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Bruguiera gymnorhiza

Bruguiera gymnorhiza, the large-leafed orange mangrove or oriental mangrove,[3]) is a mangrove tree that grows usually to 7–20 metres (23–66 ft) high, but sometimes up to 35m, that belongs to the family Rhizophoraceae. It is found on the seaward side of mangrove swamps, often in the company of Rhizophora. It grows from the Western Pacific across Indian Ocean coasts to Cape Province, South Africa.

Bruguiera gymnorhiza
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Plantae
Clade: Tracheophytes
Clade: Angiosperms
Clade: Eudicots
Clade: Rosids
Order: Malpighiales
Family: Rhizophoraceae
Genus: Bruguiera
Species:
B. gymnorhiza
Binomial name
Bruguiera gymnorhiza
(L.) Lam., Tabl. Encycl. 2(5.2): 517 (-518); 2(2.2): t. 397 (1819)[1][2]
Synonyms
  • Bruguiera capensis Blume[2]
  • B. conjugata (L.) Merr.
  • B. gymnorhiza (L.) Savigny, Encycl. [J. Lamarck & al.] 4: 696 (1798) (Isonym)[1]
  • B. rheedei Blume
  • B. rumphii Blume
  • B. wightii Blume
  • B. zippelii Blume
  • Rhizophora conjugata L.
  • R. gymnorhiza L.
  • R. palun DC.
  • R. rheedei Steud.
  • R. tinctoria Blanco

Description edit

A tree that can grow up to 35m, though usually smaller, around 7-20m, it has a glabrous, smoothish trunk with reddish-brown bark that is sometimes fibrous, sometimes lightish brown or grey.[4] The tree develops short prop-roots rather than long stilt-roots. The green elliptic leaves are 5–15 cm long. Flowers are solitary, with white or cream petals, that soon turn brown up to 1.5 cm long, pinkish-green to reddish brown calyx. The fruit are turbinate (spinning-top shaped), 2 cm long, when mature, the spindle-shaped fruits drop and become embedded in the mud in an upright position, where they rapidly develop roots. The seeds, when still on tree, have a hypocotyl up to 11 cm long.[2]

 
Bruguiera gymnorhiza

Distribution edit

The tree is found as a native on the coasts of places bordering the Indian Ocean, the South China Sea, and parts of the western Pacific Ocean.[4][2] Regions that it is native to include: Caroline Island, Samoa, Tonga, Wallis and Futuna, Fiji, Marshall Islands, Gilbert Islands, Nauru, Vanuatu, Solomon Islands, Queensland, New Guinea, Northern Territory, Lesser Sunda Islands, Sulawesi, Nansei-shoto, Borneo, Jawa, Hainan, Christmas Island, Southeast China, Cambodia, Vietnam, Sumatra, Peninsular Malaysia, Thailand, Myanmar, Bangladesh, Nicobar Islands, Andaman Islands, India (including Andhra Pradesh), Sri Lanka, Maldives, Mauritius, Madagascar, Aldabra, Seychelles, Somalia, Djibouti, Kenya, Mozambique Channel Islands, Tanzania, Mozambique, KwaZulu-Natal, Cape Provinces.

It has become extinct in Taiwan, and is naturalized in Florida

Habitat edit

The tree grows on intertidal mud-flats and estuaries, 0-2m (the elevation range between mean sea level and highest tide), on the less exposed parts of the coast, with a rainfall of 1000-8000mm.[4][2] Common associates on Pacific Island include other mangrove species. The species grows on a wide range of soils, but does best in river estuaries, Salt water habitats on an alluvial sediment allows the tree to spread with its adventitious roots.[5] The black mangrove is a protected tree in South Africa.[6]

Names edit

As well as its botanical name, the tree is known by many common, or vernacular names. These include: Tongan: tongo;[7]Marshall Islands jon;[4]Kosrae sraol; Pohnpei sohmw; Chuuk ong; Yap yangach; northern Australia orange mangrove; Wanigela, Northern (Oro) Province, Papua New Guinea kavela, mangrove bean.;[8] Thyanhngayth dialect, Awngthim language nhomb;[9] Sapek people, Supiori, Papua Province, Indonesia arouw[10]Batjamal benmerr;[11]Emi kunyme; Palau denges;[4]Indonesian: putut;[7]Malay: pokok tumu merah; Chinese: 木榄; Yue Chinese 木欖; Khmer prâsak' nhi, prâsak' toch, prâsak' tük;[5]Thai: พังกาหัวสุมดอกแดง;[7]Bengali: কাঁকড়া গাছ; Telugu (Andhra Pradesh) thuddu ponna, uredi;[4]Malayalam: പേനക്കണ്ടൽ;[7]Maldives bodu kaṇḍū, boda vaki.;[12]Kiswahili (Kenya, Tanzania, including Zanzibar, Mozambique) muia, mkoko wimbi; Zulu: isihlobane;[6]Xhosa: isikhangati; Afrikaans: swart-wortelboom; South African English black mangrove; English large-leafed mangrove, oriental mangrove;[4]Japanese: オヒルギ;[7]Russian: Бругиера голокорневая

Uses edit

A major use of the tree is for wood products. Its uses in agroforestry include a woodlot, mulch/organic matter production, soil stabilization, coastal protection, windbreak, wildlife/marine food and habitat and bee forage.[4] The wood is widely used, including for firewood, building construction (including structural components such as poles, beams and rafters), canoe parts, fishingstakes, spears, copra-huskers, chips for pulp production, tool handles and digging sticks. In the Andaman Islands the trunks have been used for telephone and transmission poles, it seems rot-resistant (i.e. durable in direct contact with the ground). The wood has a high calorific values, and is used as fuel on some Pacific Islands (e.g. Kosrae), and for charcoal production in Indonesia, and Cambodia. In the Marshall Islands, it has been used for keel-pieces (maal), outrigger (kie), and outrigger struts (kein-eon erre). Paddles are also made from the wood on some islands.

The fruit (propagule/hypocotyl) is reported as being eaten after scraping/grating, washing, drying and cooking to remove tannins, and sometimes mixed with coconut in Melanesia and Nauru.[4] The fruit is sold as a vegetable at Honiara Market, Solomon Islands. For the Sowek people, living on Supiori Island, Papua Province, Indonesia, the fruit is a staple, or primary food, of their diet, due to its high carbohydrate content.[10]

The bark is used as an abortifacient and for treating burns in the Solomon Islands.[4] The bark is reported to be used for diarrhoea and fever in Indonesia. The astringent (and mildly toxic) bark has also been used to treat malaria in Cambodia. The fruits has antiviral properties, and bark extracts of the closely related Bruguiera sexangula are reportedly active against at least two types of cancerous tumors (Sarcoma 180 and Lewis lung carcinoma). The bark is used for dying, with colours ranging from red-brown to black (requires repeated dying). For working with leather, the bark has a high tannin content, but tends to colour excessively unless collected "at the end of each growing season".

The green propagules/hypocotyl are also eaten by many indigenous groups in northern Australia. For example, on northwestern Cape York Peninsula, in the Weipa region, Thaynakwithi people (also referred to as Thyanhngayth dialect, Awngthim language people) call the species nhomb and explain that the propagules could be baked, then mashed or pounded and the flesh placed into a sieve-like woven bag before being soaked in water[9]

Amongst the people of Wanigela, Northern (Oro) Province, in southeastern Papua New Guinea, the cooked hypocotyls are eaten, providing one of their staples, and used in the ethnomedicine as antimicrobial and insecticidal.[8]

The Batjamal and Emi speaker of the Wadjiginy language, who live near Anson Bay in the Northern Territory, Australia, use the durable and hard wood to make spear tips (batjagada [Batjama], ijinde [Emi], with a Bambusa arnhemica shaft.[11]

The reddish fine-textured wood used for local building in Cambodia, such constructions as huts, wharfs, fences, and fishery structures.[5] Charcoal from the wood is excellent. The bark is used to dye fishing nets, and to tan animal skins. A decoction of the bark is taken in to combat diarrhoea.

There is evidence of the hypocotyls being eaten in India, Bangladesh, and other parts of Southeast Asia.[4]

In the Maldives the propagules or green pods are eaten as a cooked vegetable. They are peeled first and then boiled, the water being discarded and renewed at least four times. The propagules of this species are more appreciated than those of Bruguiera cylindrica.[12]

 
Flower of Bruguiera gymnorrhiza

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b "Bruguiera gymnorhiza (L.) Lam., Tabl. Encycl. 2(5.2): 517 (-518); 2(2.2): t. 397 (1819)". International Plant Name Index (IPNI). Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew. Retrieved 19 April 2020.
  2. ^ a b c d e "Bruguiera gymnorhiza (L.) Lam". Plants of the World Online (POWO). Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew/Science. Retrieved 19 April 2020.
  3. ^ "Bruguiera gymnorhiza - Large-Leafed Orange Mangrove". www.mangrove.at. Retrieved 2021-07-24.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Allen, James A.; Duke, Norman C. "Bruguiera gymnorrhiza (large-leafed mangrove)". CiteSeerX 10.1.1.889.7420.
  5. ^ a b c Pauline Dy Phon (2000). Plants Utilised In Cambodia/Plantes utilisées au Cambodge. Phnom Penh: Imprimerie Olympic. p. 121.
  6. ^ a b (PDF). Department of Water Affairs and Forestry, Republic of South Africa. 3 May 2013. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2010-07-05.
  7. ^ a b c d e "Bruguiera gymnorhiza (Q15386544)". Wikidata. Wikidata.org. Retrieved 19 April 2020.
  8. ^ a b Owen, Patrick L; Martineau, Louis C; Caves, Dayna; Haddad, Pierre S; Matainaho, Teatulohi; Johns, Timothy (2008). "Consumption of guava (Psidium guajava L) and noni (Morinda citrifolia L) may protect betel quid-chewing Papua New Guineans against diabetes" (PDF). Asia Pac J Clin Nutr. 17 (4): 635–43. PMID 19114402. Retrieved 19 April 2020.
  9. ^ a b Fletcher, Thancoupie (2007). Thanakupi's Guide to Language and Culture. Sydney: Jennifer Isaacs Arts and Publishing. p. 99. ISBN 9780980331202.
  10. ^ a b Cabuy, Reinardus L.; Marwa, Jonni; Manusawai, Jacob; Rahawarin, Yohanes Y. (2012). "Non-woody plant species of the Papua island forests, a sustainable source of food for the local communities" (PDF). Indian Journal of Traditional Knowledge. 11 (4): 586–92. Retrieved 21 April 2020.
  11. ^ a b Smith, N. M. "Ethnobotanical field notes from the Northern Territory, Australia" (PDF). Journal of the Adelaide Botanic Gardens. 14 (1): 1–65. Retrieved 20 April 2020.
  12. ^ a b Xavier Romero-Frias, The Maldive Islanders, A Study of the Popular Culture of an Ancient Ocean Kingdom, Barcelona 1999, ISBN 84-7254-801-5.

References edit

bruguiera, gymnorhiza, large, leafed, orange, mangrove, oriental, mangrove, mangrove, tree, that, grows, usually, metres, high, sometimes, that, belongs, family, rhizophoraceae, found, seaward, side, mangrove, swamps, often, company, rhizophora, grows, from, w. Bruguiera gymnorhiza the large leafed orange mangrove or oriental mangrove 3 is a mangrove tree that grows usually to 7 20 metres 23 66 ft high but sometimes up to 35m that belongs to the family Rhizophoraceae It is found on the seaward side of mangrove swamps often in the company of Rhizophora It grows from the Western Pacific across Indian Ocean coasts to Cape Province South Africa Bruguiera gymnorhizaScientific classificationKingdom PlantaeClade TracheophytesClade AngiospermsClade EudicotsClade RosidsOrder MalpighialesFamily RhizophoraceaeGenus BruguieraSpecies B gymnorhizaBinomial nameBruguiera gymnorhiza L Lam Tabl Encycl 2 5 2 517 518 2 2 2 t 397 1819 1 2 SynonymsBruguiera capensis Blume 2 B conjugata L Merr B gymnorhiza L Savigny Encycl J Lamarck amp al 4 696 1798 Isonym 1 B rheedei Blume B rumphii Blume B wightii Blume B zippelii Blume Rhizophora conjugata L R gymnorhiza L R palun DC R rheedei Steud R tinctoria Blanco Contents 1 Description 2 Distribution 3 Habitat 4 Names 5 Uses 6 Notes 7 ReferencesDescription editA tree that can grow up to 35m though usually smaller around 7 20m it has a glabrous smoothish trunk with reddish brown bark that is sometimes fibrous sometimes lightish brown or grey 4 The tree develops short prop roots rather than long stilt roots The green elliptic leaves are 5 15 cm long Flowers are solitary with white or cream petals that soon turn brown up to 1 5 cm long pinkish green to reddish brown calyx The fruit are turbinate spinning top shaped 2 cm long when mature the spindle shaped fruits drop and become embedded in the mud in an upright position where they rapidly develop roots The seeds when still on tree have a hypocotyl up to 11 cm long 2 nbsp Bruguiera gymnorhizaDistribution editThe tree is found as a native on the coasts of places bordering the Indian Ocean the South China Sea and parts of the western Pacific Ocean 4 2 Regions that it is native to include Caroline Island Samoa Tonga Wallis and Futuna Fiji Marshall Islands Gilbert Islands Nauru Vanuatu Solomon Islands Queensland New Guinea Northern Territory Lesser Sunda Islands Sulawesi Nansei shoto Borneo Jawa Hainan Christmas Island Southeast China Cambodia Vietnam Sumatra Peninsular Malaysia Thailand Myanmar Bangladesh Nicobar Islands Andaman Islands India including Andhra Pradesh Sri Lanka Maldives Mauritius Madagascar Aldabra Seychelles Somalia Djibouti Kenya Mozambique Channel Islands Tanzania Mozambique KwaZulu Natal Cape Provinces It has become extinct in Taiwan and is naturalized in FloridaHabitat editThe tree grows on intertidal mud flats and estuaries 0 2m the elevation range between mean sea level and highest tide on the less exposed parts of the coast with a rainfall of 1000 8000mm 4 2 Common associates on Pacific Island include other mangrove species The species grows on a wide range of soils but does best in river estuaries Salt water habitats on an alluvial sediment allows the tree to spread with its adventitious roots 5 The black mangrove is a protected tree in South Africa 6 Names editAs well as its botanical name the tree is known by many common or vernacular names These include Tongan tongo 7 Marshall Islands jon 4 Kosrae sraol Pohnpei sohmw Chuuk ong Yap yangach northern Australia orange mangrove Wanigela Northern Oro Province Papua New Guinea kavela mangrove bean 8 Thyanhngayth dialect Awngthim language nhomb 9 Sapek people Supiori Papua Province Indonesia arouw 10 Batjamal benmerr 11 Emi kunyme Palau denges 4 Indonesian putut 7 Malay pokok tumu merah Chinese 木榄 Yue Chinese 木欖 Khmer prasak nhi prasak toch prasak tuk 5 Thai phngkahwsumdxkaedng 7 Bengali ক কড গ ছ Telugu Andhra Pradesh thuddu ponna uredi 4 Malayalam പ നക കണ ടൽ 7 Maldives bodu kaṇḍu boda vaki 12 Kiswahili Kenya Tanzania including Zanzibar Mozambique muia mkoko wimbi Zulu isihlobane 6 Xhosa isikhangati Afrikaans swart wortelboom South African English black mangrove English large leafed mangrove oriental mangrove 4 Japanese オヒルギ 7 Russian Brugiera golokornevayaUses editA major use of the tree is for wood products Its uses in agroforestry include a woodlot mulch organic matter production soil stabilization coastal protection windbreak wildlife marine food and habitat and bee forage 4 The wood is widely used including for firewood building construction including structural components such as poles beams and rafters canoe parts fishingstakes spears copra huskers chips for pulp production tool handles and digging sticks In the Andaman Islands the trunks have been used for telephone and transmission poles it seems rot resistant i e durable in direct contact with the ground The wood has a high calorific values and is used as fuel on some Pacific Islands e g Kosrae and for charcoal production in Indonesia and Cambodia In the Marshall Islands it has been used for keel pieces maal outrigger kie and outrigger struts kein eon erre Paddles are also made from the wood on some islands The fruit propagule hypocotyl is reported as being eaten after scraping grating washing drying and cooking to remove tannins and sometimes mixed with coconut in Melanesia and Nauru 4 The fruit is sold as a vegetable at Honiara Market Solomon Islands For the Sowek people living on Supiori Island Papua Province Indonesia the fruit is a staple or primary food of their diet due to its high carbohydrate content 10 The bark is used as an abortifacient and for treating burns in the Solomon Islands 4 The bark is reported to be used for diarrhoea and fever in Indonesia The astringent and mildly toxic bark has also been used to treat malaria in Cambodia The fruits has antiviral properties and bark extracts of the closely related Bruguiera sexangula are reportedly active against at least two types of cancerous tumors Sarcoma 180 and Lewis lung carcinoma The bark is used for dying with colours ranging from red brown to black requires repeated dying For working with leather the bark has a high tannin content but tends to colour excessively unless collected at the end of each growing season The green propagules hypocotyl are also eaten by many indigenous groups in northern Australia For example on northwestern Cape York Peninsula in the Weipa region Thaynakwithi people also referred to as Thyanhngayth dialect Awngthim language people call the species nhomb and explain that the propagules could be baked then mashed or pounded and the flesh placed into a sieve like woven bag before being soaked in water 9 Amongst the people of Wanigela Northern Oro Province in southeastern Papua New Guinea the cooked hypocotyls are eaten providing one of their staples and used in the ethnomedicine as antimicrobial and insecticidal 8 The Batjamal and Emi speaker of the Wadjiginy language who live near Anson Bay in the Northern Territory Australia use the durable and hard wood to make spear tips batjagada Batjama ijinde Emi with a Bambusa arnhemica shaft 11 The reddish fine textured wood used for local building in Cambodia such constructions as huts wharfs fences and fishery structures 5 Charcoal from the wood is excellent The bark is used to dye fishing nets and to tan animal skins A decoction of the bark is taken in to combat diarrhoea There is evidence of the hypocotyls being eaten in India Bangladesh and other parts of Southeast Asia 4 In the Maldives the propagules or green pods are eaten as a cooked vegetable They are peeled first and then boiled the water being discarded and renewed at least four times The propagules of this species are more appreciated than those of Bruguiera cylindrica 12 nbsp Flower of Bruguiera gymnorrhizaNotes edit a b Bruguiera gymnorhiza L Lam Tabl Encycl 2 5 2 517 518 2 2 2 t 397 1819 International Plant Name Index IPNI Royal Botanic Gardens Kew Retrieved 19 April 2020 a b c d e Bruguiera gymnorhiza L Lam Plants of the World Online POWO Royal Botanic Gardens Kew Science Retrieved 19 April 2020 Bruguiera gymnorhiza Large Leafed Orange Mangrove www mangrove at Retrieved 2021 07 24 a b c d e f g h i j k Allen James A Duke Norman C Bruguiera gymnorrhiza large leafed mangrove CiteSeerX 10 1 1 889 7420 a b c Pauline Dy Phon 2000 Plants Utilised In Cambodia Plantes utilisees au Cambodge Phnom Penh Imprimerie Olympic p 121 a b Protected Trees PDF Department of Water Affairs and Forestry Republic of South Africa 3 May 2013 Archived from the original PDF on 2010 07 05 a b c d e Bruguiera gymnorhiza Q15386544 Wikidata Wikidata org Retrieved 19 April 2020 a b Owen Patrick L Martineau Louis C Caves Dayna Haddad Pierre S Matainaho Teatulohi Johns Timothy 2008 Consumption of guava Psidium guajava L and noni Morinda citrifolia L may protect betel quid chewing Papua New Guineans against diabetes PDF Asia Pac J Clin Nutr 17 4 635 43 PMID 19114402 Retrieved 19 April 2020 a b Fletcher Thancoupie 2007 Thanakupi s Guide to Language and Culture Sydney Jennifer Isaacs Arts and Publishing p 99 ISBN 9780980331202 a b Cabuy Reinardus L Marwa Jonni Manusawai Jacob Rahawarin Yohanes Y 2012 Non woody plant species of the Papua island forests a sustainable source of food for the local communities PDF Indian Journal of Traditional Knowledge 11 4 586 92 Retrieved 21 April 2020 a b Smith N M Ethnobotanical field notes from the Northern Territory Australia PDF Journal of the Adelaide Botanic Gardens 14 1 1 65 Retrieved 20 April 2020 a b Xavier Romero Frias The Maldive Islanders A Study of the Popular Culture of an Ancient Ocean Kingdom Barcelona 1999 ISBN 84 7254 801 5 References edit Bruguiera gymnorrhiza PlantZAfrica com Retrieved 2019 04 24 Van Wyk Braam Van Wyk Piet 1997 Field Guide to Trees of Southern Africa Struik ISBN 978 1 86825 922 9 permanent dead link Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Bruguiera gymnorhiza amp oldid 1182497299, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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