Sighted the Naagalinga Maram (நாகலிங்க மரம்)/ Cannonball Tree (Couroupita
guianensis), is an evergreen tree native to tropical northern South America
and to the southern Caribbean. In India it has been growing for the past
two or three thousand years at least, as attested by textual records; hence
it is possible that it is native to India also. It belongs to the
Lecythidaceae family and grows up to 25m in height.

The "Cannonball Tree" is so called because of its brown cannon-ball-like
fruits. The majority of these trees outside their natural environment have
been planted as a botanical curiosity, as they grow very large, distinctive
flowers. Its flowers are orange, scarlet and pink in color, and form large
bunches measuring up to 3m in length. They produce large spherical and
woody fruits ranging from 15 to 24cm in diameter, containing up to 200 or
300 seeds apiece.

The flowers do not have nectar, so these flowers are mainly visited by bees
in search of pollen; outside the native range of habitat, carpenter bees
are considered to be the principal pollinators. Both the fruit and the
flower grow from stalks which sprout from the trunk of the tree. The
flowers are found on thick tangled extrusions that grow on the trunk of the
tree; these are found just below the foliage branches. The extrusions
however, can range from two to six feet in length. The flowers are attached
to an upwardly bent, white fleshy disk. The flowers have six petals, which
are large, orange-red, and strongly perfumed. In pollination, fertile
stamens can be found in a ring around reduced style and stamens. The
sterile pollen is located in the anthers. As a bee enters to pollinate the
flower, its back rubs against the ring with fertile pollen; this allows the
bee to carry the fertile pollen to another flower. The differences in the
pollen was noticed by French botanist Antoine Porteau in 1825. The
differences in the pollen are as follows: the pollen of the ring stamens is
fertile, while the hood pollen is sterile.

The tree gets its common name from the large, spherical fruits it produces.
The fruit falls from the tree and cracks open when it hits the ground when
mature, often causing the sound of a small explosion. The fruit emits an
unpleasant aroma when exposed to the air. Individual seeds within the
"ball" are coated with hair, which is thought to protect the seed when it
is ingested and may also help in the passage of the seed through the
intestines. The cannonball tree and it's fruit are thought by some to be
remnants of the last ice age, like the "hedge apple" or "osage orane" of
north America. The fruit is thought to be an adaptation provided for the
giant ground sloth, a long extinct species. Today instead of seeds being
dispersed by the large extinct mammal, the fruit simply rots around the
base of it's mother tree. Like coconut palms, the trees should not be
planted near paths or near traffic-filled areas, as the heavy nut is known
to fall without notice.

The trees are grown extensively in Shiva temples in India. In Hindi it is
called Shiv Kamal and also known as "Kailaspati". It is called the
Nagalingam tree in Tamil. The flowers are called Shivalinga flowers in
Hindi; Nagalinga Pushpa in Kannada; Nagamalli flowers or Mallikarjuna
flowers in Telugu. Hindus revere it as a sacred tree because the petals of
the flower resemble the hood of the Naga, a sacred snake, protecting a
Shiva Lingam, the stigma.

The Cannonball Tree possesses antibiotic, antifungal, antiseptic and
analgesic qualities. The trees are used to cure colds and stomach aches.
Juice made from the leaves is used to cure skin diseases, and shamans of
South America have even used tree parts for treating malaria. The inside of
the fruit can disinfect wounds and young leaves ease toothache. The fruit
emits an unpleasant odor and can be used as an insect repelent just by
rubbing it to the skin or clothes.



https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/-v5DxpHbdZEU/T6ll_D8tvjI/AAAAAAAAEmo/M4g1CBU52ak/s512/Canon%2520Ball%2520Tree.jpg

-- 
N. Ramjee
               __
          o- '' | \_____/), No 5 Prashanthi Apartments
            \_/|_)            )  TM Maistri Street; Vanandurai,
Tiruvanmiyur PO
                    \   __    /   Chennai, Tamil Nadu--India
                    (_/  (_/    Tel: 91-44-24524272 mob: +91-9443194272

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