Annona glabra: Difference between revisions

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''To edit this page, please copy the French version and translate it. If it contains no data, the first tasks are to check all the links, to clarify nomenclature and to upload photos from Wikimedia Commons''


== Description ==


== Popular names ==
== Popular names ==
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== Description ==


== Classification ==
== Classification ==
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== Uses ==
== Uses ==
{{Citation box
|text=''Anona palustris'' Linn. ALLIGATOR APPLE. CORK-WOOD. MONKEY APPLE. POND APPLE. American and African tropics. The plant bears fruit the size of the fist. The seeds, as large as a bean, lie in an orange-colored pulp of an unsavory taste but which has something of the smell and relish of an orange <ref>Sloane, H. ''Nat. Hist. Jam.'' 2:169. 1725. (''A. aquatica'').</ref>. The fruit is considered narcotic and even poisonous in Jamaica but of the latter we have, says Lunan <ref>Lunan, J. ''Hort. Jam.'' 1:11. 1814.</ref>, no certain proof. The wood of the tree is so soft and compressible that the people of Jamaica call it corkwood and employ it for stoppers.
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|author =[[Anona (Sturtevant, 1919)#Anona palustris|Sturtevant, ''Notes on edible plants'', 1919]].
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== References ==
== References ==
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*[https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Annona%20glabra Wikipédia]
*[https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Annona%20glabra Wikipédia]
*[http://www.wikiphyto.org/wiki/Annona%20glabra Wikiphyto]
*[http://www.wikiphyto.org/wiki/Annona%20glabra Wikiphyto]
[[Category:Annona]]

Latest revision as of 16:52, 29 September 2025

Annona glabra

alt=Description of None50x50.jpg picture.
Order [[]]
Family [[]]
Genus [[]]

2n =

Origin : area of origin

wild or cultivated


Uses summary



Description

Popular names

Classification

Cultivars

History

Uses

Anona palustris Linn. ALLIGATOR APPLE. CORK-WOOD. MONKEY APPLE. POND APPLE. American and African tropics. The plant bears fruit the size of the fist. The seeds, as large as a bean, lie in an orange-colored pulp of an unsavory taste but which has something of the smell and relish of an orange [1]. The fruit is considered narcotic and even poisonous in Jamaica but of the latter we have, says Lunan [2], no certain proof. The wood of the tree is so soft and compressible that the people of Jamaica call it corkwood and employ it for stoppers.

  1. Sloane, H. Nat. Hist. Jam. 2:169. 1725. (A. aquatica).
  2. Lunan, J. Hort. Jam. 1:11. 1814.


References

Links