Handroanthus heptaphyllus

Handroanthus heptaphyllus
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Plantae
(unranked): Angiosperms
(unranked): Eudicots
(unranked): Asterids
Order: Lamiales
Family: Bignoniaceae
Tribe: Tecomeae
Genus: Handroanthus
Species: H. heptaphyllus
Binomial name
Handroanthus heptaphyllus
(Vell.) Mattos
Synonyms[1]
  • Bignonia heptaphylla Vell.
  • Handroanthus avellanedae var. paullensis (Toledo) Mattos
  • Handroanthus eximius (Miq.) Mattos
  • Handroanthus impetiginosus var. lepidotus (Bureau) Mattos
  • Tabebuia avellanedae var. paulensis Toledo
  • Tabebuia eximia (Miq.) Sandwith
  • Tabebuia heptaphylla (Vell.) Toledo
  • Tabebuia impetiginosa var. lepidota (Bureau) Toledo
  • Tabebuia ipe (Mart. ex K.Schum.) Standl.
  • Tecoma curialis Saldanha
  • Tecoma eximia Miq.
  • Tecoma impetiginosa var. lepidota Bureau
  • Tecoma ipe Mart. ex K.Schum.


Handroanthus heptaphyllus,[2] is a Bignoniaceae tree native to southern America. It is also known as Black Lapacho (lapacho negro), or tajy.

It grows in the high forest watershed of the Paraná River , Paraguay River , and Uruguay River. It has a limited distribution, almost exclusively inhabiting the low lands with wet and deep soils, where it forms part of the upper stratum. It is very rare in other microenvironments.  It is the national tree of Paraguay, declared as such in the Nº4631 Act of May 10, 2012, as proposed by the School of Chemical Sciences at the National University of Asunción.


Description

It is a very tall tree, growing up to 40 m in height. The leaves are 10-15 cm long, trifoliate with elliptical serrated leaflets. The trunk long, cylindrical, and stately. The bark is brown-gray, very rough, with deep cracks in adult specimens. The crown is hemispherical with open fan branches. Semi-persistent foliage. Leaves opposite, palmate, with 5-7 leaflets. The tree is semi-deciduous with purple/pink tubular flowers appearing before the leaves. The flowers can vary in color from bright pink to pale pink or even white. The fruit is a linear pod up to 30-40 cm long and 1-1.5 cm wide, brown when ripe, opening longitudinally into two leaflets and dropping some 150 winged seeds.

Flowering begins in the first half of September; approximately 30 days after the first leaves appear, with the seed pods ripening in January-February.

The tree is very decorative, and is frequently used in parks, squares and public woodland. It withstands high winds and has a strong and deep root system.

The tree is very demanding in terms of light and humidity, and is susceptible to frost when young. It prefers light, deep, moist soil.

Properties

The wood is hard and heavy, with well-marked differences between sapwood and heartwood timber. The heartwood turns a dark color on oxidation. The wood is very weatherproof. It is used in the construction of boats, docks, truck beds, beams, crosspieces, stairs, floors, as well as woodturning. Sawing produces a pale yellow sawdust containing lapachol. The wood has tannins and dyes.

The sawdust or wood chips, bark and leaves can be used for medicinal purposes.

The tree is easily propagated by seeds. The number of seeds/kg is 32,000 to 35,000. Planting should be done as quickly as possible, as the seeds will only germinate during the first 12-15 days. Vegetative propagation through the rootstock is also possible. In this species, certain individuals produce white flowers. These "white lapachos" are often reproduced by grafting.

References

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