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Traditional uses and benefits of Purple Bauhinia

Purple Bauhinia Quick Facts
Name: Purple Bauhinia
Scientific Name: Bauhinia purpurea
Origin South China (which includes Hong Kong) and found throughout India. It is Indigenous to Southern Asia, South-Eastern Asia and widely distributed throughout the world and common in Himalayan, Sub-Himalayan and western track of India
Colors Green turning to brown as they mature
Shapes Brown, strap-shaped, not separate, elongated dehiscent pods, 15- 30 cm long, up to 1.5-2.5 cm wide, containing 10-15- shiny-brown seeds.
Taste Pungent
Health benefits Support ulcer, wound, glandular swelling, stomach tumor, diarrhea, dysentery, amoebic dysentery, ano-rectal, piles, lymph nodes swelling, lymph node enlargement, inflammatory swelling and hemorrhage-bleeding, cold and cough
Purple Bauhinia scientifically known as Bauhinia purpurea is a species of flowering plant in the Fabaceae / Leguminosae (Pea family). The plant is native to South China (which includes Hong Kong) and found throughout India. It is Indigenous to Southern Asia, South-Eastern Asia and widely distributed throughout the world and common in Himalayan, Sub-Himalayan and western track of India. In the United States of America, the tree grows in Hawaii, coastal California, southern Texas, and southwest Florida. Popular common names includes Hawaiian Orchid Tree, Hong Kong Orchid Tree, Pink Butterfly Tree, Purple Butterfly Tree, Purple Camel’s Foot, Purple Bauhinia, Purple Orchid Tree, Semki-Gona Gum, butterfly tree, camel’s foot tree, geranium tree, orchid tree, Mountain Ebony and Geranium Tree.

The genus name, Bauhinia was named after the Bauhin brothers Jean (1541-1613) and Gaspard (1560-1624), Swiss-French botanists. The two lobes of the leaf exemplify the two brothers. The specific epithet purpurea is from the Latin word purpura referring to the purple color of the flowers. The young leaves and flowers are eaten as a side dish with rice, or used to flavor meat and fish. Sometimes the seeds are edible. The bark is used to make rope and stems of smaller lianescent species are used for binding. Some bauhinia species are used for binding. Some bauhinia species reputed for their fiber application are used medicinally as well.

Purple Bauhinia Facts

Name Purple Bauhinia
Scientific Name Bauhinia purpurea
Native South China (which includes Hong Kong) and found throughout India. It is Indigenous to Southern Asia, South-Eastern Asia and widely distributed throughout the world and common in Himalayan, Sub-Himalayan and western track of India. In the United States of America, the tree grows in Hawaii, coastal California, southern Texas, and southwest Florida
Common Names Hawaiian Orchid Tree, Hong Kong Orchid Tree, Pink Butterfly Tree, Purple Butterfly Tree, Purple Camel’s Foot, Purple Bauhinia, Purple Orchid Tree, Semki-Gona Gum, butterfly tree, camel’s foot tree, geranium tree, orchid tree, Mountain Ebony, Geranium Tree, Alibangbang, Barada, Bol-megong, Bunga kupu-kupu, Ching-kho, Chuvannamandaram, Dev-Kanchan, Deva kanchan, Guiral, Jia telong, Kachnar, Kachner, Kairwal, Kanchanam, Kandan, Kaniar, Karalli, Karar, Keelra, Koiralo, Koliar, Kurul, Levosii, Mandari, Mong bo hoa tim, Msekese, Phak-siew, Rakia kanchan, Rakia-kanchan, Rato kanchan, Sarul, Shivapa, Sona, Tanki, Tapak kuda, Tapak unta, Vaubeh, Vau-fa-vang, Zi Yangtija
Name in Other Languages Afrikaans : Skoenlapperorgideëboom
Andhra Pradesh: Kanchanam
Assamese: Kurial, Kanchan, Og-yok, Ronga-kanchan, Tenga-kotora, Raṅā kāñcana (ৰঙা কাঞ্চন)
Bengali: Devakanchan (দেবকাঞ্চন), Kanchan, Rakta Kanchan, Raktakanchan, Singyara, Koiral
Burmese: Mahahlegani, swèý-tau ni
Chinese: Zi Yang Ti Jia (紫羊 蹄甲), Yang Ti Jia (羊蹄甲)
Cuba: Bauhinia, orquídea Silvestre, puente de mono
English: Butterfly Tree, Orchid Tree, Pink Butterfly Tree, Purple Bauhinia, Purple Butterfly Tree, Butterfly-orchid-tree, Butterfly-tree, Camel’s-foot, Orchidtree, Hawaiian Orchid Tree, Hong Kong Orchid Tree, Purple Camel’s Foot, Australian orchid tree, fall orchid tree,
Estonian: Purpur-sämplehik
Finnish: Punabauhinia
French : Arbre À Orchidées, Bauhinia À Fleurs Pourpres, Bauhinie, Bauhinier, fleurs pourpres
German: Purpurfarbener Orchideenbaum, Purpurrote Bauhinie, Schmetterlings-Bauhinie
Garo: Megong
Hebrew: בוהניה ארגמנית
Hindi: Ashta, Gairal, Guiral, Gurial, Jhinjhora, Kachnar, Kaliar, Kandan, Kaniar, Karal, Karial, Khairwal, Koilari, Koinar, Koliar, Kwiryal, Lal Karal, Makkuna, Mawai, Lal Kachnar, Sona , kovidaar (कोविदार), Kaniyar (कनियार), Baswanpada, chambali, devakanchan, kachan, kanchan, kanchivala, karar, keolav, kolia, kota, kurial, manmadarai, raktakanchan, sono, survannamansaran
Indonesia : Bunga kupu-kupu, suwoto, Aroy kupu-kupu
Japanese : Murasaki mokuwan-ju, Murasakisoshinka (ムラサキソシンカ)
Kannada: Arelu, Akilu, Banne, Basavanapadu, Deva Kaanchana (ದೇವಕಾಂಚನ), Kanchivaala, Kanchivala, Kanchuvaala (ಕಂಚುವಾಳ), Kancivala, Kanjivala, Kempu Kanchuvaala, Kempu Mandaara, Kempukanchavala, Kempukancivala, Kempukanjivala, Kempumandara, Kempu Kanchivaala, Kempumandaara, Mandara, Sarul, Uleppe, Ulipe, Kanchivaala (ಕಂಚಿವಾಳ), Kanchavaala (ಕಂಚವಾಳ), ಕಂಚಾಳ (Kanchaala), Kengaanchaala (ಕೆಂಗಂಚಾಳ)
Khasi: Dieng Long
Malaysia : Tapak Kuda, lupit, daun tangkop bedaup, akah punan, dakun punan, urok punan, dahup dahup, ikop, babayak
Malayalam: Chovanna-Mandaru, Chovannamandaru, Cuvannamandaram (ചുവന്നമന്ദാരം), Mandaram, Suvannamandaram,
Manipuri: Chingthao Angangba, Chingthrao nganglei-naba
Marathi: Atmatti, Kanchan, Dev Kanchan, Deva, Devana Kanchana, Kanchana, Ragtachandan, Ragthachandan,Rakta Kanchan, Raktha Kaanchan, Tambdo-Apto , Rakta kanchan (रक्त कंचन)
Mizoram: Vaube, Vaufavang
Nepali: Khwairalo, Koeralo, tanki (टाँकी)
Oriya: Borodo, Vaube
Pakistan: Kachan, karar, khairwal
Philippines : Alibang-bang
Portuguese: Pie De Cabra
Sanskrit: Camarikah, Kancanarah, Kanchan, Kovidara, Kovidarah, Mahayamalapatrakah, Raktakovidara, Raktapushpakovidara, Swetakancanara, Tamrapuspah, Vanaraja, Devakanchan (देवकाञ्चनः)
Singapore : Tapak Kuda
Spanish: Bauhinia roja, gorro de Napoleón, mariposa, palo de orquídeas, pie de cabra, pata de vaca
Sri Lanka : Kolar
Swedish : Purpurbauhinia
Tamil: Acanomantarai, Acanomantaraimaram, Acuvacam-purappu, Arputaveni, Atthi, Cikappu Mantarai, Compucikam, Kalavilaccai, Compucikamaram, Kalavilaichi, Kalarviluti, Kalaviluti, Mancaltarai, Karuppumantarai, Kattu Mantarai, Mancaltaraimaram, Mandarai, Mandari, Mandareh, Mandharai, Mantarai, Mantharai, Nilataru,
Mutiraikkali, Nilattiruvatti, Periyavatti, Punkaram, Purapicam, Segappumandarai, Ulittikam, Nilattiruvatti (நீலத்திருவத்தி)
Tangkhul: Haochokwon
Telugu: Aroe,Bodanta, Bodanta Chettu, Deva-Kasla, Kanchanam, Devakaanchanamu, Devakanjanamu, Kaanchanamu, Kanjanamu, Peddaare, Peddare, Peddari, Dēvakān̄canaṁ (దేవకాంచనం)
Thai : Chong Kho (ชงโค), Seaw Dok Dang, Sio Dak Dang sieowaan, sieo dok daeng
Tibetan: Go Bi Da Ra, Ko Bi Da Ra, Ko Bid Dri
Vietnamese : Mòng bò tím, Móng bò hoa đỏ, Mòng bò lan, Cây móng bò
Plant Growth Habit Small to medium-sized deciduous evergreen, fast-growing shrub or tree
Growing Climates Evergreen lowland rainforests, mountain forests, savanna, scrublands, dry deciduous forests and swamp forests. It can also grow in disturbed areas, secondary forest, along roadsides and in gardens, parks, and disturbed sites near urban areas
Soil Grows on a variety of sandy, loamy and gravelly soils in full sun in fertile, moisture-retentive but well-drained soils. It demands plenty of light and requires good drainage. However, it’s adaptable to any free-draining garden soils
Plant Size 7.6 m in height and 17.8 cm in diameter. It can reach a height of 4.6 m in less than 2 years
Trunk Woody with pale grey to brown coloured bark that is smooth to slightly fissured and scaly
Twigs Twigs are slender, light green, slightly hairy and angled
Leaf Leaves are simple, alternate, base rounded to shallow-cordate, up to 4.5–11 cm long and 4.5–10 cm wide, deeply 2-lobed at apex, margin entire and the surfaces smooth and glabrous, and 9- 11 nerved at base
Leaf fall January–March
Flowering season September to November
Flower flowers are conspicuous, pink and fragrant with five petals. Pedicels 5-13 mm long, stout, tementose, bract and bracteoles small tementose, deltoid. Calyx tementose, tube 7.5-10 mm long, limb long as the tube. Petals 3.8 to 5 cm long, oblanceolate, long clawed, spreadind veined. Stamens usually 3 fertile, others reduced to antherless filaments. Ovary downy, long-stalked; style long; stigma large, oblique
Fruit Shape & Size Brown, strap-shaped, not separate, elongated dehiscent pods, 15- 30 cm long, up to 1.5-2.5 cm wide, containing 10-15- shiny-brown seeds
Fruit Color Green turning to brown as they mature
Seed Shiny-brown, glabrous, dehiscent, rounded, flat seeds that are 13-16 mm in diameter and 1-2mm thick; twists as opens
Propagation By seeds, grafting, cuttings and air-layering
Taste Pungent
Plant Parts Used Bark, leaves, root, flowers stems
Season February to March

Plant Description

Purple Bauhinia is a small to medium-sized deciduous evergreen, fast-growing shrub or tree with a round, symmetrical, moderate dense crown, young branches becoming glabrous or nearly so (glabrescent). The plant normally grows about 7.6 m in height and 17.8 cm in diameter. It can reach a height of 4.6 m in less than 2 years. It is found growing in evergreen lowland rainforests, mountain forests, savanna, scrublands, dry deciduous forests and swamp forests. It can also grow in disturbed areas, secondary forest, along roadsides and in gardens, parks, and disturbed sites near urban areas. It grows on a variety of sandy, loamy and gravelly soils in full sun in fertile, moisture-retentive but well-drained soils. It demands plenty of light and requires good drainage. However, it’s adaptable to any free-draining garden soils. Trunk is woody with pale grey to brown colored bark that is fairly smooth to slightly fissured and scaly. The twigs are slender, light green, slightly hairy, and angled, becoming brownish grey. The heart-wood is brown, hard and durable.

Leaves

Leaves are simple, alternate, base rounded to shallow-cordate, up to 4.5–11 cm long and 4.5–10 cm wide, deeply 2-lobed at apex, margin entire and the surfaces smooth and glabrous, and 9- 11 nerved at base. The apex lobes are rounded or obtuse to sub-acute, minute stipules 1-2 mm long, petioles puberulous to glabrous, 2.5-3.5 cm long. Leaf blades are 4.5-11 cm long.

Leaf arrangement Alternate
Leaf type Simple
Leaf margin Cleft, lobed
Leaf shape Orbiculate
Leaf venation Palmate
Leaf type and persistence Deciduous
Leaf blade length 2 to 4 inches
Leaf color Green
Fall color No color change
Fall characteristic Not showy

 

Flower

Inflorescence a 6-10-flowered raceme in terminal panicles; flowers numerous, hypanthium, turbinate, purple to nearly white or at least purple marked, the flower buds clavate (club-shaped), velvety, ca 3-4 cm long prior to anthesis; fertile stamens 3 or 4, the anthers ca 6 mm long, versatile; ovary superior; corolla of 5 narrow petals and constricted at base, oblanceolate, 3-5 cm long, claws 5-10 mm long, the banner purple striate, 7 mm wide.  Calyx is tubular, erupted by corolla along one side when flower fully expanding; calyx split into 2 valves with 5 teeth. In fall, before the leaves drop, Orchid-Tree is festooned with many showy and delightfully fragrant, five-inch-wide blossoms, the narrow purple, pink, and lavender petals arranged to closely resemble an orchid. These flowers appear on the trees from September through November and are a beautiful sight to see, creating a vivid splash of color in the autumn landscape.

Flower color Red, purple, blue
Flower characteristics Very showy

 

Fruit

Fertile flowers are followed by 12-inch-long, slender, brown, flat seed pods which usually persist on the tree throughout the winter. Fruit is brown, strap-shaped, not separate, elongated dehiscent pods, 15- 30 cm long, up to 1.5-2.5 cm wide, containing 10-15- shiny-brown, glabrous, dehiscent, rounded, flat seeds that are 13-16 mm in diameter and 1-2mm thick; twists as opens. Seed forms very rapidly and trees in flower may already show numerous green pods. While most pods will open in the drier winter weather some may persist through to the next flowering season. Fruit mature in spring and summer. Fruit does not attract wildlife.

Fruit shape Elongated, pod or pod-like
Fruit length 6 to 12 inches
Fruit covering Dry or hard
Fruit color Brown
Fruit characteristics Does not attract wildlife; showy; fruit/leaves a litter problem

 

Traditional uses and benefits of Purple Bauhinia

Ayurvedic Health benefits of Purple Bauhinia

Culinary Uses

Other Facts

Other Different Products

Fodder: In an experiment in Nepal, it was found increase milk production in lactating buffaloes. Leaves make good fodder and are greedily eaten by sheep, goats and cattle with protein content estimated at 12.6%.

Tannin or dyestuff: Bark of various bauhinia species consist of considerable amounts of tannin widely used in leather industry in India. Medicinal uses of bark can be largely attributed to the presence of these tannins. Flavonoids are a common feature of Bauhinia.

Medicine: Throughout South-East Asia various parts of numerous Bauhinia species are used in poulticing to reduce swelling and bruises, and to ripen ulcerations and boils. Decoctions of various plant parts are taken internally as a febrifugal, anti-diarrheal and anti-dysenteric remedy and also it is used as an astringent. In India, the bark is extensively applied in glandular diseases and as a poison antidote while the leaves are administered as cough medicine. The flowers are said to be laxative and used in curries and pickles.

Lipid: Seeds consists of high amounts of linolenic and oleic fatty acids (15% of non-drying oil) and low amounts of myristic and linolenic fatty acids.

Gum or resin: The tree yield edible gum.

Fuel: It is also used as fuel wood; its calorific value is 4 800 kcal/kg.

Timber: The wood is used for agricultural implements.

Other products: Apart from being an ornamental it is well known as the source of Bauhinia purpurea agglutin (BPA), a lectin with an affinity to galactose and lactose, widely applied in biochemical, immunochemical and histo-chemical studies.

Services

Erosion control: Bauhinia purpurea with a deep root system and high root: shoot ratio may be a suitable species for slope stabilization.

Ornamental: B. purpurea is extensively planted as an ornamental tree in parks, gardens and homesteads, and along avenues for its showy fragrant, purple flowers. The weak wood is susceptible to breakage in storms; the abundant seedlings, which may germinate in the landscape; and the litter problem, created by the falling leaves, flowers, and seedpods

Precautions

References:

https://www.itis.gov/servlet/SingleRpt/SingleRpt?search_topic=TSN&search_value=26493#null

http://www.hear.org/pier/species/bauhinia_purpurea.htm

https://npgsweb.ars-grin.gov/gringlobal/taxon/taxonomydetail?id=6590

https://www.cabi.org/isc/datasheet/8638

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

http://www.theplantlist.org/tpl1.1/record/ild-823

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

https://pfaf.org/user/Plant.aspx?LatinName=Bauhinia+purpurea

http://www.flowersofindia.net/catalog/slides/Purple%20Orchid%20Tree.html

https://plants.usda.gov/home/plantProfile?symbol=BAPU

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