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Actinidia chinensis

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Kingdom
  
Plantae

Family
  
Scientific name
  
Actinidia chinensis

Rank
  
Species

Order
  
Genus
  
Actinidia

Higher classification
  
Actinidia

Actinidia chinensis Actinidia chinensis Wikipedia

Similar
  
Actinidia, Actinidiaceae, Actinidia deliciosa, Hardy kiwi, Actinidia kolomikta

Kiwi fruit seeds chinese gooseberry actinidia chinensis seeds on www myseeds co


Actinidia chinensis is a fruit tree and medicinal plant native to China. It is pollinated by bees.

Contents

Actinidia chinensis Actinidia chinensis Planch

Habitat

Actinidia chinensis FileActinidia chinensis BotGardBln310505cjpg Wikimedia Commons

In its native habitat Actinidia chinensis grows in thickets, thick (oak) forests (e.g. Quercus aquifolioides, Quercus oxyodon, Quercus lamellosa), and light secondary forests and bushland. A. chinensis prefers slopes and likes also to grow in ravines, top heights of 200-230m, relative to the local microclimate. In Western gardens it may range 30 feet in all directions, making it unsuitable for all but the largest spaces unless pruned back hard at the end of every growing season.

Origin

Actinidia chinensis httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

The origin of Actinidia chinensis is supposed to be the northern Yangtze river valley. In China, Actinidia chinensis is nowadays dispersed in the entire southeast of the country.

Actinidia chinensis Actinidia chinensis Kiwi Yangtao

Herbarium specimens, but not plants, were forwarded to the Royal Horticultural Society by the British plant hunter Robert Fortune, from which Jules Émile Planchon named the new genus in the London Journal of Botany, 1847. Charles Maries, collecting for Messrs Veitch noted it in Japan, but the introduction to Western horticulture was from E.H. Wilson, who sent seeds collected in Hupeh to Veitch in 1900.

Uses

The fruits, the size of a walnut, are edible. It was first grown commercially in New Zealand, where it has been superseded by Actinidia deliciosa, or Kiwifruit.

It is used in traditional Chinese medicine.

References

Actinidia chinensis Wikipedia