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Coconut
Palm
The
Coconut Palm, is a member of the palm family. It is the only
species in the Genus Cocos, and is a large palm, growing to
30 m tall, with pinnate leaves 4-6 m long, pinnae 60-90 cm
long; old leaves break away cleanly leaving the trunk
smooth. The term coconut refers to the fruit of the coconut
palm.
Origins
and Cultivation
The
origin of this plant are the subject of debate with some
authorities claiming it is native to Southeast Asia, while
others claim its origin is in northwestern South America.
Fossil records from New Zealand indicate that small,
coconut-like plants grew there as far back 15 million years
ago. Even older fossils have been uncovered in Rajasthan,
India. Regardless of its origin, the coconut has spread
across much of the tropics, probably aided in many cases by
sea-faring peoples. The fruit is light and buoyant and
presumably spread significant distances by marine currents:
fruits collected from the sea as far north as Norway have
been found to be viable (subsequently germinated under the
right conditions). In the Hawaiian Islands, the coconut is
regarded as a Polynesian introduction, first brought to the
Islands by early Polynesian voyagers from their homelands in
the South Pacific.
The
coconut palm thrives on sandy soils and is highly tolerant
of salinity and prefers areas with abundant sunlight and
regular rainfall (75-200 cm annually), which makes
colonizing shorelines of the tropics relatively
straight-forward. Coconuts also need high humidity
(70–80%+) for optimum growth, which is why they are rarely
seen in areas with low humidity (e.g. the Mediterranean),
even where temperatures are high enough. They are very hard
to establish and grow in dry climates.
The
flowers of the coconut palm are polygamomonoecious, with
both male and female flowers in the same inflorescence.
Flowering occurs continuously, with female flowers producing
seeds. Coconut palms are believed to be largely
cross-pollinated, although some dwarf varieties are
self-pollinating.
The
fruit
Botanically,
a coconut is a simple dry fruit known as a fibrous drupe
(not a true nut). The husk (mesocarp) is composed of fibres
called coir and there is an inner "stone" (the
endocarp). This hard endocarp (the coconut as sold in the
shops of non-tropical countries) has three germination pores
that are clearly visible on the outside surface once the
husk is removed. It is through one of these that the radicle
emerges when the embryo germinates. When viewed on end, the
endocarp and germination pores resemble the face of a
monkey, the Portuguese word for which is coco.
In
some parts of the world, trained monkeys are used to harvest
the coconut. Training schools for monkeys still exist in
southern Thailand. Competitions are held each year to
discover the fastest harvester.
Uses
All
parts of the coconut palm are useful, and the trees have a
comparatively high yield (up to 75 "nuts" per
year); it therefore has significant economic value. The name
for the coconut palm in Sanskrit is kalpa vriksha, which
translates as "the tree which provides all the
necessities of life". In Malay, the coconut is known as
pokok seribu guna, "the tree of a thousand
uses".
Uses
of the various parts of the palm include:
- The
white, fleshy part of the seed is edible and used fresh
or dried (desiccated) in cooking.
-
The
cavity is filled with "coconut water"
containing sugars, fibre, proteins, anti-oxidants,
vitamins and minerals, which provide excellent isotonic
electrolyte balance, and an exceptional nutritional food
source, which is why it is used as a refreshing drink
throughout the humid tropics. It is also used in the
making of the gelatinous dessert Nata de Coco. Mature
fruits have significantly less liquid than young
immature coconuts. Coconut water is sterile until the
coconut is opened (unless the coconut is spoiled).
- Coconut
milk (which is approximately 17% fat) is made by
processing grated coconut with hot water or hot milk
which extracts the oil and aromatic compounds from the
fibre.
- Coconut
cream is what rises to the top when coconut milk is
refrigerated and left to set.
- The
leftover fibre from coconut milk production is used as
livestock feed.
- The
sap derived from incising the flower clusters of the
coconut form a drink known as "toddy" or, in
the Philippines, tuba.
- Apical
buds of adult plants are edible and are known as
"palm-cabbage" (though harvest of this kills
the tree).
- The
interior of the growing tip may be harvested as
heart-of-palm and is considered a rare delicacy.
Harvesting this also kills the tree. Hearts of palm are
often eaten in salads; such a salad is sometimes called
"millionaire's salad".
- The
coir (the fibre from the husk of the coconut) is used in
ropes, mats, brushes, caulking boats and as stuffing
fibre; it is also used extensively in horticulture for
making potting compost.
- Copra
is the dried meat of the seed which is the source of
coconut oil.
- The
trunks provide building timbers.
- The
leaves provide materials for baskets and roofing
thatch.
- The
husk and shells can be used for fuel and are a good
source of charcoal.
- Hawaiians
hollowed the trunk to form a drum, a container, or even
small canoes.
- The
wood can be used for specialized construction (notably
in Manila's Coconut Palace).
- The
stiff leaflet midribs make cooking skewers, kindling
arrows, or bound into bundles, brooms and brushes.
- The
roots are used as a dye, a mouthwash, or a medicine for
dysentery. A frayed-out piece of root makes a poor man's
toothbrush.
- Half
coconut shells are used in theatres, banged together to
create the sound effect of a horse hoofbeats.
- Dried
half coconut shells are used to buff floors.
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