Diospyros
{{Short description|Genus of trees and shrubs}}
{{Automatic taxobox
| oldest_fossil = Eocene
| image = Diospyros kaki3.jpg
| image_caption = Flowers of Diospyros kaki
| taxon = Diospyros
| authority = L.{{cite web | url = https://npgsweb.ars-grin.gov/gringlobal/taxonomygenus.aspx?id=3761 | title = Genus: Diospyros L. | work = Germplasm Resources Information Network (GRIN) [Online Database] | publisher = United States Department of Agriculture Agricultural Research Service, Beltsville, Maryland | date = 28 Apr 1998 | access-date = 15 Sep 2016 }}
| synonyms = * Cargillia R.Br.
- Cavanillea Desr.
- Ebenus Kuntze (nom. illeg.)
- Embryopteris Gaertn.
- Guaiacana Duhamel (nom. illeg.)
- Idesia Scop.
- Maba J.R.Forst. & G.Forst.
- Mabola Raf.
- Macreightia A.DC.
- Noltia Thonn.
- Paralea Aubl.
- Pimia Seem.
- Rhaphidanthe Hiern ex Gürke
- Ropourea Aubl.
- Royena L.
- Tetraclis Hiern
| type_species = Diospyros lotus
| type_species_authority = L.
| diversity = About 750 species
| diversity_link = List of Diospyros species
}}
Diospyros is a genus of over 700 species of deciduous and evergreen trees and shrubs. The majority are native to the tropics, with only a few species extending into temperate regions. Individual species valued for their hard, heavy, dark timber, are commonly known as ebony trees, while others are valued for their fruit and known as persimmon trees. Some are useful as ornamentals and many are of local ecological importance. Species of this genus are generally dioecious, with separate male and female plants.{{cite journal|doi=10.2503/jjshs1.CH-109|title=Development of Molecular Markers Associated with Sexuality in Diospyros lotus L. and Their Application in D. kaki Thunb.|first1=Takashi|last1=Akagi|first2=Kei|last2=Kajita|first3=Takanori|last3=Kibe|first4=Haruka|last4=Morimura|first5=Tomoyuki|last5=Tsujimoto|first6=Soichiro|last6=Nishiyama|first7=Takashi|last7=Kawai|first8=Hisayo|last8=Yamane|first9=Ryutaro|last9=Tao|journal=Journal of the Japanese Society for Horticultural Science|volume=83|date=2013|number=3|pages=214–221|doi-access=free|hdl=2433/191079|hdl-access=free}}
Taxonomy and etymology
The generic name Diospyros comes from a Latin name for the Caucasian persimmon (D. lotus), derived from the Greek διόσπυρος : dióspyros, from diós ({{lang|grc|Διός}}) and pyrós ({{lang|grc|πῡρός}}). The Greek name literally means "Zeus's wheat" but more generally intends "divine food" or "divine fruit".{{cite book |author=Jaeger, Edmund Carroll |author-link=Edmund Jaeger|title=A source-book of biological names and terms |url=https://archive.org/details/sourcebookofbiol0000jaeg |url-access=registration |publisher=Thomas |location=Springfield, IL |year=1959 |isbn=0398061793}}Tice, John. H. "Essay on the Diospyros virginiana" Annual report / Missouri State Horticultural Society 1864.
The genus is a large one and the number of species has been estimated variously, depending on the date of the source. The Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, list has over 1000 entries, including synonyms and items of low confidence. Over 700 species are marked as being assigned with high confidence.{{cite web | title = Diospyros | url = http://www.theplantlist.org/1.1/browse/A/Ebenaceae/Diospyros/ | work = The Plant List | access-date = 3 February 2014}}
The oldest fossils of the genus date to the Eocene, which indicate by that time Diospyros was widely distributed over the Northern Hemisphere.{{Cite journal |last1=Denk |first1=Thomas |last2=Bouchal |first2=Johannes M. |date=2021-07-03 |title=Dispersed pollen and calyx remains of Diospyros (Ebenaceae) from the middle Miocene "Plant beds" of Søby, Denmark |url=https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/11035897.2021.1907443 |journal=GFF |language=en |volume=143 |issue=2–3 |pages=292–304 |doi=10.1080/11035897.2021.1907443 |bibcode=2021GFF...143..292D |s2cid=237648462 |issn=1103-5897}}
Chemotaxonomy
The leaves of Diospyros blancoi have been shown to contain isoarborinol methyl ether (also called cylindrin) and fatty esters of α- and β-amyrin.{{cite journal | author = Ragasa, CY, Puno, MR, Sengson, JMA, Shen, CC, Rideout, JA, Raga, DD | title = Bioactive triterpenes from Diospyros blancoi | journal = Natural Product Research | volume = 23 | issue = 13 | pages = 1252–58 |date=November 2009 | pmid = 19731144 | doi = 10.1080/14786410902951054 | s2cid = 205836127 }} Both isoarborinol methyl ether and the amyrin mixture demonstrated antimicrobial activity against Escherichia coli, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, Candida albicans, Staphylococcus aureus, and Trichophyton interdigitale. Anti-inflammatory and analgesic properties have also been shown for the isolated amyrin mixture.
Ecology
Diospyros species are important and conspicuous trees in many of their native ecosystems, such as lowland dry forests of the former Maui Nui in Hawaii,{{cite journal |url=http://www.state.hi.us/dlnr/dofaw/pubs/Kanepuu%20LRMP%20FY05-10.pdf |author=The Nature Conservancy – Hawaiʻi Operating Unit |author-link=The Nature Conservancy|title=Kānepuʻu Preserve Lānaʻi, Hawaiʻi Long-Range Management Plan Fiscal Years 2005–2010 |publisher=Hawaii Department of Land & Natural Resources Natural Area Partnership Program |date=March 2004 |page=3 |access-date=2009-04-09 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110616065113/http://www.state.hi.us/dlnr/dofaw/pubs/Kanepuu%20LRMP%20FY05-10.pdf |archive-date=2011-06-16 }} Caspian Hyrcanian mixed forests, Khathiar–Gir dry deciduous forests, Louisiade Archipelago rain forests, Madagascar lowland forests, Narmada Valley dry deciduous forests, New Caledonian sclerophytic vegetation,{{Cite journal|last1=Paun|first1=Ovidiu|last2=Turner|first2=Barbara|last3=Trucchi|first3=Emiliano|last4=Munzinger|first4=Jérôme|last5=Chase|first5=Mark W.|last6=Samuel|first6=Rosabelle|date=March 2016|title=Processes Driving the Adaptive Radiation of a Tropical Tree ( Diospyros , Ebenaceae) in New Caledonia, a Biodiversity Hotspot|journal=Systematic Biology|volume=65|issue=2|pages=212–227|doi=10.1093/sysbio/syv076|issn=1063-5157|pmc=4748748|pmid=26430059}} New Guinea mangroves or South Western Ghats montane rain forests.
The green fruits are avoided by most herbivores, perhaps because they are rich in tannins. When ripe, they are eagerly eaten by many animals however, such as (in East Africa) the rare Aders' duiker (Cephalophus adersi). The foliage is used as food by the larvae of numerous Lepidoptera species:
- Eupseudosoma aberrans
- Eupseudosoma involutum (snowy eupseudosoma)
- Hypercompe indecisa
- Gymnoscelis rufifasciata (double-striped pug) – recorded on persimmons
- Neopithecops zalmora (Quaker)
- Charaxes khasianus (Kihansi charaxes) – recorded on D. natalensis
- Dophla evelina (redspot duke) – recorded on D. candolleana
- Actias luna (Luna moth) – recorded on persimmons
- Callosamia promethea (promethea silkmoth) – recorded on persimmons
- Citheronia regalis (regal moth) – recorded on American persimmon (D. virginiana)
- "Cnephasia" jactatana (black-lyre leafroller moth)
An economically significant plant pathogen infecting many Diospyros species – D. hispida, kaki persimmon (D. kaki), date-plum (D. lotus), Texas persimmon (D. texana), Coromandel ebony (D. melanoxylon) and probably others – is the sac fungus Pseudocercospora kaki, which causes a leaf spot disease.
Use by humans
File:Sitar jawari.jpg of a sitar]]
The genus includes several plants of commercial importance, either for their edible fruit (persimmons) or for their timber (ebony). The latter are divided into two groups in trade: the pure black ebony (notably from D. ebenum, but also several other species), and the striped ebony or calamander wood (from D. celebica, D. mun and others). Most species in the genus produce little to none of this black ebony-type wood; their hard timber (e.g. of American persimmon, D. virginiana) may still be used on a more limited basis.
Leaves of the Coromandel ebony (D. melanoxylon) are used to roll South Asian beedi cigarettes. Several species are used in herbalism, and D. leucomelas yields the versatile medical compound betulinic acid. Extracts from Diospyros plants have also been proposed as novel anti-viral treatment.{{Cite web|url=https://patents.google.com/patent/US20110027399|title = Antiviral Agent and Antiviral Composition}} Though bees do not play a key role as pollinators, in plantations Diospyros may be of some use as honey plants. D. mollis, locally known as mặc nưa, is used in Vietnam to dye the famous black lãnh Mỹ A silk of Tân Châu district.
The reverence of these trees in their native range is reflected by their use as floral emblems. In Indonesia, D. celebica (Makassar ebony, known locally as eboni) is the provincial tree of Central Sulawesi, while ajan kelicung (D. macrophylla) is that of West Nusa Tenggara. The emblem of the Japanese island of Ishigaki is the Yaeyama kokutan (D. ferrea). The Gold apple (D. decandra), called "Trái thị" in Vietnamese, is a tree in the Tấm Cám fable. It is also the provincial tree of Chanthaburi as well as Nakhon Pathom Provinces in Thailand, while the black-and-white ebony (D. malabarica) is that of Ang Thong Province. The name of the Thai district Amphoe Tha Tako, literally means "District of the Diospyros pier", the latter being a popular local gathering spot.
Selected species
{{See also|List of Diospyros species}}
File:Diospyros buxifolia.jpg leaves]]
File:Macassar01.jpg wood]]
File:Quả thị.jpg (D. decandra) fruit]]
File:04495jfConstructions Diospyros blancoi Dampol Rueda Plaridel Bulacan Roadfvf 48.jpg in Central Luzon, Philippines]]
File:Diospyros geminata foliage and fruitII.jpg foliage and young fruit]]
File:Diospyros revaughanii ebony - MonVert Arboretum 4.jpg in Mauritius]]
File:Persimmon American4 Asit.jpg in Tampa, Florida]]
File:Diospyros whyteana IMG 2651.JPG twig with young fruit]]
File:烏材(軟毛柿)Diospyros eriantha 20210331093242 11.jpg foliage]]
File:象牙柿 Diospyros ferrea 20201024211015 01.jpg, slow growth]]
File:毛柿 Diospyros blancoi 20220807225309 02.jpg, known also as "Taiwan ebony", slow growth]]
{{div col|colwidth=30em}}
- Diospyros abyssinica {{Au|(Hiern) F.White}}
- Diospyros acuminata {{Au|(Thwaites) Kosterm.}}
- Diospyros alatella {{Au|Kosterm.}}
- Diospyros andamanica {{Au|(Kurz) Bakh.}}
- Diospyros apiculata {{Au|(R.Br.) Hiern}}
- Diospyros areolata {{Au|King & Gamble}}
- Diospyros artanthifolia {{Au| Mart. ex Miq.}}
- Diospyros atrata {{Au|(Thwaites) Alston}}
- Diospyros attenuata {{Au|Thwaites}}
- Diospyros australis {{Au|(R.Br.) Hiern}} – yellow persimmon, black plum, "grey plum"
- Diospyros beccarioides {{Au|Ng}}
- Diospyros borneensis {{Au|Hiern}}
- Diospyros britannoborneensis {{Au|Bakh.}}
- Diospyros buxifolia {{Au|(Blume) Hiern}}
- Diospyros cambodiana {{Au|Lecomte}}
- Diospyros candolleana {{Au|Wight}}
- Diospyros celebica {{Au|Bakh.}} – Makassar ebony
- Diospyros chaetocarpa {{Au|Kosterm.}}
- Diospyros chamaethamnus {{Au|Mildbr.}} – sand apple
- Diospyros chloroxylon {{Au|Roxb.}}
- Diospyros clementium {{Au|Bakh.}}
- Diospyros confertiflora {{Au|(Hiern) Bakh.}}
- Diospyros cordata {{Au|(Hiern) Bakh.}}
- Diospyros coriacea {{Au|Hiern}}
- Diospyros crassiflora {{Au|Hiern}} – Gaboon ebony, Gabon ebony, African ebony, West African ebony, Benin ebony
- Diospyros crockerensis {{Au|Ng}}
- Diospyros curranii {{Au|Merr.}}
- Diospyros daemona {{Au|Bakh.}}
- Diospyros decandra {{Au|Lour.}} – gold apple
- Diospyros dichrophylla {{Au|(Gand.) De Winter}}
- Diospyros dictyoneura {{Au|Hiern}}
- Diospyros diepenhorstii {{Au|Miq.}}
- Diospyros discocalyx {{Au|Merr.}}
- Diospyros discolor {{Au|Willd.}} – kamagong, mabolo, butter fruit, velvet-apple
- Diospyros duclouxii
- Diospyros ebenum {{Au|J.Koenig ex Retz.}} – Ceylon ebony, India ebony, "ebony"
- Diospyros elliptifolia {{Au|Merr.}}
- Diospyros eriantha {{Au|Champ. ex Benth.}}
- Diospyros eucalyptifolia {{Au|Bakh.}}
- Diospyros euphlehia {{Au|Merr.}}
- Diospyros evena {{Au|Bakh.}}
- Diospyros everettii {{Au|Merr.}}
- Diospyros fasciculosa {{Au|(F.Muell.) F.Muell.}}
- Diospyros ferox {{Au|Bakh.}}
- Diospyros ferrea {{Au|(Willd.) Bakh.}}
- Diospyros ferruginescens {{Au|Bakh.}}
- Diospyros foxworthyi {{Au|Bakh.}}
- Diospyros frutescens {{Au|Blume}}
- Diospyros fusiformis {{Au|Kosterm.}}
- Diospyros geminata {{Au|(R.Br.) F.Muell.}}
- Diospyros hallieri {{Au|Bakh.}}
- Diospyros havilandii {{Au|Bakh.}}
- Diospyros hebecarpa {{Au|A.Cunn. ex Benth.}}
- Diospyros hillebrandii {{Au|(Seem.) Fosberg}}
- Diospyros hirsuta {{Au|L.f.}}
- Diospyros humilis {{Au|(R.Br.) F.Muell.}} – Queensland ebony
- Diospyros inconstans {{Au|Jacq.}}
- Diospyros insignis {{Au|Thw.}}
- Diospyros insularis {{Au|Bakh.}} – Papua ebony
- Diospyros kaki {{Au|L.f.}} – Japanese persimmon, kaki persimmon, Asian persimmon
- Diospyros keningauensis {{Au|Ng}}
- Diospyros korthalsiana {{Au|Hiern}}
- Diospyros kurzii {{Au|Hiern}} – Andaman marblewood
- Diospyros lanceifolia {{Au|Roxb.}}
- Diospyros lateralis {{Au|Hiern}}
- Diospyros leucomelas {{Au|Poir.}}
- Diospyros longibracteata {{Au|Lecomte}}
- Diospyros lotus {{Au|L.}} – date-plum, Caucasian persimmon, lilac persimmon
- Diospyros lunduensis {{Au|Ng}}
- Diospyros lycioides {{Au|Desf.}} – bushveld bluebush
- subsp. guerkei {{Au|(Kuntze) De Winter}}
- subsp. nitens {{Au|(Harv. ex Hiern) De Winter}}
- subsp. sericea {{Au|(Bernh.) De Winter}}
- Diospyros mabacea {{Au|(F.Muell.) F.Muell.}} – red-fruited ebony
- Diospyros macrophylla {{Au|Blume}}
- Diospyros maingayi {{Au|(Hiern) Bakh.}}
- Diospyros major {{Au|(G.Forst.) Bakh.}}
- Diospyros malabarica {{Au|(Desr.) Kostel.}} – black-and-white ebony, pale moon ebony, Malabar ebony, gaub tree
- Diospyros maritima {{Au|Blume}}
- Diospyros marmorata {{Au|R.Parker}}
- Diospyros melanoxylon {{Au|Roxb.}} – Coromandel ebony, East Indian ebony
- var. tupru {{Au|(Buch.-Ham.) V.Singh}}
- Diospyros mespiliformis {{Au|Hochst. ex A.DC.}} – jackalberry, "African ebony"
- Diospyros mindanaensis {{Au|Merr.}}
- Diospyros montana {{Au|Roxb.}}
- Diospyros mun {{Au|A.Chev. ex Lecomte}} – mun ebony
- Diospyros muricata {{Au|Bakh.}}
- Diospyros neurosepala {{Au|Bakh.}}
- Diospyros nigra {{Au|(J.F.Gmel.) Perrier}} – black sapote, chocolate pudding fruit, "black persimmon"
- Diospyros oligantha {{Au|Merr.}}
- Diospyros oocarpa {{Au|Thwaites}}
- Diospyros oppositifolia {{Au|Thwaites}}
- Diospyros ovalifolia {{Au|Wight}}
- Diospyros parabuxifolia {{Au|Ng}}
- Diospyros pendula {{Au|Hasselt ex Hassk.}}
- Diospyros penibukanensis {{Au|Bakh.}}
- Diospyros pentamera {{Au|(F.Muell.) Woods & F.Muell.}} – myrtle ebony, grey persimmon, black myrtle, grey plum
- Diospyros perfida {{Au|Bakh.}}
- Diospyros pilosanthera {{Au|Blanco}}
- Diospyros piscicapa {{Au|Ridl.}}
- Diospyros plectosepala {{Au|Hiern}}
- Diospyros puncticulosa {{Au|Bakh.}}
- Diospyros pyrrhocarpa {{Au|Miq.}}
- Diospyros quaesita {{Au|Thwaites}}
- Diospyros racemosa {{Au|Roxb.}}
- Diospyros revaughanii {{Au|Rich.}}
- Diospyros rhombifolia {{Au|Hemsl.}}
- Diospyros ridleyi {{Au|Bakh.}}
- Diospyros rigida {{Au|Hiern}}
- Diospyros rufa {{Au|King & Gamble}}
- Diospyros sandwicensis {{Au|(A.DC.) Fosberg}}
- Diospyros seychellarum {{Au|(Hiern) Kosterm.}}
- Diospyros siamang {{Au|Bakh.}}
- Diospyros simaloerensis {{Au|Bakh.}}
- Diospyros singaporensis {{Au|Bakh.}}
- Diospyros squamifolia {{Au|Kosterm.}}
- Diospyros squarrosa {{Au|Klotzsch}} – rigid star-berry
- Diospyros styraciformis {{Au|King & Gamble}}
- Diospyros subrhomboidea {{Au|King & Gamble}}
- Diospyros subtruncata {{Au|Hochr.}}
- Diospyros sulcata {{Au|Bourd.}}
- Diospyros sumatrana {{Au|Miq.}}
- Diospyros tessellaria {{Au|Poir.}} – Mauritius ebony
- Diospyros texana {{Au|Scheele}} – Texas persimmon, Mexican persimmon, "black persimmon"
- Diospyros thwaitesii {{Au|(Hiern) Bedd.}}
- Diospyros tuberculata {{Au|Bakh.}}
- Diospyros ulo {{Au|Merr.}}
- Diospyros venosa {{Au|Wall. ex A.DC.}}
- var. olivacea {{Au|(King & Gamble) Ng}}
- Diospyros virginiana {{Au|L.}} – American persimmon, eastern persimmon, common persimmon, possumwood, "simmon", "sugar-plum"
- Diospyros walkeri {{Au|(Wight) Gürke}}
- Diospyros wallichii {{Au|King & Gamble}}
- Diospyros whyteana {{Au|(Hiern) P.White}} – Cape ebony
{{div col end}}
See also
References
{{Reflist}}
External links
{{Commons}}
{{Wikispecies}}
{{AfricanPlants|Diospyros}}
{{Taxonbar|from=Q165258}}
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