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Pawpaw
Pawpaw
Scientific name:
Carica papaya
Family:
Caricaceae
Local names:
English (Pawpaw); Luhya (Lipaipai); Swahili (Paipai);
Introduction
Pawpaw
© Bo Tengnas
General Distribution:
Originally from southern Mexico, particularly Chiapas and Veracruz, Central America and northern South America, the papaya is now cultivated in most tropical countries, such as Brazil, Bangladesh, Pakistan, India, Indonesia, South Africa, Sri Lanka, Vietnam, Philippines and Jamaica.


General Information about the Tree:
Women in India, Bangladesh, Pakistan, Sri Lanka, and other countries have long used green papaya as a folk remedy for contraception and abortion. Enslaved women in the West Indies were noted for consuming papaya to prevent pregnancies and thus preventing their children from being born into slavery. Medical research in animals has confirmed the contraceptive and abortifacient capability of papaya, and also found that papaya seeds have contraceptive effects in adult male langur monkeys, possibly in adult male humans as well. Unripe papaya is especially effective in large amounts or high doses. Ripe papaya is not teratogenic and will not cause miscarriage in small amounts. Phytochemicals in papaya may suppress the effects of progesterone


Biophysical Limits:
Altitude: 0 - 1 600 m,
Mean annual temperature: (15) 21 - 33 deg. C,
Mean annual rainfall:1 000 - 2000 mm
Soil type: A well-drained, permeable, well aerated, root-knot nematode free, fertile loamy soil, preferably rich in organic matter with neutral reaction (pH 6 - 7) is ideal for papaya growth.
Propagation and Tree Management
In cultivation, it grows rapidly, fruiting within 3 years. Weeds must be controlled, especially during the initial stages of establishment. Herbicides, hand weeding, mulching and use of cover crops are some of the practical methods used in the control of weeds. Even though fairly resistant to drought, C. papaya requires a constant water supply. C. papaya is very responsive to fertilizers, and yield can be significantly improved by proper fertilization. Control of pH is also very important. Fruit production begins within a year of planting and is continuous thereafter. C. papaya produces 30-150 fruits/year. As the fruit is formed in the leaf axils, plants must be kept growing continuously for maximum yield. Mature trees may be rejuvenated by cutting back to 30 cm above the ground. The latex should be tapped at least once a week.


Products:
  • Food; papaya can be used as a food (ripe fruit is usually eaten raw, without skin or seeds, unripe green fruit of papaya can be eaten cooked, usually in curries, salads and stews and the young leaves of papaya are steamed and eaten like spinach) and a cooking aid
  • Fibre; the stem and bark are also used in rope production.
  • Medicine; in some parts of the world papaya leaves are made into tea as a preventative for malaria, though there is no real scientific evidence for the effectiveness of this treatment. Papaya is marketed in tablet form to remedy digestive problems.
  • Meat tenderizer; green papaya fruit and the tree's latex are both rich in an enzyme called papain, a protease which is useful in tenderizing meat and other proteins. This makes to be included as a component in powdered meat tenderizers.


Services:
  • Soil improver; the tree when cut rots in the farm adding manure to the soil.
Pests and Diseases
Papaya fruits are susceptible to Fruit Fly attacks it lays its eggs in young fruits. In the 1990s, the papaya ringspot virus threatened to wipe out Hawaii's papaya industry completely. This led to introduction of two varieties of papaya, SunUp and Rainbow, which had been genetically modified to be resistant to the virus. Consequently, by 2004 non-genetically modified and organic papayas throughout Hawaii had experienced hybridization with the genetically modified varieties. To date, there is still no conventional or organic method of controlling the ringspot virus.
Information Source Links
  • Beentje HJ. 1994. Kenya trees, shrubs and lianas. National Museums of Kenya.
  • Bekele-Tesemma A, Birnie A, Tengnas B. 1993. Useful trees and shrubs for Ethiopia. Regional Soil Conservation Unit (RSCU), Swedish International Development Authority (SIDA).
  • Birnie A. 1997. What tree is that? A beginne's guide to 40 trees in Kenya. Jacaranda designs Ltd.
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