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Kerdas - Archidendron bubalinum (Jack) I.C.Nielsen - Fabaceae [1

38 - Kerdas - Archidendron bubalinum (Jack) I.C.Nielsen - Fabaceae
Synonym:
Pitchellobium bubalinum (Jack) Benth. [1]
Other names:

Jering tupai [1], keredas padi, keredas antan [2], genuak [1,3]

General information:
A large shady tree to 25 m tall [3,4], often in belukar.
Distinguish botanical characteristics:

Leaf – young shoot – purple, mature leaf – soft texture, green [4]
Inflorescence – huge panicle, flower – creamy yellow, fragrant [4]
Fruit pod – green (young), dark brown (fully ripe), seed – pale yellow (young), black (ripe)[4]
Heart wood – freshly cut wood and twig has a smell of garlic[1], hard bark, gray brown, cream coloured, sapwood – white to pale yellow[4]

Uses:

Medicinal uses – for diabetes and heart problems[5]
Seed – used for flavouring food (the djenkolic acid is removed by boiling the seed in 2-3 changes of water), also eaten raw as an appetiser by the Malays[2]
Wood – firewood[4]

Major/bioactive phytochemicals:

Seed – djenkolic acid (a poisonous compound), can cause djenkolism[2]
Fruit husk – hexadecanoic acids and their ester derivatives[5], immunostimulatory flavonoid – quercitrin[6]

Categories: List of plants