Adansonia gregorii - Australian baobab, Baobab, Boabab, Baob, Bottle tree Seeds

UGS : P-2189 Catégorie: Mots clés: ,

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Botanical nomenclature: Adansonia gregorii
Common name: Australian baobab, Baobab, Boabab, Baob, Bottle tree
Royaume : Plantae
Clade : Trachéophytes
Clade : Angiospermes
Clade : Eudicots
Clade : Rosides
Ordre : Malvales
Famille : Malvacées
Genre : Adansonia
Species: A. gregorii

La description

Adansonia gregorii, commonly known as the boab and also known by a number of other names, is a tree in the family Malvaceae, endemic to the northern regions of Western Australia and the Northern Territory of Australia. The specific name “gregorii” honours the Australian explorer Augustus Gregory.

The common name “boab” is a shortened form of the generic common name “boabab”, and is the most widely recognised common name. It does, however, have a large number of other common names. Similar names include:

– baobab — the common name for the genus as a whole, but often used in Australia to refer to the Australian species
– Australian baobab
– boabab was in common use from the late 1850s (Perhaps the origin of boab)
– baob

Gadawon is one of the names used by the local Aboriginal Australian groups. Other names include larrgadi or larrgadiy, which is widespread in the Nyulnyulan languages of the Western Kimberley.

Other names include:
– bottle tree or bottletree
– cream of tartar tree
– gourd-gourd tree
– gouty stem tree
– monkey bread tree
– sour gourd
– upside down tree
– dead rat tree

Endemic to Australia, boab occurs in the Kimberley region of Western Australia and east into the Northern Territory. It is the only baobab to occur in Australia, the others being native to Madagascar and mainland Africa and the Arabian Peninsula. There are various theories as to how the tree got to Australia, with A. gregorii and Adansonia digitata, its African relative, being very similar genetically.

It can grow from sea level up to about 300 m (980 ft) in altitude, and is most often found in open forest and rocky areas, but is also seen in monsoon forest.

As with other baobabs, Adansonia gregorii is easily recognised by the swollen base of its trunk, which forms a massive caudex, giving the tree a bottle-like appearance. Boab ranges from 5–15 m (16–49 ft) in height, usually 9–12 m (30–39 ft), with a broad bottle-shaped trunk, up to 5 m (16 ft) in diameter.

A. gregorii is deciduous, losing its leaves during the dry winter period and producing new leaves and large white flowers between December and May, up to 75 mm (3.0 in) long. The flowers open at night, and have a calyx about 6 cm (2.4 in) long. The inner surface is densely sericeous. Boabs are pollinated by the convolvulus hawk-moth Agrius convolvuli.

The tree’s bark has a remarkable property, in that it can maintain inscribed markings for long periods of time, over more than a century. Some specimens of the African relative of boabs have been estimated to live close to 2,000 years, but the Australian ones are not as well-documented.

The plant has a wide variety of uses; most parts are edible and it is the source of a number of materials. Aboriginal Australians obtained water from the tree, owing to its ability to store huge amounts of water; some of the oldest and largest trees can hold more than 100,000 L (22,000 imp gal; 26,000 US gal) of water in their trunks. They also use the white powder that fills the seed pods (or pith, said to taste like sherbet or cream of tartar) as a food.

Decorative paintings or carvings were sometimes made on the outer surface of the fruit. The root fibres are used to create string. The 1889 book Useful native plants of Australia states that “The dry acidulous pulp of the fruit is eaten. It has an agreeable taste, like cream of tartar”. European use of the trees has included letter boxes and jails.

The leaves may see a future use prepared as food, due to their high iron content. The leaves can be boiled and eaten as a spinach; the seeds can be ground and used as a coffee-like beverage, and fermenting the pulp creates a type of beer.

A large hollow boab south of Derby, Western Australia is reputed to have been used in the 1890s as a lockup for Aboriginal prisoners on their way to Derby for sentencing. The Boab Prison Tree, Derby is now a tourist attraction.

Another hollow boab near Wyndham, Western Australia was also used as a prison tree. The Hillgrove Lockup or Wyndham Prison Tree is on the King River Road out of Wyndham near the Moochalabra Dam. There is also a boab tree located within the Wyndham Caravan Park that is billed as “the biggest boab in captivity”.

Gija Jumulu is a large boab which was transported from Warmun in the Kimberley region to Kings Park in the Western Australian capital city, Perth in 2008. As of 2019 the tree was growing well, after an initial period showing signs of stress after the move, demonstrating the adaptability of the species in a different climate.

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