Health Benefits

Uses and benefits of Chinaberry – Melia azedarach

Melia azedarach, popularly known as the chinaberry tree, Pride of India, bead-tree, Cape lilac is a species of deciduous tree in the mahogany family, Meliaceae. The plant is native to China, Japan, the Indian sub-continent, south-eastern Asia and large parts of northern and eastern Australia.  Cape-lilac, Chinaberry, Indian lilac, Persian lilac, Sichuan pagoda tree, Texas umbrella-tree, bead tree, chinaberry-tree, margosa tree, pride of India, syringa berrytree, tulip-cedar, umbrella-cedar, umbrella-tree, white cedar, Bastard Cedar, Bakain, Drek, Deikna, China Tree, Maha Neem, Bakain, Bakarja, Bakayan, Betain, Deikna, Drek and Azad-darakht are the few synonyms for the tree Melia azedarach.  It is an ornamental tree with multiple uses. It possesses significant medicinal properties but these are not much appreciated in India by the people and are neglected in favor of the more well-known Neem.

The genus name Melia is derived from μελία (melía), the Greek word used by Theophrastus (c. 371 – c. 287 BC) for Fraxinus ornus, which has similar leaves. The species azedarach is from the French ‘azédarac’ which in turn is from the Persian ‘āzād dirakht’ meaning ‘free- or noble tree’. Melia azedarach should not be confused with the Azadirachta trees, which are in the same family, but a different genus. This tree’s fruit is poisonous to humans. Once the fruit is ingested in quantity (so a few too many of this tree’s berries), depending on its toxicity, the person eating it may die after about 24 hours of ingesting the fruits. Its flowers are a respiratory irritant and its leaves, bark, flowers and sometimes fruit are poisonous.

Chinaberry Facts

Chinaberry Quick Facts
Name: Chinaberry
Scientific Name: Melia azedarach
Origin China, Japan, the Indian sub-continent, south-eastern Asia and large parts of northern and eastern Australia
Colors Greenish yellow to yellowish tan
Shapes Globose to sub globose drupe about 0.4 to 0.8 inches (1-2 cm) in diameter, but may be as much as 2 inches (5 cm) wide
Taste Bitter, sour, astringent
Health benefits Beneficial for rheumatism, neuralgia, nervous headache, ringworm, gum diseases, piles, dandruff, gout, asthma, gastroenteritis, giddiness, vertigo, ascariasis
Name Chinaberry
Scientific Name Melia azedarach
Native China, Japan, the Indian sub-continent, south-eastern Asia and large parts of northern and eastern Australia
Common Names Cape-lilac, Chinaberry, Indian lilac, Persian lilac, Sichuan pagoda tree, Texas umbrella-tree, bead tree, chinaberry-tree, margosa tree, pride of India, syringa berrytree, tulip-cedar, umbrella-cedar, umbrella-tree, white cedar, Bastard Cedar, Bakain, Drek, Deikna
Name in Other Languages Afrikaans:  Bessieboom, Bessieboom syringa, Maksering, Thamanga Seringboom, Ghora neem
Albanian: Melie, Chinaberry
Amharic: Chayininya (ቻይንኛ)
Arabic : Azadirikhat  (أزادرخت), ‘azidarakhat shayie  (أزدرخت شائع), tshinabri (تشينابري)
Armenian: Chinaberry
Assamese:  Ghora nim (ঘোঁৰা নিম), Khammaga
Azerbaijani: Cinaberry
Bangladesh: Goda neem
Bengali:  Bakarjam, Ghoranima (ঘোড়ানিম), Mahanim, Gora-Nim
Brazil: Arvore-santa, cinamomo, jasmim-de-cachorro, jasmim-de-soldado, lilás-da-India, para-raios
Bulgarian: khimalaĭska meliya (хималайска мелия)
Burmese: Tarotepyi (တရုတ်ပြည်)
Cambodia: Dâk’ hiën, sdau khmaôch
Catalan: Arbre de sabonetes, Arbre sant, Lilà de les Índies, Llessamí d’amèrica, Metzina, Mèlia, Rosarier, amèlia, arbre de grau de Rosari, arbre de sabonetes, arbre del Paradis, arbre sant, gessamí d’Amèrica, lilà de Pérsia, parenostre, xuclamoro
Chamorro: Paráisu, paraiso
Chichewa: Ndya
Chinese:  Chuan lian,   Lian (楝), Lian chu (楝树), Chuan liang zi, Ku lian pi, liàn shǔ (楝属), Zhōngguó méi (中国莓), Sen shu, Jin ling zi
Croatian :  Melija, Očenašica, kok, Perzijska očenašica, chinaberry,
Czech:   Zederach hladký, chinaberry
Danish:  Paternostertræ, Chinaberry
Dutch:  Kralenboom, Indische sering, galbessen, paternosterboom, chinaberry,
English:  Barbados lilac, Bastard cedar, Bead tree, Cape lilac, Chinaberry, Chinaberry tree, Ceylon cedar, Ceylon mahogany, Hoop tree, Indian bead tree, Indian lilac, Persian lilac, Pride of China, Pride of India, Sichuan pagoda tree, Syringa berry tree, Texas umbrella tree, Tulip cedar, Umbrella cedar, Umbrella tree, White cedar , Persian-lilac, Sichuan pagoda-tree, Sichuan pagoda-tree, Lelah, Paraiso, Umbrella-cedar, Syringa, seringa
Esperanto: Bida melio, chinaberry
Estonian: Chinaberry
Fijian: Bakain, dake
Filipino: Tsinaberry, Paraiso, Bagaluñga, Balagañgo
Finnish: Meelia, chinaberry
French:  Acacie d’Égypte, Adrézarach, Arbre à chapelets, Arbe margousier, Azédarac, Azédarach, Cascarelle, Cormier des indes, Lilas de Perse, Lilas des Indes, Margousier, Mélie Pater-noster, Arbre à chapelets, lilas de Chine, faux sycamore, laurier grec, lilas des Antilles, patenôtre, pater noster, chinaberry
Galician: Árbore de Santo Outelo
Georgian: Chinaberry (CHīnəˌberē)
German:  Chinesische Holunder, Chinesischer Holunder, Indianischer Lilak, Indischer Zederachbaum, Indischer Zedrachbaum, Paternosterbaum, Persischer Flieder, Zedrachbaum, Paradiesbaum, Perlenbaum
Greek: Agriopaschaliá (Αγριοπασχαλιά), Louloudiá (Λουλουδιά),  Mélia, Meliá (Μέλια, Μελιά),  Moschokarfia (Μοσχοκαρφια), Paschaliá (Πασχαλιά),  Pseudomelia (Ψευδομέλια),  Ψευδομελιά Pseudomelia (Ψευδομελιά), Solomós (Σολομός), Mavrommata, Pseudopaschalia, kinéziko (κινέζικο)
Gujarati: Cinābērī (ચિનાબેરી), Bakan Limado, Bakai Nimbu
Haitian: Lilas peyi
Hausa: Chinaberry
Hawaiian: Ilinia, ‘inia
Hebrew :  אזדרכת מצויה, Eazdarehet metzuya, אזדרכת מצויה
Hindi: Bakain (बकैन),  Bakānā nīmba (बकाना नीम्ब),  bakayan  (बकायन)Bakayan,  Mahanimb (महानीम), Bakarja, arebevu, bakam-limdo, bakarja, bakarjan, bakayan, bakon-limdi, betain, bokain, chik-bevu, deikna, dek, deknoi, drek, ghora nim, gowdnim, heb-bevu, hutchubevu, kadbevu, kaliyapa, karin vembu, kattu veppu, mahaneem, makanim, malla nim, mallay vembu, padrai, pejri, puvempu, sima veppu, taraka-vepa, thamaga, thurakavepa, turka, vaymbu, vilayati nim, yerri-vepa
Hungarian: Chinaberry
Icelandic: Kínberja
Indonesian: Mindi, gringging, marambung, mindi kecil
Irish: Chinaberry
Italian:  Albero da rosari, Albero dei rosari, Albero dei paternostri, Lillà delle Indie, Perlaro, albero della pazienza, perlaro, sicomoro falso, chinaberry
Japanese: Sendan (センダン),  Sendan (せんだん),  Chainaberi (チャイナベリ)
Javanese: Chinaberry, Gringging
Karbi: Neem tita
Kannada:  Kadu Bevu (ಕಾಡು ಬೇವು), Kiṟubēvu/kirubēvu (ಕಿಱುಬೇವು/ಕಿರುಬೇವು), Caināberi (ಚೈನಾಬೆರಿ), Kadu Bevu, Heb bevu
Kazakh: Chinaberiya (чинаберия)
Khmer:  Dâk’hiën, Sadau khmaôch
Korean:  Meol gu seul na mu (멀구슬나무), chaina beli (차이나 베리)
Kurdish: Chinaberry
Kwaraae: Buriakalo
Laotian:  H’ienx, Kadau s’a:ngz, chinaberry (CHīnəˌberē)
Latin: Chinaberry
Latvian: Kīniešu
Lithuanian: Chinaberry
Macedonian: Cinaberi (чинабери)
Malagasy: Chinaberry
Malay:  Gringging, Marambung, Mindi, Mindi kecil, chinaberry
Malayalam:  Malaveppu, śīmavēpp (ശീമവേപ്പ്), cainabeṟi (ചൈനബെറി), Aryaveppu, Malaveppu, Valiyaveppu, Kattuveppu
Maltese: Siġra tat-tosku, Chinaberry
Mangarevan: Paina
Manipuri: Seizrak
Maori (Cook Islands): Tīra
Marathi:  Bakan nimb (बकाणनिंब), chinaberee (चिनबेरी), Bakenu, Khaibasi
Mishing: Abori esing
Mizo: Sakhi-thei
Mongolian: Cinaʙerri (чинаберри)
Nan: Khó͘-lēng
Nauruan: Gadong, gadung
Nepali: Bakenu,  Bakā’inō (बकाइनो), Bakenu (बकेनु), Bakaaino (बकाइनो), Mahaaneem (महानीम), chinaberee (चिनबेरी)
Netherlands: Galbessen, paternosterboom
Newari: Khaibasi (खाईबसी)
Niuean: Sili, tili
Norwegian: Paternostertre, Chinaberry
Occitan: Azedrà
Oriya: ଚିନାବେରୀ |
Pakistan: Bakain, white cedar
Pashto: چینابری
Persian:   زنزلخت  Zanzalakht, آزاددرخت
Philippines: Bagaluñga, balagañgo, paraiso
Pnb: دریک
Pohnpeian: Lelah
Polish:  Miotla, Chinaberry
Portuguese:  Amargoseira, Amargoseira-do-Himalaio, Árvore-santa, Cinamomo (Brazil), Conteira, Lilás-da-Índia, Lilás-das-Índias, Margoseira-do-Himalaio, Mélia, Paraíso, Sabonete-de-soldado, Chá-de-soldado, Jasmim-de-caiena,  Lilás-de-soldado, Loureiro-grego, Santa-bárbara, Sinamomo , Neem Silvestre, agrião, amargoseira-bastarda, azedaraque, azufeifo, conteira, falso-sicómoro, mélia-dos-himaláias, sicómoro-bastardo, árvore-dos-rosários
Punjabi: Deka (ਡੇਕ), Cinabērī (ਚਿਨਬੇਰੀ), Dharek, Bakain, Drek
Romanian: Chinaberry
Russian: Мелия азедарах, chinaberry (CHīnəˌberē)
Sanskrit:  Mahanimbah (महानिंब), Mahānimba sasyam (महानिम्बिसस्यम्), Ramyaka, Dreka, Maha nimba, Nimbaraka, Karmuka, Visa mustika, Girika, Udreka, Kshira and Kesha Mushtika, Arista, Brihannimba and Parvatanimba
Serbian: Chinaberri (цхинаберри)
Sindhi: چنبيري
Singapore: Mindi kechil
Sinhala: Cayināberi (චයිනාබෙරි)
Slovene: Indijska lipovka, chinaberry
Spanish:  Agriaz, Agrión, Árbol de los rosarios, Arbol del para, Árbol del Paraíso, Árbol santo, Azedaraque, Cinamomo, Flor del paraiso, Melia, Paraíso, Paraíso sombrilla, Piocha, Rosariera, Acederaque, Alelí, Cinamon, Cinamono, Fruto del paraíso, Mirabobo, canelo, lila, paraiso, San Jacinto, jasmine de Arabia, Jazmin, acederaque, aleli, bolillero, canelo, falso sicomoro, jaboncillo, jacinto, lilaya, lilo de China, lilo de Persia, mirabobo, pasilla, rosareira, Jacinta, chinaberry
Sundanese: Cinaberry
Swedish:  Zedrak, chinaberry
Tagalog:  Balgango, Bagalunga
Tahitian: Tira
Tajik: Cinaʙerī (чинаберӣ)
Tamil:   Kattu vembhu (காட்டு வேம்பூ),  Malai vembu (மலை வேம்பு ), Malaivenimpu, Tōḻikkuraitta pattu (தோழிக்குரைத்த பத்து), Caiṉāperri (சைனாபெர்ரி), Puvempu
Telegu:  Kali yapa, Kondavepa, Turakavepa, Turka vepa, chinaberry (CHīnəˌberē)
Thai:   Hian (เฮี่ยน),  Lian (เลี่ยน),  Lian bai yai (เลี่ยน ใบหใญ่), Khian (เคี่ยน), Krian (เกรียน)
Tongan: Sita
Turkish:  Tespih aǧacı, tesbih ağacı, Chinaberry
Ukrainian: Chornytsyu (чорницю)
Upper Sorbian: Indiski melijowc
Urdu:  Bakain, Dharek, Dhrek,   دھریک  Dryk , بکائن, Maghz-E-Bakain, Bakaayan
Ulithian: Prais
Uzbek: Chinaberry
Vietnamese:  Cây xoan, Sâ dông, Xoan, chinaberry
Welsh: Chinaberry
Zulu: UmSilinga, i-chinaberry
Plant Growth Habit Small to medium sized, fast-growing, handsome, deciduous tree
Growing Climates Favors old fields, abandoned lots, roadsides, disturbed areas, riparian habitats, forests, upland grasslands, woodlands, natural forests, urban areas, wetlands, savannah, urban open spaces, wasteland, riparian corridors, road margins and prairies
Soil Grows on a wide range of soils, but best growth is obtained on well-drained, deep, sandy loam while shallow gravelly soils. It tolerates shallow soils, saline and strongly alkaline soils, but not very acid soils
Plant Size 50 ft. (15.2 m) in height and 2 ft. (0.6 m) in diameter
Bark Smooth, greenish-brown when young and turn grey and fissured with age
Branch Stout, with purplish bark dotted with buff-colored lenticels
Leaf Leaves are alternate, concentrated near the tips of twigs, petiolate, and twice or three-times pinnately compound. Leaflets are oval to elliptic in outline, glabrous or sparsely pubescent on the upper surface, and with serrate margins
Flowering season March to May
Flower Flowers are produced in open panicles from the axils of the leaves. Sepals are green, 1.5-2 mm long. Petals are pinkish lavender, ligulate, 1-1.3 cm long. Stamens are united into a cylindrical, dark purple tube, 6-8 mm long, and cut at the apex into 15-25 slender teeth. Each flower has ten anthers. Flowers are fragrant.
Fruit Shape & Size Globose to sub globose drupe about 0.4 to 0.8 inches (1-2 cm) in diameter, but may be as much as 2 inches (5 cm) wide
Fruit Color Greenish yellow to yellowish tan
Seed Oblongoid, 3.5 mm × 1.6 mm, smooth, brown
Propagation By seed or root cuttings
Flavor/Aroma Unpleasant smell
Taste Bitter, sour, astringent
Plant Parts Used Stem bark, fruit, leaves, flowers, seed, wood, root bark, Gum, Sap
Lifespan 40 to 150 years in the wild
Season October to December

Plant Description

Chinaberry is a small to medium sized, fast-growing, handsome, deciduous tree that normally grows about 50 ft. (15.2 m) in height and 2 ft. (0.6 m) in diameter. The plant favors old fields, abandoned lots, roadsides, disturbed areas, riparian habitats, forests, upland grasslands, woodlands, natural forests, urban areas, wetlands, savannah, urban open spaces, wasteland, riparian corridors, road margins and prairies. The plant grows on a wide range of soils, but best growth is obtained on well-drained, deep, sandy loam while shallow gravelly soils. It tolerates shallow soils, saline and strongly alkaline soils, but not very acid soils. The tree is often made of several smaller trunks because it is able to readily sprout from the roots. Bole is straight and cylindrical, without branches up to 10 meters. Stems can vary in coloration from olive-green and brown to a purplish red.

Bark

Bark is comparatively thin, about 0.2 to 0.6 cm thick. Bark is smooth, greenish-brown when young, turning grey and fissured with age. Outer surface is black and rough being slightly fissured and exfoliating in small slightly woody pieces light and dark-grey to greyish-black in color. Inner bark is made up of creamy layer alternating with whitish ones; fracture, fibrous; taste, extremely bitter.

Leaves

The leaves are crowded, long-stalked, alternate, compound and usually bipinnately but sometimes tripinnately about 30 to 90 centimeters long. The leaflets are in 2 to 5 pairs, ovate to ovate-lanceolate, 4 to 8 centimeters long. The ends of the leaflets are tapered with a dark green surface on the top and a lighter green surface underneath. The leaves turn golden-yellow in the fall.  The leaves emit a musky odor when crushed.

Leaf arrangement Alternate
Leaf type Bipinnately compound, odd-pinnately compound
Leaf margin Serrate, lobed, incised
Leaf shape Ovate, elliptic (oval)
Leaf venation Pinnate
Leaf type and persistence Deciduous
Leaf blade length 1 to 2 feet; secondary leaflets are 1 to 2 ½ inches
Leaf color Dark green on top, paler green underneath
Fall color Yellow
Fall characteristic Showy

 

Flowers

Inflorescence occurs on a long, axillary panicle up to 20 cm long. Flowers are small, numerous, pink to lavender, star shaped and produce a delightful chocolate scent. It is about 8 millimetres long, borne on the upper axils of the leaves. Sepals are 5-lobed, 1 cm long. Petals are 5-lobed, 0.9 cm long, pubescent. Staminal tube is deep purple blue, 0.5 cm long, 1 cm across. Petals are hairy. Flowering normally takes place in between March to May.

Flower color Lavender or purplish
Flower characteristics Not showy; fragrant; emerges in clusters on 8” long, branched panicles
Flowering Spring

 

Fruit

Fertile flowers are followed by round, ellipsoid berries about 1.5 centimeters long, smooth, shining, but held together in clusters; with each berry containing 1-6 seeds and remain on the tree after the leaves fall. Fruits are initially green turning to yellowish at maturity, hanging on the tree all winter, and gradually becoming wrinkled and almost white. Seed is solitary in each cell, pointed smooth and brown. They are oblongoid, 3.5 mm long and 1.6 mm wide surrounded by pulp.

The plant produces much fruit, which is consumed by birds that disperse the seeds. The plant also reproduces vegetatively by forming root suckers, which allows it to spread and form dense, thickets. The leaves fall in winters and the tree appears naked except for the bunches of cherry-like fruits which, when ripe and lusciously golden, attract bulbuls and other birds in large numbers.

The plant has an average lifespan around 20 years. Fruits are poisonous to humans and some other mammals but birds are able to eat the fruits and thus disperse the seed through their droppings. Some reports suggest that ingesting 6–8 fruits can be fatal to humans.

Fruit shape Round
Fruit length 1/3 to 3/4 inch
Fruit covering Fleshy drupe
Fruit color Yellow
Fruit characteristics Attracts birds; showy; fruit/leaves a litter problem
Fruiting Summer

 

History

Chinaberry tree is a nonnative tree in North America. It occurs throughout the southern United States north to Virginia and west to central California. It also occurs in Utah, Oklahoma, Missouri and New York. It has been recommended for highway planting in Nevada and may occur there. It also occurs in Hawaii and Puerto Rico. In southern forests, its estimated cover is greatest in Georgia, Alabama, Mississippi, and eastern Texas

Ethno medicinal uses of different parts of M. Azedarach.

Plant Parts Traditional Uses
Bark
  • Antidiarrhoeal, deobstruent, diuretic rheumatic pain, used in fever to relieve thirst, nausea, vomiting and general debility, loss of appetite, stomachache.
  • Bark decoction is used as a remedy for fever aches and pains.
  • Bark paste is used to treat piles, used as lotion on ulcers syphilitic
Stem
  • Asthma
Stem bark infusion
  • Used for gonorrhea, treat malaria and to expel parasitic worms
Root
  • Roots are bitter, astringent, anodyne, depurative, vulnerary, antiseptic, anthelmintic, constipating, expectorant, febrifuge, antiperiodic, and bitter tonic in low doses.
Root Bark
  • As anthelmintic, used to treat malaria
Leaves
  • Control many insect, mite and nematode pests, Anti-diarrhoeal, deobstruent, diuretic.
  • Used as fodder and are highly nutritious, Skin diseases like scabies, for brushing teeth, loosening or pain of tooth, rheumatic pain, fever, insecticide, applied externally on burns, used as mouth wash for gingivitis; pyrexia and bloody piles, hysteria, snake bite, diabetes, cure pimples, blood purifier.
  • Leaves are used in anemia, eczema and measles, jaundice, treat malaria and to expel parasitic worms.
  • Decoction is used as astringent and stomachic
Fruit
  • Fruits are used for the preparation of tonic which is purgative, emmolient.
  •  Fruits are sweetish, and though said by some to be poisonous, is eaten by children without inconvenience, and is reputed to be powerfully vermifuge.
Dried ripe fruit
  •  Used as external parasiticide, pericarp of fruit is very effective phyto-therapy for the treatment of diabetes
Flowers
  • Effective against bacterial skin diseases in children including cellulitis, pustules, and pyogenic infections.
  • They are used as astringent, refrigerant, anodyne, diuretic, resolvent, deobstruent and alexipharmic
Flower Oil
  • Antidiarrhoeal, deobstruent, diuretic
Seed
  • They are bitter, expectorant, anthelmintic and aphrodisiac and are useful in helminthiasis, typhoid fever, pain in the pelvic region and scrofula
Seed oil
  • Used as antiseptic for sores and ulcers.
  • It is also used rheumatism and skin diseases such as ring worm and scabies.
  • Internally the oil is useful in malaria fever and leprosy
Paste of Fresh fruits and leaves
  • It is given to cattle twice a day for 2-3 days to treat gas trouble and indigestion
Whole Plant
  • Used to stimulate hair growth, treat eruption of scalp

 

Traditional uses and benefits of Chinaberry

Ayurvedic Health benefits of Chinaberry

Culinary Uses

Dosage of Chinaberry

Other Facts

Precautions

References:

https://www.itis.gov/servlet/SingleRpt/SingleRpt?search_topic=TSN&search_value=29024#null

http://www.hear.org/pier/species/melia_azedarach.htm

https://pfaf.org/User/Plant.aspx?LatinName=Melia+azederach

http://www.floracatalana.net/melia-azedarach-l

https://plants.usda.gov/core/profile?symbol=MEAZ

http://www.iucngisd.org/gisd/species.php?sc=636

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Melia_azedarach

https://edis.ifas.ufl.edu/st406

http://floraofalabama.org/Plant.aspx?id=2657

http://www.theplantlist.org/tpl1.1/record/kew-2505106

https://www.cabi.org/isc/datasheet/33144#AC334DAE-C3D6-4CE0-A313-14413F7E0C6E

https://indiabiodiversity.org/species/show/264429

http://www.narc.gov.jo/gringlobal/taxonomydetail.aspx?id=23936

https://uses.plantnet-project.org/en/Melia_azedarach_(PROSEA)

http://www.flowersofindia.net/catalog/slides/Persian%20Lilac.html

https://gd.eppo.int/taxon/MEIAZ

http://www.tsusinvasives.org/home/database/melia-azedarach

http://stuartxchange.com/Paraiso

https://davesgarden.com/guides/pf/go/51724/#b

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