beetle is destroying black ash trees Fraxinus nigra a basketmaker of the Little Traverse Bay Bands of Odawa Indians in northern Michigan has begun planting pawpaw seeds on tribal lands several hundred miles north of pawpaw s historically native range 54 The earliest documented mention of pawpaws is in the 1541 report of the Spanish de Soto expedition who found Native Americans east of the Mississippi River cultivating what some have identified as the pawpaw 55 The tree s scientific name Asimina triloba comes from the Powhatan word Assimina which a Jamestown settler transcribed in 1612 as wheat plum 56 The Lewis and Clark Expedition consumed pawpaws during their travels 55 Thomas Jefferson planted it at Monticello his plantation in Virginia 55 Legend has it that chilled pawpaw fruit was a favorite dessert of George Washington 57 Research EditKentucky State University KSU has the only full time pawpaw research program in the world it was started in 1990 with the aim of developing pawpaw as a new tree fruit crop for Kentucky Pawpaw is the largest native fruit in North America and has very few diseases compared to other orchard crops KSU is the site of the USDA National Clonal Germplasm Repository for Asimina species and the pawpaw orchards at KSU contain over 1 700 trees Research activities include germplasm collection and variety trials and efforts are directed towards improving propagation understanding fruit ripening and storage and developing orchard management practices Cultivation is best in hardiness zones 5 9 and trees take 7 8 years from seedling to fruiting KSU has created the three cultivars KSU Atwood KSU Benson and KSU Chappell with foci on better flavors higher yields vigorous plants and low seed to pulp ratios 58 9 59 60 61 62 Cultivation Edit A row of pawpaw cultivars in a Michigan orchard A tall sugar maple and evergreen conifers in background Cultivation is best in hardiness zones 5 9 9 and trees take 7 8 years from seedling to fruiting Cross pollination of at least two different genetic varieties of the plant is recommended 3 Scholarly research is insufficient for horticulturalists to adopt best methods for attracting insect pollinators as effective pollinators have not yet been distinguished from casual insect visitors 43 45 46 Therefore some growers resort to hand pollination or use pollinator attractants such as spraying fish emulsion or hanging chicken necks or other meat near the open flowers to attract pollinators 8 44 While pawpaws are larval hosts for the zebra swallowtail butterfly these caterpillars are usually present only at low density and not detrimental to the foliage of the trees 34 Pawpaws have not been cultivated for their fruits on the scale of apples or peaches primarily because pawpaw fruits ripen to the point of fermentation soon after they are picked and only frozen fruit stores or ships well Other methods of preservation include dehydration production of jams or jellies and pressure canning using the numerical values for bananas Methods of separating seeds from the pulp are still in the experimental phase Mechanical methods are most efficient but any splitting or injury of seeds can contaminate the remaining pulp with seed poisons Cultivation of pawpaws for fruit production has attracted interest particularly among organic growers as a fruit with few to no pests that can successfully be grown in its native environment without pesticides The commercial cultivation and harvesting of pawpaws is strong in southeastern Ohio 63 and also being explored in Kentucky 3 and Maryland 35 as well as various areas outside the species native range including California 34 the Pacific Northwest 34 and Massachusetts 64 The pawpaw is used for landscaping due to its distinctive growth habit the appeal of its fresh fruit and its relatively low maintenance needs once established 25 Propagation Edit Germinating pawpaw in a shallow pot results in the seed rising up into the air as the growing taproot keeps pushing against the bottom Trees are easily grown from seed Seeds should not be permitted to dry as they lose viability if they dehydrate to 5 moisture 65 The seeds need to be stratified by moist cold storage for 60 100 days at 35 45 F 2 7 C some publications suggest 90 120 days 65 61 60 They will lose their viability if stored for 3 years or more some seeds survive if stored for 2 years Germination is hypogeal and cotyledons remain within the seed coat Strictly speaking hypogeal means the cotyledons stay in the soil acting as a food store for the seedling until the plumule emerges from the soil on the epicotyl or true stem Because the large seeds contain enough energy to produce a long taproot prior to seeking photosynthetic opportunities above ground the seed itself will be pushed upward and into the air if germinated in standard pots See photo at right Propagation using cuttings has generally not been successful 65 61 Desirable cultivars are propagated by chip budding or whip grafting onto a root stock Pawpaw seeds do not grow true to type each individual seed in a fruit is genetically different from the others and from its parent tree Purchased cultivars do not produce seeds true to type either which is why cultivars are all grafted trees Root sucker seedlings however are all genetically identical to their host 61 60 Commercial nurseries usually ship seedlings in containers usually grafted cultivars but other nurseries such as the Kentucky Division of Forestry ship bareroot seedlings for reforestation projects and area homeowners 66 60 Harvesting seedlings from the forest floor is tricky because most forest floor seedlings are actually root suckers with few roots and those seedlings that did grow from a seed have deep taproots 61 60 Cultivars Edit Over the years many cultivars of A triloba have been developed or discovered 67 Many have been lost and are no longer available commercially 55 68 62 The named varieties producing large fruit and performing well in Kentucky per research trials are NC 1 Overleese Potomac Shenandoah Sunflower Susquehanna Wabash KSU Atwood KSU Benson and KSU Chappell 60 Habitat restoration Edit Pawpaws are sometimes included in ecological restoration plantings since this tree grows well in wet soil and has a strong tendency to form well rooted clonal thickets Uses Edit A triloba is often called wild banana Indiana banana or prairie banana because of its banana like creamy texture and flavor Paw paw raw with skinNutritional value per 100 g 3 5 oz Carbohydrates18 8 gDietary fiber2 6 gFat1 2 gProtein1 2 gVitaminsQuantity DV Vitamin A equiv 11 87 mgThiamine B1 1 0 01 mgRiboflavin B2 8 0 09 mgNiacin B3 7 1 1 mgVitamin C22 18 3 mgMineralsQuantity DV Calcium6 63 mgIron54 7 mgMagnesium32 113 mgManganese124 2 6 mgPhosphorus7 47 mgPotassium7 345 mgZinc9 0 9 mgAnalysis from Kentucky State University Pawpaw ProgramUnits mg micrograms mg milligrams IU International units Percentages are roughly approximated using US recommendations for adults Fruits Edit As described by horticulturist Barbara Damrosch the fruit of the pawpaw looks a bit like mango but with pale yellow custardy spoonable flesh and black easy to remove seeds 64 Wild collected pawpaw fruits ripe in late August to mid September have long been a favorite treat throughout the tree s extensive native range in eastern North America and on occasion are sold locally at farmers markets 3 64 Pawpaw fruits have a sweet custard like flavor somewhat similar to banana mango and cantaloupe 3 13 varying significantly by source or cultivar 3 with more protein than most fruits 3 Nineteenth century American agronomist E Lewis Sturtevant described pawpaws as a natural custard too luscious for the relish of most people 35 Ohio botanist William B Werthner noted that The fruit has a tangy wild wood flavor peculiarly its own It is sweet yet rather cloying to the taste and a wee bit puckery only a boy can eat more than one at a time 13 Fresh fruits of the pawpaw are commonly eaten raw either chilled or at room temperature However they can be kept only 2 3 days at room temperature or about a week if refrigerated 25 69 The easily bruised pawpaw fruits do not ship well unless frozen 3 64 Where pawpaws grow the fruit pulp is also often used locally in baked dessert recipes with pawpaw often substituted with volumetric equivalency in many banana based recipes Pawpaws may also be blended into ice cream 25 or included in pancakes 25 Nutrition Edit According to a report from the KSU Pawpaw Program right table raw pawpaw with skin is 19 carbohydrates 1 protein 1 fat and 79 water estimated In a 100 g reference amount the raw fruit provides 80 Calories and is a rich source 20 or more of the Daily Value DV of vitamin C 22 DV magnesium 32 DV iron 54 DV and manganese 124 DV The fruit also contains a moderate amount of vitamin A 11 DV Phytochemicals Edit Zebra swallowtail butterflies Eurytides marcellus with pawpaw foliage Phytochemical extracts of the leaves and fruit contain acetogenins including the neurotoxin annonacin 70 The seeds and bark contain the chemical asimitrin 71 and other acetogenins including asimin asiminacin and asiminecin 70 72 Effect on insects Edit Due to the presence of acetogenins the leaves twigs and bark of pawpaw trees can be used to make an organic insecticide 33 The only insect species immune to these insecticidal compounds is the zebra swallowtail butterfly Protographium marcellus whose larvae feed on the leaves of various species of Asimina conferring protection from predation throughout the butterflies lives as trace amounts of acetogenins remain present making them unpalatable to birds and other predators 36 Historical uses Edit The tough fibrous inner bark of the pawpaw was used by Native Americans and settlers in the Midwest for making ropes fishing nets and mats 13 35 and for stringing fish 14 Pawpaw logs have been used for split rail fences in Arkansas 13 The hard brown shiny lima bean sized seeds were sometimes carried as pocket pieces in Ohio 13 Cultural significance EditOld song Edit A traditional American folk song portrays wild harvesting of pawpaws Arty Schronce of the Georgia Department of Agriculture gives these lyrics 25 Where oh where is dear little Nellie Where oh where is dear little Nellie Where oh where is dear little Nellie Way down yonder in the pawpaw patch Pickin up pawpaws puttin em in your pocket Pickin up pawpaws puttin em in your pocket Pickin up pawpaws puttin em in your pocket Way down yonder in the pawpaw patch He notes that picking up pawpaws refers to gathering the ripe fallen fruit from beneath the trees and that the pocket in the song is that of an apron or similar tie on pocket not a modern pants or blue jeans pocket into which pawpaws would hardly fit 25 A pawpaw patch refers to the plant s characteristic patch forming clonal growth habit Place names Edit The pawpaw is the basis for various place and school names in the United States almost all using the older spelling variant paw paw The Paw Paw Tunnel on the Chesapeake and Ohio Canal in Maryland is a 3118 foot 950 m canal tunnel completed in 1850 to bypass about 5 miles of the 6 mile long Paw Paw Bends of the Potomac River near the town of Paw Paw West Virginia all ultimately named after the pawpaw tree 73 In Michigan the Paw Paw River is named for the pawpaw trees that grew along its banks Paw Paw Lake and Little Paw Paw Lake are both tributaries to the river The town of Paw Paw Michigan is located at the junction of two branches of the Paw Paw River The Paw Paw Railroad 1857 1887 operated a 4 mile 6 4 km rail line between Lawton and Paw Paw in Van Buren County Michigan 74 The village of Paw Paw Illinois was named after a nearby grove of pawpaw trees 75 The community of Paw Paw Indiana in Miami County and Paw Paw Township in DeKalb County and Paw Paw Township in Wabash County are all named after groves of native pawpaw trees 76 Paw Paw Kentucky a community in easternmost Kentucky was named after the native fruit tree 77 The now empty town of Paw Paw Missouri was named after the trees 78 Art Edit Yellow billed Cuckoo Audubon Nineteenth century naturalist and painter John James Audubon included pawpaw foliage and fruits in the background of his illustration of the yellow billed cuckoo Coccyzus americanus in his classic work The Birds of America 1827 1838 Pawpaw fruits and a pawpaw leaf are featured in the painting Still Life with Pawpaws circa 1870 1875 by Edward Edmondson Jr 1830 1884 at the Dayton Art Institute in Dayton Ohio Other Edit The third Thursday in September has been designated as National Pawpaw Day by the National Day Calendar 79 It was announced on September 19 2019 80 at Kentucky State University s monthly sustainable agriculture workshop the Third Thursday Thing 81 The pawpaw was designated as Ohio s state native fruit in 2009 82 Since 1999 the Ohio Pawpaw Growers Association has sponsored an annual Ohio Pawpaw Festival at Lake Snowden near Albany Ohio 83 Since 2012 Delaware s Alapocas Run State Park has hosted an annual Pawpaw Folk Festival featuring tastings of the fruit 84 The larva of the Pawpaw sphinx moth feeds on pawpaw fruit Since 2019 the pawpaw has been the official state fruit tree of Missouri 85 See also EditMeiogyne cylindrocarpa fingersop References Edit Asimina triloba The IUCN Red List of Threatened Species IUCN 208 e T135958357A135958359 2018 doi 10 2305 IUCN UK 2018 2 RLTS T135958357A135958359 en S2CID 242070317 NatureServe Explorer 2 0 explorer natureserve org Retrieved April 27 2022 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Jones Snake C Layne Desmond R 2019 Pawpaw Description and Nutritional Information Kentucky State University Cooperative Extension Program Archived from the original on December 30 2019 Retrieved December 30 2019 Asimina triloba College of Agriculture and Life Sciences North Carolina State University Archived from the original on April 6 2018 Retrieved December 19 2018 Layne DR February 24 1998 Pawpaw NewCrop Factsheet Purdue University Archived from the original on July 11 2019 Retrieved December 19 2018 Huang Hongwen Layne Desmond Kubisiak Thomas July 2000 RAPD Inheritance and Diversity in Pawpaw Asimina triloba Journal of the American Society for Horticultural Science 125 4 454 459 doi 10 21273 JASHS 125 4 454 Native Pawpaw Tree North Carolina State University Retrieved October 6 2022 a b c Pankau Ryan Pawpaw Illinois Extension Service University of Illinois Urbana Champaign Retrieved October 6 2022 a b c Pomper Kirk W Layne Desmond R Peterson R Neal 1999 The Pawpaw Regional Variety Trial hort purdue edu Archived from the original on April 14 2015 Retrieved September 26 2019 Matthews Elizabeth September 21 2021 Pawpaw Small Tree Big Impact U S National Park Service Retrieved December 16 2021 Avalos J Rupprecht J K McLaughlin J L Rodriguez E 1993 Guinea pig maximization test of the bark extract from pawpaw Asimina triloba Annonaceae Contact Dermatitis 29 1 33 5 doi 10 1111 j 1600 0536 1993 tb04533 x PMID 8365150 S2CID 41590523 Chamberlain Alexander F December 1 1902 Algonkian Words in American English A Study in the Contact of the White Man and the Indian The Journal of American Folklore American Folklore Society 15 59 240 267 doi 10 2307 533199 ISSN 0021 8715 JSTOR 533199 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Werthner William B 1935 Some American Trees An intimate study of native Ohio trees New York The Macmillan Company pp xviii 398 pp a b Sargent Charles Sprague 1933 Manual of the trees of North America exclusive of Mexico Boston and New York Houghton Mifflin Company The Riverside Press Cambridge pp xxvi 910 Harper Douglas papaya Online Etymology Dictionary Retrieved October 28 2012 CRC Press 2004 p 122 The Asimoya The Archives of the Rare Fruit Council of Australia November 1 1996 Archived from the original on March 29 2018 Retrieved November 26 2017 Schweitzer Ally September 15 2017 This Once Obscure Fruit Is On Its Way To Becoming PawPaw Pawpular NPR NPR Archived from the original on April 5 2018 Retrieved April 4 2018 Haupt Angela September 17 2021 Four ways to learn about fungi and foraging in the D C area The Washington Post ISSN 0190 8286 Retrieved September 17 2021 Schweitzer Ally September 12 2017 Once An Obscure Local Fruit The Pawpaw Has A New Nickname The Hipster Banana WAMU Retrieved September 11 2021 American Indian Studies Research Institute zia aisri indiana edu Archived from the original on December 13 2018 Retrieved December 18 2018 English to Kanza Dictionary PDF kawnation com Archived PDF from the original on October 11 2016 Retrieved December 18 2018 Byington Cyrus 1915 A dictionary of the Choctaw language Washington D C United States Government Printing office pp 359 ISBN 1566321085 OCLC 53387982 Retrieved December 18 2018 a b c d e f g h i j k Keeler Harriet L 1900 Our Native Trees and How to Identify Them New York Charles Scribner s Sons pp 20 23 Retrieved November 7 2019 a b c d e f g Krewer Gerard W Crocker Thomas F Bertrand Paul F Horton Dan L February 2015 2012 Minor Fruits and Nuts in Georgia Pawpaw Bulletin 992 University of Georgia Cooperative Extension College of Agricultural amp Environmental Sciences Athens GA Archived from the original on October 20 2016 Retrieved October 19 2016 Walker JW 1971 Pollen Morphology Phytogeography and Phylogeny of the Annonaceae Contributions from the Gray Herbarium of Harvard University 202 1 130 Cantaluppi C J June 1 2016 The Pawpaw An Emerging Specialty Crop Journal of the NACAA 9 1 ISSN 2158 9429 Archived from the original on December 19 2018 Retrieved December 19 2018 Kral Robert 1997 Annonaceae Magnoliophyta Magnoliidae and Hamamelidae Flora of North America Vol 3 New York NY Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 511246 7 Asimina triloba L Dunal Plants Database Natural Resources Conservation Service US Department of Agriculture 2017 Archived from the original on April 27 2017 Retrieved May 23 2017 a b Tulowiecki Stephen J 2021 Modeling the geographic distribution of pawpaw Asimina triloba L Dunal in a portion of its northern range limits western New York State USA Plant Ecology 222 2 193 208 doi 10 1007 s11258 020 01098 x S2CID 228809757 a b Asimina triloba Archived 2011 06 28 at the Wayback Machine Fire Effects Information System U S Department of Agriculture Forest Service Rocky Mountain Research Station Fire Sciences Laboratory Barlow Connie Helping Forests Walk 04 B Is this an Old Growth Pawpaw Patch Michigan 2021 Youtube Retrieved October 6 2022 a b B J Sampson J L McLaughlin D E Wedge 2003 PawPaw Extract as a Botanical Insecticide 2002 Arthropod Management Tests vol 28 p L a b c d e Pawpaw California Rare Fruit Growers Archived from the original on July 20 2011 Retrieved July 15 2011 a b c d e Bilton Kathy Pawpaws A paw for you and a paw for me Archived from the original on July 18 2011 Retrieved July 21 2011 a b Martin John M Madigosky Stephen R Gu Zhe ming Zhou Dawei Wu Jinn McLaughlin Jerry L January 1999 Chemical defense in the zebra swallowtail butterfly Eurytides marcellus involving annonaceous acetogenins Journal of Natural Products 62 1 2 4 doi 10 1021 np980308s PMID 9917274 Ames Guy K January 8 2018 Pawpaw A Tropical Fruit for Temperate Climates Small Farms Quarterly Cornell Small Farms Program Retrieved July 11 2022 Goodrich Katherine R et al January 2006 When Flowers Smell Fermented The Chemistry and Ontogeny of Yeasty Floral Scent in Pawpaw Asimina triloba Annonaceae International Journal of Plant Sciences 167 1 33 46 doi 10 1086 498351 S2CID 2309906 Thein Leonard B Azuma Hiroshi Kawano Shoichi November 2000 New Perspectives on the Pollination Biology of Basal Angiosperms International Journal of Plant Sciences 161 S6 S225 S235 doi 10 1086 317575 S2CID 84852646 Gottsberger Gerhard Silberbauer Gottsberger Ilse Basal Angiosperms and Beetle Pollination XI congreso latinoamericano de botanica e LXV congresso nacional de botanica 2014 Retrieved March 31 2022 Barlow Connie Pawpaw Ecological Survey in Michigan with background information and excerpts of scholarly papers Torreya Guardians Retrieved March 31 2022 Gottsberger Gerhard 2008 Pollination and Evolution in Neotropical Annonaceae Plant Species Biology 14 2 143 152 doi 10 1046 j 1442 1984 1999 00018 x a b c Saunders Richard MK 2012 The diversity and evolution of pollination systems in Annonaceae Botanical Journal of the Linnean Society 169 222 244 doi 10 1111 j 1095 8339 2011 01208 x a b Moore Andrew 2015 Pawpaw In Search of America s Forgotten Fruit Vermont Chelsea Green p 4 ISBN 978 1 60358 596 5 a b Kral Robert October 1960 A Revision of Asimina and Deeringothamnus Annonaceae Brittonia 12 4 233 278 doi 10 2307 2805119 JSTOR 2805119 S2CID 35766955 a b Sayers Thomas DJ Steinbauer Martin J Miller Rebecca E April 2019 Visitor or vector The extent of rove beetle Coleoptera Staphylinidae pollination and floral interactions Arthropod Plant Interactions 13 5 685 701 doi 10 1007 s11829 019 09698 9 S2CID 117745469 Slater Mitchell A Anderson Rogers C 2014 Intensive Selective Deer Browsing Favors Success of Asimina triloba Paw Paw a Native Tree Species Natural Areas Journal 34 2 178 187 doi 10 3375 043 034 0207 S2CID 52834948 Barlow Connie 2001 Anachronistic Fruits and the Ghosts Who Haunt Them PDF Harvard University Arboretum Archived PDF from the original on February 12 2013 Retrieved December 5 2012 Janzen Daniel H and Paul S Martin Neotropical anachronisms the fruits the gomphotheres ate Science 215 no 4528 1982 19 27 Cook Robert E Attractions of the flesh Natural History New York NY 91 no 1 1982 20 24 Abrams Marc D Nowacki Gregory J 2008 Native Americans as active and passive promoters of mast and fruit trees in the eastern USA PDF The Holocene 18 7 1123 1137 Bibcode 2008Holoc 18 1123A doi 10 1177 0959683608095581 S2CID 128836416 Shipley Jonathan April 26 2022 The revival of a forgotten American fruit BBC Travel Retrieved April 28 2022 Wykoff M William March 2009 On the Natural Distribution of Pawpaw in the Northeast PDF The Nutshell 23 32 House Kelly May 3 2021 As northern Michigan warms scientists bring tree seedlings from the south Michigan Bridge Archived from the original on May 4 2021 Retrieved July 21 2021 a b c d Moore Andrew 2015 Pawpaw In Search of America s Forgotten Fruit White River Junction Vermont Chelsea Green Publishing ISBN 9781603585965 Retrieved November 28 2020 Way Down Yonder in the Paw Paw Patch Smithsonian Gardens May 1 2020 Retrieved June 19 2022 Ahuja Akshay September 10 2015 Rediscovering The Pawpaw cincinnatimagazine com Archived from the original on October 12 2016 Retrieved May 29 2020 USDA National Clonal Germplasm Repository for Asimina spp at KSU Slide 4 Kentucky State University Archived from the original on September 26 2019 Retrieved September 26 2019 PawPaw Kentucky State University Archived from the original on September 21 2019 Retrieved September 22 2019 a b c d e f Kaiser Cheryl Ernst Matt July 2018 Pawpaw PDF University of Kentucky College of Agriculture Food and Environment Cooperative Extension Service Archived PDF from the original on July 15 2019 Retrieved September 22 2019 a b c d e Chapter Propagation The Pawpaw M Brett Callaway Originally published as a booklet in 1990 by Kentucky State University edited and converted to web format in 1998 by Snake C Jones pawpaw kysu edu Kentucky State University a b Pomper Kirk W Crabtree Sheri B Lowe Jeremiah D January 21 2009 2009 Pawpaw Cultivars and Grafted Tree Sources Kentucky State University Archived from the original on September 22 2019 Retrieved September 22 2019 The 15th Annual Ohio Pawpaw Festival Ohio Pawpaw Festival Archived from the original on July 31 2013 Retrieved August 9 2013 a b c d Damrosch Barbara September 8 2011 Return of the Native Pawpaws Proponents The Washington Post Local Living p 9 a b c Propagation of Pawpaw Asimina triloba International Plant Propagators Society Combined Proceedings of Annual Meetings 2000 Retrieved May 17 2016 State Nurseries and Tree Seedlings Kentucky Energy and Environment Cabinet eec ky gov Archived from the original on September 24 2019 Retrieved September 22 2019 Sorten der Indianerbanane Florians Pawpawschule Asimina triloba in German Archived from the original on June 10 2020 Retrieved June 10 2020 Table 3 Pawpaw Cultivars pawpaw kysu edu Kentucky State University Locals explore the culinary potential of pawpaw a b Potts L F Luzzio F A Smith S C Hetman M Champy P Litvan I 2012 Annonacin in Asimina triloba fruit Implication for neurotoxicity PDF NeuroToxicology 33 1 53 8 doi 10 1016 j neuro 2011 10 009 PMID 22130466 Archived PDF from the original on October 5 2016 Retrieved August 18 2016 Kim Eun Jung Suh Kyung Mi Kim Dal Hwan Jung Eun Joo Seo Chang Seob Son Jong Keun Woo Mi Hee McLaughlin Jerry L February 2005 Asimitrin and 4 hydroxytrilobin new bioactive annonaceous acetogenins from the seeds of Asimina triloba possessing a bis tetrahydrofuran ring Journal of Natural Products 68 2 194 197 doi 10 1021 np040184l PMID 15730242 Zhao Geng Xian Miesbauer Laura R Smith David L McLaughlin Jerry L June 1994 Asimin asiminacin and asiminecin novel highly cytotoxic asimicin isomers from Asimina triloba Journal of Medicinal Chemistry 37 13 1971 1976 doi 10 1021 jm00039a009 PMID 8027979 Paw Paw Tunnel Town of Paw Paw West Virginia Archived from the original on October 6 2011 Retrieved July 15 2011 RRHX Railroad History Time Line 1860 RRHX Railroad History of Michigan Archived from the original on July 23 2011 Retrieved August 6 2011 Zeimetz Lisa Stephen Wright House Archived 2019 09 21 at the Wayback Machine PDF National Register of Historic Places Nomination Form 1 April 2005 HAARGIS Database Illinois Historic Preservation Agency Retrieved September 21 2019 History of Miami County Indiana From the Earliest Time to the Present Brant amp Fuller 1887 pp 536 paw paw Hess Cameron M Ludwick amp Blair Thomas March 30 2015 My Old Kentucky Road Trip Historic Destinations amp Natural Wonders Arcadia Publishing p 168 ISBN 978 1 62619 816 6 Sullivan County Missouri Place Names 1928 1945 The State Historical Society of Missouri collections shsmo org Archived from the original on September 21 2019 Retrieved September 21 2019 NATIONAL PAWPAW DAY Third Thursday in September National Day Calendar Archived from the original on September 21 2019 Retrieved September 21 2019 Third Thursday Thing Program kysu edu Kentucky State University Archived from the original on September 21 2019 Retrieved September 21 2019 The Third Thursday Thing Eleven Years and Going Strong kysu edu Kentucky State University Archived from the original on September 21 2019 Retrieved September 21 2019 Ohio Revised Code 5 082 Archived 2010 09 06 at the Wayback Machine Ohio Pawpaw Festival ohiopawpawfest com Archived from the original on January 4 2020 Retrieved May 11 2020 Pawpaw Folk Festival set for Aug 20 at the Blue Ball Barn August 15 2016 Archived from the original on December 2 2016 Retrieved December 9 2016 Missouri Revisor of Statutes Revised Statutes of Missouri RSMo Missouri Law MO Law Joint Committee on Legislative Research revisor mo gov Retrieved April 2 2021 Further reading EditMoore Andrew 2015 Pawpaw In Search of America s Forgotten Fruit Chelsea Green Publishing ISBN 978 1603585972 External links Edit Media related to Asimina triloba at Wikimedia Commons Data related to Asimina triloba at Wikispecies Kentucky State University Pawpaw Program The Pawpaw Foraging For America s Forgotten Fruit The Native Pawpaw Tree Penn State Extension Retrieved December 16 2021 Pawpaw Ecological Survey in Michigan October 2021 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Asimina triloba amp oldid 1129118202, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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