The Candlenut Tree, Handsome and Wind
Transcription
The Candlenut Tree, Handsome and Wind
Literature Cited plants, spring and fall 1988. Bradenton GCREC Res. Rept. BRA 19898. Howe, T. K. and W. E. Waters. 1985. Evaluation of petunia: spring and fall 1984. Proc. Fla. State Hort. Soc. 98:335-341. Howe, T. K. and W. E. Waters. 1986a. Observations of flowering bedding plants, spring 1985. Bradenton GCREC Res. Rept. BRA1986-6. Howe, T. K. and W. E. Waters. 1986b. Observations of flowering bedding plants, fall 1985. Bradenton GCREC Res. Rept. BRA 1986-8. Howe, T. K. and W. E. Waters. 1987a. Observations of flowering bedding plants, spring 1986. Bradenton GCREC Res. Rept. BRA 1987-13. Howe, T. K. and W. E. Waters. 1987b. Observations of flowering bedding plants, fall 1986. Bradenton GCREC Res. Rept. BRA1987-15. Howe, T. K. and W. E. Waters. 1988. Observations of flowering bedding plants, spring and fall 1987. Bradenton GCREC Res. Rept. BRA198812. Howe, T. K. and W. E. Waters. 1989. Observations of flowering bedding Howe, T. K. and W. E. Waters. 1990a. Observations of flowering bedding plants, spring, summer and fall 1989. Bradenton GCREC Res. Rept. BRA1990-8. Howe, T. K. and W. E. Waters. 1990b. Observations of flowering bedding plants, spring 1990. Bradenton GCREC Res. Rept. BRA 1990-21. Howe, T. K. and W. E. Waters. 1991. Observations of flowering bedding plants, fall-winter 1990-1991. Bradenton GCREC Res. Rept. BRA1991-12. Stanley, C. D. 1992. Temperature and rainfall report for 1991. Braden ton GCREC Res. Rept. BRA1992-2. United States Dept. Agric. 1992. Floriculture Crops 1991 Summary. Nat'l. Agric. Statistics Serv., USDA, Washington, D.C. Voight, A. O. 1992. Special report analyzing the 1991 bedding plant season. Prof. Plant Growers Assoc. Season Sales Summary, Lansing, MI. Proc. Fla. State Hort. Soc. 105:251-256. 1992. THE CANDLENUT TREE, HANDSOME AND WIND-RESISTANT, IS A NEGLECTED ORNAMENTAL IN FLORIDA Julia F. Morton Morton Collectanea University of Miami Coral Gables, FL 33124 Additional index words. Aleurites fordii, A. moluccana, A. triloba, Imperata cylindrica, lalang, linseed, lumbang, tung. Abstract. The candlenut tree, or kukui, Aleurites moluccana (L) Willd., of the family Euphorbiaceae, grows wild in the rainforests of the islands of Malaysia (but not on the main land of Asia); also in Melanesia and Polynesia; and is widely cultivated in the tropics. Introduced by aborigines into Hawaii, the tree became naturalized on the slopes of the wet, windward coasts. Normally 20-60 ft in height, it has a broad canopy of triangular, evergreen leaves, white-woolly when young, and hence showy in the forests. The small, white, dioecious flowers are followed by clusters of nearly round fruits, to 2-1/2 in wide, with thick, fleshy rind and 1-2 blac kish, rough seeds having crisp, white kernels. The tree is free of pests though the soft, rotting fallen wood is devoured by beetles, which are in turn eagerly roasted and eaten by local people. The wood is used for fuel, floats for fishing nets, crates and sometimes canoes. The foliage and wood are buried to enrich the soil in taro fields. The kernels contain 60% of a drying oil formerly exported from Hawaii to Russian settlers on the northwestern coast of America. Fishermen chew the raw kernels and spew them out over the water to calm it. After roasting, the kernel is edible and widely consumed. Various parts of the tree produce other economic products (dye, tannin, etc., and folk remedies). The hollowed shells, after retting, smoothing and polishing to a "jet" finish, are strung in necklaces (leis) selling for as much as $35. This useful tree might aid in reforesation in Latin America and should help to beautify South Florida. A stately tree, so comely and faultless that it attracts little attention, the candlenut, Aleurites moluccana (L.) Willd., (syn. A. triloba R. Forst. and G. Forst.), of the family Euphorbiaceae, is rare in Florida though it was introduced by the United States Department of Agriculture in 1915, Proc. Fla. State Hort. Soc. 105: 1992. having received a gift of seeds from the Philippine Bureau of Agriculture in Manila (Anon., 1915). Of uncertain origin, possibly eastern Malaysia (Burkill, 1935) it occurs in Kwantung, China, at 3,000 ft altitude (Lee, 1935) and is common, naturalized and cultivated, in Pakistan and South India (Anon., 1985); abounds all over Malaysia, especially the Molucca Islands (Steinmetz, 1965); the Philippines, New Zealand, and Queensland, Australia. It is barely able "to endure the winters of Melbourne" (von Mueller, 1885). It has become well established in Mauritius (Baker, 1877); also all over Polynesia, including the Ryukyu Islands (Walker, 1954) and Hawaii where it grows profusely and is sometimes dominant (Merrill, 1943) in the lower rainforests. It does not do well on limestone in Guam but inhabits farmlands in the southern part of the island (Safford, 1905; Stone, 1970). As the seeds are be lieved incapable of floating on ocean currents, man is con sidered to be the main distributor (Barrau, 1960). Arabs conveyed them to East Africa (Burkill, 1935). In Hawaii, solid groves of candlenut trees were cleared to make way for sugar plantations. There are still some remnants of ancient sacred groves in remote areas where ceremonies were conducted (Handy and Handy, 1972). In the New World, it has become common in Bermuda (Britton, 1918), runs wild in waste places in the Bahamas (Correll and Correll, 1982), is occasionally grown in vari ous Caribbean islands, including Dominica (Nicolson et al., 1991). In Puerto Rico it does best from sea level to 2,000 ft in moist limestone areas (Little et al., 1974). It is a famil iar tree in parts of Panama, where it is planted for shade (Escobar, 1972; Standley, 1928); also in El Salvador, Guatemala, Venezuela, Colombia and Brazil (Aguilar Giron, 1966; Allen, 1943; Perez-Arbelaez, 1956; Schnee, 1960). Because of its wide distribution, it has acquired a number of local names besides the best-known and wellearned "candlenut". Among them are: ama (Polynesia); lama (Samoa); arbol de India (El Salvador); Bengal nut (India); kekuna (Ceylon); mayow (Thailand); kemeeri, derekan (Java); Indian walnut (Malaya); tuitui (Cook Is lands); kukui, when raw; inamora, when cooked (Hawaii); 251 is a crisp, cream-colored shell (resembling an egg-shell), enclosing 1-2 (rarely 3) irregular, angular, more or less oblate, black "nuts", appearing grayish because of a white, waxy coating (Brown, 1954). The white kernel is firm and walnut-flavored (Britton and Wilson, 1923-24; Dastur, 1951; Degener, 1945; Dickey etal., 1952; Little etal., 1974; Fig. 1. The candlenut tree (Aleurites moluccana (L.) Willd.) is strong and stately, with a broad canopy of evergreen foliage. Photo by Julia F. Morton. lumbang, lumbang bato (Philippines); navi (New Guinea); napa or nepa (New Hebrides); gem, gun, jem, maidu, rhawa, tai, and veti (New Caledonia); lauci, sekeci, qereqere, tuitui, and toto (Fiji); nogal de la India (Panama and Venezuela); noyer de Bancoul; noguiera de Bancul (Brazil); nuez de India (Puerto Rico); country walnut, Otaheite walnut (Virgin Islands); candleberry (Trinidad); tungo (Guatemala); varnish tree (various locales); and many more (Aguilar, 1919; Aguilar Giron, 1966; Allen, 1943; Barrau, 1960; Benthall, 1946; Britton, 1918; Britton and Wilson, 1923-24; Brown, 1954; Burkill, 1935; Christo- pherson, 1935; Corner, 1952; Escobar A., 1972; Fenzi, 1915; Kaaiakamanu and Akina, 1922; Liberty Hyde Bailey Hortorium, 1976; Little et al., 1974; Merrill, 1943; Mors and Rizzini, 1966; Ochse and Bakhuizen van den Brink, 1931; Quisumbing, 1951; Richenda Parham, 1943; Roig y Mesa, 1945; Safford, 1905; Schnee, 1960; Steinmetz, 1965; Sturtevant, 1919; Williams and Williams, 1951). Ochse and Bakhuizen van den Brink, 1931; Quisumbing, 1951). It is somewhat toxic, indigestible, or purgative when raw (especially when immature) (Webb, 1948) but has been an important food of Australian aborigines (Cribb and Cribb, 1975). Arnold (1944) says the kernels are "perfectly wholesome" when cooked. Filipinos often employ the seeds as a mild laxative (Quisumbing, 1951), and I have known one Florida farmer who did so occasionally with no ill ef fect. There have also been instances when children in Florida have eaten raw seeds and shown no sign of illness. In Malaya, roasted seeds are added to curries (Burkill, 1935) and are sold as "snacks" in native shops (Corner, 1952). Howes (1953) says that the seeds are edible and palatable after "being stored for some time until they are thoroughly dry". However, they should not be consumed in excess (Cribb and Cribb 1975). Hawaiians roast the ker nels, chop them, mix them with seaweed and serve as a relish at feasts (Safford, 1905). In Java, kernels from which the oil has been extracted are soaked in water for 48 hrs and then steamed, after covering with a banana leaf and kept in the dark under pressure in a basket for 4 days. The fermented product (sauce) is esteemed for its flavor (Bur kill, 1935; Ochse and Bakhuizen van den Brink, 1931). In Sumatra, the processed kernels are used as a substi tute for coconut (Ochse and Bakhuizen van den Brink, 1931). Roasted kernels are added to curries, and are also pounded with hot peppers, salt and shrimp paste, or the dried ink bag of the squid (Degener, 1945). Steinmetz (1965) says that after World War II, small amounts of candlenuts were being used in western restaurants to flavor "special Oriental dishes". Candlenut Oil The expressed oil, "mixed with salt, is the universal condiment of Hawaiians for seasoning fish and poi" (Handy and Handy, 1972). The kernels contain 33 to Description The candlenut is fairly fast-growing (Brown, 1954); it is usually a tree of medium size—30 to 45 ft—sometimes to 60, or even 90 ft in very favorable locations (Degener, 1945). It has a tall, straight trunk and broad, dense crown of evergreen foliage which is coated with a white or gray powdery substance, especially on the young leaves in sum mer, so that the tree stands out in the forest (Degener, 1945; Sturrock and Menninger, 1946). The long-stalked leaves, to 8 or even 12 in long (Williams, 1949), are gener ally ovate or triangular but variable in form, those of young specimens may be 3- to 5-lobed. Male and female flowers, borne on the same trees, are small, white, abundant, in large terminal, downy clusters to 9 in long (Liberty Hyde Bailey Hortorium, 1976). The fruits, in dangling clusters of 3-6 (Corner, 1952) usually are nearly round, to 2-1/2 in wide; with thick, indehiscent, olive-green rind (Benthall, 1946). One type in Indonesia has oblong, thick-walled fruits (Ochse and Bakhuizen van den Brink, 1931). Within 252 Fig. 2. Candlenut flowers are small and white. Young leaves in sum mer are coated with a white or gray powder in contrast to the glossy, dark-green mature leaves. Photo by Julia F. Morton. Proc. Fla. State Hort. Soc. 105: 1992. The nuts are hard to crack, but if kept in a 95° F oven for 3-4 hrs and then soaked in cold water overnight, the shells burst, easily releasing the kernels. This method pro duces more oil per ton of nuts than extraction by crushing. Whole nuts can be kept in dry storage for at least 1 yr with no change in the quality of the oil (Aguilar, 1919; Burkill, 1935). The oil repels marine borers (Uphof, 1968) and, as a drying oil, has been valued by artists (Maiden, 1889) and Fig. 3. Candlenut fruits are nearly round with a thick, olive-green rind which does not split open. The seeds are hard, irregular, black, more or less covered with whitish or grayish wax. The kernel is white and crisp; edible when roasted. Photo by Julia F. Morton. 62.40% (Aguilar Giron, 1966) of a pale-yellow, drying oil which has been of great value as an illuminant in the Pacific Islands. A popular practice has been the stringing of dried or roasted kernels on sticks of bamboo, split roots of Pandanus (Brown, 1954), or the midrib of a coconut leaflet, or on a reed, and the igniting of them for illumination. After burning at the lower end, the strand is inverted and burn ing continues with renewed brightness (Brown, 1954). Each nut burned for 2-3 min (Degener, 1945). Sometimes the kernels would be wrapped with tapa cloth to prevent burning too fast (Handy and Handy, 1972). A hollow piece of bamboo, stuffed with kernels, also served as a torch or lamp (Degener, 1945). Crude candles were made by mash ing the kernels, blending with cotton fiber and forming the wax-like material around a slender splint of bamboo serving as a wick. The candles gave light but also produced malodorous smoke. Both men and women used the soot from the smoke to powder their hair (Steinmetz, 1965), and for tinting their eyelids (Dastur, 1951). It also pro vided a dye for tattooing (Degener, 1945). In Africa, lan terns have been made of banana stems holding bamboo adorned with candlenuts (Williamson, 1955). The extracted oil was burned in crude stone lamps (Brown, 1935; Dastur, 1945). It was not used for cooking (Hurst, 1942). Years ago Hawaiians exported candlenut oil to Russians living on the northwestern coast of America. It is very similar to linseed oil (Neal, 1965), was used for making candles in India, England and Europe (Benthall, 1946; Smith, 1882). At a time of high interest in the oil, exports amounted to 10,000 gals per yr (Neal, 1965). Candlenut oil was by far preferred to that from the thin ner-shelled A. trisperma Blanco (lumbang banucalag) which the Chinese considered irritant (Aguilar, 1919). It is said that 220 lbs of candlenut seeds will yield 44 lbs of oil (Guz man, 1947). Proc. Fla. State Hort. Soc. 105: generally for making paint and varnishes, putty, linoleum and soap (Burkill, 1935). It contains olein, palmitin, stearin, myristicin, magnesium and phosphoric anhydride compounds (Steinmetz, 1965). It dries more slowly than linseed oil (Raymond and Squires, 1952-53). There has been modest production of candlenut oil in Santa Catarina, Brazil (Mors and Rizzini, 1966). However, it can no longer compete with linseed oil because of the higher cost of man ual labor in its production (Degener, 1945). In Fiji, the oil has been applied on hair and skin (Altschul, 1973). Currently, in Hawaii, water-clear KUKUI SKINCARE ("Pure kukui nut oil") is sold as a skin mois turizer. It contains linoleic and linolenic fatty acids, also the antioxidants Vitamin C, A and E. It is the product of the HAWAIIAN KUKUI NUT COMPANY which also produces KUKUI CONDITIONING SHAMPOO which contains, besides the oil, water, ammonium lauryl sulfate, sodium myreth sulfate, cocoamidopropyl betaine, lauramide DEA, PEG-120 methyl glucose dioleate, glycol stearate, polysorbate-80, acetylated lanolin, cetyl acetate, propylene glycol, methylparaben, citric acid, panthenol, quaternium-15, fragrance and propyl paraben. Culture and Harvest The candlenut tree prefers a warm, humid to very humid climate (Holdridge and Poveda, 1975). It may be propagated by seed, cuttings, or air-layers (Fenzi, 1915). The seeds may take 38 to 150 days (Anon., 1985) to germi nate, but sprouting may be hastened by spreading them on the ground, covering with dried grass or leaves, and then burning. While still hot, the nuts are tossed into cold water. They will crack open and more than 30% will sprout. Some trees flower and fruit when only 3 yrs old (Brown, 1954). The tree yields well at 14 x 27 ft spacing (Ngaloken Gint- Fig. 4. Removal of the fleshy rind reveals a second coat, ova], pointed, brittle, which splits and releases the bony seed. Photo by Julia F. Morton. 1992. 253 Fig. 5. A growing industry in Hawaii is the extraction of oil from candlenut kernels for use in skin-moisturizing cosmetics and shampoo. Photo by Julia F. Morton. ings and Semadi, 1980). Young ones may produce 75-100 lbs of nuts per yr (Neal, 1965). Yield from mature trees may range from 5,000 to 15,000 nuts annually (Brown, 1954). Candlenuts for oil production are not harvested from the tree but allowed to fall and lie on the ground until the husk decays (Aguilar, 1919). Candlenut Leis In modern times, the candlenuts are principally used for making leis (necklaces). At first, the nuts were pierced and buried in the rich earth of marshes or taro fields where the kernel rotted or was eaten by ants, and the shell became jet-black (Brown, 1935) and ready for polishing with the stipules of the breadfruit tree and oiled (Degener, 1945). Today, the HAWAIIAN KUKUI NUT COMPANY oper ates a candlenut factory on the north shore of Oahu. Ac cording to the company's brochure, the nuts are first placed in tumblers and rotated with a mild abrasive (pul verized corn husks) for 30 hrs. Then a hole is drilled through each nut with an air drill. After rinsing, the nuts are returned to the tumblers for 6 hrs. Next, a trim wheel removes rough spots and the nuts are finished in polishing tumblers, strung on ribbons, and brought to a glossy glow by a buffing wheel. Fully mature nuts are all-black; imma ture nuts are medium-brown. The leis have been offered in mail order catalogs such as Brookstone, Peterborough, New Hampshire, at $35.00 for a 15-in (15-nut) lei, the same price as at the factory. Some are currently being pro In Java, candlenuts have been employed in a popular gambling game, the players striving to break each other's nuts by knocking them together (Ochse and Bakhuizen van den Brink, 1931). Fishermen in the Pacific make a practice of chewing a mouthful of kernels and then spew ing them out over rough water, the released oil making it calm and transparent (Degener, 1945; Handy and Handy, 1972). Similarly, crushed kernels are tossed into boiling sugarcane juice to prevent boiling over (Burkill, 1935). The candlenut is a favorite food of the cassowary (Cribb and Cribb, 1975). The kernels were an important food for wild hogs which were hunted by the Polynesians (Handy and Handy, 1972), but the residue from oil extrac tion, though it is rich in protein (up to 45%) (Burkill, 1935) cannot be used as cattlefeed (Brown, 1954; Steinmetz, 1965). It is valued for fertilizer because of its 8.5% nitrogen and 4% phosphoric acid content (Steinmetz, 1965). Fresh candlenut leaves and flowers are popular com bined in leis (Neal, 1965). Holes for taro planting were often enriched by candlenut leaves or rotting wood of old candlenut trees (Handy and Handy, 1972). The pale, soft wood weighs about 38 lbs per cu. ft (Benthall, 1946). It is useful for fuel (Kaaiakamanu and Akina, 1922) and some times used for tea chests and (Sundaraj and Balasubramanyan, 1969), canoes, roofing timbers, and water-catching troughs (Handy and Handy, 1972), matchsticks (Burkill, 1935), etc. but it is not durable (Maiden, 1889) and is sub ject to termite infestation (Walker, 1954). Beetles attack freshly felled logs (Anon., 1985) and their grubs are re lished by the natives of New Caledonia (Barrau, 1960). Australians have found the wood suitable for paper-mak ing. It yields 62% cellulose (Burkill, 1935). The bark of the tree is used for tanning. A resin ob tained from the wounded bark of the tree was used to catch birds (Brown, 1935). The feet of those released were cleaned with candlenut oil. The resin was brushed onto kapa cloth to make it more permanent and waterproof, imparting a dark, red-brown color (Degener, 1945). It was also useful for tanning fishing lines and mats (Brown, 1935). A brown dye for clothing is extracted from the tree's duced and exported from Taiwan. The polished nuts are also used in costume jewelry, including rings (Degener, 1945), tie-clasps, ornamental pins, and earrings (Neal, 1965). Other Uses of the Candlenut Tree The candlenut tree, in olden days, was rated as second in importance to the coconut palm (Barrau, 1960). In 1965, Neal wrote: "recently the kukui was made the official tree emblem for the State of Hawaii because of the multip licity of its uses". 254 Fig. 6. Candlenuts are transformed by retting and/or mechanical polishing, into jet-black (mature) or chocolate-brown (immature) "beads" for necklaces or other ornamental jewelry. Photo by Julia F. Morton. Proc. Fla. State Hort. Soc. 105: 1992. roots in the Sandwich Islands (Dastur, 1951). The root bark, mixed with charcoal, served to paint canoes black (Degener, 1945). The candlenut tree is now being planted in Sumatra to suppress the pantropical pest grass, lalang (Imperata cylindrica (L.) Beauv.). Control is achieved 3 yrs after planting at 14 X 14 ft spacing (Ngaloken Gin tings and Semadi, 1980). In Java, the tree is cultivated for reforestation (Backer and Bakhuizen van den Brink, Jr., 1963). In Southeast Asia, it has been utilized for "clothing sand- dunes" (Burkill, 1935). Folk Medicine In the Marquesas, the juice of the green rind of the fruit was used to treat thrush in infants and to treat various skin ailments. The leaf sap was used similarly (Brown, 1935). In Malaya, boiled leaves are poulticed on the tem ples to relieve headache (Burkill, 1935). Leaves heated with a flatiron are reportedly laid on rheumatic pains (Quisumbing, 1951). A leaf infusion is employed in In donesia against scrofula (Steinmetz, 1965). Tests in Florida showed that candlenut leaves are toxic to chickens but less so than those of the tung-oil tree, A. fordii Hemsl. (Kingsbury, 1964). In Fiji, the bark is grated and boiled in seawater till reduced by 50%. Then the decoction is used as a mouthwash or remedy for neuralgia (Richenda Parham, 1943). Astringent, resinous sap from the tree's inner bark has been used to relieve sorethroat and as a diuretic (Brown, 1935). It is mixed with coconut milk and drunk to relieve "sprue" (digestive and intestinal malfunction) (Steinmitz, 1965). The bark is also employed to relieve asthma (Kaaiakamanu and Akina, 1922). Sometimes the ground kernels are used like linseed in poultices (Steinmetz, 1965). The baked, pulverized kernels enter into a mixture applied to ulcers and open sores (Kaaiakamanu and Akina, 1922). A dose of 30 g of candlenut oil has been prescribed as a purgative, acting like castor oil (Safford, 1905). The oil has also been applied to the body to allay rheumatism (Steinmetz, 1965). Lepers in Brazil benefit from applying the oil externally while tak ing small doses internally (Freise, 1934). Barrau, J. 1960. The candlenut tree. South Pacific Bull. Vol. 10, No 2 Pp. 39 and 42. Benthall, A. P. 1946. Trees of Calcutta and its neighborhood. Thacker Spink & Co. (1933) Ltd., Calcutta. Britton, N. L. 1918. Flora of Bermuda. Charles Scribner's Sons, New York. and P. Wilson. 1923-24. 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Henley Central Florida Research and Education Center IFAS, University of Florida Apopka, FL 32703 Additional index word, foliage plant. Abstract Terminal cuttings of 17 dieffenbachia cultivars rooted under mist in 15-cm containers were grown to maturity at which time the number of basal shoots per plant was counted. Five cultivars had no basal shoots, 7 produced from 1 to 4 shoots, and 5 produced more than 4 shoots. A second evaluation included 26 dieffenbachia cultivars finished in 15or 20-cm pots from commercial nurseries. Leaf lamina length and ratio of lamina length to width were determined. The lamina length to width ratio is a good indicator of the leaf shape. A ratio of less than 2 to 2.9 was classified as wide, a ratio of 3 or more was regarded as intermediate, and a ratio of more than 3 was considered narrow. Of the leaves exam ined from 26 cultivars and species, 5 were wide, 15 were inter mediate and 6 were narrow. The remainder of the paper is dedicated to descriptions of 34 cultivars of dieffenbachia, in cluding plants from the previously mentioned evaluations plus some additional plants obtained from commercial growers. A member of the aroid family (Araceae), the genus Dief fenbachia is composed of about 30 species of broad-leaved, upright, herbaceous plants indigenous to South and Cen tral America (Bailey et al, 1976). Most of the species have been evaluated by plant collectors and commercial nurseFlorida Agricultural Experiment Station Journal Series No. N-00734. 256 rymen for their value as ornamental pot plants. Although a few species, such as D. amoena and D. maculata (D. picta) were grown commercially in large numbers as recently as the late 1970s, they are difficult to find today except in conservatories and private collections. Dieffenbachias are among the five most popular in terior foliage plants produced and sold in the United States. A Florida Department of Agriculture, Division of Marketing report on 1991 foliage plant production in Florida indicates dieffenbachias were 7% of the product mix of the nurseries surveyed (Sheehan, 1992). Most mod ern dieffenbachias are either hybrids resulting from plant breeding or sports from plants which spontaneously de veloped in cultivation. Popular dieffenbachias of this dec ade are generally highly variegated, have leaves with short petioles, and in most cases produce basal shoots freely, unlike the popular single-stem dieffenbachias of 20 years ago and earlier. Dieffenbachias are most frequently used as specimen plants for decorating homes and other indoor areas. Plants in 7- to 20-cm pot sizes are commonly used on tables, desks and counters while plants set at floor level are usually in 20-cm diameter pots and larger. Interiorscapers occasion ally plant dieffenbachias in mass to obtain desired patterns of color and texture in large spaces indoors. Small dieffen bachia plants, usually 10-cm or less, are useful in combina tion planters, such as dish gardens. The primary purpose of this article is to describe visual characteristics of most current commercial dieffenbachia cultivars. Two popular books on tropical ornamental plant material, Exotica III (Graf, 1968) and Tropica (Graf, 1978), do not reflect the cultivars of dieffenbachia which were popular when these books were published. Proc. Fla. State Hort. Soc. 105: 1992.