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Mucuna pruriens

Species of flowering plant From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Mucuna pruriens
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Mucuna pruriens is a tropical legume native to Africa and tropical Asia and widely naturalized and cultivated.[2] Its English common names include monkey tamarind, velvet bean, Bengal velvet bean, Florida velvet bean, Mauritius velvet bean, Yokohama velvet bean, cowage, cowitch, lacuna bean, and Lyon bean.[2]

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The plant is notorious for the extreme itchiness it produces on contact,[3] particularly with the young foliage and the seed pods. It also produces many medium-sized red swollen bumps on the skin with the itching. It has agricultural and horticultural value, and is used in herbalism.

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Description

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Mucuna pruriens is an annual climbing shrub with long vines that can reach over 15 metres (50 feet) in length. When the plant is young, it is almost completely covered with fuzzy hairs, but when older, it is almost completely free of hairs. The leaves are tripinnate, ovate, reverse ovate, rhombus-shaped or widely ovate. The sides of the leaves are often heavily grooved and the tips are pointy. In young specimens, both sides of the leaves have hairs. The stems of the leaflets are 2–3 millimetres (11618 inch) long. Additional adjacent leaves are present and are about 5 mm (14 in) long.

The flower heads take the form of axially arrayed panicles. They are 15–32 centimetres (6–13 in) long and have two or three, or many flowers, which can be white, lavender, or purple. The accompanying leaves are about 12.5 mm (12 in) long; the flower stand axes are from 2.5–5 mm (18316 in). The bell is 7.5–9 mm (51638 in) long and silky. The sepals are longer or of the same length as the shuttles. The crown is purplish or white. The flag is 1.5 mm (116 in) long. The wings are 2.5–3.8 cm (1–1+12 in) long.

In the fruit-ripening stage, a 4–13 cm (2–5 in) long, 1–2 cm (3834 in) wide, unwinged, leguminous fruit develops. There is a ridge along its length and the husk is covered in loose, orange hairs that cause a severe itch if they contact skin.[4][5] The pods carry up to seven seeds, which are shiny black or brown drift seeds. They are flattened uniform ellipsoids, 1–1.9 cm (3834 in) long, .8–1.3 cm (3812 in) wide and 4–6.5 cm (2–3 in) thick. The hilum, the base of the funiculus (connection between placenta and plant seeds) is a surrounded by a significant arillus (fleshy seed shell). The dry weight of the seeds is 55–85 grams (2–3 ounces)/100 seeds.[6]

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Velvet bean
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Seed pod, the hairs of which cause a dire itch
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Seeds

Chemistry

The seeds of the plant contain about 3.1–6.1% L-DOPA.[7] M. pruriens var. pruriens has the highest content of L-DOPA. An average of 52.11% degradation of L-DOPA into damaging quinones and reactive oxygen species was found in seeds of M. pruriens varieties.[8]

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Taxonomy

Subspecies

  • Mucuna pruriens ssp. deeringiana (Bort) Hanelt
  • Mucuna pruriens ssp. pruriens[5]

Varieties

  • Mucuna pruriens var. hirsuta (Wight & Arn.) Wilmot-Dear[2]
  • Mucuna pruriens var. pruriens (L.) DC.[9]
  • Mucuna pruriens var. sericophylla[2]
  • Mucuna pruriens var. utilis (Wall. ex Wight) L.H.Bailey is the non-stinging variety grown in Honduras.[citation needed]

Itch-inducing properties

The hairs lining the seed pods contain serotonin and the protein mucunain, which cause severe itching when the pods are touched.[3][7] The calyx below the flowers is also a source of itchy spicules and the stinging hairs on the outside of the seed pods are used in some brands of itching powder.[3][10] Scratching the exposed area can spread the itching to other areas touched, which can cause blindness if in the area of the eyes.[11] Once this happens, the subject tends to scratch vigorously and uncontrollably and for this reason the local populace in northern Mozambique refer to the beans as "mad beans" (feijões malucos). The seed pods are known as "Devil Beans" in Nigeria.

Uses

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In many parts of the world, M. pruriens is used as an important forage, fallow and green manure crop.[12] Since the plant is a legume, it fixes nitrogen and fertilizes soil. In Indonesia, particularly Java, the beans are eaten and widely known as 'Benguk'. The beans can also be fermented to form a food similar to tempeh and known as Benguk tempe or 'tempe Benguk'.

M. pruriens is a widespread fodder plant in the tropics. To that end, the whole plant is fed to animals as silage, dried hay or dried seeds. M. pruriens silage contains 11–23% crude protein, 35–40% crude fiber, and the dried beans 20–35% crude protein. It also has use in the countries of Benin and Vietnam as a biological control for problematic Imperata cylindrica grass.[12] M. pruriens is said to not be invasive outside its cultivated area.[12] However, the plant is invasive within conservation areas of South Florida, where it frequently invades disturbed land and rockland hammock edge habitats. Cooked fresh shoots or beans can also be eaten. The plant contains relatively high (3–7% dry weight) levels of l-DOPA,[13] which some people are sensitive to; it can cause nausea, vomiting, cramping, arrhythmias, and hypotension.

Traditional medicine

The plant and its extracts have long been used in tribal communities as an antidote for snakebite. More recently, its effects against bites by Naja (cobra),[14] Echis (saw-scaled viper),[15] Calloselasma (Malayan pit viper), and Bungarus (krait) species have been studied.[citation needed]

The dried leaves of M. pruriens are sometimes smoked.[why?][5]

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References

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