African peach
Appearance
English
[edit]Noun
[edit]African peach (plural African peaches)
- Nauclea latifolia) (syns. Sarcocephalus latifolius, Sarcocephalus esculentus), a deciduous rubiaceous climbing shrub of west tropical Africa, or its fruit; its bark, doundaké, is used medicinally.
- 1845, W.F. Daniell, “Some Observations on the Medical Topography, Climate, and Diseases, of the Bights of Benin and Biafra”, in London Medical Gazette[1], volume 35, page 643:
- With the plants common to the Slave Coast may be included the Zingiber officianale (ginger), Sarcocephalus esculentus (African peach), Gossipium herbaceum (cotton plant), Tamarindus Indica (tamarinds), Cucurbita Citrullus (water-melon) […]
- 2015, Bernd Schaefer, Natural Products in the Chemical Industry[2]:
- In 2013, researchers at the Universite Joseph Fourier in Grenoble discovered unexpectedly racemic tramadol in the root bark of the sub-Saharan African peach (pincushion tree, Nauclea latifolia).
Synonyms
[edit]- (Nauclea latifolia): Guinea peach, Sierra Leone peach, country fig, pincushion tree
References
[edit]- African peach on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
- Nauclea latifolia on Wikispecies.Wikispecies
- Nauclea latifolia on Wikimedia Commons.Wikimedia Commons
- Nauclea latifolia at Plants of the World Online