Uses
Bamboo is the major food source of the giant panda of China.
The shoots (new bamboo culms that come out of the ground) of bamboo are edible and are available in supermarkets in various sliced forms. However, the shoots of some species contain toxins that needs to be leached or boiled out before they can be eaten safely.
Bamboo forms a very hard wood, especially when seasoned, making it useful for many things such as houses (in tropical climates), fences, bridges, walking sticks, furniture, food steamers, toys, construction scaffolding, hats, abaci and various musical instruments. Modern companies are attempting to popularize laminate flooring made of bamboo pieces steamed, flattened, glued together, finished, and cut.
When bamboo is harvested for wood, care is needed to select mature stems that are several years old, as first-year stems, although full size, are not fully woody and are not strong.
Bamboo canes are normally round in cross-section, but square canes can be produced by forcing the new young culms to grow through a tube of square cross-section and slightly smaller than the culm's natural diameter, thereby constricting the growth to the shape of the tube. Every few days the tube is removed and replaced higher up the fast-growing culm.
Bamboo was used as a writing material in China before paper was invented. It was then disused, as it was much too heavy and awkward.
Cultural aspects
Bamboo's long life makes it a Chinese symbol of long life, while in India is a symbol of friendship. Its rare blossoms has led to the flowers being regarded as a sign of impending famine. Several Asian cultures, including the Andaman Islands, believe that humanity emerged from a bamboo stem. Malaysian legends include the story of a man who dreams of a beautiful woman while sleeping under a bamboo plant; he wakes up and breaks the bamboo stem, discovering the woman inside. In the Philippines, bamboo crosses are used as a good luck charm by farmers. In Japan, a bamboo forest surrounds a Shinto shrine as the part of sacred barier against evils. Also, bamboo is considered second in the rank in the order of "Matsu (pine wood), Take (bamboo), Ume (prune)" and this order is used when ordering a sushi course or getting a room in a traditional inn.
Genera
There are about 90 genera and 1,000 species of bamboo. The best-known, mainly temperate genera are:
- Arundinaria
- Bambusa
- Chimonobambusa
- Chusquea
- Dendrocalamus
- Drepanostachyum
- Hibanobambusa
- Indocalamus
- Otatea
- Phyllostachys
- Pleioblastus
- Pseudosasa
- Sasa
- Sasaella
- Sasamorpha
- Semiarundinaria
- Shibataea
- Sinarundinaria
- Sinobambusa
- Thamnocalamus
See also
Japanese knotweed—an unrelated, but superficially similar plant.
External links
Source | Copyright