Scyphiphora
{{Short description|Genus of plants}}
{{Speciesbox
|image = Scyphiphora_hydrophylacea_Blanco2.277.png
|image_caption = Scyphiphora hydrophylacea
|display_parents = 3
|genus = Scyphiphora
|species = hydrophylacea
|parent_authority = C.F.Gaertn.
|authority = C.F.Gaertn.
|synonyms = *Epithinia Jack
}}
Scyphiphora is a monotypic genus of flowering plants in the family Rubiaceae. It is the only genus in the tribe Scyphiphoreae. The genus contains only one species, viz. Scyphiphora hydrophylacea, which has a large distribution range from India, to tropical Asia and the western Pacific.{{cite web |title=Search results for Scyphiphora|work=The Plant List |url=http://www.theplantlist.org/tpl1.1/search?q=Scyphiphora |accessdate=1 March 2016 }} It is a shrub of about {{Convert|3|m|ft|0|abbr=on}} and is often found in mangrove forests or sandy beaches.
This flora has many local common names in Asia, such as Nilad or Sagasa in the Philippines. Also, it is called Ngam in Thailand, Côi in Vietnam, and Chen—ngam in Malaysia.{{cite web|title=Scyphiphora hydrophyllacea |url=http://www.globinmed.com/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=104677:scyphiphora-hydrophyllacea-1&catid=199&Itemid=139 |accessdate=20 August 2018 }}
Description
File:Scyphip hydrop 111021-19090 kbu.jpg
File:Scyphip hydrop 111021-19089 kbu.jpg
Its leaves are opposite. The leaf blades are broad and drop-shaped. Its terminal buds and young leaves are coated with a varnish-like substance. The flowers are tubular and have four white lobes that are tinged pink. They are arranged in dense clusters. The fruits are elliptic and deeply ridged, becoming light brown and buoyant when ripe.
Uses
Its dark brown wood can be used to craft small objects. Leaf extracts are known to be helpful for stomach aches.{{Cite web | url=http://mangrove.nus.edu.sg/guidebooks/text/1072.htm | title=Mangrove flora: Chengam (scyphiphora hydrophyllacea)}} The flowers can be used as a cleansing or whitening laundry agent.{{Citation needed|date=November 2010}}
Culture
{{Main|Manila#Etymology}}
One popular — but antiquated and less linguistically plausible — etymology for Manila, the capital city of the Philippines, asserts that the city's name derives from this shrub, locally known as nilad. However, from a linguistic perspective it would have been unlikely for native Tagalog speakers to completely drop the final consonant /d/ in nilad to achieve the present native form of the name ("Maynilà").{{cite journal| last=Baumgartner |first=Joseph |date=March 1975 |title=Manila — Maynilad or Maynila? |journal=Philippine Quarterly of Culture and Society |volume=3 |issue=1 |pages=52–54 |jstor=29791188}}
The indigo plant is called either nilà or nilad.in Tagalog.{{Cite book|last=English|first=Leo|title=Tagalog-English Dictionary|publisher=National Book Store|year=1986|isbn=971-08-4465-2|location=Mandaluyong City, Philippines|pages=932}}
Chemistry
The plant contains friedelin, syringic acid, isoscopoletin, fraxetol, casuarinondiol and guaiacylglycerol-beta-ferulic acid ether.{{cite journal | pmid = 19771844 | volume=32 | issue=5 | title=[Studies on the chemical constituents of Scyphiphora hydrophyllacea (II)] | year=2009 | journal=Zhong Yao Cai | pages=712–4 | last1 = Tao | first1 = SH | last2 = Gao | first2 = GC | last3 = Qi | first3 = SH | last4 = Li | first4 = QX | last5 = Zhang | first5 = S}}
References
{{Reflist}}
External links
- [http://apps.kew.org/wcsp/qsearch.do?plantName=Scyphiphora Scyphiphora in the World Checklist of Rubiaceae]
{{Taxonbar|from=Q2893725}}
Category:Monotypic Rubiaceae genera
Category:Flora of the Central Indo-Pacific
{{Ixoroideae-stub}}