Senna tora
This article needs additional citations for verification. (August 2017) |
- This page is about the Cassia tora described by Linnaeus. Later authors usually applied the taxon to Senna obtusifolia.
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Species: | S. tora
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Binomial name | |
Senna tora (L.) Roxb.
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Numerous, see text |
Senna tora (originally described by Linnaeus as Cassia tora) is a dicot legume in the subfamily Caesalpinioideae. Its name is derived from its Sinhala name Tora (තෝර). It grows wild in most of the tropics and is considered a weed in many places. Its native range is in Central America.[1] Its most common English name is Sickle Senna[2] or Sickle Wild sensitive-plant.[3] Other common names include sickle pod, tora, coffee pod, tovara, chakvad, thakara in Malayalam and foetid cassia.[4] It is often confused with Chinese Senna or Sicklepod, Senna obtusifolia.
Description
The Cassia tora is an herbaceous annual foetid herb. The plant can grow 30–90 centimetres (12–35 in) tall and consists of alternative pinnate leaves with leaflets mostly with three opposite pairs that are obovate in shape with a rounded tip. The leaves grow up to 3–4.5 centimeters long. The stems have distinct smelling foliage when young. The flowers occur in pairs in axils of leaves with five petals and pale yellow in colour. The stamens are of unequal length. The pods are somewhat flattened or four angled, 10–15 cm long and sickle shaped, hence the common name sickle pod. There are 30–50 seeds within a pod.[citation needed]
Growing conditions
Casia tora is considered an annual weed, is very stress tolerant, and is easily grown. In India, it occurs as a wasteland rainy season weed and its usual flowering time is after the monsoon rains, during the period of October to February. Cassia tora grows in dry soil from sea level up to 1800 meters. The seed can remain viable for up to twenty years. Up to 1000 plants can emerge per square meter following rain. Once the seed has matured, it is gathered and dried in the sun. In South Asia, it usually dies off in the dry season of July–October.[citation needed]
Pests/diseases
In Vanuatu, which is an island in the South Pacific, Cassia tora has been known to suffer limited damage by the leaf-eating larvae of a species of moth called Stegasta variana, a Gelechild moth.[citation needed]
Uses
Cassia tora has many uses. The whole plant and roots, leaves, and seeds have been widely used in traditional Indian and South Asian medicine. The plant and seeds are edible. Young leaves can be cooked as a vegetable while the roasted seeds are used as a substitute coffee. In Sri Lanka, the flowers are added to food. It is used as a natural pesticide in organic farms, and as a powder commonly used in the pet food industry. It is mixed with guar gum for use in mining and other industrial applications. The seeds and leaves are used to treat skin disease and its seeds can be utilized as a laxative. Cassia tora is made into tea. In the Republic of Korea, it is believed to rejuvenate human vision. This tea has been referred to as “coffee-tea”, because of its taste and its coffee aroma. Since Cassia tora has an external germicide and antiparasitic character, it has been used for treating skin diseases such as leprosy, ringworm, itching and psoriasis and also for snakebites. Other medicinal provisions from plant parts include balm for arthritis using leaves of Cassia tora.[citation needed] Cassia tora is one of the recognized plants that contain the organic compound anthraquinone and is used in Chinese and Ayurvedic medicine. This herb is used in Ayurveda for treatment of swellings.[citation needed]
Nutritional information
A natural gelling agent that has industrial and food benefits is made from the seed. The primary chemical constituents of the seed include cinnamaldehyde, gum, tannins, mannitol, coumarins and essential oils (aldehydes, eugenol and pinene). The seeds also contain sugars, resins and mucilage, among other elements.[citation needed]
Economics
The galactomannans (a form of polysaccharide) from Cassia tora (CT gum), after proper processing and chemical derivatization (converting chemical into a product of a similar structure), could function as an improved and more economical thickener than locust bean gum for textiles, because of the bean gum’s current high price ($18/kg) and limited availability. Most of the CT-gum processing plants in India are located in Gujarat state because of the availability of Cassia tora beans in the neighbouring states, but the widespread use of these beans as vegetables and seeds as cattle feed has been pushing up the raw material cost for the CT-gum industry. The total fixed capacity in the country is 0.2 million tonnes for splits and 59,000 for powder based on Cassia tora seeds. The capacity utilization in the industry has been around 70 percent for the last three years. Apart from domestic consumption, there are now noteworthy exports of cassia powder of the international standard to various countries. This includes the United States of America, Australia, Germany, France, Spain, Denmark, Italy, the Netherlands, Belgium, New Zealand, the United Kingdom, Singapore and Japan. The export value of Cassia tora has been progressively increasing over the last five years. Comprehensive export data disclosed that Japan and the UK receive a regular supply, while the United States market fluctuates. However, the export growth rate of Cassia tora plainly shows the difference between quantity and value, which leads to a low price per unit price.[citation needed]
Constraints for wider use
Cassia tora is not well known by sustenance farmers in regions where it is optimal to plant. Cassia tora is affordable, and can be used for the production for CT gum.[citation needed]
Cultivation
Soak the seeds for 2–3 hours in warm water before sowing it from early spring to early summer in a warm greenhouse or pot in your own home. The seed usually germinates in 1–12 weeks at 23°C. Cassia tora can be transplanted.[citation needed]
Synonyms
The taxonomic history of this plant is extremely confused, even by the standards of Senna and Cassia. S. tora and S. obtusifolia were for long and are often still held to be—and may eventually be verified as—a single species. Hence, taxa referring to either species were indiscriminately applied to both.[5]
- Cassia boreensis Miq.
- Cassia borneensis Miq.
- Cassia gallinaria Collad.
- Cassia numilis Collad.
- Apparently a misprint for Cassia humilis, which would have been applied to this species in error as it is properly a synonym of Senna obtusifolia and Chamaecrista kunthiana, depending on the author.
- Cassia tora L.
- As discussed above, the Cassia tora of other authors refers to Senna obtusifolia
- Cassia tora L. var. borneensis (Miq.) Miq.
- Cassia tora L. var. b, var. humilis, and var. obtusifolia all refer to Senna obtusifolia
- Emelista tora Britton & Rose
Habitat
Cassia tora is found in many parts of the world. It grows abundantly in parts of Afghanistan, India, Nigeria, China, Pakistan, Myanmar, Nepal and Bhutan. It is also grown and cultivated areas in the Himalayas at the elevation of 1400 meters in Nepal. It is distributed throughout India, Sri Lanka, West China and the tropics, particularly in forest and tribal areas.[citation needed]
It is considered invasive in New-Caledonia.[6]
Gallery
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growing plant, about two weeks old
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old branch with seeds
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Cassia tora
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Pollens of Senna tora
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Pollens of Senna tora
Footnotes
- ^ "Senna tora (L.) Roxb". Plants of the World Online. Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew. Retrieved 7 May 2018.
- ^ USDA, NRCS (n.d.). "Senna tora". The PLANTS Database (plants.usda.gov). Greensboro, North Carolina: National Plant Data Team. Retrieved 10 November 2015.
- ^ NatureServe (2007)
- ^ Country Compass [1] Food and Agriculture Organization
- ^ ILDIS (2005)
- ^ Hequet, Vanessa (2009). Les espèces exotiques envahissantes de Nouvelle-Calédonie (PDF) (in French). p. 17.
References
- International Legume Database & Information Service (ILDIS) (2005): Senna tora (L.) Roxb.. Version 10.01, November 2005. Retrieved 2007-DEC-20.
- NatureServe (2007): Senna tora (L.) Roxb. species factsheet. Version 6.3, 2007-OCT-29. Retrieved 2007-DEC-20.
External links 1.https://www.altranatureingredients.com/cassia-tora-split-cassia-toreaobtusifolia-split/ 2.https://www.researchgate.net/publication/307618983_Experimental_Validation_of_Antidiabetic_and_Antioxidant_Potential_of_Cassia_tora_L_An_Indigenous_Medicinal_Plant 3.https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s13204-015-0422-x
4.https://www.researchgate.net/publication/228774807_Antibacterial_Activity_of_Cassia_tora_Leaves
5.http://ijpsr.com/bft-article/cassia-tora-linn-an-overview/?view=fulltext
6.https://www.agrogums.com/blog/category/cassia-powder/cassia-tora-powder/
7.https://pdfs.semanticscholar.org/2be5/2fbee1a9fdfb7ff081edaf3ca4a7910925bf.pdf
8.https://www.ijrra.net/Vol4issue2/IJRRA-04-02-26.pdf
9.https://pdfs.semanticscholar.org/cfb8/a1957783056bc6fb8e07ed8c78891370dbb6.pdf
10.http://helix.dnares.in/wp-content/uploads/2018/01/4_Helix_202-205.pdf
11.https://updatepublishing.com/journal/index.php/rrst/article/view/681