Edible Portion:Fruit, Leaves, Seeds-Fat, Skin Rind-Spice A tree. It grows 14 m high. The leaves are sword shaped and 13 cm long. Male and female flowers are separate. Male flowersare yellow and in groups of 3-4 in the axils of leaves. The female flowers are larger and in the axils of leaves near...
2008-01-01 Le tamarinier ntomi en bambara, dàqaar en wolof, jatbi en pulaar, pusga en mooré, Tamarindus indica avec son nom scientifique) peut soigner beaucoup de maladies: abscès, asthme, affections de la bouche, bronchite, taux trop élevé de cholesterol, coliques hépatiques ou néphrétiques, constipation,...
Edible Portion:Fruit An evergreen tree. It grows 8-15 m high. It can spread 5-15 m across. It has a dense rounded crown. The trunk is smooth andpale grey. The inner bark is orange. The leaves have leaflets along the stalk. The leaves are 10-20 cm long with 2-6 pairs ofopposite leaflets. The...
2015-09-20 This book is designed as a simple introduction to the more common food plants of Bangladesh. It is hoped people will take greater pride and interest in these plants and become confident and informed about how to grow and use them. Many of the local food plants that occur in every country are very...
2001-01-01 This publication details the growing, management, and processing/storage of Tamarind trees. The purpose of the project is to provide high yielding, good quality germplasm, planting materials and technology for environmentally friendly, sustainable natural resources management. 27 pages,...
A frost-tender, tropical, evergreen tree, tamarind is densely foliated with pale green, compound, feathery leaflets which give the broad, spreading crown a light, airy effect. Tamarind may reach heights of 65 feet and a spread of 50 feet but is more often seen smaller. The delicate leaflets cast...
2017-10-23 Tamarindus indica, also known as Indian date or tamarind, is a tree with seed pods traditionally used for fruit juice, chutneys, curries, and desserts in South Asia. But it is also a drought resistant source of livestock fodder, firewood, timber, and bee forage, and its lacy canopy (Figure 9)...