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Cucumis anguria
Species of flowering plant
Species of flowering plant
- C. a. var. anguria (autonym)
- C. a. var. longaculeatus J.H.Kirkbr.
- C. longipes Hook.f.
Cucumis anguria, commonly known as maroon cucumber, West Indian gherkin, maxixe, burr gherkin, cackrey, and West Indian gourd, is a vine that is indigenous to Africa, but has become naturalized in the New World, and is cultivated in many places. It is similar and related to the common cucumber (C. sativus) and its cultivars are known as gherkins.
Description
Cucumis anguria is a thinly stemmed, herbaceous vine scrambling up to 3 meters long. Fruits (4–5 cm × 3–4 cm) grow on long stalks, and are ovoid to oblong. The fruits are covered with long hairs over a surface of spines or wart-like bumps. The inner flesh is pallid to green.
Distribution
Although naturalized in many parts of the New World, Cucumis anguria is indigenous only to Africa, in the following countries: Angola; Botswana; the Democratic Republic of the Congo; Malawi; Mozambique; Namibia; South Africa (KwaZulu-Natal, Limpopo, Mpumalanga); Eswatini; Tanzania; Zambia; and Zimbabwe.
Cucumis anguria has become naturalized in: Anguilla; Antigua and Barbuda; Australia (Queensland and Western Australia); Barbados; Brazil; Cayman Islands; Costa Rica; Cuba; the Dominican Republic; Ecuador; French Guiana; Grenada; Guadeloupe; Guatemala; Haiti; Honduras; Jamaica; Madagascar; Martinique; Mexico; Netherlands Antilles; Nicaragua; Panama; Peru; Puerto Rico; Saint Lucia; Saint Vincent and Grenadines; Suriname; the United States (California, Florida, Georgia, Massachusetts, Montana, New York, Oregon, Texas, Minnesota, Wisconsin and Washington); Canada (Ontario, Niagara Region, Nova Scotia, Hants County); Venezuela; and both British and American Virgin Islands.
Cucumis anguria is also cultivated, but not indigenous to, nor yet believed to have become naturalized in these places: Cape Verde; Réunion; Senegal; and parts of the Caribbean not already mentioned above.
Uses
Cucumis anguria is primarily grown (as a crop plant) for its edible fruit, which is used in pickling, as cooked vegetables, or eaten raw. C. anguria fruits are popular in the northeast and north of Brazil, where they are an ingredient in the local version of cozido (meat-and-vegetable stew).
Cucumis anguria has been used in folk medicine to treat ailments of the stomach.
Pests
Crops are susceptible to attacks by fungi, aphids, and cucumber beetles.
Synonyms
This species, Cucumis anguria L., has a name that other species may share:
- Cucumis anguria Forssk., a synonym for Cucumis prophetarum
Gallery
File:Cucumis anguria - Seedlings.jpg|Seedlings File:Cucumis anguria, Leaves.jpg|Plant File:Cucumis anguria, Leaf.jpg|Leaf File:Cucumis anguria, Flower.jpg|Flower File:Cucumis anguria, Fruits 02.jpg|Fruits File:Cucumis anguria, Fruits 03.jpg File:Cucumis anguria, fruit.jpg File:Cucumis anguria, Fruit.jpg|Inside the fruit
References
References
- "Name - !''Cucumis anguria'' L.". [[Missouri Botanical Garden]].
- {{GRIN
- (1993–2007). "''Cucumis anguria''". [[Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations.
- "Profile for ''Cucumis anguria'' (West Indian gherkin)". USDA, [[Natural Resources Conservation Service.
- "Maxixe {{!}} WorldCrops".
- Weaver, William Woys. "Growing Burr Gherkins - Organic Gardening".
- "Cackery".
- {{FloraBase
- Purseglove, J.W.. (1968). "Tropical Crops Dicotyledons". Longmans, Green and Co. Ltd.
- James A. Duke. "''Cucumis anguria'' (CUCURBITACEAE)". Dr. Duke's Phytochemical and Ethnobotanical Databases.
This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.
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