drift seed
{{short description|Seeds and fruits adapted for long distance dispersal by water}}
__NOTOC__
Drift seeds (also sea beans) and drift fruits are seeds and fruits adapted for long-distance dispersal by water. Most are produced by tropical trees, and they can be found on distant beaches after drifting thousands of miles through ocean currents. This method of propagation has helped many species of plant such as the coconut colonize and establish themselves on previously barren islands. Consequently, drift seeds and fruits are of interest to scientists who study these currents.
In botanical terminology, a drift fruit is a kind of diaspore, and drift seeds and fruits are disseminules.
Sources of drift seeds
Image:Drift_seeds,_Mozambique.jpg species found at Kanda on the southern Mozambique coast in May 2004:
1. Snuff box sea bean (Entada rheedii)
2. Grey nickernut (Caesalpinia bonduc)
3. a,b Colour forms of ox-eye beans (Mucuna gigantea)]]
- Caesalpinia bonduc – grey nickernut
- Caesalpinia major – yellow nickernut
- Carapa guianensis – crabwood (New World tropics)
- Entada gigas – seaheart, (New World tropics)
- Entada rheedii – snuff box sea bean, from the tropics of the Indian Ocean
- Erythrina fusca – bucayo (pantropical){{cite journal |url=http://www.seabean.com/newsletters/vol07-1.pdf |title=Notes On The Ocean Dispersal of Coral Beans |first=Wayne P. |last=Armstrong |journal=The Drifting Seed |date=May 2001 |volume=7 |issue=1 |pages=5–6}}
- Erythrina variegata – tiger claw (Old World tropics)
- Mucuna spp. – ox-eye bean, hamburger seed, deer-eye bean
- Lathyrus japonicus – beach pea (circumboreal and Argentina)
- Ormosia spp. – horse-eye bean, from the tropics
- Terminalia catappa – tropical almond, from the tropics of Asia{{cite journal |first= J. |last=Ackerman |date=October 2000 |title=New Eyes on the Oceans |journal=National Geographic Magazine |pages=112–113}}
Sources of drift fruits
- Barringtonia asiatica – box fruit, from Polynesia
- Cocos nucifera – coconut, from the tropics
- Grias cauliflora – anchovy pear, from the tropics of the Americas
- Heritiera littoralis – puzzle fruit, from Southeast Asia
- Lodoicea maldivica – coco de mer, from the Seychelles
- Manicaria saccifera – sea coconut, from South America
- Pandanus spp. – screw pines, from the Old World tropics
Research
Enthusiasts founded an annual convention in 1996, the International Sea-bean Symposium,{{cite web |title=International Sea-Bean Symposium |url=https://www.seabean.com/symposium/ |website=International Sea-Bean Symposium |access-date=27 May 2025}} dedicated to the display, study, and dissemination of information concerning drift seeds and other flotsam.{{cite web |title=28th Annual International Sea-Bean Symposium and Beachcombers' Festival |url=https://www.seabean.com/symposium/2023/ |website=Seabean |access-date=14 November 2023}}
{{multiple image
| align = center
| direction = horizontal
| header = Drift seeds and drift fruits
| caption_align = center
| total_width = 800
| image1 = Cayos_pict089.jpg
| alt1 =
| caption1 = Nickernuts in fruit capsule
| image2 = Entada gigas1.jpg
| alt2 =
| caption2 = Seaheart seeds
| image3 = Box Fruit small.jpg
| alt3 =
| caption3 = Box fruit found washed up on a beach at Mnazi Bay, Tanzania, December 2006
| image4 = Puzzle Fruit 4.jpg
| alt4 =
| caption4 = Puzzle fruit found washed up on a beach at Mnazi Bay, December 2006
}}
References
{{reflist}}
External links
{{wikiquote-inline}}
- {{cite web|title=Polishing Sea Beans (Drift Seeds) for Jewelry and Such|date=June 19, 2014|publisher=TheHornedlizardman1|website=YouTube|url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gFSbXZkDty4}}
{{fruits}}