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VIJAY's
MUSINGS
More June Musings
Dillenia
indica:
Chalta, Kanigala, Elephant
Apple
A fortnight
ago I had visited Dr. Krishnan (in retirement now –
Dr. Krishnan introduced Digital Electronics to India
and was last with NAL and continues consulting with
RRI), at his home where I found growing outside his
living room a Dillenia tree
which looked a little ragged
as the KPTCL seemed to have got to work on it to protect
their wires. |
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When
talking with Dr Krishnan I asked him about the Dillenia
which is my favourite tree. I was ever so pleased
when he told me that I was the only person who had
identified this tree correctly and further that the
Dillenia indica and the Amherstia
nobilis were his two favourite trees.
Dr. Krishnan,
in 1967 had noticed what then seemed the lone two
Dillenia trees in Bangalore both in Lalbagh gardens.
Since then he has been disseminating information on
the Dillenia and the Amherstia nobilis through talks,
lectures, articles and slide shows in Bangalore. Dr.
Krishnan informed me that he thought there might be
over 70 Dillenia trees in Bangalore today.
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| The Dillenia
indica is indigenous to India and named after
Johann Jacob Dillenius a German
botanist and Professor of Botany at Oxford.
In 1737 Linnaeus named the genus; “Dillenia
has of all plants the showiest flower; Dellinius
is likewise conspicuous amongst botanists”.
The tree is found in the sub-Himalayan tracts
extending from Nepal through most of Assam,
Arunachal Pradesh, Bangladesh and Myanmar and
in Peninsular India through Maharashtra, Kerala,
Karnataka, Andhra Pradesh to Bihar and Madhya
Pradesh particularly on the banks of streams. |
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This tree - Chalta
(Hindi & Bengali), Kanigala (Kannada)
is a beautifully formed tree with fragrant flowers,
striking globose fruit and equally striking leaves.
We attach a photograph recently taken of a Dillenia
at Lalbagh with the leaves shed and with a multitude
of eye catching fruit.
The
trunk is fluted, the bark and wood of the trees are
a terracotta reddish brown and the flowers magnolia
like and up to 5 inches across. The fruit are heavy
and edible. The sepals, which have a sour apple taste,
are used for the preparation of chutneys, pickles
and prawn curry in Bengal. The rest of the fruit is
fibrous and slightly acidic. Elephants
love the fruit and ensure propagation of the plant
at distances from where the fruit was eaten. As the
tree grows on the banks of streams, the fruit is carried
away by flowing water and the seeds sprout downstream.
The new leaves, serrated and ridged are a tender luminous
green.
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The name Elephant Apple obviously
is derived from the love of the fruit by Elephants
who gobble up large numbers at a time. There is a
symbiotic relationship between the elephant
and the tree. The tree provides food for
the elephant and the elephant disperses the seeds.
The Dillenia leaves have been used by ivory workers
in Karnataka for polishing ivory.
Both the tree
and the elephant are truly indigenous and with great
pride we can claim both as our own.
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