Quassia amara
Quassia amara | ||||||||||||||
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Quassia amara from Koehler's Medicinal-Plants (1887) Quassia amara from Koehler's Medicinal-Plants (1887)
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Scientific classification | ||||||||||||||
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Binomial name | ||||||||||||||
Quassia amara L. |
Quassia amara is a species in the genus Quassia, with some botanists treating it as the sole species in the genus. It is a shrub or rarely a small tree, growing to 3 m tall (rarely 8 m), native to Brazil. The leaves are alternate, 15-25 cm long, and pinnate with 3-5 leaflets, the leaf rachis being winged. The flowers are produced in a panicle 15-25 cm long, each flower 2.5-3.5 cm long, bright red on the outside, and white inside. The fruit is a small drupe 1-1.5 cm long. Q. amara is widely planted outside its native range.
Uses
It is famous and used for the bitterwood or quassia, its heartwood, used as a febrifuge; this contains quassin, a bitter-tasting substance (it is, in fact, the bitterest substance found in nature).[1] Extracts of Q. amara bark containing quassinoids are used as insecticides, being particularly useful against aphids on crop plants. [2]
References
- ↑ http://www.puralibre.com/html/eng_quassia.html
- ↑ Lewis, W.H. and M.P.F. Elvin-Lewis (2003). Medical Botany. Hoboken: Wiley. page 598.