Girish Mahajan (Editor)

Ziziphus

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Kingdom
  
Tribe
  
Paliureae

Higher classification
  
Paliureae

Order
  
Family
  
Scientific name
  
Ziziphus

Rank
  
Genus

Ziziphus Ziziphus Mill Checklist View

Lower classifications
  
Indian Jujube, Ziziphus spina‑christi, Jujube, Ziziphus lotus, Ziziphus joazeiro

Ziziphus jujuba chinese date


Ziziphus /ˈzɪzfəs/ is a genus of about 40 species of spiny shrubs and small trees in the buckthorn family, Rhamnaceae, distributed in the warm-temperate and subtropical regions throughout the world. The leaves are alternate, entire, with three prominent basal veins, and 2–7 cm (0.79–2.76 in) long; some species are deciduous, others evergreen. The flowers are small, inconspicuous yellow-green. The fruit is an edible drupe, yellow-brown, red, or black, globose or oblong, 1–5 cm (0.39–1.97 in) long, often very sweet and sugary, reminiscent of a date in texture and flavour.

Contents

Ziziphus Ziziphus jujuba Ziziphus sativa Ziziphus vulgaris Zizyphus

The jujube fruit ziziphus mauritiana ber hd video


Overview

The generic name is derived from zizfum or zizafun, the Persian word for Z. lotus. They are Rhamnaceae, near to the Buckthorn genus.

Ecology

Ziziphus httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Ziziphus species are used as food plants by the larvae of some Lepidoptera species including Bucculatrix zizyphella, which feeds exclusively on the genus, and Endoclita malabaricus.

Ziziphus Ziziphus mucronata Useful Tropical Plants

Well known species includes Z. jujuba (jujube), Z. spina-christi from southwestern Asia, Z. lotus from the Mediterranean region, and ber (Z. mauritiana), which is found from western Africa to India. Ziziphus joazeiro grows in the Caatinga of Brazil. Ziziphus celata is listed as an endangered species in the United States.

Ziziphus Ziziphus abyssinica Useful Tropical Plants

The fruits are an important source for birds, which eat the whole fruit and regurgitate the seeds intact, expanding the seeds in the best conditions for germination (ornitochory). Secondly, seed dispersal is carried out by mammals or fishes. The fruit is energy-rich because of the large amount of sugar it contains. It is cultivated and eaten fresh, dry, and in jam. It is also added as a base in meals and in the manufacture of candy. The leaves can be either deciduous or evergreen depending on species, and are aromatic.

They are temperate or tropical plants, having a great range. They are most abundant where annual average temperatures are between 12 and 35 °C and minimum winter temperatures are not lower than -2 °C. They prefer locations with a high temperature coupled with humidity. They require a deep soil, fresh, soft, siliceous-calcareous nature or limestone-clay-silica-clay and subsurface permeable, with pH between 5.5 and 7.8. In excessively sandy or clay soils which may be affected by standing water, the plants do not grow well. Many species are very sensitive to drought, and if the land is excessively dry and of calcareous nature, they may resent the lack of moisture. At the slightest drought, premature fruit drop is frequent. Ziziphus has several relict species living in temperate areas. These species can not endure the harsh winters of temperate continental climates.

The ecological requirements of the genus are mostly those of vigorous species with a great ability to propagate in conducive habitats. This genus is adapted mostly to high rainfall and humidity, but some species are deciduous, living in Mediterranean humid climate. The deciduous Ziziphus species lose all of their leaves for part of the year depending on variations in rainfall. In deciduous species in tropical, subtropical, and arid regions, leaf loss coincides with the dry season. They grow mostly in tropical forests but have also been found in stubbles, pastures, coastal ranges, tropical mountain areas, and wet to dry interior regions. The family is distributed throughout tropical and subtropical areas and in cloud forest.

The differences are ecological adaptations to different environments over a relatively dry-wet climate. Species in less humid environment are smaller or less robust, with less abundant and thinner foliage and have oleifera cells that produce trees with a more fragrant aroma.

Uses

In traditional Chinese medicine (TCM), suan zao ren (Ziziphus spinosa) is considered to be sweet and sour in taste, and neutral in action. It is believed to nourish the heart yin, augment the liver blood, and calm the spirit (TCM medical terms). It is used to treat irritability, insomnia and heart palpitations.

Mythology

The mythological lotus tree which occurs in Homer's Odyssey is often equated with Z. lotus, though the date palm is also a possible candidate.

Selected species

List Sources:

Fossil species

  • Ziziphus hyperboreus Heer (Greenland, Eocene fossil)
  • Ziziphus wyomingianisBerry (Tipperary, Wind River Basin Wyoming, USA, Eocene fossil)
  • † = Extinct

    References

    Ziziphus Wikipedia