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{{short description|Species of tree in the family Pandanaceae and an important regional food crop}}
{{Short description|Species of tree in the family Pandanaceae and regional food crop}}
{{Speciesbox
{{Speciesbox
| image = Pandanus julianettii fruit cluster.png
| image = Pandanus julianettii fruit cluster.png
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| display_parents = 3
| display_parents = 3
| genus = Pandanus
| genus = Pandanus
| parent = Karuka (subsection)
| parent = Pandanus sect. Karuka
| species = julianettii
| species = julianettii
| authority = [[Ugolino Martelli|Martelli]]<ref name="Martelli">{{cite journal |last1=Martelli |first1=Ugolino |authorlink1=Ugolino Martelli |editor1-last=Martelli |editor1-first=Ugolino |editor1-link=Ugolino Martelli |title=''Pandanus'' Nuove Specie Descritte Manipolo II |journal=Webbia, Raccolta di Scritti Botanici |date=December 1907 |volume=2 |page=433 |doi=10.1080/00837792.1907.10803460 |language=Italian |issn=2169-4060 |oclc=899525984|hdl=2027/mdp.39015038487925 |url=https://zenodo.org/record/1768324 }}</ref>
| authority = [[Ugolino Martelli|Martelli]]<ref name="Martelli">{{cite journal |last1=Martelli |first1=Ugolino |author-link1=Ugolino Martelli |editor1-last=Martelli |editor1-first=Ugolino |editor1-link=Ugolino Martelli |title=''Pandanus'' Nuove Specie Descritte Manipolo II |journal=Webbia, Raccolta di Scritti Botanici |date=December 1907 |volume=2 |page=433 |doi=10.1080/00837792.1907.10803460 |language=it |issn=2169-4060 |oclc=899525984 |hdl=2027/mdp.39015038487925 |url=https://zenodo.org/record/1768324 |access-date=2022-09-26 |archive-date=2022-08-12 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220812141143/https://zenodo.org/record/1768324 |url-status=live }}</ref>
| synonyms = *''Pandanus jiulianetti'' <small>[[Ugolino Martelli|Martelli]]</small><ref name="Martelli"/><ref name="Rose82"/>
| synonyms = *''Pandanus jiulianetti'' <small>[[Ugolino Martelli|Martelli]]</small><ref name="Martelli"/><ref name="Rose82"/>
| synonyms_ref =
| synonyms_ref =
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| opt4v =
| opt4v =
| note =
| note =
| source = <ref name="French">{{cite book |last1=French |first1=Bruce R. |authorlink=Bruce French (agricultural scientist) |title=Growing food in the Southern Highlands Province of Papua New Guinea |date=1982 |publisher=AFTSEMU (Agricultural Field Trials, Surveys, Evaluation and Monitoring Unit) of the World Bank funded project in the Southern Highlands of Papua New Guinea |pages=64–71 |url=https://docplayer.net/42672690-Growing-food-in-the-southern-highlands-province-of-papua-new-guinea-bruce-r-french.html |accessdate=20 September 2018 |language=English |format=PDF |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20181030035515/https://docplayer.net/42672690-Growing-food-in-the-southern-highlands-province-of-papua-new-guinea-bruce-r-french.html |archive-date=30 October 2018 |url-status=live }}</ref><ref name="Rose82"/>| source_usda =
| source = <ref name="French">{{cite book |last1=French |first1=Bruce R. |author-link=Bruce French (agricultural scientist) |title=Growing food in the Southern Highlands Province of Papua New Guinea |date=1982 |publisher=AFTSEMU (Agricultural Field Trials, Surveys, Evaluation and Monitoring Unit) of the World Bank funded project in the Southern Highlands of Papua New Guinea |pages=64–71 |url=https://docplayer.net/42672690-Growing-food-in-the-southern-highlands-province-of-papua-new-guinea-bruce-r-french.html |access-date=20 September 2018 |language=en |format=PDF |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20181030035515/https://docplayer.net/42672690-Growing-food-in-the-southern-highlands-province-of-papua-new-guinea-bruce-r-french.html |archive-date=30 October 2018 |url-status=live }}</ref><ref name="Rose82"/>| source_usda =
| noRDA =
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}}
}}


The '''karuka''' (''Pandanus julianettii'', also called '''karuka nut''' and '''''Pandanus'' nut''') is a species of tree in the family [[Pandanaceae]] and an important regional food crop in [[New Guinea]].<ref name="Lim">{{cite book |last1=Lim |first1=Tong Kwee |title=Edible Medicinal And Non-Medicinal Plants |date=2012 |publisher=Springer |isbn=978-94-007-4053-2 |pages=128–130 |doi=10.1007/978-94-007-4053-2_17 |language=English |chapter=''Pandanus julianettii'' |volume=4 |oclc=822591349}}</ref> The nuts are more nutritious than [[coconut]]s,<ref name="Rose82"/> and are so popular that villagers in the [[New Guinea Highlands|highlands]] will move their entire households closer to trees for the harvest season.<ref name="Bourke"/><ref name="Bourke88"/>
The '''karuka''' ('''''Pandanus julianettii''''', also called '''karuka nut''' and '''''Pandanus'' nut''') is a species of tree in the screwpine family ([[Pandanaceae]]) and an important regional food crop in [[New Guinea]].<ref name="Lim">{{cite book |last1=Lim |first1=Tong Kwee |title=Edible Medicinal and Non-Medicinal Plants |date=2012 |publisher=Springer |isbn=978-94-007-4053-2 |pages=128–130 |doi=10.1007/978-94-007-4053-2_17 |language=en |chapter=Pandanus julianettii |volume=4 |oclc=822591349}}</ref> The nuts are more nutritious than [[coconut]]s,<ref name="Rose82"/> and are so popular that villagers in the [[New Guinea Highlands|highlands]] will move their entire households closer to trees for the harvest season.<ref name="Bourke"/><ref name="Bourke88"/>


==Names==
==Names==
The [[Specific name (zoology)|specific epithet]] "''julianettii''" honors naturalist [[Amedeo Giulianetti]], who found the original [[Type (biology)|type specimens]].<ref name="Martelli"/>
The [[Specific name (zoology)|specific epithet]] "''julianettii''" honors naturalist [[Amedeo Giulianetti]], who found the original [[Type (biology)|type specimens]].<ref name="Martelli"/>


{{lang|tpi|Karuka}} is a [[loanword]] from [[Tok Pisin]].<ref name="Stone"/><ref name="Denham">{{cite journal |last1=Denham |first1=Tim |title=Exploiting diversity: plant exploitation and occupation in the interior of New Guinea during the Pleistocene |journal=Archaeology in Oceania |date=July 2007 |volume=42 |issue=2 |pages=41–48 |doi=10.1002/j.1834-4453.2007.tb00015.x |language=English |issn=1834-4453 |oclc=696476493}}</ref> Sometimes the tree is called '{{lang|tpi|karuga}}'<ref name="Tomlinson"/><ref name="Stilltoe">{{cite book |last1=Stilltoe |first1=Paul |title=Roots of the Earth: Crops in the Highlands of Papua New Guinea |date=1983 |publisher=Manchester university Press |location=Manchester, UK |isbn=978-0-7190-0874-0 |language=English |oclc=9556314 |lccn=82-62247}}</ref><ref name="Franklin"/> or 'karuka nut pandanus'.<ref name="Quartermain"/> The term 'karuka' can apply to both ''Pandanus julianettii'' and ''[[Pandanus brosimos|P. brosimos]]'', though the latter is usually called 'wild karuka'.<ref name="Bourke">{{cite book |last1=Bourke |first1=Richard Michael |editor1-last=Stevens |editor1-first=M.L. |editor2-last=Bourke |editor2-first=Richard Michael |editor3-last=Evans |editor3-first=Barry R. |title=South Pacific Indigenous Nuts. Proceedings of a workshop held from 31 October to 4 November 1994 at Le Lagon Resort, Port Vila, Vanuatu |publisher=Australian Centre for International Agricultural Research |location=Canberra |isbn=1-86320-485-7 |pages=45–55 |chapter-url=https://www.researchgate.net/publication/311912219 |accessdate=27 September 2018 |language=English |chapter-format=PDF |chapter=Edible indigenous nuts in Papua New Guinea |oclc=38390455 |series=Australian Centre for International Agricultural Research Proceedings |volume=69}}</ref> Both species, as well as ''[[Pandanus dubius|P. dubius]]'', can be called 'pandanus nut'.<ref name="Bourke"/> In addition to ''P. brosimos'', 'wild karuka' can also refer to ''[[Pandanus antaresensis|P. antaresensis]]'',<ref name="Quartermain"/> ''[[Pandanus iwen|P. iwen]]'', and ''[[Pandanus limbatus|P. limbatus]]'', but nuts from these trees are a much smaller part of the local diet.<ref name="Bourke"/> In contexts where multiple karuka species are discussed, ''P. julianettii'' is sometimes termed 'planted karuka'.<ref name="Quartermain"/> ''P. julianettii'', ''P. iwen'', and ''P. brosimos'' are also in the [[Subsection (botany)|subsection]] named ''[[Karuka (subsection)|Karuka]]'', which is in the [[monotypic taxon|monotypic]] [[Section (botany)|section]] also named ''[[Karuka (section)|Karuka]]''.<ref name="StoneOK"/>
{{lang|tpi|Karuka}} is a [[loanword]] from [[Tok Pisin]].<ref name="Stone"/><ref name="Denham">{{cite journal |last1=Denham |first1=Tim |title=Exploiting diversity: plant exploitation and occupation in the interior of New Guinea during the Pleistocene |journal=Archaeology in Oceania |date=July 2007 |volume=42 |issue=2 |pages=41–48 |doi=10.1002/j.1834-4453.2007.tb00015.x |language=en |issn=1834-4453 |oclc=696476493}}</ref> Sometimes the tree is called '{{lang|tpi|karuga}}'<ref name="Tomlinson"/><ref name="Stilltoe">{{cite book |last1=Stilltoe |first1=Paul |title=Roots of the Earth: Crops in the Highlands of Papua New Guinea |date=1983 |publisher=Manchester university Press |location=Manchester, UK |isbn=978-0-7190-0874-0 |language=en |oclc=9556314 |lccn=82-62247}}</ref><ref name="Franklin"/> or 'karuka nut pandanus'.<ref name="Quartermain"/> The term 'karuka' can apply to both ''Pandanus julianettii'' and ''[[Pandanus brosimos|P. brosimos]]'', though the latter is usually called 'wild karuka'.<ref name="Bourke">{{cite book |last1=Bourke |first1=Richard Michael |editor1-last=Stevens |editor1-first=M.L. |editor2-last=Bourke |editor2-first=Richard Michael |editor3-last=Evans |editor3-first=Barry R. |title=South Pacific Indigenous Nuts. Proceedings of a workshop held from 31 October to 4 November 1994 at Le Lagon Resort, Port Vila, Vanuatu |publisher=Australian Centre for International Agricultural Research |location=Canberra |isbn=1-86320-485-7 |pages=45–55 |chapter-url=https://www.researchgate.net/publication/311912219 |access-date=27 September 2018 |language=en |chapter-format=PDF |chapter=Edible indigenous nuts in Papua New Guinea |oclc=38390455 |series=Australian Centre for International Agricultural Research Proceedings |year=1994 |volume=69}}</ref> Both species, as well as ''[[Pandanus dubius|P. dubius]]'', can be called 'pandanus nut'.<ref name="Bourke"/> In addition to ''P. brosimos'', 'wild karuka' can also refer to ''[[Pandanus antaresensis|P. antaresensis]]'',<ref name="Quartermain"/> ''[[Pandanus iwen|P. iwen]]'', and ''[[Pandanus limbatus|P. limbatus]]'', but nuts from these trees are a much smaller part of the local diet.<ref name="Bourke"/> In contexts where multiple karuka species are discussed, ''P. julianettii'' is sometimes termed 'planted karuka'.<ref name="Quartermain"/> ''P. julianettii'', ''P. iwen'', and ''P. brosimos'' are also in the [[Subsection (botany)|subsection]] named ''[[Karuka (subsection)|Karuka]]'', which is in the [[monotypic taxon|monotypic]] [[Section (botany)|section]] also named ''[[Karuka (section)|Karuka]]''.<ref name="StoneOK"/>


In [[New Guinea]] it goes by different names among each of the [[Papuan people]]s.<ref name="Lim"/> In the [[Ankave language]] it is {{lang|aak|xweebo}}.<ref name="Lim"/> It is {{lang|byr|yase}} in the [[Baruya language]].<ref name="Lim"/> The [[Huli language]] word is {{lang|hui|anga}},<ref name="Goldman">{{cite book |last1=Goldman |first1=Laurence |title=Talk Never Dies: The Language of Huli Disputes |date=1983 |publisher=Tavistock Publications |location=London and New York |isbn=978-0422782104 |pages=[https://archive.org/details/talkneverdieslan0000gold/page/254 254–257] |language=English |chapter=Talking about talk |oclc=993340993 |chapter-url=https://archive.org/details/talkneverdieslan0000gold/page/254 }}</ref> and it is also {{lang|duc|anga}} in the [[Duna language]].<ref name="French"/><ref name="Lim"/><ref name="Ecocrop"/> In [[Kewa language]] it is ''aga'',<ref name="French"/><ref name="Lim"/><ref name="Franklin"/> but it is unclear which dialect(s). In the Kewa [[pandanus language]] it is ''rumala agaa''.<ref name="Franklin">{{cite journal |last1=Franklin |first1=Karl J. |title=A Ritual Pandanus Language of New Guinea |journal=Oceania |date=September 1972 |volume=43 |issue=1 |pages=66–76 |doi=10.1002/j.1834-4461.1972.tb01197.x |language=English |oclc=883021898}}</ref><ref name="Stefaniw"/> The [[Kalam language]] term, in both standard and pandanus languages, is {{lang|kmh|alŋaw}},<ref name="Majnep"/><ref name="Pawley">{{cite book |last1=Pawley |first1=Andrew |authorlink1=Andrew Pawley |editor1-last=Dutton |editor1-first=Tom E. |editor2-last=Ross |editor2-first=Malcolm |editor3-last=Tryon |editor3-first=Darrell |editor2-link=Malcolm Ross (linguist) |editor3-link=Darrell Tryon |title=The Language Game: Papers in Memory of Donald C. Laycock |date=1992 |publisher=Department of Linguistics, Research School of Pacific Studies, Australian National University |location=Canberra |isbn=0-85883-400-6 |pages=313–334 |language=English |chapter=Kalam Pandanus Language: An Old New Guinea Experiment in Language Engineering |oclc=222981840 |series=Pacific Linguistics Series C |volume=110 |issn=0078-7558 |others=Memory of [[Donald Laycock|Donald C. Laycock]]}}</ref> but it can also be called {{lang|kmh|kumi}} or {{lang|kmh|snay}}.<ref name="Kalam-Pawley"/> The plant is called {{lang|wiu|ama}} in the [[Wiru language]].<ref name="French"/><ref name="Lim"/> In the [[Pole language]] it's called ''maisene''.<ref name="French"/><ref name="Lim"/> It goes by ''ank'' in [[Angal language]],<ref name="French"/><ref name="Lim"/> and {{lang|akh|aenk}} in the Wola dialect.<ref name="Stilltoe" /> The [[Imbongu language]] word is {{lang|imo|amo}}.<ref name="Lim"/><ref name="French"/><ref name="Stefaniw">{{cite book |last1=Franklin |first1=Karl J. |last2=Stefaniw |first2=Roman |editor1-last=Dutton |editor1-first=Tom |title=Culture change, language change - case studies from Melanesia |date=1992 |publisher=Department of Linguistics Research School of Pacific Studies THE AUSTRALIAN NATIONAL UNIVERSITY |location=Canberra |isbn=978-0858834118 |issn=0078-7558 |pages=1–6 |chapter-url=https://openresearch-repository.anu.edu.au/bitstream/1885/145785/1/PL-C120.pdf |accessdate=25 October 2018 |language=English |chapter=The 'Pandanus Languages' of the Southern Highlands Province, Papua New Guinea - a further report |series=Pacific Linguistics |volume=C-120 |oclc=260177442 |doi=10.15144/PL-C120.1}}</ref>
In [[New Guinea]] it has different names among each of the [[Papuan people]]s.<ref name="Lim"/> In the [[Ankave language]] it is {{lang|aak|xweebo}}.<ref name="Lim"/> It is {{lang|byr|yase}} in the [[Baruya language]].<ref name="Lim"/> The [[Huli language]] word is {{lang|hui|anga}},<ref name="Goldman">{{cite book |last1=Goldman |first1=Laurence |title=Talk Never Dies: The Language of Huli Disputes |date=1983 |publisher=Tavistock Publications |location=London and New York |isbn=978-0422782104 |pages=[https://archive.org/details/talkneverdieslan0000gold/page/254 254–257] |language=en |chapter=Talking about talk |oclc=993340993 |chapter-url=https://archive.org/details/talkneverdieslan0000gold/page/254 }}</ref> and it is also {{lang|duc|anga}} in the [[Duna language]].<ref name="French"/><ref name="Lim"/><ref name="Ecocrop"/> In [[Kewa language]] it is ''aga'',<ref name="French"/><ref name="Lim"/><ref name="Franklin"/> but it is unclear which dialect(s). In the Kewa [[pandanus language]] it is ''rumala agaa''.<ref name="Franklin">{{cite journal |last1=Franklin |first1=Karl J. |title=A Ritual Pandanus Language of New Guinea |journal=Oceania |date=September 1972 |volume=43 |issue=1 |pages=66–76 |doi=10.1002/j.1834-4461.1972.tb01197.x |language=en |oclc=883021898}}</ref><ref name="Stefaniw"/> The [[Kalam language]] term, in both standard and pandanus languages, is {{lang|kmh|alŋaw}},<ref name="Majnep">{{cite book |last1=Majnep |first1=Ian Saem |last2=Bulmer |first2=Ralph |author-link2=Ralph Bulmer |others=illustrations by Christopher Healey |pages=53, 150, 152 |title=Birds of my Kalam Country |trans-title=Mn̄mon Yad Kalam Yakt |date=1977 |publisher=Auckland University Press |location=New Zealand |isbn=9780196479538 |language=en |oclc=251862814}}</ref><ref name="Pawley">{{cite book |last1=Pawley |first1=Andrew |author-link1=Andrew Pawley |editor1-last=Dutton |editor1-first=Tom E. |editor2-last=Ross |editor2-first=Malcolm |editor3-last=Tryon |editor3-first=Darrell |editor2-link=Malcolm Ross (linguist) |editor3-link=Darrell Tryon |title=The Language Game: Papers in Memory of Donald C. Laycock |date=1992 |publisher=Department of Linguistics, Research School of Pacific Studies, Australian National University |location=Canberra |isbn=0-85883-400-6 |pages=313–334 |language=en |chapter=Kalam Pandanus Language: An Old New Guinea Experiment in Language Engineering |oclc=222981840 |series=Pacific Linguistics Series C |volume=110 |issn=0078-7558 |others=Memory of [[Donald Laycock|Donald C. Laycock]]}}</ref> but it can also be called {{lang|kmh|kumi}} or {{lang|kmh|snay}}.<ref name="Kalam-Pawley"/> The plant is called {{lang|wiu|ama}} in the [[Wiru language]].<ref name="French"/><ref name="Lim"/> In the [[Pole language]] it's called ''maisene''.<ref name="French"/><ref name="Lim"/> It goes by ''ank'' in [[Angal language]],<ref name="French"/><ref name="Lim"/> and {{lang|akh|aenk}} in the Wola dialect.<ref name="Stilltoe" /> The [[Imbongu language]] word is {{lang|imo|amo}}.<ref name="Lim"/><ref name="French"/><ref name="Stefaniw">{{cite book |last1=Franklin |first1=Karl J. |last2=Stefaniw |first2=Roman |editor1-last=Dutton |editor1-first=Tom |title=Culture change, language change - case studies from Melanesia |date=1992 |publisher=Department of Linguistics Research School of Pacific Studies THE AUSTRALIAN NATIONAL UNIVERSITY |location=Canberra |isbn=978-0858834118 |issn=0078-7558 |pages=1–6 |chapter-url=https://openresearch-repository.anu.edu.au/bitstream/1885/145785/1/PL-C120.pdf |access-date=25 October 2018 |language=en |chapter=The 'Pandanus Languages' of the Southern Highlands Province, Papua New Guinea - a further report |series=Pacific Linguistics |volume=C-120 |oclc=260177442 |doi=10.15144/PL-C120.1 |archive-date=5 December 2020 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20201205011237/https://openresearch-repository.anu.edu.au/bitstream/1885/145785/1/PL-C120.pdf |url-status=live }}</ref>


The plant also has many names on the other half of the island. In [[Indonesian language|Indonesian]] it is called {{lang|id|pandan kelapa}} ([[Literal translation|lit.]]{{transl|id|coconut pandan}}) and {{lang|id|kelapa hutan}} ({{transl|id|forest coconut}}),<ref name="Zebua">{{cite journal |last1=Zebua |first1=Lisye Iriana |last2=Purnamasari |first2=Vita |title=Oil of Pandan Kelapa Hutan (''Pandanus jiulianettii'' Martelli): Physicochemical Properties, Total Phenols, Total Carotene, Vitamin E and Antioxidant Activity |journal=Jurnal Biologi Udayana |date=26 January 2018 |volume=21 |issue=2 |pages=71–77 |doi=10.24843/JBIOUNUD.2017.vol21.i02.p05 |url=https://ojs.unud.ac.id/index.php/BIO/article/view/37101 |accessdate=20 October 2018 |language=English |format=PDF |issn=2599-2856 |oclc=7347063503}}</ref> but the latter can also refer to ''P. brosimos'' and ''P. iwen''.<ref name="Purwanto">{{cite journal |last1=Purwanto |first1=Y. |last2=Munawaroh |first2=Esti |title=Etnobotani Jenis-Jenis Pandanaceae Sebagai Bahan Pangan di Indonesia |journal=Berkala Penelitian Hayati |date=2010 |volume=5A |pages=97–108 |doi=10.5072/FK2/Z6P0OQ |url=https://rin.lipi.go.id/file.xhtml;jsessionid=ccb24f0a337710227d6d5cecae10?fileId=1258&version=RELEASED&version=.1 |accessdate=25 October 2018 |trans-title=Ethnobotany Types of Pandanaceae as Foodstuffs in Indonesia |language=Indonesian |format=PDF |issn=2337-389X |oclc=981032990 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20181029232426/https://rin.lipi.go.id/file.xhtml;jsessionid=ccb24f0a337710227d6d5cecae10?fileId=1258&version=RELEASED&version=.1 |archive-date=29 October 2018 |url-status=dead }}</ref> The [[Dani people]] call it ''tuke''.<ref name="Zebua"/><ref name="Purwanto"/> The [[Lani people]] call it {{lang|dnw|woromo}},<ref name="Zebua"/> but this might be a separate species in the [[Species complex|complex]].
The plant also has many names on the other half of the island. In [[Indonesian language|Indonesian]] it is called {{lang|id|pandan kelapa}} ([[Literal translation|lit.]]{{transliteration|id|coconut pandan}}) and {{lang|id|kelapa hutan}} ({{transliteration|id|forest coconut}}),<ref name="Zebua">{{cite journal |last1=Zebua |first1=Lisye Iriana |last2=Purnamasari |first2=Vita |title=Oil of Pandan Kelapa Hutan (''Pandanus jiulianettii'' Martelli): Physicochemical Properties, Total Phenols, Total Carotene, Vitamin E and Antioxidant Activity |journal=Jurnal Biologi Udayana |date=26 January 2018 |volume=21 |issue=2 |pages=71–77 |doi=10.24843/JBIOUNUD.2017.vol21.i02.p05 |url=https://ojs.unud.ac.id/index.php/BIO/article/view/37101 |access-date=20 October 2018 |language=en |format=PDF |issn=2599-2856 |oclc=7347063503 |archive-date=17 April 2018 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180417133437/https://ojs.unud.ac.id/index.php/BIO/article/view/37101 |url-status=live |doi-access=free }}</ref> but these names can also refer to ''P. brosimos'' and ''P. iwen''.<ref name="Purwanto">{{cite journal |last1=Purwanto |first1=Y. |last2=Munawaroh |first2=Esti |title=Etnobotani Jenis-Jenis Pandanaceae Sebagai Bahan Pangan di Indonesia |journal=Berkala Penelitian Hayati |date=2010 |volume=5A |pages=97–108 |doi=10.5072/FK2/Z6P0OQ |url=https://rin.lipi.go.id/file.xhtml;jsessionid=ccb24f0a337710227d6d5cecae10?fileId=1258&version=RELEASED&version=.1 |access-date=25 October 2018 |trans-title=Ethnobotany Types of Pandanaceae as Foodstuffs in Indonesia |language=id |format=PDF |issn=2337-389X |oclc=981032990 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20181029232426/https://rin.lipi.go.id/file.xhtml;jsessionid=ccb24f0a337710227d6d5cecae10?fileId=1258&version=RELEASED&version=.1 |archive-date=29 October 2018 |url-status=dead }}</ref> According to field research by Kiwo et al. in Melagineri District, [[Lanny Jaya Regency|Lanny Jaya]], the [[Lani people]] call it {{lang|dnw|gawin}}, with {{lang|dnw|woromo}} for ''P. brosimos'', {{lang|dnw|owandak}} for ''P. Iwen''.<ref name="Fakultas Kehutanan Universitas Papua 2023 pp. 1–17">{{cite journal | last=Kiwo | first=Terenius | last2=Moeldjono | first2=Soetjipto | last3=Ungirwalu | first3=Antoni | last4=Murdjoko | first4=Agustinus | title=Jenis Kelapa Hutan (Pandanus spp.) pada Tipologi Kebun Pekarangan Masyarakat Suku Lanny | journal=JURNAL KEHUTANAN PAPUASIA | publisher=Fakultas Kehutanan Universitas Papua | volume=9 | issue=1 | date=2023-06-30 | issn=2722-6212 | doi=10.46703/jurnalpapuasia.vol9.iss1.423 | pages=1–17| doi-access=free }}</ref> Meanwhile according to field research by Zebua et al. in Pirime District, Lanny Jaya, ''woromo'' is used to refer to ''P. Iwen'',<ref name="Zebua Budi Wanimbo Suharno 2020">{{cite journal | last=Zebua | first=L I | last2=Budi | first2=I M | last3=Wanimbo | first3=E | author4=Suharno | title=The utilization of Pandan Coconut (Pandanaceae) at the interior tribes Papua, Indonesia | journal=IOP Conference Series: Earth and Environmental Science | volume=575 | issue=1 | date=2020-10-01 | issn=1755-1307 | doi=10.1088/1755-1315/575/1/012211 | page=012211| doi-access=free }}</ref> while in another study in [[Jayawijaya Regency|Jayawijaya]], the Lani used ''woromo'' for ''P. julianettii'' with the [[Dani people]] call it ''tuke'',<ref name="Zebua"/><ref name="Purwanto"/> hence the names have been used interchangeably by multiple publications from different regions and might be a separate species in the [[Species complex|complex]].


==Description==
==Description==
The species was originally [[Species description|described]] by [[Ugolino Martelli]] from only a few [[drupe]]s in the collections of the [[Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew]]<ref name="Martelli"/> He was hesitant to describe it as a new species from only that, but the characteristics were so salient he published his description.<ref name="Martelli"/>
The species was originally [[Species description|described]] by [[Ugolino Martelli]] from only a few [[drupe]]s in the collections of the [[Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew]]<ref name="Martelli"/> He was hesitant to describe it as a new species from only that, but the characteristics were so salient he published his description.<ref name="Martelli"/>


The tree is [[dioecious]] (individual plants either have male flowers or female ones),<ref name="Lim"/> with male trees uncommon compared to females.<ref name="French"/> It reaches {{Convert|10-30|m|}} in height, with a grey [[Trunk (botany)|trunk]]<ref name="Rose82"/> of {{Convert|30|cm||abbr=off}} in diameter and supported by [[buttress root]]s.<ref name="Lim"/> The trunk has white mottling and is generally smooth with occasional warts or small knobs as well as rings of [[leaf scar]]s.<ref name="Stilltoe" /> Inside the trunk is pithy and lacking [[cambium]].<ref name="Stilltoe" /> The top of the tree sometimes branches, producing three or four crowns of leaves.<ref name="French"/> Each crown will produce a single cluster of nuts, typically once every other season.<ref name="French"/> Production is affected by the seasonality of local rainfall.<ref name="Bourke"/>
The tree is [[dioecious]] (individual plants either have male flowers or female ones),<ref name="Lim"/> with male trees uncommon compared to females.<ref name="French"/> It reaches {{Convert|10-30|m|}} in height, with a grey [[Trunk (botany)|trunk]]<ref name="Rose82"/> of {{Convert|30|cm||abbr=off}} in diameter and supported by prop roots or flying [[buttress root]]s up to forty feet (twelve meters) in length and six inches (15 cm) or more in diameter..<ref name="Lim"/> The trunk has white mottling and is generally smooth with occasional warts or small knobs as well as rings of [[leaf scar]]s.<ref name="Stilltoe" /> Inside the trunk is pithy and lacking [[cambium]].<ref name="Stilltoe" /> The top of the tree sometimes branches, producing three or four crowns of leaves.<ref name="French"/> Each crown will produce a single cluster of nuts, typically once every other season.<ref name="French"/> Production is affected by the seasonality of local rainfall.<ref name="Bourke"/>


[[Leaf|Leaves]] spiral up the trunk in [[Leaf#Arrangement on the stem|opposite]] pairs.<ref name="French"/><ref name="Lim"/> The large leathery leaves are {{Convert|3-4|m|}} long<ref name="French"/> and {{Convert|8-12|cm|}} wide.<ref name="Lim" /> The apex of the leaf is [[Glossary of botanical terms#attenuate|attenuate]] and doubly-pleated, with [[Thorns, spines, and prickles|prickles]] pointing up at the tip<ref name="Lim" /> and along the [[leaf#margin|margins]] and [[midrib]].<ref name="Rose82"/> The leaves are dark green on top and dull cyan underneath.<ref name="Stilltoe" />
[[Leaf|Leaves]] spiral up the trunk in [[Leaf#Arrangement on the stem|opposite]] pairs.<ref name="French"/><ref name="Lim"/> The large leathery leaves are {{Convert|3-4|m|}} long<ref name="French"/> and {{Convert|8-12|cm|}} wide.<ref name="Lim" /> The apex of the leaf is [[Glossary of botanical terms#attenuate|attenuate]] and doubly-pleated, with [[Thorns, spines, and prickles|prickles]] pointing up at the tip<ref name="Lim" /> and along the [[leaf#margin|margins]] and [[midrib]].<ref name="Rose82"/> The leaves are dark green on top and dull cyan underneath.<ref name="Stilltoe" />
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The [[inflorescence]] on male trees is a densely-branched [[Spadix (botany)|spadix]] with a dozen long spikes, each containing many [[staminate]] phalanges.<ref name="Lim"/> In each phalange is a [[column]] 3&nbsp;mm long topped by up to 9 [[subsessile]] [[anther]]s.<ref name="Lim"/> The male flowers are white,<ref name="French"/> and the whole male flowering organ may be up to {{Convert|2|m|}} long.<ref name="Stilltoe" />
The [[inflorescence]] on male trees is a densely-branched [[Spadix (botany)|spadix]] with a dozen long spikes, each containing many [[staminate]] phalanges.<ref name="Lim"/> In each phalange is a [[column]] 3&nbsp;mm long topped by up to 9 [[subsessile]] [[anther]]s.<ref name="Lim"/> The male flowers are white,<ref name="French"/> and the whole male flowering organ may be up to {{Convert|2|m|}} long.<ref name="Stilltoe" />


The [[pollen]] has a [[psilate]] [[exine]] (unornamented outer wall) 0.8&nbsp;μm thick.<ref name="Haberle">{{cite journal |last1=Haberle |first1=Simon G. |title=Identification of cultivated ''Pandanus'' and ''Colocasia'' in pollen records and the implications for the study of early agriculture in New Guinea |journal=Vegetation History and Archaeobotany |date=November 1995 |volume=4 |issue=4 |pages=195–210 |doi=10.1007/BF00235751 |language=English |issn=1617-6278 |oclc=192800152}}</ref> The ornamentation is granular between [[echina]]e (short spines).<ref name="Haberle"/> The [[wikt:ulcerate|ulcerate]] [[Aperture (botany)|aperture]] is 3&nbsp;μm in diameter.<ref name="Haberle"/> Pollen grains measure an average of 30&nbsp;×&nbsp;14.5&nbsp;μm in size.<ref name="Haberle"/>
The [[pollen]] has a [[psilate]] [[exine]] (unornamented outer wall) 0.8&nbsp;μm thick.<ref name="Haberle">{{cite journal |last1=Haberle |first1=Simon G. |title=Identification of cultivated ''Pandanus'' and ''Colocasia'' in pollen records and the implications for the study of early agriculture in New Guinea |journal=Vegetation History and Archaeobotany |date=November 1995 |volume=4 |issue=4 |pages=195–210 |doi=10.1007/BF00235751 |s2cid=85369387 |language=en |issn=1617-6278 |oclc=192800152}}</ref> The ornamentation is granular between [[echina]]e (short spines).<ref name="Haberle"/> The [[wikt:ulcerate|ulcerate]] [[Aperture (botany)|aperture]] is 3&nbsp;μm in diameter.<ref name="Haberle"/> Pollen grains measure an average of 30&nbsp;×&nbsp;14.5&nbsp;μm in size.<ref name="Haberle"/>


On female trees, the inflorescence is a single ellipsoid or ovoid [[syncarp]], or fruiting head, with off-white [[bract]]s.<ref name="Lim"/> Female flowers can produce fruit without pollination,<ref name="Rose82" /> and are typically the only trees cultivated.<ref name="Stilltoe" /> The tree stops making leaves when new fruit is growing.<ref name="French"/> The syncarp has up to a thousand densely-packed single-celled [[carpel]]s that later turn into drupes.<ref name="Lim"/><ref name="French"/>
On female trees, the inflorescence is a single ellipsoid or ovoid [[syncarp]], or fruiting head, with off-white [[bract]]s.<ref name="Lim"/> Female flowers can produce fruit without pollination,<ref name="Rose82" /> and are typically the only trees cultivated.<ref name="Stilltoe" /> The tree stops making leaves when new fruit is growing.<ref name="French"/> The syncarp has up to a thousand densely-packed single-celled [[carpel]]s that later turn into drupes.<ref name="Lim"/><ref name="French"/>


The [[clavate]], [[pentagon]]al drupes measure up to 12&nbsp;cm long and have a sharpened base,<ref name="Martelli"/> but typically are 9×1.5&nbsp;cm,<ref name="Lim"/> and are a pale blue-green color.<ref name="Stilltoe" /> Each cluster contains about 1000 nuts.<ref name="French"/> The [[endocarp]] is bony and thin,<ref name="Lim"/> 5½&nbsp;cm long, with rounded edges about 1½&nbsp;cm wide.<ref name="Martelli"/> The seed-bearing [[locule]] is around 4&nbsp;cm long.<ref name="Martelli"/> The core of the mature head ([[mesocarp]]) has an appearance like [[honeycomb]] and is spongy<ref name="Lim"/> and pink.<ref name="French"/> The top of the mesocarp is fibrous, from 3&nbsp;cm long and up.<ref name="Martelli"/> Though Martelli did not have a complete syncarp, he knew the cluster of fruit must be large, estimating at least 30&nbsp;cm in diameter.<ref name="Martelli"/> He was correct, as the fruiting cluster is typically 15 to 30&nbsp;cm in diameter.<ref name="French"/> A mature head and stalk weigh up to 16&nbsp;kg,<ref name="Lim"/> but average 6&nbsp;kg.<ref name="French"/>
The [[clavate]], [[pentagon]]al drupes measure up to 12&nbsp;cm long and have a sharpened base,<ref name="Martelli"/> but typically are 9×1.5&nbsp;cm,<ref name="Lim"/> and are a pale blue-green color.<ref name="Stilltoe" /> Each cluster contains about 1000 nuts.<ref name="French"/> The [[endocarp]] is bony and thin,<ref name="Lim"/> 5½&nbsp;cm long, with rounded edges about 1½&nbsp;cm wide.<ref name="Martelli"/> The seed-bearing [[locule]] is around 4&nbsp;cm long.<ref name="Martelli"/> The core of the mature head ([[mesocarp]]) has an appearance like [[honeycomb]] and is spongy<ref name="Lim"/> and pink.<ref name="French"/> The top of the mesocarp is fibrous, from 3&nbsp;cm long and up.<ref name="Martelli"/> Though Martelli did not have a complete syncarp, he knew the cluster of fruit must be large, estimating at least 30&nbsp;cm in diameter.<ref name="Martelli"/> He was correct, as the fruiting cluster is typically 15 to 30&nbsp;cm in diameter.<ref name="French"/> A mature head and stalk weigh up to 16&nbsp;kg,<ref name="Lim"/> but average 6&nbsp;kg.<ref name="French"/> but weights up to sixty pounds ((27,3 kilograms) have been reported.<ref>Webbia Volume 2 (1908) p.433.</ref>


It most closely resembles ''[[Pandanus utilissimus|P. utilissimus]]'', which is found the [[Philippines]].<ref name="Martelli"/> People also harvest and eat nuts of ''P. antaresensis'', ''P. brosimos'', ''P. dubius'', ''P. iwen'', and ''P. limbatus'', and ''[[Pandanus odoratissima|P. odoratissima]]''<ref name="Bourke"/>
It most closely resembles ''[[Pandanus utilissimus|P. utilissimus]]'', which is found the [[Philippines]].<ref name="Martelli"/> People also harvest and eat nuts of ''P. antaresensis'', ''P. brosimos'', ''P. dubius'', ''P. iwen'', and ''P. limbatus'', and ''[[Pandanus odoratissima|P. odoratissima]]''<ref name="Bourke"/>


==Cultivars==
==Cultivars==
{{redirect|Pebet|the bird mentioned in Metei culture|Pebet (bird)}}
There are up to 45 [[cultivars]] of karuka,<ref name="Stilltoe" /> many with different kernel shapes.<ref name="French"/> There are likely many more, as some are known only to a small number of people in a single settlement.<ref name="Stilltoe" /> 'Tabuna' and 'Henga' are some of the most important.<ref name="Rose82"/> 'Tabuna' is popular because it is high-yielding, tastes good, and has no [[taboo]]s on who/what can eat it and how/if it is cooked.<ref name="Rose82"/> At least two varieties are edible raw.<ref name="French"/>
There are up to 45 [[cultivars]] of karuka,<ref name="Stilltoe" /> many with different kernel shapes.<ref name="French"/> There are likely many more, as some are known only to a small number of people in a single settlement.<ref name="Stilltoe" /> 'Tabuna' and 'Henga' are some of the most important.<ref name="Rose82"/> 'Tabuna' is popular because it is high-yielding, tastes good, and has no [[taboo]]s on who/what can eat it and how/if it is cooked.<ref name="Rose82"/> At least two varieties are edible raw.<ref name="French"/>


Named varieties include:<ref name="Rose82">{{cite journal |last1=Rose |first1=C. J. |editor1-last=Bourke |editor1-first=Richard Michael |editor2-last=Kesavan |editor2-first=V. |title=Preliminary Observations on the ''Pandanus'' nut (''Pandanus jiulianettii'' Martelli) |journal=Proceedings of the Second Papua New Guinea Food Crops Conference |date=1982 |volume=1 |pages=160–167 |language=English |oclc=17294235}}</ref><ref name="Stilltoe" />
Named varieties include:<ref name="Rose82">{{cite journal |last1=Rose |first1=C. J. |editor1-last=Bourke |editor1-first=Richard Michael |editor2-last=Kesavan |editor2-first=V. |title=Preliminary Observations on the ''Pandanus'' nut (''Pandanus jiulianettii'' Martelli) |journal=Proceedings of the Second Papua New Guinea Food Crops Conference |date=1982 |volume=1 |pages=160–167 |language=en |oclc=17294235}}</ref><ref name="Stilltoe" />
{{div col|colwidth=10em}}
{{div col|colwidth=10em}}
* {{lang|akh|Baerel}}
* {{lang|akh|Baerel}}
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It is possible a cultivar is listed more than once under different names, as Papua New Guinea has a very high [[Language#Linguistic diversity|linguistic diversity]].
It is possible a cultivar is listed more than once under different names, as Papua New Guinea has a very high [[Language#Linguistic diversity|linguistic diversity]].


[[Benjamin Clemens Stone]] posits that ''P. julianettii'' and ''P. brosimos'' are a single species with many varieties, but does not support this point.<ref name="Stone">{{cite book |last1=Stone |first1=Benjamin C. |authorlink1=Benjamin Clemens Stone |editor1-last=Gressitt |editor1-first=J. L. |title=Biogeography and Ecology of New Guinea |date=1982 |publisher=Springer |location=Dordrecht |isbn=978-94-009-8632-9 |pages=401–436 |language=English |chapter=7 New Guinea Pandanaceae: first approach to ecology and biogeography |volume=1 |oclc=5679030487 |doi=10.1007/978-94-009-8632-9_17|series=Monographiae Biologicae }}</ref> However, [[Simon G. Haberle]] notes that the pollen of the two trees are indistinguishable by [[light microscopy]].<ref name="Haberle"/> ''P. iwen'' may also be part of the [[species complex]].<ref name="StoneOK">{{cite journal |last1=Stone |first1=Benjamin Clemens |authorlink1=Benjamin Clemens Stone |title=''Pandanus'' from Ok Tedi region, Papua New Guinea, collected by Debra Donoghue |journal=Economic Botany |date=July 1984 |volume=38 |issue=3 |pages=304–313 |doi=10.1007/BF02859008 |language=English |issn=1874-9364 |oclc=7025621147}}</ref>
[[Benjamin Clemens Stone]] posits that ''P. julianettii'' and ''P. brosimos'' are a single species with many varieties, but does not support this point.<ref name="Stone">{{cite book |last1=Stone |first1=Benjamin C. |chapter=New Guinea Pandanaceae: First approach to ecology and biogeography |author-link1=Benjamin Clemens Stone |editor1-last=Gressitt |editor1-first=J. L. |title=Biogeography and Ecology of New Guinea |date=1982 |publisher=Springer |location=Dordrecht |isbn=978-94-009-8632-9 |pages=401–436 |language=en |volume=1 |oclc=5679030487 |doi=10.1007/978-94-009-8632-9_17|series=Monographiae Biologicae }}</ref> However, [[Simon G. Haberle]] notes that the pollen of the two trees are indistinguishable by [[light microscopy]].<ref name="Haberle"/> ''P. iwen'' may also be part of the [[species complex]].<ref name="StoneOK">{{cite journal |last1=Stone |first1=Benjamin Clemens |author-link1=Benjamin Clemens Stone |title=''Pandanus'' from Ok Tedi region, Papua New Guinea, collected by Debra Donoghue |journal=Economic Botany |date=July 1984 |volume=38 |issue=3 |pages=304–313 |doi=10.1007/BF02859008 |s2cid=3121361 |language=en |issn=1874-9364 |oclc=7025621147}}</ref>


==Distribution==
==Distribution==
Giulianetti's type specimens were collected from [[Vanapa]], [[British New Guinea]]<ref name="Martelli"/> (now southern [[Papua New Guinea]]). The tree can be found cultivated or wild on [[New Guinea]], both in PNG and [[Papua (province)|Papua province]].<ref name="Lim"/><ref name="French"/> Wild trees are found on the [[Huon Peninsula]] and in the highlands of New Guinea's central [[cordillera]].<ref name="Lim"/><ref name="Bourke"/> In Papua New Guinea, the tree is most commonly grown in [[Southern Highlands Province|Southern Highlands]], [[Western Highlands Province|Western Highlands]], [[Eastern Highlands Province|Eastern Highlands]], [[Enga Province|Enga]], and [[Chimbu Province]]s, and it is found in all provinces on the mainland except [[East Sepik Province|East Sepik]].<ref name="Quartermain">{{cite book |editor1-last=Quartermain |editor1-first=Alan R. |editor2-last=Tomi |editor2-first=Barbara |title=Fruits and Nuts: Research and Development Issues in Papua New Guinea Papers presented at the Fruits and Nuts Workshop held at the IATP Farmer Training Centre, University of Natural Resource and Environment (formerly University of Vudal) from 11–13 October 2005 |date=2010 |publisher=National Agricultural Research Institute |location=Lae, Papua New Guinea |url=http://www.nari.org.pg/sites/default/files/publications/proceedings/fruits&nuts_R&DIssues.pdf |accessdate=2 October 2018 |language=English |series=Workshop Proceedings |volume=9 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20181123121129/http://www.nari.org.pg/sites/default/files/publications/proceedings/fruits%26nuts_R%26DIssues.pdf |archive-date=23 November 2018 |url-status=live }}</ref> It grows in [[montane forests]]<ref name="Stone"/> between 1,300 and 3,300&nbsp;m in elevation in areas that get 2-5&nbsp;m mean annual [[precipitation]].<ref name="Lim"/><ref name="Bourke"/> It grows in both dry and wet soils,<ref name="Lim"/><ref name="Bourke"/> but prefers good soil fertility.<ref name="French"/> Trees will grow in clumped groups of 5 to 10 individuals per hectare.<ref name="Bourke"/>
Giulianetti's type specimens were collected from [[Vanapa]], [[British New Guinea]]<ref name="Martelli"/> (now southern [[Papua New Guinea]]). The tree can be found cultivated or wild on [[New Guinea]], both in PNG and [[Papua (province)|Papua province]].<ref name="Lim"/><ref name="French"/> Wild trees are found on the [[Huon Peninsula]] and in the highlands of New Guinea's central [[cordillera]].<ref name="Lim"/><ref name="Bourke"/> In Papua New Guinea, the tree is most commonly grown in [[Southern Highlands Province|Southern Highlands]], [[Western Highlands Province|Western Highlands]], [[Eastern Highlands Province|Eastern Highlands]], [[Enga Province|Enga]], and [[Chimbu Province]]s, and it is found in all provinces on the mainland except [[East Sepik Province|East Sepik]].<ref name="Quartermain">{{cite book |editor1-last=Quartermain |editor1-first=Alan R. |editor2-last=Tomi |editor2-first=Barbara |title=Fruits and Nuts: Research and Development Issues in Papua New Guinea Papers presented at the Fruits and Nuts Workshop held at the IATP Farmer Training Centre, University of Natural Resource and Environment (formerly University of Vudal) from 11–13 October 2005 |date=2010 |publisher=National Agricultural Research Institute |location=Lae, Papua New Guinea |url=http://www.nari.org.pg/sites/default/files/publications/proceedings/fruits&nuts_R&DIssues.pdf |access-date=2 October 2018 |language=en |series=Workshop Proceedings |volume=9 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20181123121129/http://www.nari.org.pg/sites/default/files/publications/proceedings/fruits%26nuts_R%26DIssues.pdf |archive-date=23 November 2018 |url-status=live }}</ref> It grows in [[montane forests]]<ref name="Stone"/> between 1,300 and 3,300&nbsp;m in elevation in areas that get 2–5&nbsp;m mean annual [[precipitation]].<ref name="Lim"/><ref name="Bourke"/> It grows in both dry and wet soils,<ref name="Lim"/><ref name="Bourke"/> but prefers good soil fertility.<ref name="French"/> Trees will grow in clumped groups of 5 to 10 individuals per hectare.<ref name="Bourke"/>


==Ecology==
==Ecology==
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[[Fungus|Fungal]] [[Pest (organism)|pests]] of karuka include [[leaf spot]], [[diffuse leaf spot]], [[black leaf mould]] (''[[Lembosia pandani]]''), [[sooty mold]] (''[[Meliola juttingii]]''), and fungus on seeds (''[[Macrophoma pandani]]'').<ref name="French"/> The leaf moulds do not do much damage.<ref name="French"/> The sooty mould seems to grow on insect [[frass]].<ref name="French"/> The black leaf mold only affects some varieties.<ref name="French"/>
[[Fungus|Fungal]] [[Pest (organism)|pests]] of karuka include [[leaf spot]], [[diffuse leaf spot]], [[black leaf mould]] (''[[Lembosia pandani]]''), [[sooty mold]] (''[[Meliola juttingii]]''), and fungus on seeds (''[[Macrophoma pandani]]'').<ref name="French"/> The leaf moulds do not do much damage.<ref name="French"/> The sooty mould seems to grow on insect [[frass]].<ref name="French"/> The black leaf mold only affects some varieties.<ref name="French"/>


The bacteria [[Pectobacterium carotovorum subsp. carotovorum|''Pectobacterium carotovorum'' subsp. ''carotovorum'']] can also cause [[bacterial soft rot]] and necrosis on the leaves, but causes more severe damage to the related species ''[[Pandanus conoideus]]''.<ref name="Tomlinson">{{cite journal |last1=Tomlinson |first1=D. L. |title=A Leaf and Fruit Disease of ''Pandanus conoideus'' caused by ''Erwinia carotovora'' subsp. ''carotovora'' in Papua New Guinea |journal=Journal of Phytopathology |date=January 1988 |volume=121 |issue=1 |pages=19–25 |doi=10.1111/j.1439-0434.1988.tb00948.x |language=English |issn=0931-1785 |oclc=4660013776}}</ref>
The bacteria [[Pectobacterium carotovorum subsp. carotovorum|''Pectobacterium carotovorum'' subsp. ''carotovorum'']] can also cause [[bacterial soft rot]] and necrosis on the leaves, but causes more severe damage to the related species ''[[Pandanus conoideus]]''.<ref name="Tomlinson">{{cite journal |last1=Tomlinson |first1=D. L. |title=A Leaf and Fruit Disease of ''Pandanus conoideus'' caused by ''Erwinia carotovora'' subsp. ''carotovora'' in Papua New Guinea |journal=Journal of Phytopathology |date=January 1988 |volume=121 |issue=1 |pages=19–25 |doi=10.1111/j.1439-0434.1988.tb00948.x |language=en |issn=0931-1785 |oclc=4660013776}}</ref>


[[Longhorn grasshopper]]s (Tettigoniidae) are serious insect pests.<ref name="French"/> ''[[Segestes gracilis]]'' and ''[[Segestidea montana]]'' eat the leaves and can sometimes kill trees.<ref name="French"/> Growers will stuff leaves and grass in between the leaves of the crown to keep insects out.<ref name="French"/> An unknown species of black [[Grub (larva)|grub]] will burrow into the cluster and eat the spongy core, causing the nuts to turn black and the whole bunch to fall off the tree.<ref name="French"/> [[Woodboring beetle]]s sometimes attack the prop root of the tree.<ref name="French"/>
[[Longhorn grasshopper]]s (Tettigoniidae) are serious insect pests.<ref name="French"/> ''[[Segestes gracilis]]'' and ''[[Segestidea montana]]'' eat the leaves and can sometimes kill trees.<ref name="French"/> Growers will stuff leaves and grass in between the leaves of the crown to keep insects out.<ref name="French"/> An unknown species of black [[Grub (larva)|grub]] will burrow into the cluster and eat the spongy core, causing the nuts to turn black and the whole bunch to fall off the tree.<ref name="French"/> [[Woodboring beetle]]s sometimes attack the prop root of the tree.<ref name="French"/>
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==Use by humans==
==Use by humans==
On New Guinea karuka is cultivated crop,<ref name="Lim"/> and has been used as a major food source since nearly 31,000 years ago in the [[Pleistocene]].<ref name="Denham"/> In PNG nearly 2 million people (almost half the rural population) live in regions where karuka is commonly eaten.<ref name="Quartermain"/> There is high demand for it in the [[New Guinea Highlands]]: Entire households (including [[Domestic pig|pigs]], who are sometimes fed the fruits<ref name="Rose82"/>) will move from the valleys to higher elevations at harvest time,<ref name="Bourke"/> often for several weeks.<ref name="Bourke88"/> Each household will average 12 to 176 trees.<ref name="Bourke88">{{cite book |last1=Bourke |first1=Richard Michael |title=Taim hangre: variation in subsistence food supply in the Papua New Guinea highlands |date=May 1988 |publisher=Australian National University |url=https://www.researchgate.net/publication/320345192 |oclc=224338489 |accessdate=27 September 2018 |language=English |format=PDF |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20181030035407/https://www.researchgate.net/publication/320345192 |archive-date=30 October 2018 |url-status=live }}</ref>
On New Guinea karuka is cultivated crop,<ref name="Lim"/> and has been used as a major food source since nearly 31,000 years ago in the [[Pleistocene]].<ref name="Denham"/> In PNG nearly 2 million people (almost half the rural population) live in regions where karuka is commonly eaten.<ref name="Quartermain"/> There is high demand for it in the [[New Guinea Highlands]]: Entire households (including [[Domestic pig|pigs]], who are sometimes fed the fruits<ref name="Rose82"/>) will move from the valleys to higher elevations at harvest time,<ref name="Bourke"/> often for several weeks.<ref name="Bourke88"/> Each household will average 12 to 176 trees.<ref name="Bourke88">{{cite book |last1=Bourke |first1=Richard Michael |title=Taim hangre: variation in subsistence food supply in the Papua New Guinea highlands |date=May 1988 |publisher=Australian National University |url=https://www.researchgate.net/publication/320345192 |oclc=224338489 |access-date=27 September 2018 |language=en |format=PDF |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20181030035407/https://www.researchgate.net/publication/320345192 |archive-date=30 October 2018 |url-status=live }}</ref>


Trade in karuka is small-scale and not commercial.<ref name="Bourke"/> Local [[marketplace]]s typically will have 12 to 50 fruits for sale.<ref name="Bourke88"/> With some coordination between state agencies and private sector, karuka could have export [[market access]].<ref name="Quartermain"/> The crop has a medium potential for large-scale sustainable commercialization in the region, but care must be taken in the sensitive local environments to expanded agriculture.<ref name="Bourke"/> Diets of tree owners could also be negatively influenced by rapid commercialization.<ref name="Bourke"/>
Trade in karuka is small-scale and not commercial.<ref name="Bourke"/> Local [[marketplace]]s typically will have 12 to 50 fruits for sale.<ref name="Bourke88"/> With some coordination between state agencies and private sector, karuka could have export [[market access]].<ref name="Quartermain"/> The crop has a medium potential for large-scale sustainable commercialization in the region, but care must be taken in the sensitive local environments to expanded agriculture.<ref name="Bourke"/> Diets of tree owners could also be negatively influenced by rapid commercialization.<ref name="Bourke"/>
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Some subjective reports indicate that children are healthier after karuka season, but there may also be increased incidence of [[tropical ulcer]]s and [[Clostridial necrotizing enteritis|pig-bel]] (caused by ''[[Clostridium perfringens]]'').<ref name="Rose82"/> But the connections, if any, are unclear.
Some subjective reports indicate that children are healthier after karuka season, but there may also be increased incidence of [[tropical ulcer]]s and [[Clostridial necrotizing enteritis|pig-bel]] (caused by ''[[Clostridium perfringens]]'').<ref name="Rose82"/> But the connections, if any, are unclear.


Trunks and buttress roots are used for building.<ref name="Lim"/> The sheets of bark are used for house walls.<ref name="Stilltoe" /> The leaves are used for [[The bush|bush]] [[Shelter (building)|shelters]]<ref name="Lim"/> and [[raincape]]s.<ref name="Stilltoe" /> The leaves were the preferred building material for housing in Papua New Guinea before [[Colonialism|colonial]] contact.<ref name="Halvaksz">{{cite journal |last1=Halvaksz |first1=Jamon |title=The Photographic Assemblage: Duration, History and Photography in Papua New Guinea |journal=History and Anthropology |date=December 2010 |volume=21 |issue=4 |pages=411–429 |doi=10.1080/02757206.2010.521556 |language=English |issn=0275-7206 |oclc=683378311}}</ref> The durable white [[spathe]] leaves on male inflorescences are used by the [[Wola people]] to wrap [[pearl]] shells.<ref name="Stilltoe" />
Trunks and buttress roots are used for building.<ref name="Lim"/> The sheets of bark are used for house walls.<ref name="Stilltoe" /> The leaves are used for [[The bush|bush]] [[Shelter (building)|shelters]]<ref name="Lim"/> and [[raincape]]s.<ref name="Stilltoe" /> The leaves were the preferred building material for housing in Papua New Guinea before [[Colonialism|colonial]] contact.<ref name="Halvaksz">{{cite journal |last1=Halvaksz |first1=Jamon |title=The Photographic Assemblage: Duration, History and Photography in Papua New Guinea |journal=History and Anthropology |date=December 2010 |volume=21 |issue=4 |pages=411–429 |doi=10.1080/02757206.2010.521556 |s2cid=144950914 |language=en |issn=0275-7206 |oclc=683378311}}</ref> The durable white [[spathe]] leaves on male inflorescences are used by the [[Wola people]] to wrap [[pearl]] shells.<ref name="Stilltoe" />


Karuka can be cultivated by cutting a mature branch and replanting it ([[Vegetative reproduction|vegetative propagation]]).<ref name="French"/> [[Basal shoot|Suckers]] can also be replanted.<ref name="French"/> [[Plant nursery|Nurseries]] also plant seeds directly.<ref name="French"/> New nuts will grow when a tree is at least five or six years old, and can keep producing for up to fifty years.<ref name="French"/><ref name="Rose82"/> The tree can tolerate temperatures down to 3°C for extended periods and 0°C for short periods.<ref name="Ecocrop">{{cite web |title=''Pandanus julianettii'' |url=http://ecocrop.fao.org/ecocrop/srv/en/cropView?id=8245 |website=Ecocrop |publisher=Food and Agriculture Organization of the UN |accessdate=26 October 2018 |language=English |format=HTML |date=1993-2007 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20181206001726/http://ecocrop.fao.org/ecocrop/srv/en/cropView?id=8245 |archive-date=6 December 2018 |url-status=live }}</ref> The [[Hardiness zone#United States hardiness zones (USDA scale)|USDA hardiness]] is 10–12, and is hardy to zone 10 in the [[Hardiness zone#Ireland and UK|UK system]].<ref name="PfaF">{{cite web |title=''Pandanus julianettii'' - Martelli |url=https://pfaf.org/user/Plant.aspx?LatinName=Pandanus+julianettii |website=Plants for a Future |accessdate=26 October 2018 |language=English |format=HTML |date=1996-2012 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20181206001836/https://pfaf.org/user/Plant.aspx?LatinName=Pandanus+julianettii |archive-date=6 December 2018 |url-status=live }}</ref>
Karuka can be cultivated by cutting a mature branch and replanting it ([[Vegetative reproduction|vegetative propagation]]).<ref name="French"/> [[Basal shoot|Suckers]] can also be replanted.<ref name="French"/> [[Plant nursery|Nurseries]] also plant seeds directly.<ref name="French"/> New nuts will grow when a tree is at least five or six years old, and can keep producing for up to fifty years.<ref name="French"/><ref name="Rose82"/> The tree can tolerate temperatures down to 3&nbsp;°C for extended periods and 0&nbsp;°C for short periods.<ref name="Ecocrop">{{cite web |title=''Pandanus julianettii'' |url=http://ecocrop.fao.org/ecocrop/srv/en/cropView?id=8245 |website=Ecocrop |publisher=Food and Agriculture Organization of the UN |access-date=26 October 2018 |language=en |date=1993–2007 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20181206001726/http://ecocrop.fao.org/ecocrop/srv/en/cropView?id=8245 |archive-date=6 December 2018 |url-status=live }}</ref> The [[Hardiness zone#United States hardiness zones (USDA scale)|USDA hardiness]] is 10–12, and is hardy to zone 10 in the [[Hardiness zone#Britain and Ireland|UK system]].<ref name="PfaF">{{cite web |title=''Pandanus julianettii'' - Martelli |url=https://pfaf.org/user/Plant.aspx?LatinName=Pandanus+julianettii |website=Plants for a Future |access-date=26 October 2018 |language=en |date=1996–2012 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20181206001836/https://pfaf.org/user/Plant.aspx?LatinName=Pandanus+julianettii |archive-date=6 December 2018 |url-status=live }}</ref>


In [[Upper Karint]] near [[Pingirip]], karukas are planted as boundary lines between garden plots.<ref name="French"/>
In [[Upper Karint]] near [[Pingirip]], karukas are planted as boundary lines between garden plots.<ref name="French"/>


==In culture==
==In culture==
In PNG's [[Central Province (Papua New Guinea)|Central Province]] Premier [[Rugby football|Rugby]] League the team for [[Goilala District]] is called the Karukas.<ref name="Pangkatana">{{cite news |last1=Pangkatana |first1=John |title=Karukas to be put to acid test in Central playoffs The Goilala Karukas are set to move into high gear. |url=https://postcourier.com.pg/karukas-put-acid-test-central-playoffs/ |accessdate=4 October 2018 |work=Post Courier Online |date=September 21, 2018 |language=en |format=HTML |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180920233156/https://postcourier.com.pg/karukas-put-acid-test-central-playoffs/ |archive-date=20 September 2018 |url-status=live }}</ref>
In PNG's [[Central Province (Papua New Guinea)|Central Province]] Premier [[Rugby football|Rugby]] League the team for [[Goilala District]] is called the Karukas.<ref name="Pangkatana">{{cite news |last1=Pangkatana |first1=John |title=Karukas to be put to acid test in Central playoffs The Goilala Karukas are set to move into high gear. |url=https://postcourier.com.pg/karukas-put-acid-test-central-playoffs/ |access-date=4 October 2018 |work=Post Courier Online |date=September 21, 2018 |language=en |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180920233156/https://postcourier.com.pg/karukas-put-acid-test-central-playoffs/ |archive-date=20 September 2018 |url-status=live }}</ref>


==See also==
==See also==
* [[Domesticated plants and animals of Austronesia]]
* [[Domesticated plants and animals of Austronesia]]
* [[Pandanus languages]]
* [[Pandanus languages]]

==References==
==References==
{{Reflist}}
{{Reflist}}
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[[Category:Tropical agriculture]]
[[Category:Tropical agriculture]]
[[Category:Non-timber forest products]]
[[Category:Non-timber forest products]]
[[Category:Papua New Guinean cuisine]]

Revision as of 08:09, 29 April 2024

Karuka
"Pandanus julianettii" fruit cluster
Pandanus julianettii fruit cluster
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Kingdom: Plantae
Clade: Tracheophytes
Clade: Angiosperms
Clade: Monocots
Order: Pandanales
Family: Pandanaceae
Genus: Pandanus
Subgenus: Pandanus subg. Lophostigma
Section: Pandanus sect. Karuka
Species:
P. julianettii
Binomial name
Pandanus julianettii
Synonyms
Karuka nuts (kernels)
Nutritional value per 100 g
Energy2,259–2,929 kJ (540–700 kcal)
28-33.5 g
Sugars5 g
Dietary fiber9.2-25 g
35.6-47 g
Saturated18 g
Trans0
11.9-18 g
Tryptophan102-136 mg
Threonine435-482 mg
Isoleucine503-555 mg
Leucine904-993 mg
Lysine426-526 mg
Methionine272-279 mg
Cystine204-234 mg
Phenylalanine571-613 mg
Tyrosine408-438 mg
Valine745-832 mg
Arginine1238-1329 mg
Histidine293-336 mg
Alanine585-642 mg
Aspartic acid1064-1197 mg
Glutamic acid2285-2453 mg
Glycine638-701 mg
Proline530-613 mg
Serine545-584 mg
VitaminsQuantity
%DV
Vitamin A2 IU
Vitamin C
7%
6.40 mg
Vitamin E
3%
0.46 mg
MineralsQuantity
%DV
Calcium
62%
97-460 mg
Iron
2328%
419 mg
Phosphorus
191%
220-360 mg
Potassium
10%
300.22 mg
Sodium
3%
71.21 mg
Other constituentsQuantity
Water9%
Cholesterol0
Percentages estimated using US recommendations for adults,[4] except for potassium, which is estimated based on expert recommendation from the National Academies.[5]
Source: [3][2]
Karuka core (mesocarp)
Nutritional value per 100 g
Dietary fiber5.3 g
0.43 g
8.5 g
Threonine289 mg
Isoleucine281 mg
Leucine485 mg
Lysine196 mg
Methionine170 mg
Phenylalanine315 mg
Tyrosine323 mg
Valine340 mg
Arginine255 mg
Histidine162 mg
Alanine391 mg
Aspartic acid672 mg
Glutamic acid748 mg
Glycine459 mg
Proline196 mg
Serine315 mg
MineralsQuantity
%DV
Calcium
9%
120 mg
Phosphorus
11%
140 mg
Other constituentsQuantity
Cholesterol0
Percentages estimated using US recommendations for adults,[4] except for potassium, which is estimated based on expert recommendation from the National Academies.[5]
Source: [3][2]

The karuka (Pandanus julianettii, also called karuka nut and Pandanus nut) is a species of tree in the screwpine family (Pandanaceae) and an important regional food crop in New Guinea.[6] The nuts are more nutritious than coconuts,[2] and are so popular that villagers in the highlands will move their entire households closer to trees for the harvest season.[7][8]

Names

The specific epithet "julianettii" honors naturalist Amedeo Giulianetti, who found the original type specimens.[1]

Karuka is a loanword from Tok Pisin.[9][10] Sometimes the tree is called 'karuga'[11][12][13] or 'karuka nut pandanus'.[14] The term 'karuka' can apply to both Pandanus julianettii and P. brosimos, though the latter is usually called 'wild karuka'.[7] Both species, as well as P. dubius, can be called 'pandanus nut'.[7] In addition to P. brosimos, 'wild karuka' can also refer to P. antaresensis,[14] P. iwen, and P. limbatus, but nuts from these trees are a much smaller part of the local diet.[7] In contexts where multiple karuka species are discussed, P. julianettii is sometimes termed 'planted karuka'.[14] P. julianettii, P. iwen, and P. brosimos are also in the subsection named Karuka, which is in the monotypic section also named Karuka.[15]

In New Guinea it has different names among each of the Papuan peoples.[6] In the Ankave language it is xweebo.[6] It is yase in the Baruya language.[6] The Huli language word is anga,[16] and it is also anga in the Duna language.[3][6][17] In Kewa language it is aga,[3][6][13] but it is unclear which dialect(s). In the Kewa pandanus language it is rumala agaa.[13][18] The Kalam language term, in both standard and pandanus languages, is alŋaw,[19][20] but it can also be called kumi or snay.[21] The plant is called ama in the Wiru language.[3][6] In the Pole language it's called maisene.[3][6] It goes by ank in Angal language,[3][6] and aenk in the Wola dialect.[12] The Imbongu language word is amo.[6][3][18]

The plant also has many names on the other half of the island. In Indonesian it is called pandan kelapa (lit.coconut pandan) and kelapa hutan (forest coconut),[22] but these names can also refer to P. brosimos and P. iwen.[23] According to field research by Kiwo et al. in Melagineri District, Lanny Jaya, the Lani people call it gawin, with woromo for P. brosimos, owandak for P. Iwen.[24] Meanwhile according to field research by Zebua et al. in Pirime District, Lanny Jaya, woromo is used to refer to P. Iwen,[25] while in another study in Jayawijaya, the Lani used woromo for P. julianettii with the Dani people call it tuke,[22][23] hence the names have been used interchangeably by multiple publications from different regions and might be a separate species in the complex.

Description

The species was originally described by Ugolino Martelli from only a few drupes in the collections of the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew[1] He was hesitant to describe it as a new species from only that, but the characteristics were so salient he published his description.[1]

The tree is dioecious (individual plants either have male flowers or female ones),[6] with male trees uncommon compared to females.[3] It reaches 10–30 metres (33–98 ft) in height, with a grey trunk[2] of 30 centimetres (12 inches) in diameter and supported by prop roots or flying buttress roots up to forty feet (twelve meters) in length and six inches (15 cm) or more in diameter..[6] The trunk has white mottling and is generally smooth with occasional warts or small knobs as well as rings of leaf scars.[12] Inside the trunk is pithy and lacking cambium.[12] The top of the tree sometimes branches, producing three or four crowns of leaves.[3] Each crown will produce a single cluster of nuts, typically once every other season.[3] Production is affected by the seasonality of local rainfall.[7]

Leaves spiral up the trunk in opposite pairs.[3][6] The large leathery leaves are 3–4 metres (9.8–13.1 ft) long[3] and 8–12 centimetres (3.1–4.7 in) wide.[6] The apex of the leaf is attenuate and doubly-pleated, with prickles pointing up at the tip[6] and along the margins and midrib.[2] The leaves are dark green on top and dull cyan underneath.[12]

The inflorescence on male trees is a densely-branched spadix with a dozen long spikes, each containing many staminate phalanges.[6] In each phalange is a column 3 mm long topped by up to 9 subsessile anthers.[6] The male flowers are white,[3] and the whole male flowering organ may be up to 2 metres (6 ft 7 in) long.[12]

The pollen has a psilate exine (unornamented outer wall) 0.8 μm thick.[26] The ornamentation is granular between echinae (short spines).[26] The ulcerate aperture is 3 μm in diameter.[26] Pollen grains measure an average of 30 × 14.5 μm in size.[26]

On female trees, the inflorescence is a single ellipsoid or ovoid syncarp, or fruiting head, with off-white bracts.[6] Female flowers can produce fruit without pollination,[2] and are typically the only trees cultivated.[12] The tree stops making leaves when new fruit is growing.[3] The syncarp has up to a thousand densely-packed single-celled carpels that later turn into drupes.[6][3]

The clavate, pentagonal drupes measure up to 12 cm long and have a sharpened base,[1] but typically are 9×1.5 cm,[6] and are a pale blue-green color.[12] Each cluster contains about 1000 nuts.[3] The endocarp is bony and thin,[6] 5½ cm long, with rounded edges about 1½ cm wide.[1] The seed-bearing locule is around 4 cm long.[1] The core of the mature head (mesocarp) has an appearance like honeycomb and is spongy[6] and pink.[3] The top of the mesocarp is fibrous, from 3 cm long and up.[1] Though Martelli did not have a complete syncarp, he knew the cluster of fruit must be large, estimating at least 30 cm in diameter.[1] He was correct, as the fruiting cluster is typically 15 to 30 cm in diameter.[3] A mature head and stalk weigh up to 16 kg,[6] but average 6 kg.[3] but weights up to sixty pounds ((27,3 kilograms) have been reported.[27]

It most closely resembles P. utilissimus, which is found the Philippines.[1] People also harvest and eat nuts of P. antaresensis, P. brosimos, P. dubius, P. iwen, and P. limbatus, and P. odoratissima[7]

Cultivars

There are up to 45 cultivars of karuka,[12] many with different kernel shapes.[3] There are likely many more, as some are known only to a small number of people in a single settlement.[12] 'Tabuna' and 'Henga' are some of the most important.[2] 'Tabuna' is popular because it is high-yielding, tastes good, and has no taboos on who/what can eat it and how/if it is cooked.[2] At least two varieties are edible raw.[3]

Named varieties include:[2][12]

  • Baerel
  • Bort
  • Dob
  • Dobiyael
  • Dor
  • Emonk
  • Gaslŋ[19]
  • Goalia
  • Gurubu
  • Hagidara
  • Hael
  • Hap
  • Henga
  • Homagal-iba
  • Honal
  • Honde
  • Hones
  • Humbuwm
  • Kaba
  • Kabali
  • Kagat
  • Kai
  • Kambiyp
  • Kat
  • Kebali
  • Kongop
  • Korhombom
  • Laek
  • Lebaga
  • Mabiyp
  • Mabu
  • Maeka
  • Maela
  • Maeraeng
  • Mbul
  • Morguwm
  • Nenjay
  • Ngaule
  • Nolorwaembuw
  • Ohaib
  • Ombohonday
  • Padua
  • Pari
  • Pebet
  • Peliya
  • Piliyhongor
  • Posjuwk
  • Sayzel
  • Shond
  • Shuwimb
  • Tabuna
  • Tabuwn
  • Taeshaen
  • Taziy
  • Tenyon
  • Tiyt
  • Toi
  • Tolo
  • Tombpayliya
  • Tomok
  • Tumbi
  • Tumbu
  • Womb

It is possible a cultivar is listed more than once under different names, as Papua New Guinea has a very high linguistic diversity.

Benjamin Clemens Stone posits that P. julianettii and P. brosimos are a single species with many varieties, but does not support this point.[9] However, Simon G. Haberle notes that the pollen of the two trees are indistinguishable by light microscopy.[26] P. iwen may also be part of the species complex.[15]

Distribution

Giulianetti's type specimens were collected from Vanapa, British New Guinea[1] (now southern Papua New Guinea). The tree can be found cultivated or wild on New Guinea, both in PNG and Papua province.[6][3] Wild trees are found on the Huon Peninsula and in the highlands of New Guinea's central cordillera.[6][7] In Papua New Guinea, the tree is most commonly grown in Southern Highlands, Western Highlands, Eastern Highlands, Enga, and Chimbu Provinces, and it is found in all provinces on the mainland except East Sepik.[14] It grows in montane forests[9] between 1,300 and 3,300 m in elevation in areas that get 2–5 m mean annual precipitation.[6][7] It grows in both dry and wet soils,[6][7] but prefers good soil fertility.[3] Trees will grow in clumped groups of 5 to 10 individuals per hectare.[7]

Ecology

Karuka produces fruit around February, with an occasional secondary season in July.[3] Typically each branch will only flower every other year.[3] The natural pollination syndrome is unknown, but the flowers can be pollinated by humans.[7] Seed dispersal is by humans, birds, and other animals.[7] According to the Kalam people of Madang Province, the Lorentz's mosaic-tailed rat (Paramelomys lorentzii) helps spread karuka seeds.[21] A fallen syncarp will disintegrate completely in about 3 days in the forest.[2]

Fungal pests of karuka include leaf spot, diffuse leaf spot, black leaf mould (Lembosia pandani), sooty mold (Meliola juttingii), and fungus on seeds (Macrophoma pandani).[3] The leaf moulds do not do much damage.[3] The sooty mould seems to grow on insect frass.[3] The black leaf mold only affects some varieties.[3]

The bacteria Pectobacterium carotovorum subsp. carotovorum can also cause bacterial soft rot and necrosis on the leaves, but causes more severe damage to the related species Pandanus conoideus.[11]

Longhorn grasshoppers (Tettigoniidae) are serious insect pests.[3] Segestes gracilis and Segestidea montana eat the leaves and can sometimes kill trees.[3] Growers will stuff leaves and grass in between the leaves of the crown to keep insects out.[3] An unknown species of black grub will burrow into the cluster and eat the spongy core, causing the nuts to turn black and the whole bunch to fall off the tree.[3] Woodboring beetles sometimes attack the prop root of the tree.[3]

Possums also eat the nuts,[3] as do rodents such as squirrel-toothed rats (Anisomys imitator), eastern white-eared giant rats (Hyomys goliath), Rothschild's woolly rats (Mallomys rothschildi), and giant naked-tailed rats (Uromys anak).[12] Growers will put platforms or other obstacles on the trunks of trees to keep the pests out.[3][12]

Harvested nuts are often beset by rats and cockroaches.[3] Hanging nuts in the smoky areas above fires can prevent this, but after a while the taste of the nuts is affected.[3]

Use by humans

On New Guinea karuka is cultivated crop,[6] and has been used as a major food source since nearly 31,000 years ago in the Pleistocene.[10] In PNG nearly 2 million people (almost half the rural population) live in regions where karuka is commonly eaten.[14] There is high demand for it in the New Guinea Highlands: Entire households (including pigs, who are sometimes fed the fruits[2]) will move from the valleys to higher elevations at harvest time,[7] often for several weeks.[8] Each household will average 12 to 176 trees.[8]

Trade in karuka is small-scale and not commercial.[7] Local marketplaces typically will have 12 to 50 fruits for sale.[8] With some coordination between state agencies and private sector, karuka could have export market access.[14] The crop has a medium potential for large-scale sustainable commercialization in the region, but care must be taken in the sensitive local environments to expanded agriculture.[7] Diets of tree owners could also be negatively influenced by rapid commercialization.[7]

The endosperm, a white kernel, is eaten raw, roasted, smoked,[6] or mumued.[3] Nuts that aren't immediately eaten are typically sun-dried for storage.[3] The karuka kernels have a sweet, coconut taste,[6][12][22] or savory and like walnuts.[23] Smoked or cooked karuka is either stored in the rafters or sold at local marketplaces.[6] The uncooked clusters can also be stored for months buried in waterlogged earth,[6][3][2] which possibly ferments it.[12] It is a regional staple food and one of the few plants in the area with a high protein content.[6] The spongy core of the multiple fruit cluster can also be cooked and eaten after the nuts are removed.[6][3]

Oil extracted from the nuts

The high fat content means the nuts can be processed into an edible yellow oil.[22] Karuka contains 52.39% oleic acid, 44.90% palmitic acid, and 0.19% stearic acid.[23] The oil is a good source of Vitamin E (α-tocopherol 5.03 mg/100 g).[22] The color of the oil is from the carotenoids, which are at a concentration of 2.75 µg/g.[22] The antioxidant activity for the oil is fairly low, and it is higher in saturated than unsaturated fats.[22]

Some subjective reports indicate that children are healthier after karuka season, but there may also be increased incidence of tropical ulcers and pig-bel (caused by Clostridium perfringens).[2] But the connections, if any, are unclear.

Trunks and buttress roots are used for building.[6] The sheets of bark are used for house walls.[12] The leaves are used for bush shelters[6] and raincapes.[12] The leaves were the preferred building material for housing in Papua New Guinea before colonial contact.[28] The durable white spathe leaves on male inflorescences are used by the Wola people to wrap pearl shells.[12]

Karuka can be cultivated by cutting a mature branch and replanting it (vegetative propagation).[3] Suckers can also be replanted.[3] Nurseries also plant seeds directly.[3] New nuts will grow when a tree is at least five or six years old, and can keep producing for up to fifty years.[3][2] The tree can tolerate temperatures down to 3 °C for extended periods and 0 °C for short periods.[17] The USDA hardiness is 10–12, and is hardy to zone 10 in the UK system.[29]

In Upper Karint near Pingirip, karukas are planted as boundary lines between garden plots.[3]

In culture

In PNG's Central Province Premier Rugby League the team for Goilala District is called the Karukas.[30]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Martelli, Ugolino (December 1907). Martelli, Ugolino (ed.). "Pandanus Nuove Specie Descritte Manipolo II". Webbia, Raccolta di Scritti Botanici (in Italian). 2: 433. doi:10.1080/00837792.1907.10803460. hdl:2027/mdp.39015038487925. ISSN 2169-4060. OCLC 899525984. Archived from the original on 2022-08-12. Retrieved 2022-09-26.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Rose, C. J. (1982). Bourke, Richard Michael; Kesavan, V. (eds.). "Preliminary Observations on the Pandanus nut (Pandanus jiulianettii Martelli)". Proceedings of the Second Papua New Guinea Food Crops Conference. 1: 160–167. OCLC 17294235.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq ar as at au av French, Bruce R. (1982). Growing food in the Southern Highlands Province of Papua New Guinea (PDF). AFTSEMU (Agricultural Field Trials, Surveys, Evaluation and Monitoring Unit) of the World Bank funded project in the Southern Highlands of Papua New Guinea. pp. 64–71. Archived from the original on 30 October 2018. Retrieved 20 September 2018.
  4. ^ a b United States Food and Drug Administration (2024). "Daily Value on the Nutrition and Supplement Facts Labels". Retrieved 2024-03-28.
  5. ^ a b National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine; Health and Medicine Division; Food and Nutrition Board; Committee to Review the Dietary Reference Intakes for Sodium and Potassium (2019). Oria, Maria; Harrison, Meghan; Stallings, Virginia A. (eds.). Dietary Reference Intakes for Sodium and Potassium. The National Academies Collection: Reports funded by National Institutes of Health. Washington, DC: National Academies Press (US). ISBN 978-0-309-48834-1. PMID 30844154.
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj Lim, Tong Kwee (2012). "Pandanus julianettii". Edible Medicinal and Non-Medicinal Plants. Vol. 4. Springer. pp. 128–130. doi:10.1007/978-94-007-4053-2_17. ISBN 978-94-007-4053-2. OCLC 822591349.
  7. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Bourke, Richard Michael (1994). "Edible indigenous nuts in Papua New Guinea" (PDF). In Stevens, M.L.; Bourke, Richard Michael; Evans, Barry R. (eds.). South Pacific Indigenous Nuts. Proceedings of a workshop held from 31 October to 4 November 1994 at Le Lagon Resort, Port Vila, Vanuatu. Australian Centre for International Agricultural Research Proceedings. Vol. 69. Canberra: Australian Centre for International Agricultural Research. pp. 45–55. ISBN 1-86320-485-7. OCLC 38390455. Retrieved 27 September 2018.
  8. ^ a b c d Bourke, Richard Michael (May 1988). Taim hangre: variation in subsistence food supply in the Papua New Guinea highlands (PDF). Australian National University. OCLC 224338489. Archived from the original on 30 October 2018. Retrieved 27 September 2018.
  9. ^ a b c Stone, Benjamin C. (1982). "New Guinea Pandanaceae: First approach to ecology and biogeography". In Gressitt, J. L. (ed.). Biogeography and Ecology of New Guinea. Monographiae Biologicae. Vol. 1. Dordrecht: Springer. pp. 401–436. doi:10.1007/978-94-009-8632-9_17. ISBN 978-94-009-8632-9. OCLC 5679030487.
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