Spondias

Spondias is a genus of flowering plants in the cashew family, Anacardiaceae. The genus consists of 17 described species, 7 of which are native to the Neotropics and about 10 are native to tropical Asia. They are commonly named hog plums, Spanish plums, libas in Bikol and in some cases golden apples for their brightly colored fruit which resemble an apple or small plum at a casual glance. They are only distantly related to apple and plum trees, however. A more unequivocal common name is mombins.

Spondias dulcis, fruit, section and seed

Spondias
Fruiting Spondias mombin
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Plantae
Clade: Tracheophytes
Clade: Angiosperms
Clade: Eudicots
Clade: Rosids
Order: Sapindales
Family: Anacardiaceae
Subfamily: Spondiadoideae
Genus: Spondias
L.
Type species
Spondias mombin
Species

See Selected species

Synonyms

Allospondias (Pierre) Stapf
Skoliostigma Lauterb.[1]

A theory regarding the name of the city of Bangkok, Thailand is that the name is derived from Thai: -มะกอกน้ำ; RTGS: makok nam 'water olive', the Thai name for the fruit of Spondias dulcis.[2] In Cambodia, Spondias pinnata is called /pɷːn siː pʰlaɛ/ (ពោនស៊ីផ្លែ) or /məkaʔ prẹj/ (ម្កាក់ព្រៃ),[3] and Spondias dulcis simply /məkaʔ/ (ម្កាក់). Spondias pinnata is called Pulicha kaai in the Tamil language, which means "sour fruit." It is also called "Amate Kaai" in the Kannada language, Ambade in Tulu and Konkani. In Sri Lanka it is called Amberella. In Bangladesh it is known as Aamra (আমড়া) and when served with seasonings it is a very popular street food.

Description

They are deciduous or semi-evergreen trees growing to 25 m tall. The leaves are spirally arranged, pinnate, rarely bipinnate or simple. The fruit is a drupe similar to a small mango (in the related genus Mangifera), 4–10 cm long, ripening yellow or orange. It has a single seed.

The Malesian species of Spondias were revised by Ding Hou in 1978.[4] The most recently recognized species, Spondias testudinis, was described in 1998.[5]

As food

Preserved ma-kok, sweet and sour with chili

About 10 species of Spondias bear edible fruits and have been domesticated for fruit production. These fruits are also consumed by herbivorous mammals such as deer.

In the Western Ghats of Karnataka flower buds and tender fruits are used in pickle preparation. In Thai cuisine both the fruits and the tender leaves are eaten.

Selected species

As of July 2020, Plants of the World online has 19 accepted species:[6]

  • Spondias acida Blume
  • Spondias admirabilis J.D.Mitch. & Daly
  • Spondias bahiensis P.Carvalho, Van den Berg & M.Machado
  • Spondias bipinnata Airy Shaw & Forman
  • Spondias dulcis Parkinson Tahitian apple, pommecythere (Trinidad & Tobago)
  • Spondias expeditionaria J.D.Mitch. & Daly
  • Spondias globosa J.D.Mitch. & Daly
  • Spondias macrocarpa Engl.
  • Spondias malayana Kosterm.
  • Spondias mombin L. Yellow mombin, gully plum, Ashanti plum, "Java plum"
  • Spondias novoguineensis Kosterm.
  • Spondias pinnata (L.f.) Kurz
  • Spondias purpurea L. Jocote, purple mombin, red mombin, ciruela, siniguela, sirigwela
  • Spondias radlkoferi Donn.Sm.
  • Spondias tefyi J.D.Mitch., Daly & Randrian.
  • Spondias testudinis J.D.Mitch. & Daly
  • Spondias tuberosa Arruda Umbú, imbu, Brazil plum
  • Spondias venulosa (Mart. ex Engl.) Engl.
  • Spondias xerophila Kosterm.

Selected synonyms include:

  • Spondias cytherea Sonn. synonym of Spondias dulcis
  • Spondias haplophylla Airy Shaw & Forman synonym of Bouea oppositifolia (Roxb.) Meisn.
  • Spondias indica (Wight & Arn.) Airy Shaw & Forman synonym of Solenocarpus indicus Wight & Arn.
  • Spondias lakonensis Pierre synonym of Allospondias lakonensis (Pierre) Stapf

References

  1. "Spondias L." Germplasm Resources Information Network. United States Department of Agriculture. 2009-11-23. Retrieved 2010-02-12.
  2. "ชั้นและตำบลที่ตั้งวัด" Archived 2011-06-23 at the Wayback Machine, watarun.org, accessed March 29, 2011.
  3. LETI, Mathieu, HUL Sovanmoly, Jean-Gabriel FOUCHÉ, CHENG Sun Kaing, Bruno DAVID, Flore photographique du Cambodge, Paris: Privat, 2013, p. 63.
  4. Flora Malesiana series 1, 8(3):395-577.
  5. John D. Mitchell and Douglas C. Daly. 1998. "The "tortoise's cajá" - a new species of Spondias (Anacardiaceae) from southwestern Amazonia" Brittonia 50( ):447-451.
  6. Kew Science Plants of the World Online, retrieved 14 July 2020

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Data related to Spondias at Wikispecies

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