Anacardium excelsum


Anacardium excelsum, the wild cashew or espavé, is a tree in the flowering plant family Anacardiaceae. The tree is common in the tropical and subtropical dry broadleaf forests of Pacific and Atlantic watersheds of Central and South America, extending as far north as Guatemala and south into Ecuador.

Description

This large evergreen tree grows along riverbanks, reaching heights of up to, with a straight, rose-hued trunk reaching in diameter. The leaves are simple, alternate, oval-shaped, long and broad. The flowers are produced in a panicle up to long, each flower small, pale green to white. Older flowers turn pink and develop a strong clove-like fragrance.
The fruit is a long, kidney-shaped drupe. Maturation occurs in March, April, and May.

Taxonomy

The wild cashew is a closely related species within the same genus as the cashew.

Ecology

Fruit-eating bats pick the fruit of the wild cashew and transport it to their feeding places, where they eat only the fleshy part. The nuts are dropped into the leaf litter of the forest floor, where they later germinate.

Uses

When uncooked, the fruit is highly toxic to humans. It may, however, be eaten after it is roasted.