PROSEA Handbook Number
11: Auxiliary plants
Taxon
Inocarpus fagifer (Parkinson) Fosberg
Family
LEGUMINOSAE - PAPILIONOIDEAE
Synonyms
Inocarpus edulis J.R. & G. Forster. Note: Inocarpus fagiferus is an often used orthographic variant of Inocarpus fagifer.
Vernacular Names
Otaheite chestnut, Polynesian chestnut, Tahiti chestnut (En). Inocarpe comestible (Fr). Indonesia: gayam (Java), bosua (Manado, Ternate). Malaysia: kerepit, kopit. Papua New Guinea: aila, lala, ivi. Philippines: kayam.
Distribution
Probably originated in eastern Malesia and taken to Micronesia, Melanesia and Polynesia by Malay-Polynesian migrants, who are thought to have carried the seeds as food on their voyages. It is occasionally also cultivated elsewhere in the tropics (e.g. in Peninsular Malaysia, Sumatra, Borneo, Java).
Uses Inocarpus fagifer is a common tree in home gardens in the Pacific where it provides shade and firewood. Nearly ripe seeds are eaten after boiling or roasting in hot ashes and taste like chestnut. A popular Polynesian dish is prepared from grated seed mixed with coconut meat and coconut milk, wrapped in green leaves and baked in a stone oven. Seeds are also stored in underground pits after partial fermentation, as is done with breadfruit (Artocarpus altilis (Parkinson) Fosberg). The hard timber is used for making moulds and bed frames. In Borneo and Java tannin from the bark is taken internally as a remedy against intestinal disorders. The foliage is fed to cattle.
Observations
Often several-stemmed, evergreen tree, with straggling appearance and drooping branches, up to 30 m tall and 65 cm in trunk diameter. Trunk often irregularly fluted, sometimes with stout buttresses, 1—3 m long; bark dark brown, slightly flaky, inner bark yielding a red exudate. Leaves alternate, simple; petiole 0.5—1.5 cm long; stipules small; blade oblong, 10—50 cm x 4—18 cm, thinly leathery, shiny yellowish-green, pink when young, glabrous, drooping. Inflorescence an axillary spike, 1—17 cm long, simple or 2—5-fid; flowers small, 5-merous, pungently fragrant; calyx tubular with 2—5 teeth; petals 5, subequal, 1—1.5 cm long, white or yellow, apex recurved; stamens 10 in 2 series, alternately long and short. Pod very variable, 1-seeded, flattened, reniform or wedge-shaped, 5—10 cm x 5—8 cm x 4—5 cm, indehiscent, keeled, ribbed or smooth, mostly densely, finely pubescent when young. Seed up to 8 cm long, with very hard seed-coat and white endosperm.
In Java, Inocarpus fagifer flowers from January to June and in September. Fruit set is poor. Plants start bearing fruit when about 8 years old. The fruit may float for over one month in seawater, but the seed quickly loses its viability. A second species, Inocarpus papuanus Kostermans, whose specific distinctness is questioned, occurs in the rain forest of New Guinea; its fruit is somewhat smaller, red and inedible. Inocarpus fagifer is resistant to flooding and grows in swamps and on the banks of estuaries and streams, even in brackish water. It is one of the most common species on the islands of the Pacific, where it occurs up to 500 m altitude. In brackish tidal swamp forest in Johor, Malaysia, it locally dominates the undergrowth.
Selected Sources
[79]Iwasa, S., 1973. Fruit trees of South and South-East Asia. Tropical Agricultural Research Center, Ministry of Agriculture and Forestry, Japan. pp. 138–140.
[104]Matsuo, T., 1989. Collected data of plant genetic resources. Kodansha Scientific. Vol IV. Tokyo, Japan. p. 1634.
[127]Prasad, J., 1982. Composition of ivi (Inocarpus fagiferus). Fiji Agricultural Journal 44: 41–42.
[137]Rosengarten, F., 1984. The book of edible nuts. Walker, New York, United States. 384 pp.
[170]Verdcourt, B., 1979. A manual of New Guinea legumes. Botany Bulletin No 11. Office of Forests, Division of Botany, Lae, Papua New Guinea. 645 pp.
Author(s)
M.S.M. Sosef & L.J.G. van der Maesen
Correct Citation of this Article
Sosef, M.S.M. & van der Maesen, L.J.G., 1997. Inocarpus fagifer (Parkinson) Fosberg. In: Faridah Hanum, I & van der Maesen, L.J.G. (Editors): Plant Resources of South-East Asia No 11: Auxiliary plants. PROSEA Foundation, Bogor, Indonesia. Database record:
prota4u.org/prosea