Colubrina is a genus of about 30 species of flowering plants in the family Rhamnaceae, native to warm temperate to tropical regions of Africa, the Americas, southern Asia, northern Australia, and the Indian Ocean islands.
Names
Common names include nakedwood, snakewood, greenheart and hogplum. The generic name is derived from the Latin word coluber, meaning "snake", and refers to the snake-like stems or stamens.
Description
The species are shrubs and small trees growing tall, with simple ovate leaves. The flowers are small, greenish-white or yellowish; the fruit is a capsule containing three seeds.
Taxonomy
The genus is at least in part a wastebasket taxon, and revision will likely result in the renaming of a number of species to different genera in the future.
Selected species
- Colubrina angustior <small>(M.C.Johnst.) G.L.Nesom</small> (eastern Mexico)
- Colubrina arborescens <small>(Mill.) Sarg.</small> – Greenheart (southern Florida, southern Mexico, the Caribbean, Central America)
- Colubrina articulata <small>(Capuron) Figueiredo</small>
- Colubrina asiatica <small>(L.) Brongn.</small> – Asian nakedwood, ÃÂnapanapa kukuku (Hawaiian) (Indo-Pacific)
- Colubrina beccariana <small>Warb.</small> (Malaysia)
- Colubrina californica <small>I.M.Johnst.</small> – Las Animas nakedwood
- Colubrina cubensis <small>(Jacq.) Brongn.</small> – Cuban nakedwood (southern Florida, The Bahamas, Cayman Islands, Cuba)
- Colubrina decipiens <small>(Baill.) Capuron</small>
- Colubrina elliptica <small>(Sw.) Brizicky & W.L.Stern</small> – mabi, soldierwood (Florida Keys, Mexico, the Caribbean, Central America, Venezuela)
- Colubrina ferruginosa <small>Brongn.</small>
- Colubrina glandulosa <small>Perkins</small> – glandular nakedwood
- Colubrina greggii <small>S.Watson</small> â Sierra nakedwood
- Colubrina humbertii <small>(H.Perrier) Capuron</small>
- Colubrina nicholsonii <small>Van Wyk & Schrire</small> – Pondo snakewood, Pondo weeping thorn,
- Colubrina oppositifolia <small>Brongn. ex H.Mann</small> – kauila (Hawaii)
- Colubrina pedunculata <small>Baker f.</small> (Christmas Island)
- Colubrina pubescens <small>Kurz</small>
- Colubrina stricta <small>Engelm. ex M.C.Johnst.</small> – Comal nakedwood
- Colubrina texensis <small>(Torr. & A.Gray) A.Gray</small> – snakewood or Texan hogplum (Texas, northern Mexico)
- Colubrina verrucosa <small>(Urb.) M.C.Johnst.</small> – Urban's nakedwood
- Colubrina yucatanensis <small>(M.C.Johnst.) G.L.Nesom</small> (Yucatán Peninsula)
Formerly placed here
- Alphitonia excelsa <small>(Fenzl) Reissek ex Benth.</small> (as C. excelsa <small>Fenzl</small>)
Ecology
Colubrina species are used as food plants by the larvae of some Lepidoptera species including Bucculatrix kendalli which feeds exclusively on C. texensis. Colubrina asiatica, native to tropical Asia, eastern Africa and northern Australia, has become an invasive species in Florida.
Uses
In the Caribbean, the leaves and/or fruit and in some cases the bark of some species such as Colubrina elliptica (soldierwood) are used to produce a soft drink called mauby.
References
External links