Sterculia urens

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Sterculia urens
File:Ghost Tree. Sterculia urens..jpg
Scientific classification
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S. urens
Binomial name
Sterculia urens
Roxb.[1]
Synonyms[1]
  • Cavallium urens Schott & Endl.
  • Clompanus urens Kuntze
  • Kavalama urens Rafin.

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Sterculia urens is a species of plant in the family Malvaceae. It is native to India and has been introduced into Burma. A small to medium-sized tree with a pale-coloured trunk, it is commonly known as the भुत्या in Marathi (meaning ghost tree), kulu, Indian tragacanth, gum karaya, katira, sterculia gum or kateera gum.[2] The specific name urens refers to the stinging hairs present on the flowers.[3]

Description

The gum karaya is a medium-sized deciduous tree with horizontally-spreading branches, growing to a maximum height of about 15 m (49 ft). The bark is smooth, fibrous and thick, greenish-grey, with the surface layer peeling off in large flakes. The twigs are hairy at first. The leaves are alternate, simple, hairy beneath and have three to five palmate lobes. They are clustered at the tips of the twigs. The flowers are yellowish-green and produced in panicles in the axils of the leaves. They are polygamous (having male, female and bisexual flowers on the same tree) and are clad in sticky or glandular short hairs. The calyx has five lobes and there are no petals. Male flowers have a columnar boss of ten stamens while bisexual flowers have a ring of anthers round the five free, radiating carpels which grow to 7.5 cm (3 in) when fully developed. They are pinkish and densely covered with red hairs, including stinging hairs. They split open when ripe to reveal up to six squarish, brown or black seeds.[2]

Distribution and habitat

File:Sterculia urens raigad maharashtra 2.jpg
Sterculia urens during summer in Maharashtra, India

The gum karaya is native to the Indian Subcontinent and Malesia. It is a common species and grows in deciduous forests, both wet and dry. It is often found on steep, rock-strewn slopes at altitudes between 400 and 800 metres (1,300 and 2,600 ft).[2]

Uses

A natural gum known as gum karaya is exuded by the tree when the bark is damaged. This valuable substance is traditionally tapped by cutting or peeling back the bark, or by making deep gashes at the base of the trunk with an axe. Such crude methods of extraction often kill the tree, but it has been found that application of the plant growth regulator ethephon stimulates the production of gum, and when used in carefully controlled amounts, increases gum yield and enhances healing of the wounds.[4]

Karaya gum swells when it absorbs water and is used as a laxative because adds bulk to the contents of the intestine, stimulating the gut to expel waste material. Karaya gum is also reputed to have aphrodisiacal properties, but there is insufficient evidence to support this.[5] Other uses for the gum are as a thickener in cosmetics and medications, and as an adhesive for dentures. In manufacturing, it is added as a binder, emulsifier and stabiliser in the preparation of beverages and foods.[5] The seeds are roasted and eaten.[3]

References

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