When time and funding permit, each flower (each plant species) will have its own page, and its own PDF, and eventually its own PPT so that professors and students have plenty of material on Guatemala (and Honduras, etc) to study.

Heliconia adflexa, Coban, Guatemala, Hotel Monja Blanca, FLAAR, by Nicholas Hellmuth

Florifundia
This space is for flowers
we have recently found and photographed.

Reports by FLAAR Mesoamerica
on Flora & Fauna of Parque Nacional Yaxha Nakum Naranjo
Peten, Guatemala, Central America


Follow me in twitter. FLAAR reports Add a Nicholas Hellmunth to yor network. FLAAR reports.
| Share
News Feeds:
Yellow-flowered tecomasuche, Cochlospermum vitifolium, common especially in Guatemala and Honduras, provides many uses for local Mayan people.

Beautiful yellow flower, tecomasuche, Cochlospermum vitifolium

Cochlospermum vitifolium, tecomasuche flower at Copan, 2012

I have seen this flower in many parts of Guatemala, and blooming during many months (not one tree blooming many months, but if you drive long distances through Guatemala you may see this tree blooming somewhere in January, elsewhere in February, and we saw lots of them blooming in early April in Copan, Honduras area).

 

Tecomasuche flower branches, cochlospermum vitifolium, Jutiapa, photo taken by Sofia Monzon on January 2012
Tecomasuche flower branches, Cochlospermum vitifolium, Jutiapa, photo taken by Sofia Monzon on January.
Sofia uses a Canon EOS REBEL T2i with a EF-S18-55mm f/3.5-5.6 IS on a Gitzo tripod. Copyright FLAAR 2012.

"Cotton" fiber comes from the dry seed pod

Most "cotton" comes from the kapok trees (Ceiba pentandra and its relatives). But several other unrelated tree species have cotton-like fibers in their seed pods. But since the flowers are so photogenic, not many people bother to photograph the seed pods.

Since we at FLAAR Reports are working on all the trees of the Bombacaceae (especially the species with conical thorns), we have become interested in the economic potential (for local people) of collecting and marketing any and all usable "cotton" from wild or semi-cultivated trees. During our research in our library, and out on field trips, we quickly learned that several trees other than Ceiba and Pseudobombax ellipticum also produce kapok-like "silk cotton."

Tecomasuche flower, maya medcine, photograph by Sofia Monzón
Tecomasuche flower branches, Cochlospermum vitifolium, Jutiapa, photo taken by Sofia Monzon on January.
Sofia uses a Canon EOS REBEL with a T2i EF-S18-55mm f/3.5-5.6 IS on a Gitzo tripod. Copyright FLAAR 2012.

 

Medicinal uses of tecomasuche Cochlospermum vitifolium

A boiled potion of the grama colorada or of tecomasuche shoots and flowers is drunk to hasten delivery and to expelthe placenta.

The Chorti Indians of Guatemala, Wisdom 1940: 288.

Detail view of a Tecomasuche flower, maya ethnobotany images. Photo taken by Sofia Monzón in Jutiapa, January 2012
Detail view of a Tecomasuche flower, Jutiapa. Photo taken by Sofia Monzón in January
Sofia uses a Canon EOS REBEL with a T2i EF-S18-55mm f/3.5-5.6 IS on a Gitzo tripod. Copyright FLAAR 2012.

 

Tecomasuche is also a place name in El Salvador:

Tecomasuche is found throughout Central America so it is not surprising there would be place names such as, Tecomasuche Cerro, El Salvador.

Buds and open flower, Tecomasuche is a medicinal plant used by the maya. Photo taken in Jutiapa by Sofia Monzon
Buds and open flower of Cochlospermum vitifolium at Peten; Tecomasuche is a medicinal plant used by the maya.
Sofia Monzón uses a Canon EOS REBEL with a T2i EF-S18-55mm f/3.5-5.6 IS on a Gitzo tripod. Copyright FLAAR 2012.


Image of several flowers and buds of Tecomasuche, a dye plant used for textiles among the maya
Several flowers and buds of Tecomasuche, a dye plant used for textiles. Peten, January 2012.
Photo taken by Sofia Monzón using a Canon EOS REBEL with a T2i EF-S18-55mm f/3.5-5.6 IS on a Gitzo tripod. Copyright FLAAR 2012.


Cochlospermum vitifolium at Petén. Photography by Sofia Monzon using a Canon EOS REBEL with a T2i EF-S18-55mm f/3.5-5.6 IS on a Gitzo tripod. Copyright FLAAR 2012
Cochlospermum vitifolium at Petén. Photography by Sofia Monzon using a Canon EOS REBEL with a T2i EF-S18-55mm f/3.5-5.6 IS on a Gitzo tripod. Copyright FLAAR 2012


Cochlospermum vitifolium at Petén. Photography by Sofia Monzon using a Canon EOS REBEL with a T2i EF-S18-55mm f/3.5-5.6 IS on a Gitzo tripod. Copyright FLAAR 2012
Cochlospermum vitifolium at Petén. Photography by Sofia Monzon using a Canon EOS REBEL with a T2i EF-S18-55mm f/3.5-5.6 IS on a Gitzo tripod. Copyright FLAAR 2012


Tecomasuche open flowers. Cochlospermum vitifolium, maya medicinal plant. Photography by Sofia Monzon using a Canon EOS REBEL with a T2i EF-S18-55mm f/3.5-5.6 IS on a Gitzo tripod. Copyright FLAAR 2012
Tecomasuche open flowers. Cochlospermum vitifolium, maya medicinal plant. Photography by Sofia Monzon using a Canon EOS REBEL with a T2i EF-S18-55mm f/3.5-5.6 IS on a Gitzo tripod. Copyright FLAAR 2012

 

Bibliography on tecomasuche Cochlospermum vitifolium

We have additional bibliographic references in the seprate PDF on tecomasuche Cochlospermum vitifolium photographed at Copan Ruinas, Honduras, in April 2012.

www.iadb.org/idbamerica/index.cfm?thisid=3574
Article via BID on honey potential of the flowers of tecomasuche Coclospermum vitifolium. With basic photos.

First posted April 25, 2012

 

Parque Nacional Yaxha, Nakum and Naranjo

Smartphone Camera Reviews

Fungi and Lichens

Botanical Terms

Consulting cacao & Theobroma species

Tobacco Ingredients of Aztec & Maya

Bombacaceae, Bombacoideae

Plants and trees used to produce incense

Camera Reviews for Photographing Flowers and Plants

Flowers native to Guatemala visible now around the world

Ethnobotany site page Donations acknowled Botton DONATE NOW

SUBJECTS TO BE COVERED DURING NEXT 6 MONTHS

Fruits (typical misnomer mishmash of Spanish language)

Fruits (vines or cacti)

Flowers, sacred

Plants or trees that are used to produce incense

Read article on Achiote, Bixa orellana, annatto, natural plant dye for coloring (and flavoring) food (especially cacao drink) in Guatemala and Mexico.
Read article on Cuajilote or Caiba: Parmentiera aculeata, a forgotten fruit.
Read article on Split leaf philodendron, Monstera deliciosa.
Read article on Gonolobus, an edible vine from Asclepiadaceae Family.
Pachira aquatica, zapoton, zapote bobo, crucial sacred flower for Maya archaeologists and iconographers
Flor de Mayo,Plumeria rubia, plumeria alba, plumeria obtusa. Edible flower used to flavor cacao
Guanaba, annona squamosa, Chincuya, Annona purpurea, Sugar apple, Chirimoya

4x4 Pickup Truck Reviews, Evaluations and Suggestions

Tikal Related Reports

Bernoullia_flammea_mapola_&_temple_III_Tikal_FLAAR_Report_cover
Bernoullia_flammea_mapola_&_temple_V_Tikal_FLAAR_Report
Bernoullia_flammea_mapola_cante_great_plaza_ballcourt_&_temple_I_Tikal_FLAAR_Report
Bernoullia_flammea_mapola_cante_Natural_Beauty_at_Tikal_Central_Acropolis_FLAAR_Report
Cutting-Patterns-made-by-leaf-cutting-ants-Zompopos-at-parque-nacional-tikal-FLAAR-Reports
Flowers-of-Maya-art-Pachira-aquatica_Parque-Nacional_Tikal_Nicholas-Hellmuth
Guazuma_ulmifolia_at_Tikal_Report_Nicholas_Hellmuth
Meleagris_ocellata_occelated_turkey_Tikal_FLAAR_Report

Visit other FLAAR sites

 
 
Copyright © 2024. maya-ethnobotany.org. Powered by FLAAR