Related Items
Encarta Search
Search Encarta about Cinchona

Advertisement

Windows Live® Search Results

See all search results in
Windows Live® Search Results
Also on Encarta

Cinchona

Encyclopedia Article
Find | Print | E-mail | Blog It
Multimedia
Cinchona TreeCinchona Tree

Cinchona, genus of tropical evergreen trees and shrubs of the madder family, yielding the medicinal bark variously known as Peruvian bark, Jesuits' bark, China bark, or cinchona bark, from which the drug quinine and related substances are obtained. All the cinchonas have laurel-like, entire, opposite leaves; stipules that soon fall off; and panicles of flowers that somewhat resemble those of the lilac. The flowers are white, rose, or purplish and very fragrant.

The species first discovered was found in the Andean highlands of Ecuador and Peru. An important species exists in Bolivia and southeastern Peru, and another in Peru and Ecuador. The practice of destroying the tree for the bark made the tree rare in its native habitat. In 1859, however, the tree was introduced into India and the East Indies, where it was so widely cultivated that the islands, particularly Java, became the center of world production of cinchona bark until World War II (1939-1945). Today the bark is peeled from the tree and dried, and the final extraction of quinine alkaloids is usually done in factories.

Scientific classification: Cinchonas belong to the family Rubiaceae. The species first discovered is classified as Cinchona officinalis. The important species found in Bolivia and southeastern Peru is classified as Cinchona calisaya, the species in Peru and Ecuador as Cinchona succirubra.



Find
Print
E-mail
Blog It


More from Encarta


© 2008 Microsoft