Chisocheton erythrocarpus explained

Chisocheton erythrocarpus is a tree in the family Meliaceae. The specific epithet Greek, Modern (1453-);: erythrocarpus is from the Greek meaning 'red-fruited'.

Description

The tree grows up to 40m (130feet) tall with a trunk diameter of up to 40cm (20inches). The bark is dark grey to chocolate brown. The flowers are creamy-white. The fruits are round, yellow (blood-red when ripe), up to 60NaN0 in diameter.

Distribution and habitat

Chisocheton erythrocarpus is found in Peninsular Malaysia, Borneo and the Philippines. The habitat is coastal forest.

Phytochemicals

Eight previously unknown limonoids were identified via spectroscopy in the fruits of C. erythrocarpus gathered in Malaysia. These compounds were dubbed erythrocarpines after the species epithet.

The same study tested several preparations of C. erythrocarpus extract as larvicidal agent against Aedes aegypti mosquitoes; they found that 1000 ppm DCM extract resulted in 100% mortality of larva 24 hours after exposure.[1]

Notes and References

  1. Ngadni . Muhammad Afiq . Chong . Soon-Lim . Hazni . Hazrina . Asib . Norhayu . Ishak . Intan Haslina . Mohmad Misnan . Norazlan . Supratman . Unang . Awang . Khalijah . 2024-06-01 . Limonoids from the fruits of Chisocheton erythrocarpus and their mosquito larvicidal activities . Phytochemistry . 222 . 114092 . 10.1016/j.phytochem.2024.114092 . 0031-9422.