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Manihot glaziovii
Species identityTaxonomyCommon names (English) : tree cassava (French) : caouchouc de ceara, ceara, maniçoba, manioc de ceara (Portuguese) : manicoba (Swahili) : mpira (Yoruba) : gbaguda Botanic description Manihot glaziovii is a glabrous shrub or tree to 6 m high, occasionally taller (10-20 m), often with several weak branches from near the base. Bark papery, peeling, dark reddish brown. Young shoots glaucous. Leaves deeply palmipartite, 3-5 lobed, peltate. Cordate, membranous-chartaceous, lobes broadly ovate to obovate, (4-)7-12(-15) cm long, (2-)4-8(-10) wide, entire. Green above, glaucous beneath, petiole to 25 cm long, often tinged reddish. Stipules lanceolate 5 mm long, entire, decidous. Inflorescence paniculate, to 12 cm long, bracts resembling the stipules. Male flowers 7-9 mm long, female flowers 0.8-1.4 cm long extending to 2-3 cm in fruit. Fruit globose 1.9-2 cm by 1.9-2.2 cm, smooth, muricate-tuberculate, endocarp woody. Ecology and distributionHistory of cultivationThe original interest in the manicoba tree was as rubber bearer. The first mention of ceara rubber exports dates from 1845 and the boom period occurred between 1903 and 1912. At the time, 45 000 hectares had been planted in Brazil. Ceara rubber was widely distributed by the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, from 1877 onwards from a collection made in Brazil in 1876 for trials as a plantation crop for rubber production. Extensive plantations were established in East Africa and by 1912 there were 1 500 acres in Uganda and over 100 000 acres in Tanzania. It was also introduced into Hawaii and the Far East. Natural Habitat M. glaziovii occurs throughout the semi-arid Caatinga region of northeastern Brazil on intermediate slopes and elevations, particularly near the base or on lower slopes of the sierras or buttes common to most of northeastern Brazil. Geographic distribution Native : Brazil, Colombia Exotic : Gambia, Ghana, Kenya, Malaysia, Nigeria, Senegal, Sierra Leone, Singapore, Sri Lanka, Tanzania, Uganda Biophysical limitsAltitude: Mean annual temperature: Mean annual rainfall: 600-700 mm Soil type: The tree tolerates a wide range of soils including very poor and acidic soils. Propagation and managementPropagation methodsM. glaziovii can be propagated either from cuttings or direct seeding.Tree Management M. glaziovii can be tapped at the age of 3 years. Germplasm Management Seed storage is orthodox: dry seeds (10 %) survive 24 hrs in liquid nitrogen. Seeds tolerate desiccation to 3.7 % mc when they do not lose viability in subsequent hermitic storage at -200 deg C. Functional usesProductsFood: The leaves yield a white plastic substance, which is not rubber. Hydrocyanic acid is also produced in them, but this is dissipated by heat and they are eaten cooked as a vegetable in Gabon and in East Africa. The root is rich in starch but it is hard and woody, and also produces hydrocyanic acid. It is eaten in times of food scarcity. Fodder: In Senegal, young branches are fed to sheep and goats. Ceara leaves have a 25 % to 30 % dry matter protein content. However, cattle in Brazil suffer from hydrocyanic acid poisoning when they consume wilted leaves of the manicoba tree. Apiculture: The flowers are freely visited by bees and the wax could be of importance. Latex or rubber: M. glaziovii was planted mainly for rubber production. The rubber is said to be of good appearance, but resin content at 3-12% is too high, thus it is considered uneconomical when there are other sources. The Fula of Nigeria use the latex as glue for paper. Essential oil: M. glaziovii produces many seeds which contain 90 % unsaturated oil which might possibly be used as a fuel for pre-combustion diesel engines. Medicine: The stem and root enter into a Nigerian remedy for skin infections.Services Shade or shelter: It is used for temporary shade for cocoa in West Africa. Soil improver: Applied as green leaf manure. Ornamental: The plant is still widely grown as an ornamental. Boundary or barrier or support: In some areas the species is used as a hedge especially in areas of low rainfall. Other services: Used in breeding programmes, to improve disease resistance especially of cassava. Drought tolerant thus suitable for planting in the Sahel, North Africa and Brazil. Pests and diseasesOlder leaves are attacked by Cercospora henningsii Allesch in India. BibliographyBurkill HM. 1994. Useful plants of West Tropical Africa. Vol. 2. Families E-I. Royal Botanical Gardens, Kew.Polhill RM. 1987. Euphorbiaceae (Part I). In: Flora of Tropical East Africa. Crown Agents, London. Purseglove JW. 1968. Tropical crops. Dicotyledons. Longman Group Ltd, UK. Schery RW. 1949. Manicoba and Mangabeira rubbers. Economic Botany. 3(3): 240-264. |
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