Annona
Annona is a genus of flowering plants in the pawpaw/sugar apple family, Annonaceae. It is the second largest genus in the family after Guatteria, containing approximately 166 species of mostly Neotropical and Afrotropical trees and shrubs.
The generic name derives from anón, a Hispaniolan TaÃno word for the fruit. Paleoethnobotanical studies have dated Annona exploitation and cultivation in the Yautepec River region of Medicoto approximately 1000 BC. It has several common names, including Guanabana, and Soursop.
Currently, seven Annona species and one hybrid are grown for domestic or commercial use, mostly for the edible and nutritious fruits; several others also produce edible fruits.
Many of the species are used in traditional medicines for the treatment of a variety of diseases, though their efficacy as a medicine has yet to be validated scientifically. Several annonacaeous species have been found to contain acetogenins, a class of natural compounds with a wide variety of biological activities.
Description
Annona species are taprooted, evergreen or semideciduous, tropical trees or shrubs. This fruit typically grows in areas where temperature does not drop below 28 °F, especially Cuba, Jamaica, and the Philippines. However, it has also been known to grow in certain areas of Florida.- Trunks: The trunks have thin bark that has broad and shallow depressions or fissures which join together and are scaly giving rise to slender, stiff, cylindrical and tapering shoots with raised pores and naked buds.
- Leaves: Leaf blades can be leathery or thin and rather soft or pliable, bald or hairy.
- Flowers: The flowering stalks rise from axils, or occasionally from axillary buds on main stems or older stems, or as solitary flowers or small bundle of flowers. Usually, the three or four deciduous sepals are smaller than the outer petals that do not overlap while in bud. Six to eight fleshy petals in two whorls—the petals of the outer whorl are larger and do not overlap; inner petals are ascending and distinctively smaller, and nectar glands are darker pigmented. Numerous stamens that are ball, club-shaped, or curved and hooded or pointed beyond anther sac. Numerous pistils, attached directly to the base, are partially united to various degrees with distinct stigma, with one or two ovules per pistil; the style and stigma are club-shaped or narrowly conic.
- Fruits: One fleshy, ovate to spherical fruit is produced per flower. Each fruit consists of many individual small fruits or syncarps, with one syncarp and seed per pistil. Seeds are bean-like with tough coats; the seed kernels are toxic.
- Pollination: Dynastid scarab beetles appear basic within the genus Annona. Those species of Annona which are more morphologically derived, as well as all Rollinia spp., possess reduced floral chambers and attract small beetles such as Nitidulidae or Staphylinidae.
Toxicology
Selected species
The following is a list of some of the more important species. Many of them have significant agricultural, medicinal, pharmaceutical, and other uses.- Annona amambayensis
- Annona acuminata
- Annona acutiflora
- Annona ambotay
- Annona angustifolia
- Annona asplundiana
- Annona atabapensis
- Annona aurantiaca
- Annona bullata
- Annona biflora
- Annona bicolor
- Annona brasililensis
- Annona cacans - araticum-cagão
- Annona calophylla
- Annona campestris
- Annona cascarilloides
- Annona cherimola - cherimoya
- Annona chrysophylla - graines
- Annona conica
- Annona cordifolia
- Annona coriacea
- Annona cornifolia
- Annona crassiflora - araticum do cerrado, marolo
- Annona crassivenia
- Annona cristalensis
- Annona crotonifolia
- Annona deceptrix
- Annona deminuta
- Annona dioica
- Annona diversifolia
- Annona dolabripetala
- Annona dolichophylla
- Annona echinata
- Annona ecuadorensis
- Annona ekmanii
- Annona excellens
- Annona foetida
- Annona glabra - pond apple, alligator apple, monkey apple
- Annona glaucophylla
- Annona haematantha
- Annona haitiensis
- Annona hayesii
- Annona hypoglauca
- Annona hystricoides
- Annona jahnii
- Annona jamaicensis
- Annona longiflora
- Annona lutescens
- Annona macrocalyx
- Annona macrocarpa auct.
- Annona macroprophyllata
- Annona malmeana
- Annona manabiensis
- Annona microcarpa
- Annona moaensis
- Annona montana Macfad. - mountain soursop
- Annona monticola
- Annona muricata - soursop, graviola
- Annona nitida
- Annona nutans
- Annona oligocarpa
- Annona paludosa
- Annona paraguayensis
- Annona phaeoclados
- Annona pittieri
- Annona praetermissa
- Annona pubescens
- Annona purpurea - soncoya
- Annona pygmaea
- Annona reticulata - custard apple, bullock's heart
- Annona rigida
- Annona salzmannii - beach sugar apple
- Annona scleroderma - poshe-te, cawesh, wild red custard apple
- Annona sclerophylla
- Annona senegalensis - African custard apple
- Annona sericea
- Annona spinescens
- Annona spraguei
- Annona squamosa - sugar apple, sweetsop
- Annona stenophylla
- Annona tenuiflora
- Annona testudinea
- Annona tomentosa
- Annona tripetala
- Annona trunciflora
Hybrids
- Annona × atemoya - atemoya
Insects and diseases
;Insects
- Braephratiloides cubense
- Bepratelloides cubense
- Morganella longispina
- Philephedra n.sp.
- Pseudococcus sp.
- Xyleborus sp.
- Ammiscus polygrophoides
- Anastrepha atrox
- Anastrepha barandianae
- Anastrepha bistrigata
- Anastrepha chiclayae
- Anastrepha disticta
- Anastrepha extensa
- Anastrepha fraterculus
- Anastrepha oblicua
- Anastrepha serpentina
- Anastrepha striata
- Anastrepha suspensa
- Apate monachus
- Bactrocera spp.
- Bephrata maculicollis
- Brevipalpus spp.
- Ceratitis capitata
- Cerconota anonella
- Coccoidea spp.
- Coccus viridis
- Emanadia flavipennis
- Gelwchiidae spp.
- Heliothrips haemorphoidalis
- Leosynodes elegantales
- Lyonetia spp.
- Oiketicus kirby
- Orthezia olivicola
- Phyllocnistis spp.
- Pinnaspis aspidistrae
- Planococcus citri
- Saissetia nigra
- Talponia spp.
- Tenuipalpidae
- Tetranynchus spp.
- Thrips
;Fungi
- Armillaria
- Ascochyta cherimolaer
- Botryodiplodia theobromae
- Cercospora annonaceae
- Cladosporium carpophilum
- Colletotrichium spp.
- Colletotrichium annonicola
- Colletotrichum gloeosporioides
- Corticium salmonicolor
- Fumagina spp.
- Fusarium solani
- Gloeosporium
- Glomerella cingulata
- Isariopsis anonarum
- Koleroga noxis
- Monilia
- Nectria episphaeria
- Oidium
- Phakopsora cherimolae
- Phomopsis spp.
- Phomopsis annonacearum
- Phyllosticta
- Phythium spp.
- Phytophtora palmivora
- Phytophtora parasitica
- Rhizopus nigricans
- Rhizopus stolonifer
- Rhizoctonia spp.
- Rhizoctonia solani
- Salssetia oleare
- Sclerotium rolfsii
- Uredo cherimola
- Verticillium
- Zignoella annonicola
;Nematodes
- Cephalobidae spp.
- Dorylaimidae spp.
- Gracilacus spp.
- Helicotylenchus spp.
- Hemicycliophora spp.
- Hoplolaimidae spp.
- Meloidogyne incognita spp.
- Pratylenchus spp.
- Paratylenchus micoletzky. Rhabditis spp.
- Tylenchorhynchus spp.
- Xiphinema americanum
;Algae
- Cephaleuros virescens
- Cephalosporium spp.
- Paecilomyces spp.
;Diseases
- Diplodia natalensis''
- Fruit rot
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