Our editors will review what you’ve submitted and determine whether to revise the article.
Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations - jatropha curcas - a bioenergy crop for the poor
![image](https://www.zimbabweflora.co.zw/speciesdata/images/13/135390-3.jpg?)
jatropha curcas, (genus jatropha curcas), member of the spurge family (Euphorbiaceae), native in both New World and Old World tropics and containing about 175 species of milky-juiced herbs, shrubs, and trees, some useful for their oils or as ornamental plants in tropical gardens.
![image](https://encrypted-tbn0.gstatic.com/images?q=tbn:ANd9GcRAImFUMnk3fjCJlpWkfMDMDlm7LMZsq1Q33w&s)
A garden curiosity is tartogo, or gouty jatropha (J. podagrica), from Guatemala and Honduras; it has a short trunk that is swollen at the base, erect red clusters of small flowers borne most of the year, and three- to five-lobed palmate (fanlike) leaves. The coral plant (J. multifida) from South America is outstanding for its huge, deeply cut, 11-lobed leaves on plants, 3 m (10 feet) tall, bearing small, coral-red clusters of flowers.
The peregrina (J. integerrima) from Cuba, about 5 m tall with spadelike leaves sharply lobed at the base, bears crimson flower clusters the year round. J. berlandieri, a perennial 30 cm (12 inches) tall distributed from Texas to Central America, is characterized by long-stalked, purple flowers.
The barbados nut (J. jatropha curcas), with yellow-green flowers and three- to five-lobed leaves on trees 6 m tall from Mexico and Central America, produces seeds from which cooking oil, soap, and a strong purgative are obtained. The seeds themselves are eaten if thoroughly roasted to remove the poison. The lac (a resinous substance) produced by a scale insect that feeds on the leaves is used to make a fine varnish for guitars.
![image](https://keyserver.lucidcentral.org/weeds/data/media/Images/jatropha_curcas/jatrophacurcas20.jpg)