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   » » Wiki: Phytolacca
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Phytolacca is a of native to , and . Some members of the genus are known as pokeweeds or similar names such as pokebush, pokeberry, pokeroot or poke sallet. Annual Poke Sallet Festival, Harlan, KYEd Dinger "Allen Canning Company". International Directory of Company Histories. FindArticles.com. 15 Apr, 2011. http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_gx5202/is_2005/ai_n19123469/ Other names for species of Phytolacca include inkberry and ombú. The generic name is derived from the word φυτόν ( phyton), meaning "plant," and the word lacca, a red .

(2025). 9780849326776, CRC Press. .
and are present (in the leaves, stems, roots, blossoms, berries etc.) in many species which are poisonous to if not prepared properly. The berries are eaten by , which are not affected by the . The small with very hard outer shells remain intact in the digestive system and are eliminated whole.

The genus comprises about 25 to 35 species of , , and growing from tall. They have alternate simple leaves, pointed at the end, with entire or crinkled margins; the leaves can be either or . The stems are green, pink or red. The are greenish-white to pink, produced in long at the ends of the stems. They develop into berries diameter, green at first, ripening dark purple to black. Flora of China: Phytolacca Flora of North America: PhytolaccaMacBride, J. F. (1937). Flora of Peru. Publications of Field Museum of Natural History, Botanical Series. Volume XIII Part II pp. 553–556. University of Illinois. Full text


Selected species
The following species are accepted by one or more regional floras:Reiche, K. (undated). Flora de Chile Volume 6 pp. 143–145. Full text Catalogue of the Vascular Plants of Madagascar: Phytolacca
  • Phytolacca acinosa Roxb. – Indian poke. Southern and eastern (syn. P. esculenta Van Houtte, P. latbenia (Moq.) Walter). Black and Judziewicz report it in Dane County, Wisconsin in their 2008 and 2009 books (Wildflowers of Wisconsin and the Great Lakes Region. A Comprehensive Field Guide, first and 2nd editions. )
  • Phytolacca americana American pokeweed. (syn. P. decandra L.)
  • Phytolacca australis Phil. – Western
  • Phytolacca bogotensis Kunth – Tropical and subtropical South America (sometimes included in P. icosandra).
  • Phytolacca chilensis Miers – central (possibly synonymous with P. icosandra)
  • Phytolacca dioica L. – Ombú. Subtropical South America.
  • Phytolacca dodecandra L'Hér. – Eastern , (syn. P. abyssinica Hoffm.).
  • Phytolacca heterotepala H.Walt. – Mexican pokeweed. Mexico.
  • Phytolacca icosandra L. – Central and South America.
  • Phytolacca japonica Makino – Eastern Asia (syn. P. hunanensis Hand.-Mazz., P. zhejiangensis W.T.Fan).
  • Phytolacca octandra L. – Red inkplant. Subtropical and tropical regions worldwide (sometimes included in P. icosandra).
  • Phytolacca polyandra Batalin – Central and southwest China (syn. P. clavigera W.W.Smith).
  • Phytolacca pruinosa Levantine Pokeweed. Southern , , and .
  • Phytolacca rivinoides Kunth & C.D.Bouché – Central and South America.
  • Phytolacca sandwicensis Endl. – Hawaiian Pokeweed. .
  • Phytolacca thyrsiflora Fenzl ex J.A.Schmidt – Northern South America.
  • Phytolacca weberbaueri H.Walt. – Yumbi. Peru.


Formerly placed here
  • (L.) Ridsdale (as P. asiatica L.)
  • Terminalia catappa L. (as P. javanica Osbeck)


Ecology
The ombú (Phytolacca dioica) grows as a tree on the of South America and is one of the few providers of shade on the open grassland. It is a symbol of , and culture. P. weberbaueri from Peru also grows to tree size. Both species have massively bases to their trunks, and very soft wood with a high water storage capacity which makes them resistant to and drought.

In the Pacific Northwest of , pokeweed is an invasive species.


Uses
Phytolacca americana (American pokeweed, pokeweed, poke) is used as a folk medicine and as food, although all parts of it must be considered toxic unless, as folk recipes claim, it is "properly prepared." The root is never eaten and cannot be made edible. Iowa Cooperative Extension Service publication Pm-746 "POKEWEED" Poke salad ('poke salat') is considered part of traditional southern U.S. cuisine, where it is cooked three times in three changes of boiling water to remove some of the harmful components. Toxic constituents which have been identified include the alkaloids and , as well as a .


Fossil record
A Phytolacca-like has been described from the (late ) Cerro del Pueblo Formation, , , it is a multiple composed of berries with six , each containing a single seed with a curved developed in a curved with pendulous , a berry anatomy that is similar to that of the genus Phytolacca. Though this new plant from shares reproductive characters with Phytolacca, the constant number (six) of carpels per fruit and pendulous placentation support the recognition of a new genus, Coahuilacarpon phytolaccoides.PHYTOLACCACEAE INFRUCTESCENCE FROM CERRO DEL PUEBLO FORMATION, UPPER CRETACEOUS (LATE CAMPANIAN), COAHUILA, MEXICO by Sergio R. S. Cevallos-Ferriz, Emilio Estrada-Ruiz and Balam Rodrigo Pérez-Hernández - American Journal of Botany 95(1): 77–83. 2008


Notes and references

External links
  • Big Phytolacca, about 8 ft. high, photograph by Roland M. Harper, DeKalb County, Alabama, 9/26/1948, from the University Libraries Division of Special Collections, The University of Alabama

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