From the FAO Forestry Paper 44/3
by the Food And Agriculture Organization of the United Nations



Inga macrophylla


Family: Leguminosae subfamily Mimosoideae
Botanical: Inga macrophylla Kunt.

Synonym: Inga quadrangularis Ducke
Vernacular: ingá-peuá, ing
á-peba (Brazil, Amazonia), pacai amarillố (Bolivia).

Ecology and Distribution
Inga macrophylla occurs in the relatively low profile, secondary growth known as "capoeira" and "capoeirinha", preferring non-flooded terra firma and grows well infertile clay soils with some organic matter.

Its distribution pattern within the Amazon basin suggests that it is not particularly sensitive to the variety of climates to be found in the region, although it does appear to prefer low altitudes not exceeding 250 m.

Although frequent, the tree is not abundant and is encountered only as dispersed, isolated individuals, even when cultivated for shade or fruit production.

Ingá-peuá is native to the Amazon Basin and is distributed throughout the entire region, including Brazil, Bolivia, Peru and Venezuela.

Related species: the genus Inga includes some 200 species in tropical America, with 90 species in Amazonia (Ducke,1949).
The majority of the species produce edible fruits, but only a few have a pulp thick enough to be of economic interest.
In addition to the species treated here, only four others deserve mention: I. edulis Mart., "Ingá-cipo"; I. cinnamomea Benth., "Ingá-açu"; I. capitata Desv. "Ingá costela"; I. ruiziana G. Don, "Ingá peba".

Description
A small tree to 5m high, with a wide, low crown; root system unknown.

Leaves alternate, 1-pinnate; stipules cordate, c. 12 mm long, deciduous, rachis, including petiole 9 cm or more long, broadly winged between the leaflets and with a raised, cup-shaped or cylindrical nectarial gland on the upper side between the junction of each pair of leaflets; leaflets 2-3 (-4) pairs, broadly elliptic, 12-18 cm long, 6-9 cm wide, apex acuminate or sometimes retuse, base sub-cordate, margins entire, glabrous.

Inflorescence axillary or terminal, on a short peduncle up to 6 cm long; flowers subsessile, in a short, bracteate raceme.
Calyx narrowly cylindrical, 15-25mm long, with 5 deltoid teeth, glabrous or sparsely hairy; corolla white or yellowish, narrowly cylindrical, 20-40 mm long, densely hairy outside, with 5 lobes; stamens numerous, fused into a tube below, delicate; ovary elongate, stipitate, with 8-10 ovules, style long, filamentous.

Fruit a stout, woody pod, rectangular in cross-section, straight or sometimes arcuate, up to 45 cm long, 4-5 cm wide, yellow, with 8-10 seed 3 cm long enveloped in a white, slightly fibrous pulp. Flowering July to September and sporadically during the fruiting season; fruiting January to April.

Main Uses
The only edible part of the fruit is the pulp, which is white and slightly fibrous and surrounds the seed. The seed and surrounding pulp are approximately equal in weight. The pulp is simply sweet with no aroma worthy to mention. It is consumed exclusively in natura.

The tree is very suitable for shade

Method of Collection of the Edible Part
The fruits only fall from the tree long after they are ripe and are unsuitable for consumption.
The pods should be collected by hand using a cutting instrument.
The fruits are ready to be collected when they are thick and the endocarp turns yellow.
There is no precise information on yields but random observations of production fluctuate around 100 to 150 fruits per harvest.

Nutritional Value
No information is available.

Cultivation and Propagation Methods
There are no technical reports on the cultivation of ingá-peua, but it is known that the plant propagates spontaneously from seeds and that monkeys are the principal dispersers.
The seeds of well-matured fruits will germinate in 4 to 5 days.The seedlings grow rapidly if planted in soil with a significant amount of organic matter. The tree can begin to flower and fruit at 3 to 4 years of age.

Potential Economic Importance
Like the other species of Inga, principally I. edulis and I. cinnamomea, which are abundant in local markets, the ingá-peua could very well represent another option in the array of fruits offered to consumers.

The plant's voluminous fruit with a large proportion of edible pulp rivals that of the other two species. All that is required is the selection of more productive varieties and the use of improved strains.The rest is easy, since the tree is a vigorous wild plant which does not require expensive culture techniques.


Inga macrophylla
Fig. 1 



Back to
Inga Species page


© FAO, 2018
Bibliography

"Food and Fruit-bearing Forest Species: Examples from Latin America." FAO Forestry Paper 44/3, Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations, Forest Resources Development Branch, Rome, 1986, FAO, www.fao.org/3/ap368e/ap368e00.pdf. Accessed 6 June 2020.

Photograph

Fig. 1 "Inga macrophylla." Carnegie Spectranomics Project, Carnegie Institution for Science, ID CSP01244, BOLDSYSTEMS, (CC BY-NC-SA 3.0), v3.boldsystems.org/index.php/Taxbrowser_Taxonpage?taxid=405387. Accessed 28 July 2020.

Published 3 Nov. 2020 LR
Please help us do more!

© 2013 - Growables, Inc.
A not-for-profit, tax exempt organization under section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code.
about credits disclaimer sitemap friends