Brazil nut


The Brazil nut is a South American tree in the family Lecythidaceae, and is also the name of the tree's commercially harvested edible seeds. It is one of the largest and longest-lived trees in the Amazon rainforest. The fruit and its nutshell - containing the edible Brazil nut - are relatively large, possibly weighing as much as in total weight. As food, Brazil nuts are notable for diverse content of micronutrients, especially a high amount of selenium. The wood of the Brazil nut tree is prized for its quality in carpentry, flooring, and heavy construction.

Etymology and names

In Bolivia and other Spanish-speaking countries, Brazil nuts are called castañas de Brasil, nuez de Brasil or castañas de Pando. In Brazil, they are called castanhas-do-pará, but in Acre they are often called castanhas-do-acre instead. Indigenous names include juvia in the Orinoco area. In Cuba, the nut is alternatively called coquito de Santiago, literally St. ⁠James coconut.
In North America, as early as 1896, Brazil nuts were sometimes known by the slang term "nigger toes", a vulgarity that faded as the racial slur became less used.

Taxonomy

The Brazil nut family, Lecythidaceae, is in the order Ericales, as are other well-known plants such as blueberries, cranberries, sapote, gutta-percha, tea, phlox and persimmons. The tree is the only species in the monotypic genus Bertholletia.

Description

The Brazil nut is a large tree, reaching tall and with a trunk in diameter, making it among the largest of trees in the Amazon rainforest. It may live for 500 years or more, and can often reach a thousand years of age. The stem is straight and commonly without branches for well over half the tree's height, with a large emergent crown of long branches above the surrounding canopy of other trees.
The bark is grayish and smooth. The leaves are dry-season deciduous, alternate, simple, entire or crenate, oblong, long and broad. The flowers are small, greenish-white, in panicles long; each flower has a two-parted, deciduous calyx, six unequal cream-colored petals, and numerous stamens united into a broad, hood-shaped mass.

Range

The Brazil nut is native to the Guianas, Venezuela, Brazil, eastern Colombia, eastern Peru, and eastern Bolivia. It occurs as scattered trees in large forests on the banks of the Amazon River, Rio Negro, Tapajós, and the Orinoco. The genus is named after the French chemist Claude Louis Berthollet.
As a result, they can be found outside production areas, in the backyards of homes and near roads and streets in the Brazilian North and Northeast. The fruit is heavy and rigid; when the fruits fall, they pose a serious threat to vehicles and people passing under the tree. Brazil nut fruit sinks in water, which can cause clogging of waterways in riparian areas.

Reproduction

Brazil nut trees produce fruit almost exclusively in pristine forests, as disturbed forests lack the large-bodied bees of the genera Bombus, Centris, Epicharis, Eulaema, and Xylocopa which are the only ones capable of pollinating the tree's flowers, with different bee genera being the primary pollinators in different areas, and different times of year. Brazil nuts have been harvested from plantations, but production is low and is currently not economically viable.
The fruit takes 14 months to mature after pollination of the flowers. The fruit itself is a large capsule in diameter, resembling a coconut endocarp in size and weighing up to. It has a hard, woody shell thick, which contains eight to 24 wedge-shaped seeds long packed like the segments of an orange.
The capsule contains a small hole at one end, which enables large rodents like the agouti to gnaw it open. They then eat some of the seeds inside while burying others for later use; some of these are able to germinate into new Brazil nut trees. Most of the seeds are "planted" by the agoutis in caches during wet season, and the young saplings may have to wait years, in a state of dormancy, for a tree to fall and sunlight to reach it, when it starts growing again. Capuchin monkeys have been reported to open Brazil nuts using a stone as an anvil.

Society and culture

In Brazil, it is illegal to cut down a Brazil nut tree, unless with previous authorization from IBAMA.

Production

In 2017, global production of Brazil nuts was 84 thousand tonnes, including shells, most of which derive from wild harvests in tropical forests, especially the Amazon. The annual total was consistent since 2009. According to FAO, there were 4 producing countries for brazil nuts in 2017. The largest producer was Brazil, with 39% of the world total, followed by Bolivia, with 30%. The United States was the largest single importer, with 9% of imports.

Environmental effects of harvesting

Since most of the production for international trade is harvested in the wild, the business arrangement has been advanced as a model for generating income from a tropical forest without destroying it. The nuts are most often gathered by migrant workers known as castañeros or castanheiros. Logging is a significant threat to the sustainability of the Brazil nut harvesting industry.
Analysis of tree ages in areas that are harvested shows that moderate and intense gathering takes so many seeds that not enough are left to replace older trees as they die. Sites with light gathering activities had many young trees, while sites with intense gathering practices had nearly none.

European Union import regulation

In 2003, the European Union imposed strict regulations on the import of Brazilian-harvested Brazil nuts in their shells, as the shells are considered to contain unsafe levels of aflatoxins, a potential cause of liver cancer.

Nutrition and human consumption

Brazil nuts contain 14% protein, 12% carbohydrate, and 66% fat by weight; 85% of their calories come from fat, and a amount provides of food energy. The fat components are 23% saturated, 38% monounsaturated, and 32% polyunsaturated. Due to their high polyunsaturated fat content, primarily omega-6 fatty acids, shelled Brazil nuts may quickly become rancid.
Nutritionally, Brazil nuts are a rich source of dietary fiber and various vitamins and dietary minerals. A amount of Brazil nuts contains rich content of thiamin, vitamin E, magnesium, phosphorus, manganese and zinc . Brazil nuts are perhaps the richest dietary source of selenium, with a serving of 6 nuts supplying 774% DV. This is 10 times the adult U.S. Recommended Dietary Allowance, more even than the Tolerable Upper Intake Level, although the amount of selenium within batches of nuts varies greatly.
The high selenium content is used as a biomarker in studies of selenium intake and deficiency. Consumption of just one Brazil nut per day over 8 weeks was sufficient to restore selenium blood levels and increase HDL cholesterol in obese women.

Phytochemicals

The shells of Brazil nuts contain high levels of aflatoxins, which can cause liver damage, including possible cancer, if consumed.
The nuts contain small amounts of radium, a radioactive element, with a kilogram of nuts containing an activity between. This is about 1000 times higher than in several other common foods; according to Oak Ridge Associated Universities, this is not because of elevated levels of radium in the soil, but due to "the very extensive root system of the tree."

Uses

Oil

Brazil nut oil contains 75% unsaturated fatty acids composed mainly of oleic and linoleic acids, as well as the phytosterol, beta-sitosterol, and fat-soluble vitamin E.
The following table presents the composition of fatty acids in Brazil nut essential oil:
Palmitic acid16–20%
Palmitoleic acid0.5–1.2%
Stearic acid9–13%
Oleic acid36–45%
Linoleic acid33–38%
Saturated fats25%
Unsaturated fats75%

Wood

The lumber from Brazil nut trees is of excellent quality, having diverse uses from flooring to heavy construction. Logging the trees is prohibited by law in all three producing countries. Illegal extraction of timber and land clearances present a continuing threat.

Other uses

Brazil nut oil is used as a lubricant in clocks, in the manufacturing of paint, and in the cosmetics industry. Engravings in Brazil nut shells are supposed to have used as decorative jewelry by unnamed indigenous tribes in Bolivia, although no extant examples exist. Because of its hardness, the Brazil nutshell is often pulverized and used as an abrasive to polish materials such as metals and ceramics, in the same way jeweler's rouge is used.