Zanthoxylum rhetsa explained

Zanthoxylum rhetsa, commonly known as Indian prickly ash,[1] is a species of flowering plant in the family Rutaceae and occurs from India east to the Philippines and south to northern Australia. It is a deciduous shrub or tree with cone-shaped spines on the stems, pinnate leaves with between nine and twenty-three leaflets, panicles of white or yellowish, male and female flowers, followed by spherical red, brown or black follicles.

Description

Zanthoxylum rhetsa is a shrub or tree that sometimes grows to a height of . The plant is sometimes deciduous and has stems with thick, cone-shaped spines on the older stems. The leaves are long and pinnate, with nine to twenty three egg-shaped to elliptical leaflets. The leaflets are long and wide, the side leaflets on petiolules long and the end leaflet on a petiolule long. The flowers are arranged on the ends of branchlets, sometimes also in leaf axils, in panicles up to long. Each flower is on a pedicel long, the four sepals joined at the base and long and the four petals white or yellowish white and long. Male flowers have stamens about long with a sterile carpel about long. Female flowers lack stamens and usually have a single carpel about long. Flowering occurs in summer and the fruit is a spherical red or brown to black follicle wide.[2] [3]

Taxonomy

Indian prickly ash was first formally described in 1820 by William Roxburgh who gave it the name Fagara rhetsa in his book, Flora Indica.[4] [5] In 1824, de Candolle changed the name to Zanthoxylum rhetsa in his book Prodromus Systematis Naturalis Regni Vegetabilis.[6] [7]

Distribution and habitat

Zanthoxylum rhetsa grows in rainforest and coastal thickets from sea level to an altitude of, and is found in India, east to the Philippines and south to northern Australia. It occurs in the northern Kimberley in Western Australia, the northern coastal areas of the Northern Territory, Cape York Peninsula in Queensland and on Gabba and Moa Islands in the Torres Strait.[8]

Uses

The people of Goa, the Konkan and Kanara coasts, and Coorg use the woody pericarp of the tiny fruits as a spice, particularly with seafood dishes. The spice is known as "teppal" in Konkani. The spice contains a chemical ingredient, sanshool, a local anesthetic that causes a tingling sensation on the tongue. Sanshool is also the main principle of Sichuan Pepper, which comes from the related species Zanthoxylum bungeanum and the Japanese/Korean pepper Zanthoxylum piperitum. Many butterflies, including Papilio buddha and Papilio helenus, use this as a host plant.[9]

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Zanthoxylum rhetsa - RUTACEAE. www.biotik.org. 2016-10-15. https://web.archive.org/web/20160901074443/http://www.biotik.org/india/species/z/zantrhet/zantrhet_en.html. 2016-09-01. live.
  2. Book: Hartley . Thomas G. . Annette J.G. Wilson . Flora of Australia (Volume 26) . 2013 . Australian Biological Resources Study . Canberra . 75–76 . 19 August 2020.
  3. Web site: F.A.Zich . B.P.M.Hyland . T.Whiffen . R.A.Kerrigan . Bernard Hyland . 2020 . Zanthoxylum rhetsa . Australian Tropical Rainforest Plants Edition 8 (RFK8) . . 27 June 2021.
  4. Web site: Fagara rhetsa. APNI. 19 August 2020.
  5. Book: Roxburgh . William . Wallich . Nathaniel . Flora indica, or, Descriptions of Indian plants . 1820 . Mission Press . Serampore . 438–439 . 19 August 2020.
  6. Web site: Zanthoxylum rhetsa. APNI. 19 August 2020.
  7. Book: de Candolle . Augustin Pyramus . Prodromus Systematis Naturalis Regni Vegetabilis . 1824 . Sumptibus Sociorum Treuttel et Würtz . Paris . 728 . 19 August 2020.
  8. Web site: Zanthoxylum rhetsa (Roxb.) DC. . Northern Territory Government . 19 August 2020.
  9. Web site: ButterflyCorner.net: Papilio helenus (Red Helen, Rote Helene). en.butterflycorner.net. 2016-10-15. https://web.archive.org/web/20161019002542/http://en.butterflycorner.net/papilio-helenus-red-helen-rote-helene.965.0.html. 2016-10-19. live.