Webster's Online Dictionary
with Multilingual Thesaurus Translation

 
Earth's largest dictionary with more than 1226 modern languages and Eve!

Definition: Adansonia

Part of Speech Definition
Noun 1. Baobab; cream-of-tartar tree.[Wordnet]
2. A genus of great trees related to the Bombax. There are two species, A. digitata, the baobab or monkey-bread of Africa and India, and A. Gregorii, the sour gourd or cream-of-tartar tree of Australia. Both have a trunk of moderate height, but of enormous diameter, and a wide-spreading head. The fruit is oblong, and filled with pleasantly acid pulp. The wood is very soft, and the bark is used by the natives for making ropes and cloth.[Websters].

Sources: WordNet 3.0 Copyright © 2006 by Princeton University. All rights reserved. Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913)

Top

Date "Adansonia" was first used in popular English literature: sometime before 1828. (references)

Etymology:Adansonia \Ad`an*so"ni*a\, noun. [From Adanson, French botanist.]. (references)

Specialty Definition: Adansonia

Domain Definition
Noah Webster [Noun] Ethiopian sour gourd, monkey's bread, of African calabash-tree. It is a tree of one species, called baobab, a native of Africa, and the largest of the vegetable kingdom. The stem rises not above twelve or fifteen feet, but is from sixty-five to seventy-eight feet in circumference. The branches shoot horizontally to the length of sixty feet, the ends bending to the ground. The fruit is oblong, pointed at both ends, ten inches in length, and covered with a greenish down, under which is a hard ligneous rind. It hangs to the tree by a pedicle two feet long, and contains a white spungy substance. The leaves and bark, dried and powdered, are used by the negroes, as pepper, on their food, to promote perspiration. The tree is named from M. Adanson, who has given a description of it. Source: Webster's 1828 American Dictionary.

Source: compiled by the editor from various references; see credits.

Top

Common Expressions: Adansonia

Expressions Definition
Adansonia digitata African tree having an exceedingly thick trunk and fruit that resembles a gourd and has an edible pulp called monkey bread. Source: Wordnet 3.0 Copyright © 2006 by Princeton University. All rights reserved.
Adansonia gregorii Australian tree having an agreeably acid fruit that resembles a gourd. Source: Wordnet 3.0 Copyright © 2006 by Princeton University. All rights reserved.
Genus Adansonia Baobab; cream-of-tartar tree. Source: Wordnet 3.0 Copyright © 2006 by Princeton University. All rights reserved.

Source: compiled by the editor from various references; see credits.

Top

Extended Definition: Adansonia


Adansonia

Baobab
African Baobab
African Baobab
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Plantae
Division: Magnoliophyta
Class: Magnoliopsida
Order: Malvales
Family: Malvaceae
Genus: Adansonia
Species

See text

Baobab is the common name of a genus (Adansonia) containing eight species of trees, native to Madagascar (the centre of diversity, with six species), mainland Africa and Australia (one species in each). The mainland African species also occurs on Madagascar, but it is not a native of that country. Other common names include boab, boaboa, bottle tree and monkey bread tree. The species reach a height of 5–25 m, 10-80ft (exceptionally 30 m, 100ft), and often a trunk diameter of 7 m, 23ft (exceptionally over 11 m, 36ft). A specimen in Limpopo Province South Africa, often considered the largest example alive, has a girth of 155 feet and an average diameter of 15 m, 49ft.[citation needed] Baobabs store water inside the swollen trunk, up to 120,000 litres (32,000 US gallons), to endure the harsh drought conditions particular to each region.[1] All occur in seasonally arid areas, and are deciduous, shedding their leaves during the dry season. Some are reputed to be many thousands of years old, though this is impossible to verify as the wood does not produce annual growth rings. Few botanists believe these claims of extreme age; current evidence suggests they rarely exceed 400 years.[2]

The Malagasy species are important components of the Madagascar dry deciduous forests. Within that biome, A. madagascariensis and A. rubrostipa occur specifically in the Anjajavy Forest, sometimes growing out of the tsingy limestone itself.

Species

  • Adansonia digitata – African Baobab (western, northeastern, central & southern Africa)
  • Adansonia grandidieri – Grandidier's Baobab (Madagascar)
  • Adansonia gregorii (syn. A. gibbosa) – Boab or Australian Baobab (northwest Australia)
  • Adansonia madagascariensis – Madagascar Baobab (Madagascar)
  • Adansonia perrieri – Perrier's Baobab (North Madagascar)
  • Adansonia rubrostipa (syn. A. fony) – Fony Baobab (Madagascar)
  • Adansonia suarezensis – Suarez Baobab (Diego Suarez, Madagascar)
  • Adansonia za – Za Baobab (Madagascar)

The name Adansonia honours Michel Adanson, the French naturalist and explorer who described A. digitata.

Uses

The fruit is about 18 cm long
The fruit is about 18 cm long

The leaves are commonly used as a leaf vegetable throughout the area of mainland African distribution, including Malawi, Zimbabwe, and the Sahel. They are eaten both fresh and as a dry powder. In Nigeria, the leaves are locally known as kuka, and are used to make kuka soup.

The fruit is extremely nutritious and is known as sour gourd[3] or monkey's bread. The dry pulp of the fruit, after separation from the seeds and fibers, is eaten directly or mixed into porridge or milk. In Malawi, the fruit pulp is used to make juice which is very rich in nutrients such as calcium and vitamin C. The shells are burned for heat. The fruit was once used in the production of tartar sauce.[4] In various parts of East Africa, the dry fruit pulp is covered in sugary coating (usually with red coloring) and sold in packages as a sweet and sour candy called "boonya" or "bungha".

The seeds are mostly used as a thickener for soups, but may also be fermented into a seasoning, roasted for direct consumption, or pounded to extract vegetable oil. The tree also provides a source of fibre, dye, and fuel.

Indigenous Australians used baobabs as a source of water and food, and used leaves medicinally. They also painted and carved the outside of the fruits and wore them as ornaments. A very large, hollow boab south of Derby, Western Australia was used in the 1890s as a lockup for Aboriginal prisoners on their way to Derby for sentencing. The Boab Prison Tree still stands and is now a tourist attraction.

In culture

Adansonia grandidieri, Madagascar
Adansonia grandidieri, Madagascar
Adansonia digitata, Tarangire National Park in Tanzania
Adansonia digitata, Tarangire National Park in Tanzania
  • The baobab is the national tree of Madagascar.[5]
  • Baobabs are also used for bonsai (the most popular being A. digitata).
  • The baobab is occasionally known colloquially as "upside-down tree". Cited in an Arabic legend in which the devil pulled out the tree and planted it upside down. It is also cited in older African lore: after creation, each of the animals was given a tree to plant and the hyena planted the baobab upside-down.
  • In Antoine de Saint-Exupéry's story The Little Prince, the Little Prince was worried that baobabs (described as "trees as big as churches") would grow on his small asteroid, take up all the space and even cause it to explode.
  • There is an important baobab tree in Kunta Kinte's village in The Gambia from Alex Haley's novel Roots: The Saga of an American Family.
  • Rafiki, in The Lion King, makes his home in a baobab tree.
  • Singer Regina Spektor has a song called Baobabs that was released on the special edition of "Begin To Hope" (2006).
  • Orchestra Baobab is a Senegalese band.
  • British/South African composer Andi Spicer wrote a piece for percussion called Baobab. There is also a version of the piece written for harpsichord.
  • Ernst Haeckel mentions "monkey bread-fruit trees (Adansonia)" in his The History of Creation (Chap. 29), and claims that their "individual life exceeds a period of five thousand years".
  • The owners of Sunland Farm in Limpopo, South Africa have built a pub called "The Big Baobab Pub" inside the hollow trunk of a 72ft high baobab. The tree, which is 155ft in circumference, is reported to have been carbon dated at over 6,000 years old.[6][7]
  • In the movie FernGully: The Last Rainforest, the evil spirit Hexxus is released when the baobab tree he is imprisoned in is cut down.

References and external links

  1. Senegal Online: Baobabs
  2. Wilson, R. T. (1988). Vital statistics of the baobab (Adansonia digitata). African Journal of Ecology 26 (3): 197-206.
  3. http://dictionary.oed.com/cgi/entry/50231604/50231604se21?single=1&query_type=word&queryword=Sour+gourd&first=1&max_to_show=10&hilite=50231604se21
  4. Bioversity International: African fruit trees
  5. Natural Africa: Madagascar
  6. www.dailymail.co.uk Retrieved 2007-12-20
  7. www.timesonline.co.uk Retrieved 2007-12-20

Gallery


Source: adapted by the editor from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia; from the article "Adansonia". Image Credit.



Topics by Level of Interest: Adansonia

Topics sorted by level of Interest Level (1=low, 600=high)     Topics sorted Alphabetically Level (1=low, 600=high)
Adansonia 21     Adansonia 21
Adansonia digitata 16     Adansonia digitata 16
Adansonia gregorii 9     Adansonia grandidieri 6
Adansonia grandidieri 6     Adansonia gregorii 9
Adansonia rubrostipa 5     Adansonia madagascariensis 4
Adansonia madagascariensis 4     Adansonia perrieri 4
Adansonia za 4     Adansonia rubrostipa 5
Adansonia perrieri 4     Adansonia suarezensis 4
Adansonia suarezensis 4     Adansonia za 4

Source: the editor, created by/for EVE to gauge likely levels of human interest in linguistically triggered topics (compiled across various sources, such as Wikipedia and specialty expression glosses).

Translations: Adansonia

Language Translations (or nearest inflections or synonyms, in parentheses)
Chinese Simplified 猴面包树 (Adansonia, baobab, monkey-bread tree). Additional references: Chinese Simplified, China, Brunei, Adansonia. (volunteer & more translations)
Chinese Traditional 猴面包樹 (Adansonia). Additional references: Chinese Traditional, China, Brunei, Adansonia. (volunteer & more translations)
Source: Eve, based on a combination of meta analysis and graph theory (for near and back translations). Top