Wednesday, November 29, 2017

The Trees of Lagro: Nature's Gene Bank and Wildlife Sanctuary


The eucalyptus bears the proverbial  golden leaves - pure gold particles one-fifth the diameter of human hair embedded in the leaf veins! 

Gold vein! Microdeposits of pure gold.  This new discovery is more important in gold prospecting where eucalyptus grows, indicating deep beneath the earth lies a "pot of gold."   

 Dr Abe V Rotor

  
Eucalyptus (Eucalyptus globulus), relative of the macopa (Eugenia jambalana) and duhat (Syzigium cumini) under Family Myrtaceae

Part 1. Eucalyptus and neighboring trees
  
This towering eucalyptus Eucalyptus globulus dwarfs the adjacent barangay hall, covered court, and high school buildings, yet she is unassuming. Her lanky nature with dull green foliage with a tinge of blue flimsily hanging like the weeping willow (Salix sp), does not stir much attention of passersby, not even residents around.  

No, she does not exude the regal pose of the narra (Dipterocarpus indicus), the Philippine national tree; the shady crown of the acacia (Samanea saman), the biggest legume in the world; and the coconut (Cocos nucifera), the miracle tree.  Paradoxically all these trees occupy the same compound, the center of barangay activities.

Even as the wind blows the eucalyptus has little confetti to throw, few notes to whistle, little shade to draw on the ground. Yet she is a living Panacea, the Greek goddess of universal remedy from insect bite to asthma to alleviation of mental and physical fatigue.  Her leaves have virtual cure-all power: antiviral, antibacterial, anti-fungal, and they exude volatile oil into the air and even as they lay on the ground. She keeps at bay vermin from mosquitoes, flies, cockroaches, flea,ticks, to rodents.  Yet, unlike other pesticides, the volatile oil of eucalyptus is refreshing, soothing to the lungs, increasing oxygenation and blood circulation. 

Why, Indisposed feelings are gone! That pep is back! Where have all the flies gone? 
If there is a tree that is a must in the neighborhood, better on the backyard, it is this goddess tree Panacea.   

But wait, there is a hidden treasure in the leaves of eucalyptus, the proverbial "gold leaves," as shown by the photomicrograph above.   Gold vein! Microdeposits of pure gold.  This new discovery is more important in gold prospecting where eucalyptus grows, indicating deep beneath the earth lies a "pot of gold."  Asked if it's worth collecting the leaves for gold - Australian scientists wryly said no.  The amount is too little to be worth the effort. Well, gold is gold.

Every time I look at a eucalyptus tree I see Panacea holding a gold leaf.  

Narra trees (Pterocarpus indicus), the pride of Philippine wood as Philippine mahogany is the best furniture and finish wood in the world, comparable if not better than the oak and maple, including the redwood.  Two of the hardest woods of the world are found here: Molave (Vitex parviflora) and mabolo (Diospyros discolor) or kamagong.   

 Acacia (Samanea saman), is a popular trees in the Philippines, introduced to the Philippines by the Spaniards from Mexico.  Acacia trees have a long life span, some reaching three or four hundred years. Acacia trees in Rizal's time, including those he planted, while in exile at Dapitan, still stand today robust and tall.  The secret of the acacia is, it is self-fertilizing: its roots harbor Rhizobium, a bacterium that fixes elemental nitrogen into nitrates (NO3) that combine with the elements needed by the tree, a characteristics of all legumes. 

Part 2:  Fruiting Lychee in Lagro QC - a Rare Phenomenon 
This is a series of photographs my son and I made on a rare fruiting lychee tree in Lagro subdivision, not far from the boundary of La Mesa Water Reservoir in Quezon City. The tree was planted from seedling by the homeowner and friend Ms Elvie Machate. When she invited me and my family to harvest her lychees, I could hardly believe her, until I saw the fruit laden lychees tree right in her backyard. It's so full of fruits, the branches sagged which made picking easy. Which we did on the roof of her house where we had direct access to the bunches of fruits.

Lychees is a temperate tree. That's why it grows best above the Tropic of Cancer such as in China. I have yet to see fruiting lychees in the highlands. Surprisingly here on the lowland where temperature reaches 36 degrees Celsius in summer, this tree has broken all known adaptive notions about this plant. I had a lychee at home, also in Lagro, and waited for fifteen years. It did not fruit. And yet it was just a block away from this miracle tree. There is another lychee standing at Don Antonio Heights in Quezon City. It must be twenty years, and it too, has not produced a single fruit.

What could be the explanation to this rare phenomenon? I venture two likely reasons.

First, it is a variety or cultivar that had undergone prior acclimatization. Meaning its introduction to a new place was gradual, and not just a single transfer.

Second, it is a mutant that luckily turned out to bear fruits - and of commercial quality at that.

A third, if I may add, it must have been planted by one with green thumb.

Whatever the reason is, it shows nature's way to transfer and spread out species in different places - and given enough time and proper care - will successfully adapt to the new home.

I got some seeds which I am going to plant. I hope I'll be successful this time. 

This lychee tree is in a backyard not far from the La Mesa
Eco Park in Quezon City



 
 Closeup of the fruits of lychee, also called lichee or litchi (plural, litchis); pronounced locally, lichiyas.


Acclimatization is an adaptation process for exotic species or varieties of plants in places outside their known habitat. The technique is not new. The early settlers introduced grapes, oranges, apples, apricot, and other plants to the New World from Europe, the Middle East and Asia. Their success made us think these plants are native to the place. This actually is a traditional practice since man settled down as farmer.

A dramatic event is recorded in Mutiny of the Bounty, when a ship carrying breadfruit seedlings (rimas) to be planted in British island colonies failed because of a mutiny. Wheat was introduced to the Fertile Crescent between the Tigris and Euphrates rivers. In the eighties wheat was introduced in our ricefields after the rice is harvested. It was about to take off as a regular crop when the program was overtaken by the Edsa Revolution.

Perhaps the most successful of recent plant introductions is the dragon fruit. It is a hanging cactus (epiphytic) found in the jungles of Vietnam. During the war, the cactus was dislodged from its host tree and began growing on fertile soil. With prop to support it upright it began to  bear large fruits each weighing up to a kilogram. In less than a decade dragon fruit can be found in several countries, Israel being the most successful that it is a now major exporter of dragon fruit.

There are many other cases. Our avocado came from Mexico through the Galleon Trade. Corn is perhaps the most adaptable crop - it can grow in tropical and temperate areas . Rice follows to a lesser extent. The japonica rice extends up north beyond the limit of indica rice. Wheat, through overwintering, can grow in very cold countries like Siberia - particularly now that ice is retreating as a result of global warming.

In southern Cebu I found fruiting loquat which is a native of northern China. It is a small tree that bears fruits like the lychee, only that the color of the fruit is dull yellow, and the taste is different. There are fruiting trees of lanzones, durian, and rambutan in least expected places. Surprise? I estimate half of our local plants to be products of acclimatization over the years, and with proper selection and successful breeding, have become native to the Philippines. With today's science and technology, and the current shifting of climatic patterns, we expect more cases of successful acclimatization - whether these are transient or long lasting. ~

Monday, November 27, 2017

Marang (Artocarpus odoratissimus) - royal tropical fruit

Artocarpus odoratissimus, also called terap,marang, johey oak, green pedalai, madang, tarap, or timadang, is a tree in the mulberry and fig family Moraceae. It is a relative of durian, nangka, and breadfruit (rimas).


Dr Abe V Rotor


 Fully ripe marang is eaten with fingers to enjoy its fresh, sweet taste, and unique flavor that gives its species' name, odoratissimus.   

Tired of common fruits in supermarkets and sidewalk fruitstands?  Try something exotic, such as fruits from the south, Mindanao.  Try marang, a relative of durian, which is known to many, for its unpleasant smell.  In fact, marang and durian share the same odor when ripe, but to a much lesser degree.

 Now and then we have marang on the dining table. It goes well with any meal as dessert. Or it is simply served as is - ripe and easy to pry open, without knife. Just pluck the flesh straight to the mouth, and spit out the seeds.  The seeds are edible, like nangka seeds, which when boiled are enjoyed by young and old alike.  

So what's in marang?  Dubbed as "royal" food, I can imagine its special place on occasions celebrated in the tropical countries where marang grows, like Indonesia, Thailand, and Malaysia. Other than the celebrated ambiance I came to know of its high nutritiove value, from calories to elements needed for good health from a research conducted in Brunei.   

Artocarpus odoratissimus samples obtained from three different locations in Brunei Darussalam were analysed for their proximate composition which consists of moisture, ash, total carbohydrate, crude protein, crude fibre, energy content and crude fat. The mineral and sugar (fructose, glucose and sucrose) were also investigated *

A. odoratissimus flesh contains
  • moisture (wet basis), 67.9 – 73.4 g/100g 
  • ash (wet basis), 0.6 – 0.8 g/100 g
  • total carbohydrate (wet basis),12.0 – 25.2 g/100 g
  • crude protein,1.2 – 1.5 g/100g 
  • crude fibre (wet basis), 0.8 – 1.3 g/100g 
  • energy content (dry basis) 334 – 379 kcal/100g, and
  • proline (wet basis) 85 – 363 mg/kg. 
 The seeds contain 
  •  moisture (wet basis), 31.0 - 55.0 g/100g
  •  ash (wet basis), 1.0 – 1.5 g/100g
  •  crude fibre (wet basis), 3.2 – 4.7 g/100g
  •  crude protein (wet basis), 5.1 - 6.6 g/100g
  •  crude fat (dry basis), 10.1 – 28.1 g/100g 
  •  energy content (dry basis), 488– 497 Kcal/100g 
  •  fresh weight of total carbohydrate1.2 – 2.3 g/100g,  and
  •  proline. 255 – 476 mg/ kg
Of the minerals in both flesh and seeds (potassium, sodium, calcium, magnesium, copper, cobalt, nickel, zinc, manganese cadmium and lead), potassium was found to be the most abundant mineral. No lead was detected in any parts of the fruit. From the quantification of sugar content, fructose was the dominant type of sugar in Artocarpus odoratissimus flesh (5.8 – 13.7 g/100g). From the range of nutrients, A. odoratissimus is generally comparable with A. heterophyllus (nangka), Artocarpus altilis  and A. integer (breadfruit or rimas).

*Proximate analysis of Artocarpus odoratissimus (Tarap) in
Brunei Darussalam

1,2*Tang, Y. P., 2Linda, B. L. L. and 2Franz, L. W.1Department of Agriculture and Agrifood, Ministry of Industry and Primary Resources, Negara Brunei Darussalam; 2Department of Chemistry, Faculty of Science, Universiti Brunei Darussalam, Negara Brunei Darussalam

Sunday, November 26, 2017

Pomegranate - ancient, sacred fruit

Dr Abe V Rotor
Living with Nature School on Blog
Paaralang Bayan sa Himpapawid (People's School-on-Air) with Ms Melly C Tenorio
738 DZRB AM Band, 8 to 9 evening class, Monday to Friday
  

Two common varieties of pomegranate locally called granada or grenade for the shape and interior of the fruit; the flower is popularly the design of royal crowns in ancient times, which is still popular today.
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The pomegranate, botanical name Punica granatum, is a fruit-bearing deciduous shrub or small tree growing between 5–8 meters tall. The pomegranate is widely considered to have originated in Iran and has been cultivated since ancient times.                                                                                                                            Wikipedia
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remember the pomegranate trees dad planted around the house.  The bright red flowers resembled a royal crown that breaks the dull landscape, especially in summer.  The fruits dangle almost to the ground we children can pick when ripe.  

The fully ripe fruit easily cracks and spill some seeds like a grenade, a botanical phenomenon called dehiscence.  It is for this, together with the shape of the fruit that the plant earned its name.  Oh, how we kids loved to eat the fleshy seeds, then force them out when spent like blowgun and start a war as ancient as the history of the plant itself. 

Pomegranate is a very old crop probably first domesticated in Persia, modern day Iran. From there it spread throughout the Middle East, then to Asia, the Americas, and to other tropical countries.  


But it was the Greeks who treasured its myth. To them, it was pomegranate that caused the seasons. In a shortened version, Hades, god of the underworld, kidnapped Persephone to be his wife, and to keep her from returning to her mourning mother on earth, he deceived her into eating six seeds of the sacred but fatal fruit. In her deep sorrow Persephone's mother, Demeter ceased in giving life to earth for six months which represents the dry season, and were it not for the intervention of Zeus, the earth would have been totally lifeless the whole year.

The ancient Greeks regarded pomegranate as the "fruit of the dead," and to appease the gods, gave importance to it at weddings and funerals. It is traditional to them to break a pomegranate on the ground at weddings and on New Year. Pomegranate decors abound their homes and buildings. To this day we can find their influence to art through Renaissance Europe, finding its way to the Philippines during the 400-year Spanish colonization.

There are other myths associated with pomegranate. The ancient Egyptians regarded the pomegranate as a symbol of prosperity and ambition. Goddess Hera is sometimes represented offering the pomegranate. Even among Christians, the pomegranate is regarded as sacred, symbolized by Mary and her child Jesus holding a pomegranate. In many 


countries it is a practice that when one buys a new home, it is conventional for a house guest to bring as a first gift a pomegranate, which is placed at the home altar, as a symbol of abundance, fertility and good luck.

 Pomegranate in the hands of Madonna and Child

Pomegranate was the symbol of fertility in ancient Persian culture. In Persian Mythology, Isfandiyar eats a pomegranate and becomes invincible. In the Greco-Persian Wars, Herodotus the Greek historian, mentions golden pomegranates adorning the spears of warriors in the phalanx. Even in today's Iran, pomegranate may imply love and fertility.
Iran produces pomegranates as a common crop. Its juice and paste have a role in some Iranian cuisines, e.g. chicken, ghormas and refreshment bars. Pomegranate skins may be used to stain wool and silk in the carpet industry. Pomegranate Festival is an annual cultural and artistic festival held during October in Tehran to exhibit and sell pomegranates, food products and handicraft.

To the Chinese pomegranate is a symbol of long life and fertility 

In some Hindu traditions, the pomegranate (hindi: Beejapuram, literally: replete with seeds) symbolizes prosperity and fertility. So with the Chinese. 

But what made pomegranate popular worldwide?
Medical science found its many benefits to health that it is virtually an elixir, a panacea. First, let’s take a cursory look at its nutritional value

Nutrition Facts of Pomegranate per 100 grams

  • Calories 83 % Daily Value*
  • Total Fat 1.2 g 1%
  • Saturated fat 0.1 g 0%
  • Polyunsaturated fat 0.1 g
  • Monounsaturated fat 0.1 g
  • Cholesterol 0 mg 0%
  • Sodium 3 mg 0%
  • Potassium 236 mg 6%
  • Total Carbohydrate 19 g 6%
  • Dietary fiber 4 g 16%
  • Sugar 14 g
  • Protein 1.7 g 3%
  • Vitamin A 0% Vitamin C 17%
  • Calcium 1% Iron 1%
  • Vitamin D 0% Vitamin B-6 5%
  • Vitamin B-12 0% Magnesium 3%
*Per cent Daily Values are based on a 2,000 calorie diet. Your daily values may be higher 
or lower depending on your calorie needs. FeedbackSources include: USDA

Metabolites of pomegranate juice ellagitannins (urolithins) localize specifically in the prostate gland, colon, and intestinal tissues of mice, leading to clinical studies of pomegranate juice or fruit extracts for efficacy against several diseases.

In 2013, 44 clinical trials were registered with the National Institutes of Health to examine effects of pomegranate extracts or juice consumption on a variety of human disorders, including:

·         prostate cancer
·         prostatic hyperplasia
·         diabetes
·         lymphoma
·         rhinovirus infection
·         common cold
·         oxidative stress in diabetic hemodialysis
·         atherosclerosis
·         coronary artery disease
·         infant brain injury
·         hemodialysis for kidney disease
·         male infertility
·         aging
·         memory
·         pregnancy complications
·         osteoporosis
·         erectile dysfunction


Reference: Wikipedia, other Internet sources, Living with Nature Series, AVR

Among the recommended fruits we should include to popularize in the Philippines - among the common fruits on the backyard and in the market - is pomegranate. Lately we came to realize its importance to senior citizens, especially those taking maintenance medicine.  Its medicinal and nutritive properties indeed makes it worthy to be elevated as “sacred” as the Greeks and other cultures held for centuries - and up to the present.  

Our pomegranate trees at home stood the test of time in the absence of caretakers. We left for our studies Manila, and when dad died, the backyard gave way to other plants.                                   
Lately my wife brought home a big pomegranate (first photo, top). “I will plant the seeds,” I said, remembering the beautiful pomegranate trees of my childhood at home in San Vicente (IS). I waited for the seeds to germinate. After almost a month one seed germinated. To me it is new hope for the young generation. I proudly showed it to my children and grandchildren and related a long story that actually started with the ancient Greeks. ~
    

Seedling of pomegranate - ancient and sacred, elixir and secret of long life.
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Pomegranate is used in cooking, baking, juices, smoothies and alcoholic beverages, such as martinis and wine.

The rind of the fruit and the bark of the pomegranate tree is used as a traditional remedy against diarrhea, dysentery and intestinal parasites. The seeds and juice are considered a tonic for the heart and throat, and classified as having bitter-astringent taste plus a range of taste from sweet to sour, depending on ripeness. Thus Pomegranate is considered a healthful counterbalance to a diet high in sweet-fatty (kapha or earth) components.

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The Making of a Plastic Continent

Dr Abe V Rotor
  
The main Plastic Vortex as big as the state of texas - and growing - lies north of Hawaii off the coast of Canada and the US. "Islands" of plastics coalese into the vortex. Dutch scientists propose to convert the floating debris into a livable environment.  Satellite photo below shows ocean currents and gyres responsible in creating the vortex.   Canada is directly affected as indicated in the North Pacific Gyre. 
 Another gyre in the North Atlantic is poised to form another Plastic Vortex along the east coast of the US and Canada. If this happens we might expect a graver consequence as plastic merges with seaweeds that comprise the huge Sargasso Sea. (See lowermost photos, from the Internet) 

NOTE: There are other gyres three in the south hemisphere, all potential spawning grounds of floating garbage.
 
 
 

Relate these events with the following: 
1. Pope Francis Laudato Si (Praise Be), a call to save the Earth
2. Canada exporting trash to the Philippines
3. Earth Summits - review and prospects
4. Culture of Consumerism
5. Waste management models 
6. Personal concern and action
7. Global Leadership challenge
8. Autotoxicity - myth of fact?

Study the following photos (Internet).  






Saturday, November 25, 2017

A Good Public Servant is Likened to The Good Shepherd

By Director Cecilia R Rotor
 Prayer for the Management Committee of the National Food Authority, November 4, 2014 (Tuesday)

Father Almighty, teach us to become good public servants in the way of the Good Shepherd, who “lays down his life for his flock.”

Father Almighty, source of light, of life and everything in this world, we beg you to be with us, to be our “unseen Guest” in this meeting;

Light our way; touch our heart as we touch the hearts of the people we serve, whom You have placed under our care.

Bless us with joy and enthusiasm, with zeal and obedience, with understanding and compassion in making this world a better place to live in, through our own humble way.

Teach us then to emulate You in the way of the Good Shepherd, that we may live and work peacefully in our organization;

Make us teachers to bring knowledge, skill and values to our co-employees, and to those we serve;

Make us healers by bringing enlightenment to human misery;

Make us agents of rational thoughts and decisions;

Make us guardians in the way of the Parable of the Sower, The Prodigal Son, and The Good Samaritan.

You have chosen us to be public servants as a profession and above all, a vocation:
 - to reach out for one another;
- to listen;
- to care;
- to comfort;
- to encourage one another when we fail;
- to help one another when we falter;
- to be strong together; and
- to share the joy of service.

With you, Father Almighty, we can do many things; without you, we can do nothing.
Make us then your instrument of service through your Jesus Christ, who reigns forever and ever. Amen. ~

NOTE: Today, November 4, marks two significant events in history: election of the first African American president of United States, and the first Marxist president of Latin America.  (Barack Obama 2008 and Salvador Allende, Chile 1970)

Mudspring - Mt Makiling's Mystical Crater


Dr Abe V Rotor
On the trail to the Mudspring with the author's family

It's a long trail if you start at the foot of Mt Makiling,
take the road with a four-wheel drive, 
then stop where the road ends and from here starts
a long trek you really have to strive.  

Among the huge towering trees you're but a dwarf
among creatures crawling or flying,
searching far beyond of what they are looking for; 
theirs for survival, yours meaning.  

Mudspring Crater, author with children.

Incessantly the crater pops scalding mud 
and gases that boggle the mind,
a mystic shroud where mist and cloud meet, 
    a spectacle of a different kind.  

Everybody loves this legendary mountain,
though fiery inside to be free;
Lofty is her majestic pose be near or far 
reclining in peace and beauty.  

Wonder the young mind thinks of this world,
  a hybrid of  fantasy and reality,
where spirits live and mortals dare to tread,
in a lifetime journey to infinity. ~

Mt Makiling is a dormant volcano in Laguna, site of the historic University of the Philippines at Los Banos, and the International Rice Research Institute.  The mountain has a profile of a reclining deity, Maria Makiling, for whom this mountain is named.   

Thursday, November 16, 2017

A Naturalist's World in Paintings

Paintings and Verses by Dr Abe V Rotor

Drynaria Fern
Two kinds of leaves have you to catch the sun,
rain and organic matter;
When in summer time, one dies into cap and pan
to give life to the other. 



A Parthenon of Trees, Temple of Nature
The Parthenon of Greece is but an imitation,
false pride of claiming God's Creation. 



Ripples of Rainbow
Clear as the rainbow in the sky,
its image on the pond a far cry.



Transition of Life
Land dies into a pond, pond into land,
in seres, one after another;
living mass into organic matter over time.
death to living in this order. 



Milton's Query 
If Paradise was lost because of man's disobedience,
was it regained in his absence? ~

Fossil - Chronicler of Nature

Fossil - Chronicler of Nature
Dr Abe V Rotor

                                                                  Fossil by AVRotor 2011

You’re the Creator’s emissary,
blueprint of phylogeny;
what enshrined you in a rock,
is more than fate or luck;
but a testimony of creation,
by design or evolution.

You’re a chronicler of nature,
the rise and fall of every creature;
more than a fossil but monument
of God’s supreme moment;
revealing through natural history,
the world's greatest mystery. ~

Saturday, November 11, 2017

Rainbow on Wings - a Passing Scene

Dr Abe V Rotor


The mayfly lives for just a few hours, hence it is called Ephemerid, 
(Order Ephemerida) Its life cycle is mainly spent in water as naiad. 
(Acknowledgement: Melvyn Yeo photo, edited by the author) 

The night lies awake with a dim light,
     comes a companion in flight 
with wings of rainbow burning bright- 
     what a magnificent sight! ~ 

NOTE: Compose a song about this beautiful insect, with the verse as lyrics. Recommended as lullaby or romantic song. The verse may be modified as Refrain to give freedom for the composer to add his own.