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Moringa
Family: Moringaceae
Moringa image
Sue Carnahan
  • FNA
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Mark E. Olson in Flora of North America (vol. 7)
Trees or shrubs, [massive pachycauls, baobab-like with water-storing trunk], slender-trunked. Leaves: stipules with nectaries at growing tip; rachis articulation with stalked glands; [1-pinnate](2-)3-4(-5)-pinnate; leaflet blade membranous [subcoriaceous], [lanceolate, oblanceolate, linear] round or oval, venation sometimes conspicuous abaxially, apex glandular, surfaces [pubescent] puberulent or glabrous. Flowers: parts usually with hairs forming a barrier distal to the nectariferous hypanthium; 1 sporangium initiated in anther ontogeny. Capsules 2-valved, often constricted between seeds. Seeds [1]2-3 cm, winged [not winged], sometimes with spongy seed coat, shed by gravity. x = 11. Little is known about breeding systems in Moringa; M. longituba Engler appears incapable of self-pollination, and flowers with sterile anthers have been reported in M. concanensis Nimmo ex Dalzell & Gibson. All species are used medicinally locally; M. stenopetala (Baker f.) Cufodontis is used as a leaf vegetable in northwestern Kenya and southwestern Ethiopia.

Moringa aptera
Images
not available
Moringa oleifera
Image of Moringa oleifera
Moringa ovalifolia
Image of Moringa ovalifolia
Moringa peregrina
Image of Moringa peregrina
Moringa stenopetala
Images
not available
The National Science Foundation
Development supported by National Science Foundation Grants (DBI 9983132, BRC 0237418, DBI 0743827, DBI 0847966)
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