Senna obtusifolia
Senna obtusifolia, known by common names including Chinese senna, American sicklepod and sicklepod, is a plant in the genus Senna, sometimes separated in the monotypic genus Diallobus. It grows wild in North, Central, and South America, Asia, Africa, and Oceania, and is considered a particularly problematic weed in many places. It has a long-standing history of confusion with Senna tora and that taxon in many sources actually refers to the present species.
In the traditional medicine of Eastern Asia, the seeds are called in Chinese, gyeolmyeongja in Korean, and ketsumeishi in Japanese.
The green leaves of the plant are fermented to produce a high-protein food product called kawal which is eaten by many people in Sudan as a meat substitute. Its leaves, seeds, and root are also used in folk medicine, primarily in Asia. It is believed to possess a laxative effect, as well as to be beneficial for the eyes. As a folk remedy, the seeds are often roasted, then boiled in water to produce sicklepod tea. The plant's seeds are a commercial source of cassia gum, a food additive usually used as a thickener and named for the Chinese Senna's former placement in the genus Cassia. Roasted and ground, the seeds have also been used as a substitute for coffee. In vitro cultures of S. obtusifolia such as hairy roots may be a source of valuable secondary metabolites with medical applications.
Taxonomy and naming
This species was first formally described in 1753 by Carl Linnaeus who gave it the name Cassia obtusifolia in Species Plantarum. In 1979, Howard Samuel Irwin and Rupert Charles Barneby transferred the species to the genus Senna as S. obtusifolia in the Memoirs of the New York Botanical Garden. The specific epithet means "blunt-leaved".S. obtusifolia is known by a number of common names. Apart from "sicklepod", sickle-pod senna, rarely "Chinese senna" or even "American sicklepod", it is also called arsenic weed, foetid cassia, or wild senna.
It is also known locally by common names such as "coffee weed" or "java bean" or "coffee pod", although the terms "coffee weed" or "coffee pod" are ambiguous as they also apply to S. tora. It may be called by the Hindi name "chakunda" in India, but this is also one of the names for S. tora.
Names in its native range are also:
- Chinese: pinyin: , though this could apply to S. tora or loosely to the Senna genus generally.
- Japanese:
- Korean:
- Vietnamese:
- Portuguese: fedegoso
- Hindi:
- Sanskrit: चक्रमर्द, प्रापुनाट, or प्रपुन्नाड.
Distribution and habitat
Ecology
Senna obtusifolia is non-nodulating and does not have a symbiotic association with soil bacteria, unlike other members of the family Fabaceae. Senna obtusifolia is usually self pollinated as many flowers being fertilized before opening, though the flowers are heavily visited by bees. Senna obtusifolia has one to two extrafloral nectaries on the upper surface of the rachis that usually attract ants, but occasionally attracts wasps, flies and small bees. It serves as a host plant for several Lepidoptera and other insects including Eurema lisa, Eurema nicippe, Phoebis sennae cubule and Calycomyza malvae. Northern bobwhite and greater prairie chickens are known to feed on the seeds. Mammalian herbivory is rare due to the foliage's foul taste and toxicity, which is known to poison livestock.Traditional Eastern medicine
The materia medica name for the seeds in Chinese is . The medicinal seeds are also known by the equivalent Korean name gyeolmyeongja in traditional Korean medicine, and by the Japanese name ketsumei-shi in kampō medicine.The jue ming zi is used widely in Asia, including Southeast Asian countries such as Thailand, and its herbal sicklepod tea is drunk instead of regular tea as a preventative for hypertension. It is also purported to have the ability to clear the eye. In Korea also, medicinal gyeolmyeongja is usually prepared as tea.
Senna tora the Japanese government's officially acknowledges both S. obtusifolia and S. tora to be commerced as ketsumeishi.
The Japanese beverage habu-cha, as the name suggests, was originally brewed from the seeds of the habusō or S. occidentalis, but currently marketed habu-cha uses S. obtusifolia as substitute, since it is a higher-yielding crop.