PROSEA
Record display

Record Number

3278

PROSEA Handbook Number

9: Plants yielding non-seed carbohydrates

Taxon

Pueraria lobata (Willdenow) Ohwi

Family

LEGUMINOSAE

Synonyms

— var. lobata: Pueraria thunbergiana (Sieb. & Zucc.) Bentham, Pueraria hirsuta (Thunb.) Matsumura, Pueraria triloba (Houtt.) Makino;
— var. montana (Lour.) van der Maesen: Dolichos montanus Lour., Pueraria tonkinensis Gagnepain, Pueraria montana (Lour.) Merrill;
— var. thomsoni (Bentham) van der Maesen: Pueraria thomsoni Bentham.

Vernacular Names

General: kudzu (En).
— var. lobata: Kudzu, Japanese arrowroot (En). Koudzou (Fr). Indonesia: bitok (Madurese), tobi (Sundanese), tebi (Kangean). Papua New Guinea: owitu (Asaro), kopitu (Kainantu), oka moi (Medlpa). Philippines: baai (Igorot), tahaunon (Manubo). Thailand: tamyakhrua. Vietnam: cu nang, cu s[aws]n d[aa]y.
— var. montana: Taiwan kudzu (En). Laos: chüa tau kung (northern), khauz pièd (northern). Vietnam: d[aa]y cae lan, d[aa]y dan, s[aws]n d[aa]y.
— var. thomsoni: Thomson's kudzu (En). Thailand: phakphit. Vietnam: d[aa]y c[as]t c[aw]n, s[aws]n d[aa]y.

Distribution

From eastern India throughout South-East Asia, China, Japan and Pacific Islands. Now widespread in other tropical and subtropical areas, cultivated and often naturalized. Var. lobata, originally from China and Japan, is the main variety introduced elsewhere. Var. montana originates from Indo-China, southern China, Taiwan and the Philippines, var. thomsoni from north-eastern India to Indo-China and the Philippines.

Uses

Kudzu produces edible tubers, useful stem fibres, its leaves, shoots and flowers can be used as vegetable and for silage or hay, and it is a useful erosion-controlling soil cover, shade plant and medicinal plant. The tuber is esteemed for its fine starch, used especially in China, Japan and Papua New Guinea for sauces, soups, jelled salads, noodles, porridges, jelly puddings, confectionary and beverages. Japan produces over 300 t per year. Elsewhere in South-East Asia the tubers are used in times of famine. The stem fibres are used for binding (ropes), weaving (clothes, fishing lines, baskets) and for paper production. It is excellent for fodder and silage, if mixed with grass. It is effective for erosion control, provided its growth is controlled well; its aggressive growth may lead to entire forests being covered and trees dying, as has been experienced in the United States. Medicinally the starch is used in Japan to restore intestinal and digestive disorders, taken in soups or teas. Tea from the tubers is used in China against colds, influenza, diarrhoea, dysentery and hangovers. The flowerbuds are used as a diaphoretic and febrifuge medicine. Kudzu is also popular as an ornamental climber with fragrant flowers.

Observations

Perennial, pubescent, woody climber with very large oblongoid tubers up to 2 m long, 18—45 cm in diameter, weighing up to 180 kg when old. Branches strong, up to 30 m long and up to 10 cm in diameter. Leaves alternate, pinnately trifoliolate; petiole 8—13(—21) cm long, rachis 1.5—7 cm long, petiolules 4—10 mm; leaflets ovate to orbicular, 8—26 cm 5—22 cm, entire to trilobed. Inflorescence usually an unbranched elongate pseudoraceme up to 35 cm long with 3 flowers per node; calyx campanulate with 5 unequal teeth; petals purplish to blue or pink, often with a yellow or green spot, up to 25 mm long; stamens 10, monadelphous or with one free stamen. Fruit a flattened oblongoid pod, straight to falcate, 4—13 cm 0.6—1.3 cm, golden-brown hairy, with 5—15 seeds. Seed flattened-ovoid, 4—5 mm 4 mm 2 mm, red-brown with black mosaic. Germination epigeal, first two leaves simple and opposite.
Pueraria lobata occurs in thickets, forests, roadsides, pastures, hedges, on dry or moist, poor or rich soils, more common in the lowlands but up to 2000 m altitude. Outside its native area, seed is not usually formed. Propagation is mainly by planting young stem cuttings almost horizontally. Tubers can be harvested about 1 year after planting the cuttings. If left longer in the soil they can become very large. For fodder production, first harvest is possible in the second year, full production is reached from the third year onwards.
Pueraria lobata is extremely variable and 3 varieties have been distinguished, although intermediates occur. The main distinguishing characteristics are flower size, leaflet form and fruit size.
— var. lobata: flowers 12—20 mm long, leaflets usually trilobed, fruits 5—13 cm 7—12 mm;
— var. montana: flowers up to 12 mm long, leaflets usually entire, fruits 4—10 cm 6—9 mm;
— var. thomsoni: flowers 20 mm or longer, leaflets usually trilobed, fruits 8—13 cm 9-13 mm.
Other tuberous Pueraria species have or might have similar possibilities (e.g. Pueraria candollei Graham ex Bentham from India, Bangladesh, Burma (Myanmar) and Thailand; Pueraria edulis Pampanini from India and China; Pueraria mirifica Airy Shaw & Suvat. from Thailand; Pueraria tuberosa (Roxb. ex Willd.) DC. from India, Nepal and Pakistan).

Selected Sources

[1]Ali, S.I., 1977. Papilionaceae. In: Nasir, E. & Ali, S.I. (Editors): Flora of West Pakistan. No 100. University of Karachi, Karachi, Pakistan. 389 pp.
[3]Backer, C.A. & Bakhuizen van den Brink Jr, R.C., 1963–1968. Flora of Java. 3 volumes. Wolters–Noordhoff, Groningen, the Netherlands. Vol. 1 (1963) 647 pp., Vol. 2 (1965) 641 pp., Vol. 3 (1968) 761 pp.
[8]Bodner, C.C. & Gereau, R.E., 1986. A contribution to Bontoc ethnobotany. Economic Botany 42: 307–369.
[13]Burkill, I.H., 1935. A dictionary of the economic products of the Malay Peninsula. 2 Vols. Crown Agents for the Colonies, London, United Kingdom. 2402 pp. (slightly revised reprint, 1966. 2 Vols. Ministry of Agriculture and Cooperatives, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. 2444 pp.).
[17]de Beer, J.H. & McDermott, M.J., 1989. The economic value of non-timber forest products in Southeast Asia with emphasis on Indonesia, Malaysia and Thailand. Netherlands Committee for the International Union for Conservation of Nature and Natural Resources (IUCN), Amsterdam, the Netherlands. 174 pp.
[23]Flora of tropical East Africa (various editors), 1952– . A.A. Balkema, Rotterdam, the Netherlands.
[24]Flore du Cambodge, du Laos et du Vietnam [Flora of Cambodia, Laos and Vietnam] (various editors), 1960– . Muséum National d'Histoire Naturelle, Laboratoire de Phanérogamie, Paris, France.
[30]Hedrick, U.P. (Editor), 1972. Sturtevant's edible plants of the world. Reprint of the 1919 edition. Sturtevant's notes on edible plants. Report of the New York Agricultural Experiment Station for the Year 1919. State of New York, Department of Agriculture. Twenty-seventh Annual Report, Vol. 2, Part II. Dover Publications, New York, United States. 686 pp.
[32]Heyne, K., 1927. De nuttige planten van Nederlandsch Indië [The useful plants of the Dutch East Indies]. 2nd edition. 3 volumes. Departement van Landbouw, Nijverheid en Handel in Nederlandsch Indië. 1953 pp. (3rd edition, 1950. van Hoeve, 's-Gravenhage/Bandung, the Netherlands/Indonesia. 1660 pp.).
[40]Huxley, A., Griffiths, M., & Levy, M. (Editors), 1992. The New Royal Horticultural Society Dictionary of Gardening. 4 volumes. MacMillan Press, London, United Kingdom, and Stockton Press, New York, United States. 3353 pp.
[43]Kay, D.E., 1973. Crop and product digest No 2. Root crops. The Tropical Products Institute, London, United Kingdom. 245 pp.
[62]National Academy of Sciences, 1979. Tropical legumes: resources for the future. National Academy Press, Washington, D.C., United States. 331 pp.
[67]Peekel, P.G., 1984. Flora of the Bismarck Archipelago for naturalists. English edition. Office of Forests, Division of Botany, Lae, Papua New Guinea. 638 pp.
[68]Porterfield Jr, W.M., 1951. The principal Chinese vegetable foods and food plants of chinatown markets. Economic Botany 5: 3–37.
[79]Singh, H.B. & Arora, R.K., 1978. Wild edible plants of India. Indian Council of Agricultural Research, New Delhi. B.D. Sen at Naba Mudrad, Calcutta, India. 88 pp.
[90]van der Maesen, L.J.G., 1985. Revision of the genus Pueraria DC. with some notes on Teyleria Backer (Leguminosae). Wageningen Agricultural University Papers 85: 1–132.
[91]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)

L.E. Groen, J.S. Siemonsma & P.C.M. Jansen

Correct Citation of this Article

Groen, L.E., Siemonsma, J.S. & Jansen, P.C.M., 1996. Pueraria lobata (Willdenow) Ohwi. In: Flach, M. & Rumawas, F. (Editors): Plant Resources of South-East Asia No 9: Plants yielding non-seed carbohydrates. PROSEA Foundation, Bogor, Indonesia. Database record: prota4u.org/prosea

Creative Commons License
All texts are licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike 3.0 Netherlands License
This license does not include the illustrations (Maps,drawings,pictures); these remain all under copyright.