Leírás
Zanthoxylum Alatum , Tüskefa, Nepáli Bors
A Zanthoxylum Alatum , Tüskefa, Nepáli Bors 2-4 méteres, lomblevelű örökzöld cserje, vagy kis fa.
Aromás illatú leveleivel, sűrű tüskéivel díszít.
Fekete, bors méretű fényes bogyótermései sokáig a bokron maradnak. Igazi ritkaság!
Jelen termékünk 2 literes konténerben és 30/40 cm magasságban kapható.
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zanthoxylum
Zanthoxylum is a genus of about 250 species of deciduous and evergreen trees, shrubs and climbers in the family Rutaceae that are native to warm temperate and subtropical areas worldwide. It is the type genus of the tribe Zanthoxyleae in the subfamily Rutoideae. Several of the species have yellow heartwood, to which their generic name alludes.[3]
Description[edit]
Plants in the genus Zanthoxylum are shrubs, trees or woody climbers armed with trichomes. The leaves are arranged alternately and are usually pinnate or trifoliate. The flowers are usually arranged in panicles and usually function as male or female flowers with four sepals and four petals, the sepals remaining attached to the fruit. Male flowers have four stamens opposite the sepals. Female flowers have up to five, more or less free carpels with the styles free or sometimes fused near the tip. The fruit is usually of up to four follicles fused at the base, each containing a single seed almost as large as the follicle.[4][5]
Taxonomy[edit]
The genus Zanthoxylum was first formally described in 1753 by Carl Linnaeus in the first volume of Species Plantarum.[6][7] The generic name is derived from Ancient Greek words ξανθός (xanthos), meaning „yellow,” and ξύλον (xylon), meaning „wood.” It is technically misspelled, as the z should be x, but botanical nomenclature does not allow for spelling corrections. It refers to a yellow dye made from the roots of some species.[8] The first species that Linnaeus described was Zanthoxylum trifoliatum, now regarded as a synonym of Eleutherococcus trifoliatus.[7][9] The once separate genus Fagara is now included in Zanthoxylum.[10]