Brazilwood

Brazilwood

Taxobox
name = Brazilwood
status = EN | status_system = IUCN2.3


image_width = 250px
image_caption = An adult specimen in a square in Vitória, Brazil.
regnum = Plantae
divisio = Magnoliophyta
classis = Magnoliopsida
ordo = Fabales
familia = Fabaceae
subfamilia = Caesalpinioideae
genus = "Caesalpinia"
species = "C. echinata"
binomial = "Caesalpinia echinata"
binomial_authority = Lam.
range_



range_map_width = 250px
range_map_caption = natural range
synonyms = "Guilandina echinata" (Lam.) Spreng.

Brazilwood or "Pau-Brasil", sometimes known as Pernambuco ("Caesalpinia echinata" syn. "Guilandina echinata" (Lam.) Spreng.) is a Brazilian timber tree. This plant has a dense, orange-red heartwood that takes a high shine, and it is the premier wood used for making bows for string instruments from the violin family. The wood also yields a red dye called brazilin, which oxidizes to "brazilein".

Etymology

When Portuguese explorers found these trees of a deep red hue inside on the coast of South America, they used the name "pau-brasil" to describe them. "Pau" is Portuguese for "wood", and "brasil" is said to have come from "brasa", Portuguese for "ember". This name had been earlier used to describe a "different" species of tree which was found in Asia and other places and which also produced red dye; but the South American trees soon became the better source of red dye. Brazilwood trees were such a large part of the exports and economy of the land that the country which sprang up in that part of the world took its name from them and is now called Brazil.

Botanically, several tree species are involved, all in the family "Fabaceae" (the pulse family). The term "Brasilwood" is most often used to refer to the species "Caesalpinia echinata", but it is also applied to other species. "Caesalpinia echinata" is also known as "Pau-de-Pernambuco" (named after the state of Pernambuco in northeastern Brazil).

In the bow making business, the best-quality wood bows are made from "Caesalpinia echinata", commonly known in the trade as "Pernambuco Wood"; bows of "lesser quality wood" are made from "other" tropical species, often called "Brazilwood". Thus, the terms "Pernambuco" and "Brazilwood" — as used in the stringed instruments bows — refer to completely different species. Examples of "Brazilwood" species used for bows include Pink Ipê ("Tabebuia impetiginosa"), Massaranduba ("Manilkara bidentata") and Palo Brasil ("Haematoxylum brasiletto").

Historical importance

In the 15th and 16th centuries, brazilwood was highly valued in Europe and quite difficult to get. Coming from Asia, it was traded in powder form and used as a red dye in the manufacture of luxury textiles, such as velvet, in high demand during the Renaissance. When Portuguese navigators discovered present-day Brazil, on April 22, 1500, they immediately saw that brazilwood was extremely abundant along the coast and in its hinterland, along the rivers. In a few years, a hectic and very profitable operation for felling and transporting by shipping all the brazilwood logs they could get was established, as a crown-granted Portuguese monopoly. The rich commerce which soon followed stimulated other nations to try to harvest and smuggle brazilwood contraband out of Brazil, or even corsairs attacking loaded Portuguese ships in order to steal their cargo. For example, the unsuccessful attempt of a French expedition led by Nicolas Durand de Villegaignon, vice-admiral of Brittany and corsair under the King, in 1555, to establish a colony in present-day Rio de Janeiro (France Antarctique) was motivated in part by the bounty generated by economic exploitation of brazilwood. In addition, this plant is also cited in "Flora Brasiliensis" by Carl Friedrich Philipp von Martius.

Exploitation

Excessive exploitation led to a steep decrease in the number of brazilwood trees in the 18th century, causing the collapse of this economic activity. Presently, the species is nearly extinct in most of its original range. Brazilwood is listed as an endangered species by the IUCN, and it is cited in the official list of endangered flora of Brazil. The trade of brazilwood is likely to be banned in the immediate future, creating a major problem in the bow-making industry which highly values this wood{ (see Smithsonian, April 2004, cover story). The International Pernambuco Conservation Initiative (IPCI), whose members are the bowmakers who rely on pernambuco for their livelihoods, is working to replant it. IPCI is advocating the use of other woods for violin bows as it raises money to plant pernambuco seedlings. The shortage of pernambuco has also helped the carbon fiber bow industry to thrive.

"Tree of Music," a feature-length documentary on the plight of this species, is currently in production.

External links

* [http://www.arcosbrasil.com/PernambuccoWood/pernambuccowood.html About Pernambuco Wood] from a bowmaker's website.
* [http://plants.usda.gov/java/ClassificationServlet?source=profile&symbol=CAEC3&display=31 USDA Plants Profile: "Caesalpinia echinata"]
*pt icon [http://florabrasiliensis.cria.org.br/search?taxon_id=5939 Flora Brasiliensis: "Caesalpinia echinata"]
*pt icon [http://www.ipef.br/identificacao/nativas/detalhes.asp?codigo=9 Instituto de Pesquisas e Estudos Florestais: "Caesalpinia echinata"]


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Look at other dictionaries:

  • brazilwood — [brə zil′wood΄] n. [see BRAZIL] a hard, reddish wood obtained from several tropical American trees (genera Caesalpinia and Haematoxylon) of the caesalpinia family: it yields a red or blue dye and is also used in making cabinets and violin bows …   English World dictionary

  • Brazilwood — Brazil wood Bra*zil wood , Brazilwood Bra*zil wood (br[.a]*z[i^]l w[oo^]d ). [OE. brasil, LL. brasile (cf. Pg. & Sp. brasil, Pr. bresil, Pr. bresil); perh. from Sp. or Pg. brasa a live coal (cf. {Braze}, {Brasier}); or Ar. vars plant for dyeing… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • brazilwood — /breuh zil wood /, n. 1. any of several tropical trees of the genus Caesalpinia, as C. echinata, having wood from which a red dye is obtained. 2. the wood of such a tree. [1550 60; BRAZIL + WOOD1] * * *       dense, compact dyewood from any of… …   Universalium

  • brazilwood — dygliuotoji cezalpinija statusas T sritis vardynas apibrėžtis Cezalpinijinių šeimos dažinis, dekoratyvinis, medieninis, vaistinis augalas (Caesalpinia echinata), paplitęs Pietų Amerikoje. atitikmenys: lot. Caesalpinia echinata angl. brazilwood;… …   Lithuanian dictionary (lietuvių žodynas)

  • brazilwood — noun 1. heavy wood of various brazilwood trees; used for violin bows and as dyewoods • Hypernyms: ↑wood • Substance Holonyms: ↑peachwood, ↑peach wood, ↑pernambuco wood, ↑Caesalpinia echinata 2. tropical tree with prickly trunk; its heavy red wood …   Useful english dictionary

  • brazilwood — noun Etymology: Spanish brasil, from brasa live coals (from the wood s color), probably of Germanic origin; akin to Swedish brasa fire Date: 1559 the heavy wood of any of various tropical leguminous trees (especially genus Caesalpinia) that is… …   New Collegiate Dictionary

  • brazilwood — noun A Brazilian timber tree, Caesalpinia echinata, used primarily to make bows for string instruments. Syn: dyewood, pau brasil, pernambuco …   Wiktionary

  • brazilwood — n. type of tropical tree from which a red dye is produced; wood of that tree …   English contemporary dictionary

  • brazilwood — bra·zil·wood …   English syllables

  • brazilwood — bra•zil•wood [[t]brəˈzɪlˌwʊd[/t]] n. 1) pln any of several tropical trees of the genus Caesalpinia, of the legume family, as C. echinata, having a wood used to make violins and from which a red dye is obtained 2) cvb the wood of such a tree •… …   From formal English to slang

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