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Useful Tropical Plants

Vigna frutescens

A.Rich.

Fabaceae

+ Synonyms

Liebrechtsia esculenta De Wild.

Liebrechtsia katangensis De Wild.

Liebrechtsia kotschyi (Schweinf.) De Wild.

Liebrechtsia schweinfurthii De Wild.

Liebrechtsia spartioides (Taub.) De Wild.

Vigna buchneri Harms

Vigna debanensis Martelli

Vigna decipiens Harv.

Vigna esculenta (De Wild.) De Wild.

Vigna fragrans Baker f.

Vigna glandulosa Chiov.

Vigna harmsiana Buscal. & Muschl.

Vigna incana Taub.

Vigna katangensis (De Wild.) T.Durand & H.Durand

Vigna keniensis Harms

Vigna kotschyi Schweinf.

Vigna ledermannii Harms

Vigna longiloba Burtt Davy

Vigna neumannii Harms

Vigna pongolensis Burtt Davy

Vigna pseudotriloba Harms

Vigna spartioides Taub.

Vigna sudanica Baker f.

Vigna taubertii Volkens ex Harms

Vigna violacea Hutch.

Common Name:

No Image.

General Information

Vigna frutescens is a herbaceous perennial plant growing from a woody rootstock (the tuber is often 5cm wide). The stems scramble over the ground, twining into the surrounding vegetation for support; they are usually 50 - 150cm long, but can be up to 400cm when supported by other plants. After being cut back by fire, the plant will often start flowering when the stems are only 7 - 20cm long and still erect, before the leaves appear[
328
Title
African Flowering Plants Database
Publication
 
Author
 
Website
http://www.ville-ge.ch/musinfo/bd/cjb/africa/recherche.php
Publisher
Conservatoire et Jardin Botaniques.
Year
0
ISBN
 
Description
Contains information on over 150,000 plant names (including synonyms) giving a description and habitat, plus a distribution map.
,
332
Title
The Useful Plants of West Tropical Africa.
Publication
 
Author
Burkil. H. M.
Publisher
Royal Botanic Gardens; Kew.
Year
1985 - 2004
ISBN
 
Description
Brief descriptions and details of the uses of over 4,000 plants. A superb, if terse, resource, it is also available electronically on the Web - see http://www.aluka.org/
].
The plant is harvested from the wild for its root, which is used locally as a food. The plant bears fragrant, beautiful lavender-violet flowers and is sometimes grown as an ornamental in gardens[
332
Title
The Useful Plants of West Tropical Africa.
Publication
 
Author
Burkil. H. M.
Publisher
Royal Botanic Gardens; Kew.
Year
1985 - 2004
ISBN
 
Description
Brief descriptions and details of the uses of over 4,000 plants. A superb, if terse, resource, it is also available electronically on the Web - see http://www.aluka.org/
].

Known Hazards

None known

Botanical References

308
Title
Flora Zambesiaca
Publication
 
Author
 
Website
http://apps.kew.org/efloras/fz/intro.html
Publisher
 
Year
0
ISBN
 
Description
An excellent online flora of plants from the Zambezi River basin. It lists a number of the plant uses as well as the habitats and botanical descriptions of the plants.

Range

Africa - widespread from Ghana to Eritrea and Ethiopia, south to S. Africa, but absent from the areas of heavier rainfall.

Habitat

Woodland with Combretum collinum, C. molle, Annona senegalensis; or with Combretum molle, Stereospermum kunthianum, Erythrina abyssinica, Entada abyssinica; Loudetia arundinacea grassland on shallow soil, mostly subject to seasonal burning; etc[
328
Title
African Flowering Plants Database
Publication
 
Author
 
Website
http://www.ville-ge.ch/musinfo/bd/cjb/africa/recherche.php
Publisher
Conservatoire et Jardin Botaniques.
Year
0
ISBN
 
Description
Contains information on over 150,000 plant names (including synonyms) giving a description and habitat, plus a distribution map.
].

Properties

Edibility Rating *  *
Other Uses Rating *  *
HabitPerennial Climber
Height2.00 m
Cultivation StatusOrnamental, Wild

Cultivation Details



This species has a symbiotic relationship with certain soil bacteria; these bacteria form nodules on the roots and fix atmospheric nitrogen. Some of this nitrogen is utilized by the growing plant but some can also be used by other plants growing nearby[
755
Title
Nodulation Plants in GRIN Taxonomy
Publication
 
Author
 
Website
http://www.ars-grin.gov/~sbmljw/cgi-bin/taxnodul.pl?language=en
Publisher
United States Department of Agriculture
Year
0
ISBN
 
Description
An online database listing plants that have either positive or negative reports on root and stem nodulation with nitrogen-fixing bacteria.
].

Edible Uses

Roots - raw or cooked. The younger ones are often eaten raw, older ones either cooked or dried and ground to a powder[
1442
Title
Composition of Tubers Used by Hadza Foragers of Tanzania
Publication
Journal of Food Composition and Analysis (2001) 14, 15-25
Author
Schoeninger M.J.; Bunn H.T.; Murray S.S.; Marlett J.A.
Website
http://10.1006/jfca.2000.0961
Publisher
 
Year
2000
ISBN
 
Description
 
]. The roots are rather fibrous, traditionally they would be chewed and the fibrous portion spat out. If the root is dried and powdered, the fibre can be separated by sieving prior to cooking

Medicinal

None known

Other Uses

A fibre is obtained from the stem[
332
Title
The Useful Plants of West Tropical Africa.
Publication
 
Author
Burkil. H. M.
Publisher
Royal Botanic Gardens; Kew.
Year
1985 - 2004
ISBN
 
Description
Brief descriptions and details of the uses of over 4,000 plants. A superb, if terse, resource, it is also available electronically on the Web - see http://www.aluka.org/
].

Propagation

Seed -
Cite as: Tropical Plants Database, Ken Fern. tropical.theferns.info. 2024-04-25. <tropical.theferns.info/viewtropical.php?id=Vigna%20frutescens>

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