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Okoubaka aubrevillei

Okoubaka aubrevillei (known as okoubaka tree from "oku baku" in Anyin) is a rare tropical tree species distributed throughout tropical rainforests of West and Central Africa that is thought to be the largest known parasitic plant.

Okoubaka aubrevillei
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Plantae
Clade: Tracheophytes
Clade: Angiosperms
Clade: Eudicots
Order: Santalales
Family: Santalaceae
Genus: Okoubaka
Species:
O. aubrevillei
Binomial name
Okoubaka aubrevillei
Pellegr. & Normand

Names edit

The name "okoubaku" derives from the Anyin (a language mostly spoken by peoples in Côte d'Ivoire) term oku baku meaning "a tree that causes the death of surrounding vegetation", or "a tree with allelopathic properties", or simply "death tree".[citation needed]

Description edit

The okoubaka tree is considered a trophophyte, meaning it is adapted to an environment that alternates between periods of heavy rainfall and droughts. It is deciduous meaning it sheds its leaves seasonally, and monoecious, meaning it contains both male and female reproductive flower parts.

It is a tree that can reach 40 meters in height with a trunk that can reach 3 meters in width. The tree forms a large bushy crown and has a straight and cylindrical bole (trunk). Its bark is coarse and usually reddish-brown. The tree development fits the Mangenot architectural model.[citation needed]

Ecology edit

The okoubaka tree is a hemiparasite meaning it is parasitic under natural conditions but is photosynthetic to some degree. It is known to parasitize tiama (Entandrophragma angolense from the mahogany family), African teak (Pericopsis elata from the legume family), Pterygota macrocarpa (from the mallow family), and baku (Tieghemella heckelii from Sapotaceae) with P. macrocarpa and African teak being reported as most affected.[citation needed]

Seed mass is large and so seed dispersal has been hypothesized to depend on large forest animals such as elephants.[citation needed]

Folk medicine edit

The tree is thought to be useful for various folk medicinal purposes in all of its native ranges (mostly the seeds and bark).[citation needed] In Nigeria, the stem bark is used for the production of Maloff-HB, an anti-malarial drug.[citation needed] There is no scientific evidence that it has any medicinal properties.

References edit

External links edit

  1. Plants for a Future: Okoubaka aubrevillei
  2. Useful Tropical Plants: Okoubaka aubrevillei

okoubaka, aubrevillei, known, okoubaka, tree, from, baku, anyin, rare, tropical, tree, species, distributed, throughout, tropical, rainforests, west, central, africa, that, thought, largest, known, parasitic, plant, scientific, classificationkingdom, plantaecl. Okoubaka aubrevillei known as okoubaka tree from oku baku in Anyin is a rare tropical tree species distributed throughout tropical rainforests of West and Central Africa that is thought to be the largest known parasitic plant Okoubaka aubrevilleiScientific classificationKingdom PlantaeClade TracheophytesClade AngiospermsClade EudicotsOrder SantalalesFamily SantalaceaeGenus OkoubakaSpecies O aubrevilleiBinomial nameOkoubaka aubrevilleiPellegr amp Normand Contents 1 Names 2 Description 3 Ecology 4 Folk medicine 5 References 6 External linksNames editThe name okoubaku derives from the Anyin a language mostly spoken by peoples in Cote d Ivoire term oku baku meaning a tree that causes the death of surrounding vegetation or a tree with allelopathic properties or simply death tree citation needed Description editThe okoubaka tree is considered a trophophyte meaning it is adapted to an environment that alternates between periods of heavy rainfall and droughts It is deciduous meaning it sheds its leaves seasonally and monoecious meaning it contains both male and female reproductive flower parts It is a tree that can reach 40 meters in height with a trunk that can reach 3 meters in width The tree forms a large bushy crown and has a straight and cylindrical bole trunk Its bark is coarse and usually reddish brown The tree development fits the Mangenot architectural model citation needed Ecology editThe okoubaka tree is a hemiparasite meaning it is parasitic under natural conditions but is photosynthetic to some degree It is known to parasitize tiama Entandrophragma angolense from the mahogany family African teak Pericopsis elata from the legume family Pterygota macrocarpa from the mallow family and baku Tieghemella heckelii from Sapotaceae with P macrocarpa and African teak being reported as most affected citation needed Seed mass is large and so seed dispersal has been hypothesized to depend on large forest animals such as elephants citation needed Folk medicine editThe tree is thought to be useful for various folk medicinal purposes in all of its native ranges mostly the seeds and bark citation needed In Nigeria the stem bark is used for the production of Maloff HB an anti malarial drug citation needed There is no scientific evidence that it has any medicinal properties References editExternal links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Okoubaka aubrevillei Plants for a Future Okoubaka aubrevillei Useful Tropical Plants Okoubaka aubrevillei Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Okoubaka aubrevillei amp oldid 1013691866, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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