Parkia biglobosa

Wɔatwerɛ nsɛm wei ɛwɔ Asante kasa mu
Parkia biglobosa
taxon
subclass ofuseful plant Sesa
short nameP. biglobosa Sesa
taxon nameParkia biglobosa Sesa
taxon rankspecies Sesa
parent taxonParkia Sesa
has basionymMimosa biglobosa Sesa
IUCN conservation statusLeast Concern Sesa
subject has roletype species Sesa
maintained by WikiProjectWikiProject Invasion Biology Sesa
GRIN URLhttps://npgsweb.ars-grin.gov/gringlobal/taxonomydetail.aspx?id=26777 Sesa

Parkia biglobosa, a yɛfrɛ no African locust bean wɔ borɔfo kasa [1] dua bi a ɛka Fabaceae nnua abusuakuo kɛseɛ no ho. Edin a yɛde nim no wɔ Twi kasa mu ne dawadawa. Woba Africa a, ɛnyɛ na koraa. Ɛwɔ meammea ahodoɔ bebree. De ɛhia wɔ dua no ho pa ara ne n'abono a mma wɔ mu no. Ɛno titiriw nti na Wɔdua dawadawa dua no. Esiane sɛ, wɔtɔ pa ara. Na ɛwɔ boɔ nso. Nyu ne sɛ nko ara nti na wɔdi, mmom, ɛtumi nso sa yadeɛ. Ɛyɛ ma nnipa apɔɔmuden.

Ne Bɔberɛ

sesa

Parkia biglobosa yɛ nnua a wɔfrɛ wɔn dicotyledonous angiosperm no mu baako .[2] Ɛnyini a ne tenten tumi yɛ mita aduonu.[3] Ebi wɔ hɔ mpo a, ne tenten no tumi duru mita aduasa.[3] Dua no abono a yɛfrɛ no dawadawa anaa locust bean no ankasa no, sɛ ɛrenyini a, n'ahosuo yɛ penke, nanso sɛ enyini wie a, na adane brown ne tenten bɛtumi aduru 40 cm[3]

Ne Dwumadie

sesa
 
Mma a wɔayiyi afiri n'abono mu

Abono a mma no wowɔ mu no ɛyɛ dɛ. N'ahosuo yɛ akokɔseradeɛ. Ɛno nso, wɔde yɛ aduane. Ɛmu mma no na wɔyiyi a, wɔde yɛ dawadawa no. Wɔde yɛ aduane a, ɛma no yɛ hwam. Wokɔ Ghana a, wɔn a wɔtaa de yɛ aduane pa ara ne Hausafoɔ ne titiriw, wɔn a wɔwɔ atifi fam. Ghanafoɔ frɛ no dawadawa, Igbofoɔ feɛ no sikomu, Yorubafoɔ frɛ no iru.”[4] Wɔtumi nso de n'abono no yɛ nsa.[5] Sɛ wɔyiyi mma no firi abono no mu a, wɔdi kan noa ma ɛho pɔre. Afei, na wɔakata so de asi hɔ kɔpem sɛ wɔbɛnya nka a ɔrepɛ no. Wɔtumi yam no muhumuhu. Wɔtumi nso gyae no saa. Wɔkyerɛ sɛ nnuane nnuro bi te sɛ carbohydrate nyɛ na wɔ n'abono no mu. Saa ara nso na protein nso nyɛ na wɔ amma no mu .[6]Nyɛ nnipa nko ara na wɔdi. Mmoa nso tumi di. Sɛ wɔyiyi mma no firi abono no mu wie a, na wɔde abono no ama ayɛnmmoa.[7][8]

Aduroyɛ mu

sesa

Dawadawa dwumadie titiriw baako ne apɔɔmuden a ɛma. Ɛboa nnipa appɔmuden wɔ akwan ahodoɔ pii so wɔ Afrika.[9] Ɛtumi ko akomayareɛ.[10] [11] [12]

Beaeɛ a Menyaa Mmoa Firiiɛ

sesa
  1. Nhwɛsoɔ:GRIN
  2. Thiombiano, D. N., Lamien, N., Dibong, D. S., Boussim, I. J., & Belem, B. (2012). The role of woody species in managing food shortage in Burkina Faso. Sécheresse, 23(2), 86-93. Retrieved November 13, 2013, from the Web of Knowledge
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 Species Information – Parkia biglobosa. (n.d.). Agroforestry Tree Database. Retrieved November 13, 2013, from worldagroforestrycentre.org, archived from the original on December 18, 2013, retrieved July 10, 2024
  4. Olaniyan, A. (n.d.). Locust Bean Products. Non-Wood News-No.10. Retrieved November 12, 2013, from fao.org
  5. Pieroni, Andrea (2005). Prance, Ghillean; Nesbitt, Mark (eds.). The Cultural History of Plants. Routledge. p. 30. ISBN 0415927463.
  6. Gernah, D.I., Inyang, C.U., & Ezeora, N.L. (2007). Incubation and fermentation of African locust beans (Parkia biglobosa) in production of "dawadawa". Journal of Food Processing and Preservation, 31(2), 227-239. Retrieved November 13, 2013, from the Agricola database.
  7. Heuzé V., Thiollet H., Tran G., Edouard N., Lebas F., 2018. African locust bean (Parkia biglobosa & Parkia filicoidea). Feedipedia, a programme by INRA, CIRAD, AFZ and FAO. https://www.feedipedia.org/node/268 Last updated on January 25, 2018, 13:49
  8. Teklehaimanot, Z. (2004). Exploiting the potential of indigenous agroforestry trees: Parkia biglobosa and Vitellaria paradoxa in sub-Saharan Africa. Agroforestry Systems, 61, 207-220.
  9. Karou, S., Tchacondo, T., Tchibozo, M. D., Abdoul-Rahaman, S., Anani, K., Koudouvo, K., et al. (2011). Ethnobotanical study of medicinal plants used in the management of diabetes mellitus and hypertension in the Central Region of Togo.. PharmBiol., 49(12), 1286-1297. Retrieved November 13, 2013, from the PubMed database.
  10. Adetutu, A., Morgan, W., & Corcoran, O. (2011). Ethnopharmacological survey and in vitro evaluation of wound-healing plants used in South-western Nigeria.. J Ethnopharmacol, 137(1), 50-56. Retrieved November 13, 2013, from the PubMed database.
  11. Traoré, M., Baldé, M., Oularé, K., Magassouba, F., Diakité, I., Diallo, A., et al. (2013). Ethnobotanical survey on medicinal plants used by Guinean traditional healers in the treatment of malaria.. J Ethnopharmacol, S0378-8741(13)00773-3. 10.1016/j.jep.2013.10.048.. Retrieved November 14, 2013, from the PubMed database.
  12. Abioye, E., Akinpelu, D., Aiyegoro, O., Adegboye, M., Oni, M., & Okoh, A. (2013). Preliminary phytochemical screening and antibacterial properties of crude stem bark extracts and fractions of Parkia biglobosa (Jacq.).. Molecules, 18(7), 8459-8499. Retrieved November 13, 2013, from the PubMed database.