Canavalia Rosea (Swartz) DC

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Canavalia Rosea (Swartz) DC Canavalia rosea (Swartz) DC. Identifiants : 6152/canros Association du Potager de mes/nos Rêves (https://lepotager-demesreves.fr) Fiche réalisée par Patrick Le Ménahèze Dernière modification le 30/09/2021 Classification phylogénétique : Clade : Angiospermes ; Clade : Dicotylédones vraies ; Clade : Rosidées ; Clade : Fabidées ; Ordre : Fabales ; Famille : Fabaceae ; Classification/taxinomie traditionnelle : Règne : Plantae ; Sous-règne : Tracheobionta ; Division : Magnoliophyta ; Classe : Magnoliopsida ; Ordre : Fabales ; Famille : Fabaceae ; Genre : Canavalia ; Synonymes : Canavalia apiculata Piper, Canavalia arenicola Piper, Canavalia baueriana Endl, Canavalia emarginata (Jacq.) G. Don, Canavalia maritima (Aubl.) Thouars, Canavalia miniata (Kunth) DC, Canavalia moneta Welw, Canavalia obcordata Voigt, Canavalia obtusifolia (Lam.) DC, Canavalia obtusifolia (Lam.) DC. var. emarginata (Jacq.) DC, Canavalia obtuifolia (Lam.) DC. var. insularis Ridl, Canavalia podocarpa Dunn, Clitoria rotundifolia (Vah.) Sesse & Mocino, Dolichos emarginatus Jacq, Dolichos littoralis Vell, Dolichos maritimus Aubl, Dolichos miniatus Kunth, Dolichos obcordatus Roxb, Dolichos obovatus Schum. & Thonn, Dolichos obtusifolius Lam, Dolichos roseus Sw ; Nom(s) anglais, local(aux) et/ou international(aux) : Mackenzie Bean, Fire Bean, Coastal jack bean, , Fanta, Fue fai va'a, Kachang laut, Kachang rang-rang, Kam pra, Kia tia, Lerelere, N'habo, Nhabo, Norfolk Island bean, Tagale, Tobalo-sosso, Tua- kla ; Rapport de consommation et comestibilité/consommabilité inférée (partie(s) utilisable(s) et usage(s) alimentaire(s) correspondant(s)) : Parties comestibles : graines, gousses, fleurs, fruits{{{0(+x) (traduction automatique) | Original : Seeds, Pods, Flowers, Fruit{{{0(+x) ATTENTION: Les graines sont crues vénéneuses. Les graines sont comestibles après une cuisson complète. Ils sont également torréfiés et moulus et utilisés comme substitut du café. Les fleurs sont consommées comme arôme. Ils sont utilisés dans les sauces. Les gousses sont comestibles lorsqu'elles sont jeunes. Partie testée : fruit{{{0(+x) (traduction automatique) Original : Fruit{{{0(+x) Taux d'humidité Énergie (kj) Énergie (kcal) Protéines (g) Pro- Vitamines C (mg) Fer (mg) Zinc (mg) vitamines A (µg) 10.4 0 0 4.3 0 0 0 0 néant, inconnus ou indéterminés. Illustration(s) (photographie(s) et/ou dessin(s)): Page 1/3 Autres infos : dont infos de "FOOD PLANTS INTERNATIONAL" : Distribution : C'est une plante tropicale. Il se produit dans les tropiques et dans les régions subtropicales. Il est très courant le long des côtes. Il se produit sur les plages de sable à marée haute. Il peut pousser dans des endroits arides. Ils ont besoin d'un sol bien drainé et d'une position ensoleillée. Il convient aux zones de rusticité 9-12{{{0(+x) (traduction automatique). Original : It is a tropical plant. It occurs throughout the tropics and into the subtropics. It is very common along sea shores. It occurs on sandy beaches at high tide mark. It can grow in arid places. They need a well drained soil and a sunny position. It suits hardiness zones 9-12{{{0(+x). Localisation : Afrique, Samoa américaines, Angola, Asie, Australie, Bénin, Cameroun, Afrique centrale, Chine, Colombie, Congo, Côte d'Ivoire, République dominicaine, Afrique de l'Est, Timor oriental, Guinée équatoriale, Fidji, Gambie, Ghana, Guyane, Guyanes, Guinée, Guinée, Guinée-Bissau, Guyane, Haïti, Inde, Indochine, Côte d'Ivoire, Japon, Kenya, Libéria, Malaisie, Marquises, Mauritanie, Micronésie, Mozambique, Nauru, Nigéria, Île Norfolk, Pacifique, Palaos, Papouasie-Nouvelle-Guinée, PNG, Porto Rico, Sao Tomé-et-Principe, Asie du Sud-Est, Sénégal, Sierra Leone, Somalie, Afrique du Sud, Amérique du Sud, Suriname, Taiwan, Tanzanie, Thaïlande, Timor-Leste, Togo, Tonga, Vanuatu, Venezuela, Vietnam, Iles Vierges, Afrique de l'Ouest, Antilles, Zambie{{{0(+x) (traduction automatique). Original : Africa, American Samoa, Angola, Asia, Australia, Benin, Cameroon, Central Africa, China, Colombia, Congo, Côte d'Ivoire, Dominican Republic, East Africa, East Timor, Equatorial-Guinea, Fiji, Gambia, Ghana, Guiana, Guianas, Guinea, Guinée, Guinea-Bissau, Guyana, Haiti, India, Indochina, Ivory Coast, Japan, Kenya, Liberia, Malaysia, Marquesas, Mauritania, Micronesia, Mozambique, Nauru, Nigeria, Norfolk Island, Pacific, Palau, Papua New Guinea, PNG, Puerto Rico, Sao Tome and Principe, SE Asia, Senegal, Sierra Leone, Somalia, South Africa, South America, Suriname, Taiwan, Tanzania, Thailand, Timor-Leste, Togo, Tonga, Vanuatu, Venezuela, Vietnam, Virgin Islands, West Africa, West Indies, Zambia{{{0(+x). Notes : Il existe environ 50 espèces de Canavalia{{{0(+x) (traduction automatique). Original : There are about 50 Canavalia species{{{0(+x). Liens, sources et/ou références : dont classification : dont livres et bases de données : 0"Food Plants International" (en anglais) ; dont biographie/références de 0"FOOD PLANTS INTERNATIONAL" : Barrau, J., 1976, Subsistence Agriculture in Melanesia. Bernice P. Bishop Museu, Bulletin 219 Honolulu Hawaii. Kraus reprint. p 52 (As Canavalia obtusifolia) ; Bircher, A. G. & Bircher, W. H., 2000, Encyclopedia of Fruit Trees and Edible Flowering Plants in Egypt and the Subtropics. AUC Press. p 80 (As Canavalia maritima) ; Bodkin, F., 1991, Encyclopedia Botanica. Cornstalk publishing, p 210 (Also as Canavalia maritima) ; Borrell, O.W., 1989, An Annotated Checklist of the Flora of Kairiru Island, New Guinea. Marcellin College, Victoria Australia. p 89 ; Brock, J., 1993, Native Plants of Northern Australia, Reed. p 113 ; Burkill, H. M., 1985, The useful plants of west tropical Africa, Vol. 1. Kew. ; Burkill, I.H., 1966, A Dictionary of the Economic Products of the Malay Peninsula. Ministry of Agriculture and Cooperatives, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. Vol 1 (A-H) p 439 ; Cherikoff V. & Isaacs, J., The Bush Food Handbook. How to gather, grow, process and cook Australian Wild Foods. Ti Tree Press, Australia p 198 ; Cooper, W. and Cooper, W., 2004, Fruits of the Australian Tropical Rainforest. Nokomis Editions, Victoria, Australia. p 204 ; Cribb, A.B. & J.W., 1976, Wild Food in Australia, Fontana. p 94, 176 (As Canavalia maritima) ; Cundall, P., (ed.), 2004, Gardening Australia: flora: the gardener's bible. ABC Books. p 324 ; Elliot, W.R., & Jones, D.L., 1982, Encyclopedia of Australian Plants suitable for cultivation. Vol 2. Lothian. p 456 ; Facciola, S., 1998, Cornucopia 2: a Source Book of Edible Plants. Kampong Publications, p 103 (As Canavalia maritima) ; Flora of Australia Volume 49, Oceanic Islands 1, Australian Government Publishing Service, Canberra. (1994) p 183 ; Fowler, D. G., 2007, Zambian Plants: Their Vernacular Names and Uses. Kew. p 80 ; Franklin, J., Keppel, G., & Whistler, W., 2008, The vegetation and flora of Lakeba, Nayau and Aiwa Islands, Central Lau Group, Fiji. Micronesica 40(1/2): 169â??225, Page 2/3 2008 ; Greig, D., 1996, Flowering Natives for Home Gardens. Angus & Robertson. p 106 (As Canavalia maritima) ; Haslam, S., 2004, Noosa's Native Plants. Noosa Integrated Catchment Assn. Inc. p 18 ; Hibbert, M., 2002, The Aussie Plant Finder 2002, Florilegium. p 59 (As Canavalia maritima) ; Jones, D.L. & Gray, B., 1977, Australian Climbing Plants. Reed. p 50, 60, 86 (As Canavalia maritima) ; J. Bot. Agric. 1:80. 1813 (As Canavalia maritima) ; Kenneally, K.E., Edinger, D. C., and Willing T., 1996, Broome and Beyond, Plants and People of the Dampier Peninsula, Kimberley, Western Australia. Department of Conservation and Land Management. p 153 ; Lazarides, M. & Hince, B., 1993, Handbook of Economic Plants of Australia, CSIRO. p 46 ; Leiper, G & Houser, J., Mutooroo. Plant Use by Australian Aboriginal People. Assembly press, Queensland. (As Canavalia maritima) ; Low, T., 1991, Wild Food Plants of Australia. Australian Nature FieldGuide, Angus & Robertson. p 32 ; Low, T., 1992, Bush Tucker. Australiaâ's Wild Food Harvest. Angus & Robertson. p 23 ; Massal, E. and Barrau, J., 1973, Food Plants of the South Sea Islands. SPC Technical Paper No 94. Nounea, New Caledonia. p 30 (As Canavalia obtusifolia) ; McMakin, P.D., 2000, Flowering Plants of Thailand. A Field Guide. White Lotus. p 95 ; Melzer, R. & Plumb, J., 2011, Plants of Capricornia. Belgamba, Rockhampton. p 367 ; Paczkowska, G . & Chapman, A.R., 2000, The Western Australian Flora. A Descriptive Catalogue. Western Australian Herbarium. p 419 ; Peekel, P.G., 1984, (Translation E.E.Henty), Flora of the Bismarck Archipelago for Naturalists, Division of Botany, Lae, PNG. p 257, 254 ; Peters, C. R., O'Brien, E. M., and Drummond, R.B., 1992, Edible Wild plants of Sub-saharan Africa. Kew. p 131 ; Pham-Hoang Ho, 1999, An Illustrated Flora of Vietnam. Nha Xuat Ban Tre. p 945 (As Canavalia maritima) ; Plants of Haiti Smithsonian Institute http://botany.si.edu/antilles/West Indies ; Prodr. 2:404. 1825 ; Recher, P, 2001, Fruit Spirit Botanical Gardens Plant Index. www.nrg.com.au/~recher/ seedlist.html p 5 (As Canavalia maritima) ; Reis, S. V. and Lipp, F. L., 1982, New Plant Sources for Drugs and Foods from the New York Botanical Garden herbarium. Harvard. p 130 (As Canavalia maritima) ; Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew (1999). Survey of Economic Plants for Arid and Semi-Arid Lands (SEPASAL) database. Published on the Internet; http://www.rbgkew.org.uk/ceb/sepasal/internet [Accessed 28th April 2011] ; Scarth-Johnson, V., 2000, National Treasures. Flowering Plants of Cooktown and Northern Australia. Vera Scarth-Johnson Gallery Association. Cooktown, Australia. p 128 ; Seidemann J., 2005, World Spice Plants.
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