About Us
News
Announcement
Research
Conservation & Horticulture
Public Education
Graduate Study
Scientist
International Cooperation
Resources
Annual Reports
Publications & Papers
Visit XTBG
Societies
XTBG Seminar
Open Positions
4th XSBN Symposium
CAS-SEABRI
PFS-Tropical Asia
Links
 
   Location:Home > Resources > Multimedia
African Tulip Tree
Author: Pictured by Jiang Hong
ArticleSource:
Update time: 2010-05-21
Close
Text Size: A A A
Print
 Spathodea nilotica
 
 
Synonyms
Spathodea danckelmaniana, Spathodea nilotica, Spathodea tulipifera.
Common name
African tulip tree, flame of the forest, fountain tree, fireball, Afrikanischer Tulpenbaum, baton du sorcier, tulipier du Gabon.
Family
Bignoniaceae (Trumpet creeper family).

Overview
Originally from Equatorial Africa, the evergreen African tulip tree can be found abundantly in Suriname; it is a spectacular flowering tree.
It is a fast-growing, about 80' tall, ever-blooming tree. The wood is known to be very soft and brittle.
The trunk is light gray and somewhat buttressed.
When young, the leaves are bronze; deep glossy-green at maturity.
Large clusters of velvety, bronze-green, kidney-shaped buds are to see at the ends of the branches.
Flame of the forest is an ornamental tree in the tropics. The unopened buds contain water, which squirt when squeezed or pierced, for instance by birds.
Out of each bud come, large orange-red flowers and because of those the tree is planted as an ornamental.
The many seeds (about 500) are in an 8" long legume that breaks open when it falls from the tree.
The seeds are very small with transparent winglets.
There is a rare yellow variety of the African tulip tree called Lutea.
The bark and leaves are used in traditional medicine in Ghana.
Bark is used in wound healing and especially burn healing. The bark and leaves shows a wide spectrum of antibacterial activity including anti-malarial activity.
Aqueous alcoholic decoctions of the leaves shows promise to be used for the treatment of malaria.
The stem bark decoction has shown hypoglycemic activity in mice.

Hardiness
USDA zone 10 - 11.
Propagation
Seeds and cuttings.
Culture
Full sun; moist rich soil, has some salt tolerance, foliage will be killed at 28 - 30° F, but the roots survive down to 20° F.
These tree are grown for shade and tropical effects.
Plant in frost free areas and/or protect from frost.
SPATHODEA CAMPANULATA - AFRICAN TULIP TREE.

Spatodea Campanulata
 
 
  Appendix Download
Xishuangbanna Tropical Botanical Garden, Chinese Academy of Sciences. Menglun, Mengla, Yunnan 666303, China
Copyright XTBG 2005-2014 Powered by XTBG Information Center