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   » » Wiki: Areca Catechu
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Areca catechu is a species of native to the cultivated for . It was carried widely through the tropics by the Austronesian migrations and since at least 1500 BCE due to its use in betel nut chewing. It is widespread in cultivation and is considered naturalized in much of tropical Asia and in , southern China (, , ), , parts of the , and also in the .Jones, D. (2001), Palms Throughout The World, Reed New Holland, Australia.

This review cites this research.

Its fruits (called or betel nuts) are chewed together with slaked lime and betel leaves for their stimulant and narcotic effects.


Taxonomy
Common names in English include areca palm, areca nut palm, betel palm, betel nut palm, Indian nut, Pinang palm and catechu. This palm is commonly called the betel tree because its fruit, the , which are often with the , a leaf from a vine of the family .

The species was first published by in his book Species Plantarum on page 1189 in 1753.


Description
Areca catechu is a medium-sized palm , growing straight to tall, with a trunk in diameter. The are long, pinnate, with numerous, crowded leaflets.


Chemical composition
The seed contains such as and , which, when chewed, are intoxicating and slightly addictive. The seed also contains condensed () called , which are carcinogenic.

The activity of the seed has been studied.


Uses

Betel nut chewing
Areca catechu is grown for its commercially important seed crop, the , which is the main component of the practice of betel nut chewing. It is popular throughout , , , Papua New Guinea, the , parts of southern , , and the . The nut itself can be addictive and has direct link to . Chewing areca nut is a cause of oral submucous fibrosis, a lesion which frequently progresses to .
(2025). 9780262692656, MIT Press. .

The practice of chewing originated in Island Southeast Asia, where the areca palm is native. The oldest known evidence of areca nut chewing was found in a burial pit in the site in the (to which areca palms are native), which dates to around 4,630±250 . Its diffusion is closely tied to the expansion of the Austronesian peoples. It was spread to the Indo-Pacific during prehistoric times, reaching at 3,500 to 3,000 BP, at 3,400 to 3,000 BP; and by 3,500 BP; Mainland Southeast Asia by 3,000 to 2,500 BP; by 1500 BP; and by 600 BP. From India, it was also spread westwards to and the . It was also previously present in the , based on archaeological remains dated from 3,600 to 2,500 BP, but it was not carried into .


Other uses
The areca palm is also used as an interior landscaping species. It is often used in large indoor areas such as malls and hotels. It will not fruit or reach full size if grown in this way. Indoors, it is a slow-growing, low-water, high-light plant that is sensitive to and occasionally .

In India, the dried fallen leaves are collected and hot-pressed into palm leaf plates and bowls. Palm Leaf Plates on the website TheWholeLeafCo.dom; viewed in September 2016


Cultural significance
In Indonesia and Malaysia there are numerous place names using the words pinang, jambi or jambe (areca in Javanese, Sundanese, Balinese, and ). For example, the cities of , in Indonesia, the Indonesian province of and Island ( Pulau Pinang) off the west coast of Peninsular Malaysia. in the Maldives, in , Supari (সুপারি) in and coastal areas of and in India, are also some of the places named after a local name for areca nut.

== Gallery ==


See also
  • Domesticated plants and animals of Austronesia


External links

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