Categories
Herbs & Plants

Dalea purpurea

Botanical Name: Dalea purpurea
Family: Fabaceae
Kingdom: Plantae
Order: Fabales
Genus: Dalea
Species: D. purpurea

Synonyms:
*Dalea violacea (Michx.) Willd.
*Kuhnistera violacea (Vent.) Steud.
*Petalostemon violaceum Michx.
*P. pubescens (A.Gray) A.Nelson
*P. purpureum (Vent.) Rydb.
*P. standleyanus Rydb.
*Psoralea purpurea (Vent.) MacMill.

Common Names: Purple Prairie Clover

Habitat: Dalea purpurea is native to Western N. America. It grows in dry desert and alluvial soils to 2000 metres. Sandy prairies in Texas.

Description:
Dalea purpurea is a perennial herb growing 20 to 90 cm (8 to 35 in) tall. The mature plant has a large taproot 5.5 to 6.5 feet (1.7 to 2.0 m) deep. The stem is woody with several branches. The leaves are a few centimeters long and are divided into 3 to 7 narrow leaflets. The inflorescence atop each stem branch is a spike up to 7 cm (2 3?4 in) long containing many purple flowers. The fruit is a legume pod containing 1 or 2 seeds.

CLICK & SEE THE PICTURES

Cultivation:
Requires a well-drained soil in full sun. A deep-rooted plant, it prefers a sandy loam with added leaf mould. This species is well-suited to informal and naturalistic plantings, especially as part of a collection of native species. Plants are monocarpic, living for a number of years without flowering and then dying after flowering. The stems, leaves and flowers are dotted with glands, making the plant look blistered. This species has a symbiotic relationship with certain soil bacteria, these bacteria form nodules on the roots and fix atmospheric nitrogen. Some of this nitrogen is utilized by the growing plant but some can also be used by other plants growing nearby.

Edible Uses: The root was used for chewing. A pleasant sweet flavour. The dried leaves are a tea substitute.

Medicinal Uses:
Dalea purpurea has been found to contain several active constituents, including pawhuskin A, pawhuskin B, pawhuskin C, and petalostemumol. The pawhuskins possess affinity for the opioid receptors, and pawhuskin A, by far the most potent of the group, acts as a non-selective antagonist of all three opioid receptors, with preference for the ?- and ?-opioid receptors over the ?-opioid receptor.

A poultice of the steeped bruised leaves has been applied to fresh wounds. A decoction of the leaves and blossoms has been used in the treatment of heart problems, diarrhoea. An infusion of the roots has been used in the treatment of measles.

Other Uses:
This species is used for revegetation efforts on reclaimed land, such as land that has been strip mined. It is good for preventing erosion and for fixing nitrogen in soil. Though it is often found in mid- to late-successional stages of ecological succession, it may also be a pioneer species, taking hold in bare and disturbed habitat, such as roadsides.[6]

Purple prairie clover provides food for a number of animals, such as pronghorn. It also grows in cultivated fields and becomes included in hay for livestock. It is nutritious and is “considered one of the most important legumes in native grasslands on the Great Plains.” It also had a number of uses for Native Americans. The leaves are edible and good for making tea and medicines, and the roots are palatable when chewed. The stems were used as brooms by the Pawnee people.

Disclaimer : The information presented herein is intended for educational purposes only. Individual results may vary, and before using any supplement, it is always advisable to consult with your own health care provider.

Resources:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dalea_purpurea
https://pfaf.org/user/Plant.aspx?LatinName=Dalea+purpurea

Categories
Herbs & Plants

Dalea candida

Botanical Name: Dalea candida
Family: Fabaceae
Kingdom: Plantae
Order: Fabales
Genus: Dalea
Species: D. candida

Synonyms: Petalostemon candidum. (Willd.)Michx.

Common Names: White Prairie Clover

Common Alternate Names: Slender white prairie clover and prairie clover

Habitat: Dalea candida is native to Central N. America – southwards from Canada. It grows on dry desert and alluvial soils to 2000 metres. Prairies and open wods on sandy, clayey and rocky soils.

Description:
Dalea candida is a herbaceous perennial plant, growing to 0.7 m (2ft 4in). with a stout taproot. There are usually multiple stems from each root crown. The stems are erect to ascending, green to reddish-brown in color, and glabrous. The stems are 2-3 feet in height. Leaves are alternate, odd pinnately compound with 5-9 leaflets. The leaflets are elliptic to oblanceolate in outline, entire, and glabrous. The leaflets are flat or slightly folded. It is in flower from July to August. Flowers are produced in dense terminal spikes. The spikes are conical to cylindrical in shape on long peduncles. The flowers have 5 white petals and the color is white. The fruit is a l-seeded indehiscent legume that is partly or completely enclosed in the persistent calyx. White Prairie Clover is similar to White Tassels (Dalea albida (Torr. & A. Gray) D.B. Ward). It differs in having a calyx tube that is not incised on ventral side, and with the blade of the standard petal broad and cordate. In White Tassels the calyx tube is deeply incised on ventral surface, and the blade of standard petal is obovate to scoop shaped.

The species is hermaphrodite (has both male and female organs).
It can fix Nitrogen

Cultivation:
Requires a well-drained soil in full sun. A deep-rooted plant, it prefers a sandy loam with added leaf mould. This species is well-suited to informal and naturalistic plantings, especially as part of a collection of native species. We are not sure how hardy this plant is in Britain, but judging by its native range it should succeed outdoors in many parts of the country. Plants are monocarpic, living for a number of years without flowering and then dying after flowering. The stems, leaves and flowers are dotted with glands, making the plant look blistered. This species has a symbiotic relationship with certain soil bacteria, these bacteria form nodules on the roots and fix atmospheric nitrogen. Some of this nitrogen is utilized by the growing plant but some can also be used by other plants growing nearb.

Edible Uses:
Root is eaten -raw or chewed for its pleasant sweet flavour. Eaten as a delicacy by children. A tea-like beverage is made from the dried leaves.

Medicinal Uses: The roots have been chewed to bring relief from the pain of toothaches etc.

Other Uses:
This leguminous forb produces palatable and nutritious forage for all classes of livestock and is an important browse species for antelope, deer and upland game birds,
particularly sharp-tail grouse. This species will decrease and disappear under persistent overgrazing. It is an important legume in native grasslands because of its nitrogen fixing characteristic. This native legume can be used as the forb component in reclamation of drastically disturbed lands, range renovation and prairie restoration projects. It is also a potentially useful plant for roadside and rest area beautification, park plantings and recreational garden natural area plantings.

Disclaimer : The information presented herein is intended for educational purposes only. Individual results may vary, and before using any supplement, it is always advisable to consult with your own health care provider.

Resources:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dalea_candida
https://pfaf.org/user/Plant.aspx?LatinName=Dalea+candida
https://plants.usda.gov/plantguide/pdf/pg_daca7.pdf

Categories
Herbs & Plants

Dalbergia melanoxylon

Botanical Name: Dalbergia melanoxylon
Family: Fabaceae
Kingdom: Plantae
Order: Fabales
Genus: Dalbergia
Species: D. melanoxylon

Synonyms:
*Amerimnon melanoxylon (Guill. & Perr.) Kuntze
*Amerimnon stocksii (Benth.) Kuntze
*Dalbergia stocksii Benth.

Common Names: African Blackwood, Grenadilla, Mpingo
Vernacular names:
*African blackwood, African ebony, African grenadillo, African ironwood, Senegal ebony, zebra wood (En).
*Grenadille d’Afrique, ébénier du Sénégal (Fr).
*Grenadilha, pau preto (Po).
*Mpingo, kikwaju (Sw).

It has many local names :

Habitat: Dalbergia melanoxylon is native to Africa – drier areas from Senegal to Ethiopia, south to S. Africa. It grows under a wide range of conditions including semi-arid, subhumid and tropical lowland areas. It is often found on dry, rocky sites but is most frequent in the mixed deciduous forests and savannahs of the coastal region.

Description;
Dalbergia melanoxylon is a deciduous spiny shrub or small tree up to 12(–20) m tall, often several-stemmed and much-branched; bole usually short, branchless for up to 2(–3.5) m, often gnarled and fluted, up to 50(–100) cm in diameter; bark surface whitish to pale grey or greyish brown, thin, smooth but becoming rough and fissured or flaking, inner bark orange-pink; crown irregular, open; young branches clustered at the nodes, some growing out and others remaining short and spine-tipped, initially short-hairy but soon glabrescent, whitish grey.

Leaves arranged spirally, imparipinnately compound with 7–13(–17) leaflets; stipules 2–6 mm long, caducous; petiole and rachis almost glabrous; petiolules 1–2 mm long; leaflets alternate to opposite, obovate to elliptical, 1–5(–5.5) cm × (0.5–)1–3(–5) cm, leathery, short-hairy below but glabrescent.
Inflorescence a terminal or axillary panicle 2–12 cm long, laxly branched, short-hairy to almost glabrous, many-flowered.
Flowers bisexual, papilionaceous, 4–6 mm long, almost sessile; calyx campanulate, 2–3(–4) mm long, lobes shorter than tube, lower lobe longest, upper lobes fused; corolla whitish, with obovate standard and clawed wings and keel; stamens usually 9, fused into a tube, but free in upper part; ovary superior, with distinct stipe at base, style short.
Fruit a flat, elliptical to oblong, papery pod 3–7 cm × 1–1.5(–2) cm, with stipe 3–7 mm long, glabrous, greyish brown, laxly veined, indehiscent, 1–2(–4)-seeded.
Seeds kidney-shaped.

Cultivation:
A plant of low to moderate elevations in the tropics, being found at elevations from sea level to 1,200 metres. It grows in areas where the mean annual temperature is in the range 18 – 35°c and the mean annual rainfall is 700 – 1,200 mm. Succeeds in a variety of soils, from loamy sands to clayey Vertisols (black cotton soils). This species demands water and light and therefore is common near water and will not regenerate under heavy cover. When introduced into India and Australia, the plant became naturalized. In western Australia it behaved as a very aggressive weed and was quickly eradicated. The species is extremely slow growing. Seven year old trees are only up to 4 metres tall and it takes 70 – 100 years for trees to attain timber size. Trees coppice successfully and also produce root suckers. Trees generally exhibit heavy annual seed production[. Mature trees are fire tolerant. This species has a symbiotic relationship with certain soil bacteria, these bacteria form nodules on the roots and fix atmospheric nitrogen. Some of this nitrogen is utilized by the growing plant but some can also be used by other plants growing nearby. Small growers in Naples, Florida have been successful in growing African blackwood there. Growth habit in Florida yields taller, larger trees, and the rich soil combined with ample nutrients and long growing season yields timber of superior quality at more sustainable rates.

Propagation:
Seed extracted from pods germinate readily without pre-treatment. They should be kept in the shade for 2 weeks after sowing, but can then be placed in full sun. They germinate 8 – 20 days after sowing, with a germination rate of 50 – 60%. Although pre-treatment of seeds is not necessary, soaking the seeds in water accelerates germination. Experimental work in Tanzania suggests that survival and growth are improved by planting 2-year-old stumps that are 14 cm long, comprising 12 cm of root and 2 cm of shoot. These should be planted in the early or middle part of the rainy season, followed by intensive weeding. Potted seedlings may also be used, but they tend to grow more slowly. When seedlings are raised in pots, frequent root pruning is mandatory. Delayed pruning leads to seedling shock. Like many species within the family Fabaceae, once they have been dried for storage the seeds of this species may benefit from scarification before sowing in order to speed up germination. This can usually be done by pouring a small amount of nearly boiling water on the seeds (being careful not to cook them!) and then soaking them for 12 – 24 hours in warm water. By this time they should have imbibed moisture and swollen – if they have not, then carefully make a nick in the seedcoat (being careful not to damage the embryo) and soak for a further 12 hours before sowing. Seed storage behaviour is orthodox; viability can be maintained for several years in hermetic storage at 3?c with 9 – 12% mc

Medicinal Uses:
The roots are said to be anthelmintic and aphrodisiac. A decoction is used to prevent miscarriage, to treat abdominal pain, diarrhoea, gonorrhoea and syphilis. The wood smoke is inhaled to treat headaches, colds and bronchitis. The stem and root bark is used in traditional medicine to treat diarrhoea in combination with baobab or tamarind fruits. A bark decoction or bark powder is used to clean wounds. A leaf decoction is used to relieve pain in the joints. The leaf sap is taken to treat inflammations in mouth and throat. Bark extracts have shown antibacterial and antifungal activities, thus supporting the traditional application for cleansing wounds.

Other Uses:
Agroforestry Uses: The tree provides good mulch and may improve the soil by nitrogen fixation. It can be used to avoid soil erosion because of its extensive root system. It is also useful in windbreaks and live fences. Other Uses The heartwood is purplish black, sometimes darker towards the outside, with light streaks and not always uniform in colour; it is sharply differentiated from the up to 12cm wide band of white or yellowish-white sapwood. The timber is slightly oily, exceptionally hard and very heavy, brittle and somewhat fissile. The heartwood is extremely durable and resistant to all forms of biological deterioration. The sapwood, however, is susceptible to fungal or insect attack. The dry wood is difficult to saw or plane; it blunts saws and cutters and cannot be nailed or screwed without drilling; it is, however, among the finest of all turnery timbers, cutting exactly and finishing to a brilliantly polished, lustrous surface, dry and cold to the touch. Other products made from the timber include carvings, turnery and marquetry to produce sculptures, musical instruments, ornaments, inlays, chess pieces, walking sticks, bearings and many other products. The main industrial use, long supporting an export trade from East Africa and Mozambique, is the manufacture of musical instruments, especially woodwinds. With its high density and fine texture, the wood produces a beautiful musical tone. It is stable, stands up to metalwork processes, and takes an excellent finish. The wood is used as a fuel and to make charcoal. Its calorific value is more than 49,000 kcal/kg. Heat generation is so high that fires of D. Melanoxylon have been reported to melt cooking utensils.

Disclaimer : The information presented herein is intended for educational purposes only. Individual results may vary, and before using any supplement, it is always advisable to consult with your own health care provider.

Resources:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dalbergia_melanoxylon
https://pfaf.org/user/Plant.aspx?LatinName=Dalbergia+melanoxylon
https://uses.plantnet-project.org/en/Dalbergia_melanoxylon_(PROTA)

Categories
Herbs & Plants

Dalbergia louvelii

Botanical Name: Dalbergia louvelii
Family: Fabaceae
Kingdom: Plantae
Order: Fabales
Genus: Dalbergia
Species: D. louvelii

Common Names: Andramena, Volombodipona, Violet rosewood

Habitat: Dalbergia louvelii is native to Africa – eastern Madagascar. It grows on lowland evergreen forest and coastal forest at elevations up to 700 metres. It occurs on ferrallitic or sandy soils.

Description:
Dalbergia louvelii is a deciduous tree growing to 15 m (49ft) by 15 m (49ft) at a medium rate. Bark is greyish; young branches short-hairy.
Leaves arranged spirally, imparipinnately compound with 9–15 leaflets; stipules small, caducous; petiole and rachis bristly hairy but glabrescent; petiolules 1–2.5 mm long; leaflets alternate, ovate to elliptical, (1–)2–4 cm × 0.5–1.5 cm, thinly leathery, usually hairy on both surfaces.
Inflorescence an axillary raceme shorter than the leaves, hairy.
Flowers bisexual, papilionaceous, 12–15(–18) mm long; pedicel 2–10 mm long, jointed; calyx campanulate, 7–10 mm long, lobes about as long as tube, lower lobe longer, upper lobes fused; corolla whitish, with almost circular standard and clawed wings and keel; stamens 10, fused into a tube, but free in upper part; ovary superior, with distinct stipe at base, style slender, 2.5–3.5 mm long.
Fruit : a flat, oblong-elliptical pod 4–8 cm × c. 1.5 cm, with slender stipe 1–1.5 cm long, reddish brown, slightly reticulately veined, indehiscent, 1–2-seeded.
Seeds : kidney-shaped, c. 13 mm × 6 mm, reddish brown.

Cultivation:
This species has a symbiotic relationship with certain soil bacteria, these bacteria form nodules on the roots and fix atmospheric nitrogen. Some of this nitrogen is utilized by the growing plant but some can also be used by other plants growing nearby.

Propagation:
Like many species within the family Fabaceae, once they have been dried for storage the seeds of this species may benefit from scarification before sowing in order to speed up germination. This can usually be done by pouring a small amount of nearly boiling water on the seeds (being careful not to cook them!) and then soaking them for 12 – 24 hours in warm water. By this time they should have imbibed moisture and swollen – if they have not, then carefully make a nick in the seedcoat (being careful not to damage the embryo) and soak for a further 12 hours before sowing.

Medicinal Uses::
The heartwood is used in traditional medicine to treat bilharzia and malaria. Several flavonoids have been isolated from the heartwood, some of which showed antiplasmodial activit

Other Uses:
The heartwood is purplish red, becoming purplish black upon drying. The texture is fine and even, and the wood has a beautiful polish. It is very heavy and very hard. The wood is much in demand for cabinet making, furniture, marquetry and parquet flooring. It is one of the favoured woods for musical instruments and is locally in high demand for carving and turning. It has been used traditionally for tombs.

Disclaimer : The information presented herein is intended for educational purposes only. Individual results may vary, and before using any supplement, it is always advisable to consult with your own health care provider.

Resources:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dalbergia_louvelii
https://pfaf.org/user/Plant.aspx?LatinName=Dalbergia+louvelii
https://uses.plantnet-project.org/en/Dalbergia_louvelii_(PROTA)
http://tropical.theferns.info/viewtropical.php?id=Dalbergia+louvelii

Categories
Herbs & Plants

Dalbergia latifolia

Botanical Name: Dalbergia latifolia
Family: Fabaceae
Kingdom: Plantae
Order: Fabales
Genus: Dalbergia
Species: D. latifolia

Synonyms:
*Amerimnon latifolium (Roxb.) Kuntze
*Dalbergia emarginata Roxb.

Common Names: Bosewood, Bombay blackwood, Roseta rosewood, East Indian rosewood, Reddish-brown rosewood, Indian palisandre, and Java palisandre

Habitat:
Dalbergia latifolia is native to E. Asia – Indian subcontinent; Java in Indonesia. It is mainly found in monsoon forests in association with species such as Tectona grandis, Albizzia chinensis, and Cassia fistula. In the southwestern part of its range, it also occurs in evergreen forests.

Description;
Dalbergia latifolia or Black Rosewood is an evergreen or deciduous tree, growing to 30 m (98ft) by 30 m (98ft) at a medium rate.It has grey bark that peels in long fibres, pinnately compound leaves, and bunches of small white flowers. Leaves are alternate, imparipinnate, the leaflets 3-5, alternate, orbicular, abruptly acuminate, puberulous but glabrescent, 3.5-6.5 cm long, not quite so broad. Flowers sessile, or short-stalked in axillary panicles shorter than the leaves. Sepals 4-5 mm long, pubescent, the lobes short. Petals yellow, 6-8 mm long. Ovary pubescent; ovules 2-4. Pods to 10 cm long, 1.5 cm broad, the stipe longer than the calyx. Seeds 1-4.

Cultivation:
Directly sown seed attain 15-25 cm after the first rains, 90-120 cm after the second rains in India. For seedling transplantation, only tender plants with small taproots should be used. Root suckers transplant satisfactorily in dry climates. Planting should be in spring (March in India). Raising of monocultural sissoo is discouraged. Stump planting is widely employed in irrigated plantations in India. Trenches are dug ca 1.5 m apart, earth thrown a little away from the trenches and the berms used for sowing seed or pod segments. Sowing is done on both sides of the trenches, between middle March and middle June, earlier sowing being preferred. Plants are big enough by the beginning of the next season to yield stumps. Plants are pulled out and stems and roots chopped off leaving 3-5 cm of the former and 22-35 m of the latter; ther lateral roots are also removed. Stumps thicker than 2.5 cm and thinner than 2 cm diam. at the collar are rejected. The yield of stumps is 160,000 per ha. For transport over long distances, stumps are made into bundles, wrapped in leaves or grass, sprinkled with water, and carried in gunny bags. Stumps are planted in spring, not earlier than the third week of March, perhaps April. In no case should it be put off to August. Where subsoil water is low or rainfall poor and uncertain, irrigation is essential. Stumps are planted along trenches or on berms of pits and the field is irrigated. Shallow and frequent irrigation or constant flooding is harmful and induces superficial root formation. Depending upon the weather and the condition of plants, 10-15 irrigations are adequate in the first season and 4-6 in the second. Under proper irrigation, sissoo roots tap the subsoil water within 2 years. Irrigation in later years is required only for supplementing subsoil water supplies.

Medicinal Uses:
Reported to be stimulant, sissoo is a folk remedy for excoriations, gonorrhea, and skin ailments (Duke and Wain, 1981). Ayurvedics prescribe the leaf juice for eye ailments, considering the wood and bark abortifacient, anthelmintic, antipyretic, apertif, aphrodisiac, expectorant, and refrigerant. They use the wood and bark for anal disorders, blood diseases, burning sensations, dysentery, dyspepsia, leucoderma, and skin ailments. Yunani use the wood for blood disorders, burning sensations, eye and nose disorders, scabies, scalding urine, stomach problems, and syphilis. The alterative wood is used in India for boils, eruptions, leprosy and nausea (Kirtikar and Basu, 1975)

Other Uses:
Agroforestry Uses: Used as a shade tree in agroforestry in India and Indonesia, for reforestation of eroded soils, and as a soil improver fixing nitrogen and providing mulch. It is also planted as a roadside tree and shade tree in coffee plantations. During the first three years the trees are interplanted with rice, maize, beans or cassava and later, when the canopies begin to close, they are underplanted with shade-tolerant crops like coffee, turmeric and ginger. In other systems it is grown with fruit trees like mango, annona, jackfruits and guava. Other Uses The heartwood varies in colour from rose to dark-brown with darker purple-black lines or deep purple with black lines – the darker streaks impart[ng an attractive figure to the timber; it is clearly demarcated from the yellowish or pale yellowish-white sapwood that often has a purple tinge. The wood is light in weight, close and firm. It has exceptional dimensional stability, and retains its shape very well after seasoning. It is rather difficult to work with hand tools, but is quite easy to machine; it can be planed to a smooth surface.; turning, screwing, polishing and gluing give good results; and the wood can be peeled or sliced to make decorative veneer and plywood. The heartwood is durable, being resistant to dry-wood termites and wood-rotting fungi; it is difficult to treat with preservatives. The sapwood is perishable but readily treatable. The wood is used for fine furniture; cabinet making; as a decorative wood used, for example, in passenger ships and for instrument cases; musical instruments; turnery, flooring and decorative veneers. It is suitable for high-grade plywood and, owing to its beautiful colour and figure, for decorative veneer. Because of its strength and durability, it is suitable for all kinds of constructional work, doors, window frames and wagon building. It is also used for handles of heavy-duty hammers and axes and for agricultural implements such as ploughs, harrows and rollers. In cart and carriage building, it is used for wheel rims, spokes, poles and shafts. It is one of the most popular woods for carving and engraving. It is suitable for turnery and is excellent for high-class bentwood furniture, walking sticks, umbrella handles and other bentwood article.

Disclaimer : The information presented herein is intended for educational purposes only. Individual results may vary, and before using any supplement, it is always advisable to consult with your own health care provider.

Resources:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dalbergia_latifolia
https://pfaf.org/user/Plant.aspx?LatinName=Dalbergia+latifolia
https://hort.purdue.edu/newcrop/duke_energy/Dalbergia_sissoo.html

css.php