Strychnos nux-blanda is a shrub or small tree in the Loganiaceaefamily. It is native to Southeast Asia and Assam. The wood is used as fuel; seeds are toxic, but used in folk-medicine. It is one of the plants featured in the garden of King Narai (1633–88) at Lopburi, Thailand.
This species grows as a deciduous shrub or small tree, some 4–15 m tall.[1][2]
Leaves are broadly ovate, elliptic or suborbicular; some 9–22 × 7–16 cm in size, papery, smooth with a round base, acute to acuminate apex and 5–7 basal veins. The axillary thyrses are 4–6 cm in size. There are puberulent bracteoles. Flowers are present in fives, with a puberulent pedicel. Calyx has narrow oblong lobes some 3mm in size, outside glandular. White corolla are salverform, some 1–2 cm long, the tube is around 9 mm, the outside is villous near the base, narrowly elliptic lobes some 3mm, with there outside gandular. The stamens are inserted at the corolla mouth, with very short filament, the anthers are subovate, around 2 mm long with an exserted apex. The ovary is ovoid and smooth. Smooth style is up to 1.2 cm long. The stigma are capitate. The fruit, berries, are globose, 6–8 cm in diameter and have 4–15 seeds. Seeds are ovoid to suborbicular to ellipsoid in shape, some 1.5–2.2 by 1.3–2 cm in size, plano-compressed. In China the flowers appear from March to June with fruiting is from August to December.
Traits that distinguish it from other Strycnos species include: the narrowly oblong sepals which are subglabrous; the fruit is 6–8 cm in diameter.[3]
The wood of the species has the unusual anatomical trait (in wood generally and Loganiaceae in particular) of having perforations in the ray cells.[4]
The wood measured higher than average density, 0.88 g/cm3 (average: 0.64 g/cm3), and lower than average water content, 0.344 g/cm3 (average: 0.42 g/cm3), amongst the tree taxa of a dry deciduous forest in Cambodia.[5]
The species is native to Southeast Asia and Assam. Countries and regions where it grows include: Thailand, Cambodia, Vietnam, Laos, Myanmar, and India (Assam).[6]
The plant grows in subcanopy, in open forest, usually at some distance from other specimens, often in gritty soil.[1][5]
It grows in Guangdong at between 300 and 600 m elevation.[2]
Sap oozing from the fruit of this species is eaten by the fruit fly Bactrocera flavoverticalis.[9]
Male tephritid fruit flies display aggressive behaviour when maintaining a territory, during courtship or occasionally when protecting temporarily a feeding site. During daylight both males and females of the above species feed on this fruit peacefully, however at dusk the males start to fight and court females.
The wood furnishes firewood.[1] The fruit is toxic, in the indigenous medicine of Cambodia the seeds are often sold in a mixture with the seeds of Strychnos nux-vomica to be used as an emetic. Warning: taking these seeds is often fatal, and their effective use as an emetic is not verified by science. The plant is also used for folk medicine in Thailand.[7]
Amongst Kuy- and Khmer-speaking people living in the same villages in Stung Treng and Preah Vihear Provinces of north-central Cambodia, the tree is used as source of medicine.[14]
The Bunong people of Mondulkiri Province, northeastern Cambodia, gather the bark and wood from wild trees for various folk remedies, to clean wounds, to treat headaches (sometimes mixed with Helicteres angustifolia wood), and for post-natal care.[13]
The tree is one of the plants mentioned as being in the gardens of King Narai the Great, in the poem Eulogy of King Narai (written shortly after 1680 CE). He was ruler of the Ayutthaya Kingdom in what is now central and southern Thailand. The gardens were adjacent to the palace at Lopburi.[11]
Dy Phon, P. (2000). Dictionnaire des plantes utilisées au Cambodge: 1-915. chez l'auteur, Phnom Penh, Cambodia.
Lê, T.C. (2005). Danh lục các loài thục vật Việt Nam [Checklist of Plant Species of Vietnam] 3: 1-1248. Hà Noi : Nhà xu?t b?n Nông nghi?p.
Kress, W.J., DeFilipps, R.A., Farr, E. & Kyi, D.Y.Y. (2003). A Checklist of the Trees, Shrubs, Herbs and Climbers of Myanmar Contributions from the United States National Herbarium 45: 1-590. Smithsonian Institution.
Newman, M., Ketphanh, S., Svengsuksa, B., Thomas, P., Sengdala, K., Lamxay, V. & Armstrong, K. (2007). A checklist of the vascular plants of Lao PDR: 1-394. Royal Botanic Gardens, Edinburgh.
Santisuk, T. & Larsen, K. (eds.) (1997). Flora of Thailand 6(3): 179-245. The Forest Herbarium, Royal Forest Department.
Wu, Z. & Raven, P.H. (eds.) (1996). Flora of China 15: 1-387. Science Press (Beijing) & Missouri Botanical Garden Press (St. Louis).
^ abDhiravat na Pombejra (2019). "The Eulogy of King Narai". Journal of the Siam Society. 107 (2): 1–16. Retrieved 5 February 2021.
^ abเฉลิมรัมย์ Chaloemram, ชินพัฒน์ Chinnaphat; เซดลัค Sedlak, สุทธิรา Sutthira (2020). "เวชกรรมพื้นบ้านในเอกสารใบลานอีสาน: กรณีศึกษาโรคผิวหนัง" [Folk medicine recorded in Palm Leaf Manuscripts of Isan: A case study of skin disorders] (PDF). J Sci Technol MSU: 458–70. Retrieved 5 February 2021.
^ abTurreira Garcia, Nerea; Argyriou, Dimitrios; Chhang, Phourin; Srisanga, Prachaya; Theilade, Ida (2017). "Ethnobotanical knowledge of the Kuy and Khmer people in Prey Lang, Cambodia"(PDF). Cambodian Journal of Natural History (1). Centre for Biodiversity Conservation, Phnom Penh: 76–101. Retrieved 22 April 2020.