amara is native in the tropics of Southern America. Quassia amara is an understorey plant in neotropic rainforests and humid sites and mostly abundant in young forests. Besides hummingbirds, other birds and Trigona species from the Apidea family do pollination. The tree is predominately pollinated by hummingbirds but also self-compatible. The fruits, five small elliptic, fleshy, purple black drupes, 0.8-1.5 cm long, replace the flower and turn red as they mature. The flowers are fragile and sometimes fall from the rachis at the slightest touch. They are generally open for two days during the flowering period and each inflorescence presents on to four open flowers at once. The flowers are produced in a panicle 15–25 cm long, each flower 2.5-3.5 cm long, bright red on the outside, and white inside. The flower comprises 5 lanceolate petals, which remain mostly closed together forming a sharpening cylinder. Terminal red-branched racemes of panicles, 10–30 cm long, produces narrow, vivid crimson flowers, 2.5-3.5 cm long, that decorate the tips of each little limb. The pinnate with 3-5 leaflets, deeply veined, polished alternated dark green leaves are 15–25 cm long and distinctive for their broadly winged axis and reddish veins. It is a shrub or rarely a small tree, reaching a height up to 6 metres. amargo, Simaroube officinale Common names Īmargo, Bitter ash, Bitterholz, Bitterwood, Bois amer, Bois de quassia, Crucete, Quassia, Cuassia, Cuachi, Fliegenholz, Guabo, Hombre grande, Jamaica bark, Kashshing, Marauba, Marupa, Palo muneco, Pau amarelo, Quassia amarga, Quassiawood, Ruda, Simaruba, Simarubabaum, Quassiaholz, Quassia de cayenne, Quassie, Quina, Simaba, Suriname wood Morphology, life form and growth Ī small, multistemmed and slow growing tree with a disorderly growth twiggy limbs. Also in herbal medicine in the United States and Europe very little distinction is made between these two species of trees they are used identically and just called quassia. excelsa is with up to 25 m in height much taller, and occurs farther north in the tropics of Jamaica, the Caribbean, the Lesser Antilles, and northern Venezuela than Quassia amara. Quassia amara is marketed and used interchangeably with another tree species Picrasma excelsa, sharing the common name of quassia (and many of Quassia amara's constituents and uses). For its beauty, quassia is also grown as ornamental plant. Trunk wood, roots, bark, stems, leaves, flowers and seeds are harvested to gain extracts of the plant. All plant parts are useful for medicinal properties and the bark extracts are mainly used as flavoring in drinks but also for insecticides. Therefore, it is used as insecticide, in traditional medicine against lot of disease and as bitter tasting additive in the food industry. amara contents more than thirty phytochemicals with biological activities in its tissues including the very bitter compound quassin. The name "amara" means "bitter" in Latin and describes its very bitter taste. amara was named after called Graman Quassi, and enslaved healer and botanist who showed Europeans the plant's fever treating uses. Quassia (genus) amara (species) is an attractive small evergreen shrub or tree from the tropics and belongs to the family Simaroubaceae. 6.3.1 Potential effects on human health.
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