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Artocarpus hirsutus Lam.
Synonym : Artocarpus pubescens Willd.
Family : Moraceae
Local
Names :
Ayani, Anjili, Wild jack
Flowering
and fruiting period:
December – March
Distribution: South India
Habitat: Semi-evergreen and moist
deciduous forests, also in the plains
IUCN
status: Least
concern
Endemic:
Yes
Uses: Fruits edible, timber yielding,
varnish production. The seed is used medicinally. The tree is grown to provide
shade in coffee plantations and also as undergrowth in teak plantations. The
concreted juice forms a waxy, tough, light brown substance, which when melted,
is used as a cement to join broken earthen-ware and stoned ware. The heartwood
is yellowish-brown; the sapwood white. The wood is moderately hard, durable; it
lasts well in water and is not attacked by white ants. A valuable timber, it is
used for house and boat building, furniture, etc
Key
Characters: Wild
jack are evergreen tree, with bark
surface dull grey-brown, smooth, exudation milky white, sticky, branchlets
hirsute. Leaves simple, alternate broadly ovate. Flowers unisexual, minute,
yellowish-green; male in axillary, pendulous, narrowly cylindric; tepals 2, united
below; stamen 1; female flowers in axillary ovoid spikes; perianth tubular,
ovary superior. Fruit a sorosis, globose or ovoid, echinate, the spines
cylindric, straight, hispid.