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Haematoxylum campechianum
Species identity
Ecology and distribution
Propagation and management
Functional uses
Pests and diseases
Additional Info
Bibliography
Images

Species identity
Taxonomy
Current name: Haematoxylum campechianum
Authority: L.
Family: Leguminosae


Common names

(Filipino) : campeachy wood
(French) : bois bleu

Botanic description
A small, bushy tree up to 15 m tall, but usually smaller, often thorny and gnarled; trunk irregularly fluted and contorted, attaining a length of 2-3 m and a diameter of 60 cm, although usually much less, prolonged into large, rather long and straight branches, bark grey to brown, rather smooth, peeling in flakes. Leaves alternate, paripinnate, distichous or fascicled on very short branches; stipules partly spine-like; leaflets in 2-4 pairs, obcordate or obovate, 10-35 mm x 5-25 mm, acute at base, emarginate at apex, closely veined and glabrous. Flowers in 5-20 cm long racemes in the axils of present or fallen leaves, 5-merous, sweet-scented; calyx 4-5 mm long, deeply lobed; petals 5-7 mm long, bright yellow; stamens 10, free; ovary superior, shortly stalked, glabrous; style filiform. Fruit a lanceolate, extremely flattened pod, 3-5 cm long, pointed at both ends, dehiscent not along the sutures but along the median of the sides, usually 2-seeded. Haematoxylum L. ('bloodwood') is a small genus with about 4 species. It is indigenous to Central America and southern Africa. In Central America 2 species are usually distinguished, both producing a dye in the wood. Only H. campechianum has spread over most of the tropics. In Central America logwood trees which do not produce haematoxylin have been found. They are referred as 'bastard logwood'.
Ecology and distribution
History of cultivation
Logwood is cultivated on very limited scale in Malaysia (Penang), Indonesia (Java), and the Philippines.
Natural Habitat
Logwood is a lowland species which may grow under very different conditions. In Central America it grows best in flat marshy areas often inundated by rivers. In the West Indies, the best wood is common on exposed limestone hillsides in dry secondary thickets.
Logwood is indigenous to Central America and the adjoining parts of South America. The plant was discovered by the Spanish on the shores of Campeche Bay in the Gulf of Mexico before 1525. It was introduced into the Caribbean where it widely naturalized, and into most parts of the Old World tropics, e.g. Sout-East Asia. It was introduced in Singapore in 1876. Logwood is cultivated on very limited scale in Malaysia (Penang), Indonesia (Java), and the Philippines.

Biophysical limits
Soil types: Logwood prefers light soils with some humus.

Propagation and management
Propagation methods
Logwood is propagated by seed or cuttings.

Functional uses
Products
Tannin or dyestuff: The main product of the tree is the hearthwood; it is the logwood commerce. This wood yields a series of dyes in darker tints of grey, brown, violet, blue and black. The dyes give a fairly permanent colour to several fabrics such as silk, wool, and sometimes cotton, but also to synthetics such as nylon and rayon. They may be used to dye leather as well as fur, feathers, paper and bone, and also in the manufacture of inks. Haematoxylin, the colouring agent of logwood, is a histological stain used for staining cell nuclei; alcoholic solutions serve as indicator for alkaloid titration. Timber: As timber its use is largely limited by the irregularity of the trunk. The wood is strong but brittle; it is durable for use outdoors and in contact with the ground. It is sometimes used for furniture and fancy articles because it may be finished to a very smooth surface and takes a high polish. Medicine: Medicinally it is a mild astringent and tonic it is prescribed in the form of a decoction and liquid extract. It is also useful against diarrhoea, dysentery, atonic dyspepsia and leucorrhoea. An ointment prepared from the wood is said to be useful against cancer and hospital gangrene. Haematoxylin has been shown to possess anti-flammatory properties. Fuel: The wood burns readily.

Services
Boundary or barrier or support: In South-East Asia, and also in India, logwood is only occasionally cultivated as hedge plant, not for production of dyewood. Logwood may be grown in gardens as a hedge, or for its delicate foliage and fragrants flowers. Apiculture: The flowers are the source of a very good honey.

Additional Information
Development
Logwood grows slowly, but cultivation is easy. With favourable growing conditions, the trees attain harvestable size in about 12 years. However trees planted in the botanical garden at Bogor (Indonesia) in 1886 were only 2 m tall in 1918.

Properties
Tannin or dyestuff: Immediately after the tree has been felled, its hearthwood is yellow-ish. On exposure to air it gradually acquires a bright reddish colour. Later it becomes dark purple with darker stripes, frequently tinged orange. Old wood may be coloured red. These different colours of the wood are caused by different substances. Fresh young wood contains about 10% colourless haematoxylin. This oxidizes to haematoxein, in pure from a dark violet crystalline substance with a green metallic lustre. In dyeing, the dyer prodyces haematoxein from haematoxylin. Haematoxylin is soluble in water, and is extracted from chips of the wood. Haematoxein is far less soluble in water and during the dyeing process it may be converted into isohaematin, which is even less soluble. Beside haematoxylin, hearthwood contains tannin, resin, quercetin, traces of volatile oil, oxalic acid, and acetic acid. Timber: The wood is very hard and heavy, woth an air-dry weight of 950-1085 kg/m. The wood is compact, the grain interlocked, the texture is coarse but fairly even. It has an agreeable odour resembling violets, and a sweet astringent taste. The sapwood ring is thin, white or yellowish, and does not contain haematoxylin.

Trade
With annual exports of 100 000 t of wood, the logwood industry reached its peak during the latter half of the 19th Century. Logwood cutting is now a minor industry. To cheapen the cost of transport, logwood is mainly traded in the form of powdered extracts today. The total logwood trade in 1990 is unlikely to be more than 500 t/year and might be much less. The main commercially producing countries are in the Caribbean area. France and Switzerland are the major importers. They are the main suppliers to the consuming countries in Europe, North America and Japan. In recent decades the price has fluctuated considerably.

Yields
Harvesting: In Central America logwood is mostly collected from the wild where it occasionally forms almost pure stands. The older tree, the richer the colour of the wood because of oxidation of haematoxylin. In trade, however, wood with non-oxidized haematoxylin, thus young wood, is preferred. At harvest, the wood is cut into pieces 1-2.5 m long, and the sapwood is removed. Handling after harvest: The pieces of wood are transported to the factory where they are mechanically reduced to small chips. The dye is extracted in boiling water, the resulting orange-red solution turns yellow and later black when cooled. After evaporation a powder remains.

Genetic
Genetic resources: No specific data are available on the genetic variability, but the wide variation in habitats and the existence of plants lacking haematoxylin suggest considerable variation within species.

Prospects
A more or less constant group of consumers appreciate logwood for its specific properties. The inadequacy of the alternatives has helped to maintain a reasonably good market outlook for the product. In fact, logwood is one of the few vegetable dyes with current importance on the world market. Although world demand is not expected to increase substantially, experiments on the cultivation of logwood in South-East Asia might be worthwhile.



Bibliography
Seegeler, C.J.P., 1992. Haematoxylum campechianum L. In Lemmens, R.H.M.J. & Wulijarni-Soetjipto, N. (Eds.): Plant Resources of South-East Asia. No. 3: Dye and tannin-producing plants. Prosea Foundation, Bogor, Indonesia. pp. 78-79.
 
     
   
 
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