Lawsonia inermis

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Lawsonia inermis, also known as hina, the henna tree, the mignonette tree, and the Egyptian privet,[1] is a flowering plant and one of the only two species of the genus Lawsonia, with the other being Lawsonia odorata. It is used as a traditional medicinal plant.[2] The species is named after the Scottish physician Isaac Lawson, a good friend of Linnaeus.

Description

Henna is a tall shrub or small tree, standing Template:Convert. It is glabrous and multi-branched, with spine-tipped branchlets. The leaves grow opposite each other on the stem. They are glabrous, sub-sessile, elliptical, and lanceolate (long and wider in the middle; average dimensions are 1.5–5.0 cm x 0.5–2 cm or .6–2 in x 0.2–0.8 in), acuminate (tapering to a long point), and have depressed veins on the dorsal surface. Henna flowers have four sepals and a Template:Convert calyx tube, with Template:Convert spread lobes. Its petals are ovate, with white or red stamens found in pairs on the rim of the calyx tube. The ovary is four-celled, Template:Convert long, and erect. Henna fruits are small, brownish capsules, Template:Convert in diameter, with 32–49 seeds per fruit, and open irregularly into four splits.[3]

Distribution and habitat

The henna plant is native to northern and eastern Africa, Asia and northern Australia, in semi-arid zones and tropical areas.[4]

Cultivation

It produces the most dye when grown in temperatures between Template:Convert.[5] During the onset of precipitation intervals, the plant grows rapidly, putting out new shoots. Growth subsequently slows. The leaves gradually yellow and fall during prolonged dry or cool intervals. It does not thrive where minimum temperatures are below Template:Convert. Temperatures below Template:Convert will kill the henna plant.

Dye

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Said leaves also have antifungal and antiseptic properties.[7]

Image gallery

References

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