Submitted by kiran yadav on Thu, 04/02/2010 - 10:52
Posted in
FLOWERING TREES
SILK COTTON TREE SEMAL
Common name: Silk Cotton Tree, Kopak Tree
Hindi: Semal
Manipuri: Tera
Assamese: Dumboli
Tamil: Sittan, Sanmali
Malyalam: Unnamurika
Botanical name: Bombax celiba
Family: Bombacaceae (baobab family)
Synonyms: Salmalia malabarica
Silk cotton tree is a type of native cotton tree with large red flowers. The genus name Salmaila is derived from the Sanskrit name shaalmali. Silk cotton trees comprose eight species in the genus Bombax, native to India, tropical southern Asia, northern Australia and tropical Africa. Semul trees bear beautiful red-colored flowers during January to March. The phenomenon paints the whole landscape in an enchanting red hue. The fruit, the size of a pin-pong ball, on maturity appears during March and April. These are full of cotton-like fibrous stuff. It is for the fiber that villagers gather the semul fruit and extract the cotton substance called "kopak". This substance is used for filling economically priced pillows, quilts, sofas etc. the fruit is cooked and eaten and also pickled. Semul is quite a fast growing tree and can attain a girth of 2 to 3 m, and height about 30 m, in nearly 50 years or so. Its wood, when sown fresh, is white in color. However, with exposure and passage of time it grows darkish gray. It is as light as 10 to 12 kg, per cubic foot. It is easy to work but not durable anywhere other than under water. So, it is popular for construction work, but is very good and prized for manufacture of plywood, match boxes and sticks, scabbards, patterns, moulds, etc. also for making canoes and light duty boats and or other structures required under water. Bombax species are used as food plants by the larvae of some Lepidoptera species including the leaf-miner , Bucculatrix crateracma which feeds exclusively on Bombax celiba.
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