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Family:
Rubiaceae
Latin name: Genipa americana
Vernacular
name
Huito
Ethnobotany
The large fruits are eaten raw, or cooked with sugar to flavor liquor
("huitoachado") and make a type of preserve. The juice
is used as a dye for many needs, including the skin. The fruit is
also used for respiratory ailments, and can be cooked into a cough
and sore throat remedy. The wood is excellent for carving.
Agroforestry
Huito prefers alluvial soils, and grows very quickly (producing
in 3 years), even in heavily flooded fields. It can be planted,
but more often than not is cultivated from human, animal, or water-dispersed
seeds. It should be spaced at least six meters apart. The canopy
is large, but light, with frequent shedding of leaves. It serves
as an excellent climbing tree to utilize for harvesting other trees
that are difficult to climb. Popular in homegardens, the fruit attracts
animals, which are then hunted.
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