Cestrum aurantiacum

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Cestrum aurantiacum[1] (orange cestrum, "orange jessamine", orange-flowering jessamine, and yellow cestrum;[2] syn. Capraria lanceolata L.f.) is a species of shrub in the potato family Solanaceae that is native to tropical regions of North and South America.

Description

File:Cestrum aurantiacum 1.jpg
Large shrubby plant

Cestrum aurantiacum is a shrub 1.5 to 6.5 m tall or occasionally up to 8.5 m tall. The branches are glabrous or sparsely tomentose. The leaves are ovate to elliptical, 7 to 17 cm long and 2.5 to 5.5 cm wide. Both sides of the leaf are glabrous, the tip is acuminate or shortly tapering, the base is acuminate to blunt or occasionally shortly tapering. The petioles are 1 to 3 cm long and glabrous.[3]

Inflorescences

The terminal or axillary, umbelliferous or racemose inflorescences consist of a few to a few flowers. The inflorescence axis is finely hairy or hairless, the bracts linear and later deciduous. The flowers are sessile, almost sessile or stand on flower stalks up to 1.5 mm long. Blooming constantly through the year, the flowers produce a citrus-like scent at night.[3]

The calyx is tubular, 5 to 6.5 (rarely up to 9) mm long and hairless except for the (0.7) 1 to 2 (3) mm long, ciliate calyx lobes. These are awl-shaped and long-spiked or rounded and long-spiked and run further down the calyx tube as five nerve tracts.

File:Cestrum aurantiacum-fruits-2-yercaud-salem-India.JPG
White berries

The orange or rarely yellow corolla has a 17.5 to 20 mm long corolla tube, the corolla lobes are 3 to 3.5 (5.5) mm long, egg-shaped or lanceolate. The edges are covered with papillose hairs. The stamens are 4 to 6.5 mm long, swollen and bent over in a knee-like shape, groove-like or almost appendage-like. The base and the vascular bundles of the stamens are hairy. The style is 16.5 to 18.5 mm long.[4]

The fruits are white berries (which are distinguished from the black fruits of Cestrum parqui), 8 to 12 mm long, with seven to nine seeds, which are about 3 to 5 mm long.[3]

Distribution

This species is distributed in an area extending from southern Mexico to Nicaragua, where it is found in moist thickets or forests, often in pine-oak forests at altitudes between 1000 and 2600 m.[3]

Cultivation

File:Cestrum aurantiacum - Orange Cestrum at Ooty 2014 (17).jpg
Foliage and flowers

This plant is used as an ornamental plant, and it is a poisonous plant if eaten by animals.[5] However, the species is widely grown as an ornamental plant and in some places it has escaped from cultivation and returned to the wild. In parts of Africa, Asia and Australia, the species has become a harmful invasive species. The top of the plant is hardy to zone 8 but it is root hardy to zone 7.[6]

Drought tolerant, the species grows best in occasionally moist, humus-rich, well-drained soil in full sun or partial shade. The size of the shrub is easily controlled by pruning. It is regarded as medicinal in Peru. The flowers attract hummingbirds, butterflies, and other pollinating insects. [7]

References

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  1. Cestrum aurantiacum at USDA PLANTS Database
  2. Cestrum aurantiacum Template:Webarchive at Swaziland's Flora Database Template:Webarchive
  3. a b c d Cestrum aurantiacum Lindl. by National Parks Board. Retrieved January 31, 2025.
  4. Johnnie L. Gentry Jr. and Paul Standley: Flora of Guatemala. Solanaceae , Fieldiana:Botany, Volume 24, Part X, Numbers 1 and 2. Field Museum of Natural History, 1974.
  5. Template:GRIN
  6. Cestrum aurantiacum by NC State University. Retrieved January 31, 2025.
  7. Cestrum aurantiacum at Universal Postal Union - stamps of Peru]

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