Canavalia ensiformis

Canavalia ensiformis

''Canavalia ensiformis'', or jack bean, is a legume which is used for animal fodder and human nutrition, especially in Brazil where it is called ''feijão-de-porco'' . It is also the source of concanavalin A.
Jack Bean (Canavalia ensiformis)  Canavalia ensiformis,Geotagged,India

Appearance

''C. ensiformis'' is a twining plant up to 1 metre in height. It has deep roots, which makes it drought resistant. The plant can spread via long runners. The flowers are pink-purple in colour. The pods are up to 36 centimetres long with large white seeds.

Naming

''C. ensiformis'' has numerous names in English. They include many that are misleading or ambiguous, being derived from comparing the Common Jack-bean to plants with similar seeds or fruit: they thrive in warm, sunny, places with lots of water or rain.

⤷ Brazilian broad bean
⤷ "Coffee bean"
⤷ Chickasaw lima bean
⤷ Ensiform bean
⤷ "Horse bean"
⤷ "Jack bean"
⤷ Mole bean
⤷ Overlook bean
⤷ Pearson bean
⤷ "Sword bean"
⤷ Wonder bean

Uses

The plant is not in large-scale commercial cultivation. The beans are mildly toxic, and copious consumption should be avoided. Boiling will, however, remove toxicity if done properly. Young foliage is also edible. The whole plant is used for fodder, although it cannot be used in fodder mixtures containing urea, since it contains large quantities of the enzyme urease, which liberates harmful ammonia from urea. For this reason ''C. ensiformis'' has been investigated as a potential source of the urease enzyme. It is also the source of concanavalin A, a lectin used in biotechnology applications, such as lectin affinity chromatography.

As a garden plant, it can grow to over 2 meters, provided it gets enough nutrients, rich soil, sun and warmth. It grows therefore in rich soil, or use extra nutrients, in a sunny warm place.

References:

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Taxonomy
KingdomPlantae
DivisionAngiosperms
ClassEudicots
OrderFabales
FamilyFabaceae
GenusCanavalia
SpeciesC. ensiformis
Photographed in
India