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Facts about Lollipop Climber

Lollipop climber Quick Facts
Name: Lollipop climber
Scientific Name: Diplocyclos palmatus
Origin Malesia phytoregion, including Papua New Guinea, and in Australia, in Western Australia, Northern Territory, Cape York Peninsula
Colors Initially green with white blotched stripes and later turn a bright red- orange color when ripe
Shapes Sub globose, indehiscent berry 1.5–2.5 cm in diameter, solitary or clustered, red with silvery white longitudinal stripes
Taste Acrid, Bitter
Health benefits Beneficial for ague, colic pain, enlarged spleen, paralysis of tongue, delirium, convulsions, leucorrhoea, asthma, bronchitis, carbuncles, cholera, colic, cough, fertility, headache, megalosplenyb, phthisis and snake bite
  Diplocyclos palmatus also known as cucumber, striped cucumber or native bryony is a vine in the family Cucurbitaceae. It is commonly known as cucumber, native bryony, striped cucumber, lollipop climber, marble vine and red-striped cucumber. The plant is native to rainforests and dry rainforests habitats in the Malesia phyto region, including Papua New Guinea, and in Australia, in Western Australia, Northern Territory, Cape York Peninsula, North East Queensland, southwards to north-eastern New South Wales. The Latin name Diplocyclos is derived from the Greek word Diplos which means double and kyklos which means ring, and signifies the tendrils coiling. All parts of the plant are toxic in large quantities. The fruits have been supposed of causing illness and death in children. The likeness of the fruits to lollipops makes them very attractive to small children.

Plant Description

Lollipop climber is a short-lived, herbaceous, perennial climbing plant that grows about 6 m tall. The plant is found growing in rain, swamp or other ground-water forests, flood-plains, valley and seasonal swamp grasslands, old cultivations, thickets, monsoon forests, lowland and upland disturbed areas, and mountain rain forest. Annual, much-branched stems are up to 6 meters long from a fleshy rootstock. The stems scramble over the ground, climbing into the surrounding vegetation where it attaches itself by means of tendrils.

Leaves

Leaf-blade is broadly ovate-cordate in outline, glabrous except for a few forward-pointing aculei on the nerves beneath, gland-dotted just above the base, about 6-13 cm long and 6-12 cm broad, palmately 3–7-lobed.  Lobes are linear-lanceolate to long-elliptic, usually distinctly narrowed below, entire or especially in the upper parts sinuate or sub serrate with apiculate teeth, acuminate, obtuse to acute and apiculate. Petiole is about 2-4 cm long and is armed with a few forward-curving fairly stout aculeate hairs. Leaves emit an unpleasant odor when crushed. Upper surface of the leaf blade clothed in scattered scabrid hairs. Tendrils are 2- branched, leaf-opposed. Leaves are hairy and bright green on the upper surface and pale and smooth underneath.

Flowers

Usually one female flower and three male flowers are present in each leaf axil. Male flowers are about 20 mm in diameter. Hypanthium is 3-4 mm long, calyx lobes are about 2 mm long, bases inflated, and lobes spreading. Petals are 9-10 mm long, densely hairy on the inner surface. Anthers are 3-4 mm long, filaments about 2 mm long, very hairy towards the base. Two anthers are bilocular, one anther unilocular. Anther locules bent and twisted. Female flowers are about 15 mm in diameter. Calyx lobes are about 2 mm long, bases inflated, and lobes spreading. Petals are about 8 mm long, densely hairy on the inner surface. Staminodes 3, about 3 mm long, densely hairy. Style is about 3 mm long and then branching into 3 arms or stigmas. Flowering normally takes place from August and September.

Fruits

Fertile flowers are followed by ovoid to ellipsoid berry with a diameter of 2-3 cm found solitary or in clusters of 2–5 on 1–5 mm. long stalks. Berries are initially green with white blotched stripes and later turn a bright red- orange color when ripe. Ripe fruits bear 6-10 brown, obovate seeds per fruit. They are irregularly shaped, vaguely like tear drops or bird skulls. The compressed seeds have a length of 4 mm and width of 3 mm and they are usually encircled by a prominent raised band. The plant generally fruits in September and October.

Traditional uses and benefits of Lollipop climber

Ayurvedic Health benefits of Lollipop climber

Culinary uses

Other Facts

Precautions

References:

https://npgsweb.ars-grin.gov/gringlobal/taxonomydetail.aspx?id=409855

http://keys.trin.org.au/key-server/data/0e0f0504-0103-430d-8004-060d07080d04/media/Html/taxon/Diplocyclos_palmatus.htm

http://tropical.theferns.info/viewtropical.php?id=Diplocyclos+palmatus

https://www.flowersofindia.net/catalog/slides/Lollipop%20Climber.html

https://indiabiodiversity.org/species/show/229562

http://envis.frlht.org/plantdetails/a2fabc83839c69ce0bef32ea7db8a9b3/321f2c9e524b50a39528528a82602645

https://shodhganga.inflibnet.ac.in/bitstream/10603/192205/3/13.chapter3,review%20of%20literature.pdf

http://powo.science.kew.org/taxon/urn:lsid:ipni.org:names:292565-1

https://gd.eppo.int/taxon/DPYPA

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diplocyclos_palmatus

http://www.ijrpc.com/files/25-336.pdf

https://www.researchgate.net/publication/331821986_DIPLOCYCLOS_PALMATUS_A_PHYTOPHARMACOLOGICAL_REVIEW

https://uses.plantnet-project.org/en/Diplocyclos_palmatus_(PROTA)

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