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Artocarpus heterophyllus Lam.
Synonym : Artocarpus integrifolius
Wight.
Family
: Moraceae
Local Names
: Plavu, Jack fruit tree
Flowering
and fruiting period:
November – April
Distribution: Widely cultivated in
the tropics, origin is probably South India
Habitat: Evergreen and
semi-evergreen forests, also widely
IUCN
status:
Data Deficient
Endemic:
No
Uses: Fruits edible,
Aphrodisiac, Timber yielding, Nut edible, Remedy for skin disorders. The ripe
fruit may be eaten raw. Timber is used for making furniture and musical
instruments. Heartwood yields a yellow dye. The bark is used for tanning and
the leaves are eaten by cattle. Heated leaves can be used to treat wounds, and
the ash, when burned with maize and coconut shell can treat ulcers. By mixing
vinegar and latex, it can promote healing of abscesses, snakebite and glandular
swellings. In the treatment against skin diseases and asthma, the root is used.
Its extraction is used to treat fever and diarrhea.
Key
Characters:
evergreen tree with bark blackish-grey, mottled with green and black having
exudation milky white latex. Leaves are simple, alternate, obovate-oblong,
margin entire, glabrous and shining above and scabrous beneath. Flowers
unisexual,minute, yellowish-green, in spikes enclosed by spathe-like bracts,
male from young branches, catkin; perianth 2-lobed, stamen 1. Female catkins
from the trunk ovary superior. Fruit a sorosis, yellowish-green.