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In a survival situation, plants can provide food and medicine. Their safe
usage requires absolutely positive identification, knowing how to prepare
them for eating, and knowing any dangerous properties they might have.
Familiarity with botanical structures of plants and information on where
they grow will make them easier to locate and identify.
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| Abal |
Calligonum
comosum
Description:
The abal is one of the few shrubby plants that exists in the shady
deserts. This plant grows to about 1.2 meters, and its branches
look like wisps from a broom. The stiff, green branches produce
an abundance of flowers in the early spring months (March, April).
Habitat
and Distribution: This plant is found in desert scrub and waste
in any climatic zone. It inhabits much of the North African desert.
It may also be found on the desert sands of the Middle East and
as far eastward as the Rajputana desert of western India.
Edible
Parts: This plant's general appearance would not indicate its
usefulness to the survivor, but while this plant is flowering in
the spring, its fresh flowers can be eaten. This plant is common
in the areas where it is found. An analysis of the food value of
this plant has shown it to be high in sugar and nitrogenous components.
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| Acacia |
Acacia
farnesiana
Description:
Acacia is a spreading, usually short tree with spines and alternate
compound leaves. Its individual leaflets are small. Its flowers
are ball-shaped, bright yellow, and very fragrant. Its bark is a
whitish-gray color. Its fruits are dark brown and pod like.
Habitat
and Distribution: Acacia grows in open, sunny areas. It is found
throughout all tropical regions.
Note:
There are about 500 species of acacia. These plants are especially
prevalent in Africa, southern Asia, and Australia, but many species
are found in the warmer and drier parts of America.
Edible
Parts: Its young leaves, flowers, and pods are edible raw or
cooked.
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| |
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| Agave |
Agave
species
Description:
These plants have large clusters of thick, fleshy leaves borne close
to the ground and surrounding a central stalk. The plants flower
only once, then die. They produce a massive flower stalk.
Habitat
and Distribution: Agaves prefer dry, open areas. They are found
throughout Central America, the Caribbean, and parts of the western
deserts of the United States and Mexico.
Edible
Parts: Its flowers and flower buds are edible. Boil them before
eating.
Caution!
The juice of some species causes dermatitis in some individuals.
Other
Uses: Cut the huge flower stalk and collect the juice for drinking.
Some species have very fibrous leaves. Pound the leaves and remove
the fibers for weaving and making ropes. Most species have thick,
sharp needles at the tips of the leaves. Use them for sewing or
making hacks. The sap of some species contains a chemical that makes
the sap suitable for use as a soap.
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| Almond |
Prunus
amygdalus
Description:
The almond tree, which sometimes grows to 12.2 meters, looks like
a peach tree. The fresh almond fruit resembles a gnarled, unripe
peach and grows in clusters. The stone (the almond itself) is covered
with a thick, dry, woolly skin.
Habitat
and Distribution: Almonds are found in the scrub and thorn forests
of the tropics, the evergreen scrub forests of temperate areas,
and in desert scrub and waste in all climatic zones. The almond
tree is also found in the semi-desert areas of the Old World in
southern Europe, the eastern Mediterranean, Iran, the Middle East,
China, Madeira, the Azores, and the Canary Islands.
Edible
Parts: The mature almond fruit splits open lengthwise down the
side, exposing the ripe almond nut. You can easily get the dry kernel
by simply cracking open the stone. Almond meats are rich in food
value, like all nuts. Gather them in large quantities and shell
them for further use as survival food. You could live solely on
almonds for rather long periods. When you boil them, the kernel's
outer covering comes off and only the white meat remains.
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| Aramanth |
Amaranthus
species
Description:
These plants, which grow 90 centimeters to 150 centimeters tall,
are abundant weeds in many parts of the world. All amaranth have
alternate simple leaves. They may have some red color present on
the stems. They bear minute, greenish flowers in dense clusters
at the top of the plants. Their seeds may be brown or black in weedy
species and light-colored in domestic species.
Habitat
and Distribution: Look for amaranth along roadsides, in disturbed
waste areas, or as weeds in crops throughout the world. Some amaranth
species have been grown as a grain crop and a garden vegetable in
various parts of the world, especially in South America.
Edible
Parts: All parts are edible, but some may have sharp spines
you should remove before eating. The young plants or the growing
tips of alder plants are an excellent vegetable. Simply boil the
young plants or eat them raw. Their seeds are very nutritious. Shake
the tops of alder plants to get the seeds. Eat the seeds raw, boiled,
ground into flour, or popped like popcorn.
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| Arctic
willow |
Salix
arctica
Description:
The arctic willow is a shrub that never exceeds more than 60 centimeters
in height and grows in clumps that form dense mats on the tundra.
Habitat
and Distribution: The arctic willow is common on tundras in
North America. Europe, and Asia. You can also find it in some mountainous
areas in temperate regions.
Edible
Parts: You can collect the succulent, tender young shoots of
the arctic willow in early spring. Strip off the outer bark of the
new shoots and eat the inner portion raw. You can also peel and
eat raw the young underground shoots of any of the various kinds
of arctic willow. Young willow leaves are one of the richest sources
of vitamin C, containing 7 to 10 times more than an orange.
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| Arrowroot |
Maranta
and Sagittaria species
Description:
The arrowroot is an aquatic plant with arrow-shaped leaves and potato
like tubers in the mud.
Habitat
and Distribution: Arrowroot is found worldwide in temperate
zones and the tropics. It is found in moist to wet habitats.
Edible
Parts: The rootstock is a rich source of high quality starch.
Boil the rootstock and eat it as a vegetable.
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| Asparagus |
Asparagus
officinalis
Description:
The spring growth of this plant resembles a cluster of green fingers.
The mature plant has fernlike, wispy foliage and red berries. Its
flowers are small and greenish in color. Several species have sharp,
thorn like structures.
Habitat
and Distribution: Asparagus is found worldwide in temperate
areas. Look for it in fields, old home sites, and fencerows.
Edible
Parts: Eat the young stems before leaves form. Steam or boil
them for 10 to 15 minutes before eating. Raw asparagus may cause
nausea or diarrhea. The fleshy roots are a good source of starch.
WARNING!!!
Do not eat the fruits of any since some are toxic
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| Bael
fruit |
Aegle
marmelos
Description:
This is a tree that grows from 2.4 to 4.6 meters tall, with a dense
spiny growth. The fruit is 5 to 10 centimeters in diameter, gray
or yellowish, and full of seeds.
Habitat
and Distribution: Bael fruit is found in rain forests and semi-evergreen
seasonal forests of the tropics. It grows wild in India and Burma.
Edible
Parts: The fruit, which ripens in December, is at its best when
just turning ripe. The juice of the ripe fruit, diluted with water
and mixed with a small amount of tamarind and sugar or honey, is
sour but refreshing. Like other citrus fruits, it is rich in vitamin
C.
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| |
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| Bamboo |
Various
species including Bambusa, Dendrocalamus, Phyllostachys
Description:
Bamboos are woody grasses that grow up to 15 meters tall. The leaves
are grass like and the stems are the familiar bamboo used in furniture
and fishing poles.
Habitat
and Distribution: Look for bamboo in warm, moist regions in
open or jungle country, in lowland, or on mountains. Bamboos are
native to the Far East (Temperate and Tropical zones) but have bean
widely planted around the world.
Edible
Parts: The young shoots of almost all species are edible raw
or cooked. Raw shoots have a slightly bitter taste that is removed
by boiling. To prepare, remove the tough protective sheath that
is coated with tawny or red hairs. The seed grain of the flowering
bamboo is also edible. Boil the seeds like rice or pulverize them,
mix with water, and make into cakes.
Other
Uses: Use the mature bamboo to build structures or to make containers,
ladles, spoons, and various other cooking utensils. Also use bamboo
to make tools and weapons. You can make a strong bow by splitting
the bamboo and putting several pieces together.
Caution!
Green bamboo may explode in a fire. Green bamboo has an internal
membrane you must remove before using it as a food or water container.
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| Banana
and plantain |
Musa
species
Description:
These are treelike plants with several large leaves at the top.
Their flowers are borne in dense hanging clusters.
Habitat
and Distribution: Look for bananas and plantains in open fields
or margins of forests where they are grown as a crop. They grow
in the humid tropics.
Edible
Parts: Their fruits are edible raw or cooked. They may be boiled
or baked. You can boil their flowers and eat them like a vegetable.
You can cook and eat the rootstocks and leaf sheaths of many species.
The center or "heart" or the plant is edible year-round,
cooked or raw.
Other
Uses: You can use the layers of the lower third of the plants
to cover coals to roast food. You can also use their stumps to get
water (see Chapter 6). You can use
their leaves to wrap other foods for cooking or storage.
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| Baobab |
Adansonia
digitata
Description:
The baobab tree may grow as high as 18 meters and may have a trunk
9 meters in diameter. The tree has short, stubby branches and a
gray, thick bark. Its leaves are compound and their segments are
arranged like the palm of a hand. Its flowers, which are white and
several centimeters across, hang from the higher branches. Its fruit
is shaped like a football, measures up to 45 centimeters long, and
is covered with short dense hair.
Habitat
and Distribution: These trees grow in savannas. They are found
in Africa, in parts of Australia, and on the island of Madagascar.
Edible
Parts: You can use the young leaves as a soup vegetable. The
tender root of the young baobab tree is edible. The pulp and seeds
of the fruit are also edible. Use one handful of pulp to about one
cup of water for a refreshing drink. To obtain flour, roast the
seeds, then grind them.
Other
Uses: Drinking a mixture of pulp and water will help cure diarrhea.
Often the hollow trunks are good sources of fresh water. The bark
can be cut into strips and pounded to obtain a strong fiber for
making rope.
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| Batoko
plum |
Flacourtia
inermis
Description:
This shrub or small tree has dark green, alternate, simple leaves.
Its fruits are bright red and contain six or more seeds.
Habitat
and Distribution: This plant is a native of the Philippines
but is widely cultivated for its fruit in other areas. It can be
found in clearings and at the edges of the tropical rain forests
of Africa and Asia.
Edible
Parts: Eat the fruit raw or cooked.
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| |
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| Bearberry
or kinnikinnick |
Arctostaphylos
uvaursi
Description:
This plant is a common evergreen shrub with reddish, scaly bark
and thick, leathery leaves 4 centimeters long and 1 centimeter wide.
It has white flowers and bright red fruits.
Habitat
and Distribution: This plant is found in arctic, subarctic,
and temperate regions, most often in sandy or rocky soil.
Edible
Parts: Its berries are edible raw or cooked. You can make a
refreshing tea from its young leaves.
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| Beech |
Fagus
species
Description:
Beech trees are large (9 to 24 meters), symmetrical forest trees
that have smooth, light-gray bark and dark green foliage. The character
of its bark, plus its clusters of prickly seedpods, clearly distinguish
the beech tree in the field.
Habitat
and Distribution: This tree is found in the Temperate Zone.
It grows wild in the eastern United States, Europe, Asia, and North
Africa. It is found in moist areas, mainly in the forests. This
tree is common throughout southeastern Europe and across temperate
Asia. Beech relatives are also found in Chile, New Guinea, and New
Zealand.
Edible
Parts: The mature beechnuts readily fall out of the husk like
seedpods. You can eat these dark brown triangular nuts by breaking
the thin shell with your fingernail and removing the white, sweet
kernel inside. Beechnuts are one of the most delicious of all wild
nuts. They are a most useful survival food because of the kernel's
high oil content. You can also use the beechnuts as a coffee substitute.
Roast them so that the kernel becomes golden brown and quite hard.
Then pulverize the kernel and, after boiling or steeping in hot
water, you have a passable coffee substitute.
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| Bignay |
Antidesma
bunius
Description:
Bignay is a shrub or small tree, 3 to 12 meters tall, with shiny,
pointed leaves about 15 centimeters long. Its flowers are small,
clustered, and green. It has fleshy, dark red or black fruit and
a single seed. The fruit is about 1 centimeter in diameter.
Habitat
and Distribution: This plant is found in rain forests and semi-evergreen
seasonal forests in the tropics. It is found in open places and
in secondary forests. It grows wild from the Himalayas to Ceylon
and eastward through Indonesia to northern Australia. However, it
may be found anywhere in the tropics in cultivated forms.
Edible
Parts: The fruit is edible raw. Do not eat any other parts of
the tree. In Africa, the roots are toxic. Other parts of the plant
may be poisonous.
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| Blackberry,
raspberry, and dewberry |
Rubus
species
Description:
These plants have prickly stems (canes) that grow upward, arching
back toward the ground. They have alternate, usually compound leaves.
Their fruits may be red, black, yellow, or orange.
Habitat
and Distribution: These plants grow in open, sunny areas at
the margin of woods, lakes, streams, and roads throughout temperate
regions. There is also an arctic raspberry.
Edible
Parts: The fruits and peeled young shoots are edible. Flavor
varies greatly.
Other
Uses: Use the leaves to make tea. To treat diarrhea, drink a
tea made by brewing the dried root bark of the blackberry bush.
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| Blueberry
and huckleberry |
Vaccinium
and Gaylussacia species
Description:
These shrubs vary in size from 30 centimeters to 3.7 meters tall.
All have alternate, simple leaves. Their fruits may be dark blue,
black, or red and have many small seeds.
Habitat
and Distribution: These plants prefer open, sunny areas. They
are found throughout much of the north temperate regions and at
higher elevations in Central America.
Edible
Parts: Their fruits are edible raw.
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| |
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| Breadfruit |
Artocarpus
incisa
Description:
This tree may grow up to 9 meters tall. It has dark green, deeply
divided leaves that are 75 centimeters long and 30 centimeters wide.
Its fruits are large, green, ball-like structures up to 30 centimeters
across when mature.
Habitat
and Distribution: Look for this tree at the margins of forests
and homesites in the humid tropics. It is native to the South Pacific
region but has been widely planted in the West Indies and parts
of Polynesia.
Edible
Parts: The fruit pulp is edible raw. The fruit can be sliced,
dried, and ground into flour for later use. The seeds are edible
cooked.
Other
Uses: The thick sap can serve as glue and caulking material.
You can also use it as birdlime (to entrap small birds by smearing
the sap on twigs where they usually perch).
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| Burdock |
Arctium
lappa
Description:
This plant has wavy-edged, arrow-shaped leaves and flower heads
in burrlike clusters. It grows up to 2 meters tall, with purple
or pink flowers and a large, fleshy root.
Habitat
and Distribution: Burdock is found worldwide in the North Temperate
Zone. Look for it in open waste areas during the spring and summer.
Edible
Parts: Peel the tender leaf stalks and eat them raw or cook
them like greens. The roots are also edible boiled or baked.
Caution!
Do not confuse burdock with rhubarb that has poisonous leaves.
Other
Uses: A liquid made from the roots will help to produce sweating
and increase urination. Dry the root, simmer it in water, strain
the liquid, and then drink the strained liquid. Use the fiber from
the dried stalk to weave cordage.
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| Burl
Palm |
Corypha
elata
Description:
This tree may reach 18 meters in height. It has large, fan-shaped
leaves up to 3 meters long and split into about 100 narrow segments.
It bears flowers in huge dusters at the top of the tree. The tree
dies after flowering.
Habitat
and Distribution: This tree grows in coastal areas of the East
Indies.
Edible
Parts: The trunk contains starch that is edible raw. The very
tip of the trunk is also edible raw or cooked. You can get large
quantities of liquid by bruising the flowering stalk. The kernels
of the nuts are edible.
Caution!
The seed covering may cause dermatitis in some individuals.
Other
Uses: You can use the leaves as weaving material.
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| Canna
lily |
Canna
indica
Description:
The canna lily is a coarse perennial herb, 90 centimeters to 3 meters
tall. The plant grows from a large, thick, underground rootstock
that is edible. Its large leaves resemble those of the banana plant
but are not so large. The flowers of wild canna lily are usually
small, relatively inconspicuous, and brightly colored reds, oranges,
or yellows.
Habitat
and Distribution: As a wild plant, the canna lily is found in
all tropical areas, especially in moist places along streams, springs,
ditches, and the margins of woods. It may also be found in wet temperate,
mountainous regions. It is easy to recognize because it is commonly
cultivated in flower gardens in the United States.
Edible
Parts: The large and much branched rootstocks are full of edible
starch. The younger parts may be finely chopped and then boiled
or pulverized into a meal. Mix in the young shoots of palm cabbage
for flavoring.
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| Carob
tree |
Ceratonia
siliqua
Description:
This large tree has a spreading crown. Its leaves are compound and
alternate. Its seedpods, also known as Saint John's bread, are up
to 45 centimeters long and are filled with round, hard seeds and
a thick pulp.
Habitat
and Distribution: This tree is found throughout the Mediterranean,
the Middle East, and parts of North Africa.
Edible
Parts: The young tender pods are edible raw or boiled. You can
pulverize the seeds in mature pods and cook as porridge.
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| Cashew
Nut |
Anacardium
occidentale
Description:
The cashew is a spreading evergreen tree growing to a height of
12 meters, with leaves up to 20 centimeters long and 10 centimeters
wide. Its flowers are yellowish-pink. Its fruit is very easy to
recognize because of its peculiar structure. The fruit is thick
and pear-shaped, pulpy and red or yellow when ripe. This fruit bears
a hard, green, kidney-shaped nut at its tip. This nut is smooth,
shiny, and green or brown according to its maturity.
Habitat
and Distribution: The cashew is native to the West Indies and
northern South America, but transplantation has spread it to all
tropical climates. In the Old World, it has escaped from cultivation
and appears to be wild at least in parts of Africa and India.
Edible
Parts: The nut encloses one seed. The seed is edible when roasted.
The pear-shaped fruit is juicy, sweet-acid, and astringent. It is
quite safe and considered delicious by most people who eat it.
Caution!
The green hull surrounding the nut contains a resinous irritant
poison that will blister the lips and tongue like poison ivy. Heat
destroys this poison when roasting the nuts.
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| Cattail |
Typha
latifolia
Description:
Cattails are grasslike plants with strap-shaped leaves 1 to 5 centimeters
wide and growing up to 1.8 meters tall. The male flowers are borne
in a dense mass above the female flowers. These last only a short
time, leaving the female flowers that develop into the brown cattail.
Pollen from the male flowers is often abundant and bright yellow.
Habitat
and Distribution: Cattails are found throughout most of the
world. Look for them in full sun areas at the margins of lakes,
streams, canals, rivers, and brackish water.
Edible
Parts: The young tender shoots are edible raw or cooked. The
rhizome is often very tough but is a rich source of starch. Pound
the rhizome to remove the starch and use as a flour. The pollen
is also an exceptional source of starch. When the cattail is immature
and still green, you can boil the female portion and eat it like
corn on the cob.
Other
Uses: The dried leaves are an excellent source of weaving material
you can use to make floats and rafts. The cottony seeds make good
pillow stuffing and insulation. The fluff makes excellent tinder.
Dried cattails are effective insect repellents when burned.
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| Cereus
cactus |
Cereus
species
Description:
These cacti are tall and narrow with angled stems and numerous spines.
Habitat
and Distribution: They may be found in true deserts and other
dry, open, sunny areas throughout the Caribbean region, Central
America, and the western United States.
Edible
Parts: The fruits are edible, but some may have a laxative effect.
Other
Uses: The pulp of the cactus is a good source of water. Break
open the stem and scoop out the pulp.
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| |
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| Chestnut |
Castanea
sativa
Description:
The European chestnut is usually a large tree, up to 18 meters in
height.
Habitat
and Distribution: In temperate regions, the chestnut is found
in both hardwood and coniferous forests. In the tropics, it is found
in semievergreen seasonal forests. They are found over all of middle
and south Europe and across middle Asia to China and Japan. They
are relatively abundant along the edge of meadows and as a forest
tree. The European chestnut is one of the most common varieties.
Wild chestnuts in Asia belong to the related chestnut species.
Edible
Parts: Chestnuts are highly useful as survival food. Ripe nuts
are usually picked in autumn, although unripe nuts picked while
green may also be used for food. Perhaps the easiest way to prepare
them is to roast the ripe nuts in embers. Cooked this way, they
are quite tasty, and you can eat large quantities. Another way is
to boil the kernels after removing the outer shell. After being
boiled until fairly soft, you can mash the nuts like potatoes.
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| Chicory |
Cichorium
intybus
Description:
This plant grows up to 1.8 meters tall. It has leaves clustered
at the base of the stem and some leaves on the stem. The base leaves
resemble those of the dandelion. The flowers are sky blue and stay
open only on sunny days. Chicory has a milky juice.
Habitat
and Distribution: Look for chicory in old fields, waste areas,
weedy lots, and along roads. It is a native of Europe and Asia,
but is also found in Africa and most of North America where it grows
as a weed.
Edible
Parts: All parts are edible. Eat the young leaves as a salad
or boil to eat as a vegetable. Cook the roots as a vegetable. For
use as a coffee substitute, roast the roots until they are dark
brown and then pulverize them.
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| |
 |
| Chufa |
Cyperus
esculentus
Description:
This very common plant has a triangular stem and grass like leaves.
It grows to a height of 20 to 60 centimeters. The mature plant has
a soft fur like bloom that extends from a whorl of leaves. Tubers
1 to 2.5 centimeters in diameter grow at the ends of the roots.
Habitat
and Distribution: Chufa grows in moist sandy areas throughout
the world. It is often an abundant weed in cultivated fields.
Edible
Parts: The tubers are edible raw, boiled, or baked. You can
also grind them and use them as a coffee substitute.
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| |
 |
| Coconut |
Cocos
nucifera
Description:
This tree has a single, narrow, tall trunk with a cluster of very
large leaves at the top. Each leaf may be over 6 meters long with
over 100 pairs of leaflets.
Habitat
and Distribution: Coconut palms are found throughout the tropics.
They are most abundant near coastal regions.
Edible
Parts: The nut is a valuable source of food. The milk of the
young coconut is rich in sugar and vitamins and is an excellent
source of liquid. The nut meat is also nutritious but is rich in
oil. To preserve the meat, spread it in the sun until it is completely
dry.
Other
Uses: Use coconut oil to cook and to protect metal objects from
corrosion. Also use the oil to treat saltwater sores, sunburn, and
dry skin. Use the oil in improvised torches. Use the tree trunk
as building material and the leaves as thatch. Hollow out the large
stump for use as a food container. The coconut husks are good flotation
devices and the husk's fibers are used to weave ropes and other
items. Use the gauzelike fibers at the leaf bases as strainers or
use them to weave a bug net or to make a pad to use on wounds. The
husk makes a good abrasive. Dried husk fiber is an excellent tinder.
A smoldering husk helps to repel mosquitoes. Smoke caused by dripping
coconut oil in a fire also repels mosquitoes. To render coconut
oil, put the coconut meat in the sun, heat it over a slow fire,
or boil it in a pot of water. Coconuts washed out to sea are a good
source of fresh liquid for the sea survivor.
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| |
 |
| Common
jujube |
Ziziphus
jujuba
Description:
The common jujube is either a deciduous tree growing to a height
of 12 meters or a large shrub, depending upon where it grows and
how much water is available for growth. Its branches are usually
spiny. Its reddish-brown to yellowish-green fruit is oblong to ovoid,
3 centimeters or less in diameter, smooth, and sweet in flavor,
but has rather dry pulp around a comparatively large stone. Its
flowers are green.
Habitat
and Distribution: The jujube is found in forested areas of temperate
regions and in desert scrub and waste areas worldwide. It is common
in many of the tropical and subtropical areas of the Old World.
In Africa, it is found mainly bordering the Mediterranean. In Asia,
it is especially common in the drier parts of India and China. The
jujube is also found throughout the East Indies. It can be found
bordering some desert areas.
Edible
Parts: The pulp, crushed in water, makes a refreshing beverage.
If time permits, you can dry the ripe fruit in the sun like dates.
Its fruits are high in vitamins A and C.
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| |
 |
| Cranberry |
Vaccinium
macrocarpon
Description:
This plant has tiny leaves arranged alternately. Its stem creeps
along the ground. Its fruits are red berries.
Habitat
and Distribution: It only grows in open, sunny, wet areas in
the colder regions of the Northern Hemisphere.
Edible
Parts: The berries are very tart when eaten raw. Cook in a small
amount of water and add sugar, if available, to make a jelly.
Other
Uses: Cranberries may act as a diuretic. They are useful for
treating urinary tract infections.
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| |
 |
| Crowberry |
Empetrum
nigrum
Description:
This is a dwarf evergreen shrub with short needlelike leaves. It
has small, shiny, black berries that remain on the bush throughout
the winter.
Habitat
and Distribution: Look for this plant in tundra throughout arctic
regions of North America and Eurasia.
Edible
Parts: The fruits are edible fresh or can be dried for later
use.
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| |
 |
| Cuipo
tree |
Cavanillesia
platanifolia
Description:
This is a very dominant and easily detected tree because it extends
above the other trees. Its height ranges from 45 to 60 meters. It
has leaves only at the top and is bare 11 months out of the year.
It has rings on its bark that extend to the top to make is easily
recognizable. Its bark is reddish or gray in color. Its roots are
light reddish-brown or yellowish-brown.
Habitat
and Distribution: The cuipo tree is located primarily in Central
American tropical rain forests in mountainous areas.
Edible
Parts: To get water from this tree, cut a piece of the root
and clean the dirt and bark off one end, keeping the root horizontal.
Put the clean end to your mouth or canteen and raise the other.
The water from this tree tastes like potato water.
Other
Uses: Use young saplings and the branches' inner bark to make
rope.
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| |
 |
| Dandelion |
Taraxacum
officinale
Description:
Dandelion leaves have a jagged edge, grow close to the ground, and
are seldom more than 20 centimeters long. Its flowers are bright
yellow. There are several dandelion species.
Habitat
and Distribution: Dandelions grow in open, sunny locations throughout
the Northern Hemisphere.
Edible
Parts: All parts are edible. Eat the leaves raw or cooked. Boil
the roots as a vegetable. Roots roasted and ground are a good coffee
substitute. Dandelions are high in vitamins A and C and in calcium.
Other
Uses: Use the white juice in the flower stems as glue.
|
| |
 |
| Date
Palm |
Phoenix
dactylifera
Description:
The date palm is a tall, unbranched tree with a crown of huge, compound
leaves. Its fruit is yellow when ripe.
Habitat
and Distribution: This tree grows in arid semitropical regions.
It is native to North Africa and the Middle East but has been planted
in the arid semitropics in other parts of the world.
Edible
Parts: Its fruit is edible fresh but is very bitter if eaten
before it is ripe. You can dry the fruits in the sun and preserve
them for a long time.
Other
Uses: The trunks provide valuable building material in desert
regions where few other treelike plants are found. The leaves are
durable and you can use them for thatching and as weaving material.
The base of the leaves resembles coarse cloth that you can use for
scrubbing and cleaning.
|
| |
 |
| Daylily
|
Hemerocallis
fulva
Description:
This plant has unspotted, tawny blossoms that open for 1 day only.
It has long, swordlike, green basal leaves. Its root is a mass of
swollen and elongated tubers.
Habitat
and Distribution: Daylilies are found worldwide in Tropic and
Temperate Zones. They are grown as a vegetable in the Orient and
as an ornamental plant elsewhere.
Edible
Parts: The young green leaves are edible raw or cooked. Tubers
are also edible raw or cooked. You can eat its flowers raw, but
they taste better cooked. You can also fry the flowers for storage.
Caution!
Eating excessive amounts of raw flowers may cause diarrhea.
|
| |
 |
| Duchesnea
or Indian strawberry |
Duchesnea
indica
Description:
The duchesnea is a small plant that has runners and three-parted
leaves. Its flowers are yellow and its fruit resembles a strawberry.
Habitat
and Distribution: It is native to southern Asia but is a common
weed in warmer temperate regions. Look for it in lawns, gardens,
and along roads.
Edible
Parts: Its fruit is edible. Eat it fresh.
|
| |
 |
| Elderberry |
Sambucus
canadensis
Description:
Elderberry is a many-stemmed shrub with opposite, compound leaves.
It grows to a height of 6 meters. Its flowers are fragrant, white,
and borne in large flat-topped clusters up to 30 centimeters across.
Its berrylike fruits are dark blue or black when ripe.
Habitat
and Distribution: This plant is found in open, usually wet areas
at the margins of marshes, rivers, ditches, and lakes. It grows
throughout much of eastern North America and Canada.
Edible
Parts: The flowers and fruits are edible. You can make a drink
by soaking the flower heads for 8 hours, discarding the flowers,
and drinking the liquid.
Caution!
All other parts of the plant are poisonous and dangerous
if eaten.
|
| |
 |
| Fireweed |
Epilobium
angustifolium
Description:
This plant grows up to 1.8 meters tall. It has large, showy, pink
flowers and lance-shaped leaves. Its relative, the dwarf fireweed
(Epilobium latifolium), grows 30 to 60 centimeters tall.
Habitat
and Distribution: Tall fireweed is found in open woods, on hillsides,
on stream banks, and near seashores in arctic regions. It is especially
abundant in burned-over areas. Dwarf fireweed is found along streams,
sandbars, and lakeshores and on alpine and arctic slopes.
Edible
Parts: The leaves, stems, and flowers are edible in the spring
but become tough in summer. You can split open the stems of old
plants and eat the pith raw.
|
| |
 |
| Fishtail
Palm |
Caryota
urens
Description:
Fishtail palms are large trees, at least 18 meters tall. Their leaves
are unlike those of any other palm; the leaflets are irregular and
toothed on the upper margins. All other palms have either fan-shaped
or featherlike leaves. Its massive flowering shoot is borne at the
top of the tree and hangs downward.
Habitat
and Distribution: The fishtail palm is native to the tropics
of India, Assam, and Burma. Several related species also exist in
Southeast Asia and the Philippines. These palms are found in open
hill country and jungle areas.
Edible
Parts: The chief food in this palm is the starch stored in large
quantities in its trunk. The juice from the fishtail palm is very
nourishing and you have to drink it shortly after getting it from
the palm flower shoot. Boil the juice down to get a rich sugar syrup.
Use the same method as for the sugar palm to get the juice. The
palm cabbage may be eaten raw or cooked.
|
| |
 |
| Foxtail
Grass |
Setaria
species
Description:
This weedy grass is readily recognized by the narrow, cylindrical
head containing long hairs. Its grains are small, less than 6 millimeters
long. The dense heads of grain often droop when ripe.
Habitat
and Distribution: Look for foxtail grasses in open, sunny areas,
along roads, and at the margins of fields. Some species occur in
wet, marshy areas. Species of Setaria are found throughout the United
States, Europe, western Asia, and tropical Africa. In some parts
of the world, foxtail grasses are grown as a food crop.
Edible
Parts: The grains are edible raw but are very hard and sometimes
bitter. Boiling removes some of the bitterness and makes them easier
to eat.
|
| |
 |
| Goa
Bean |
Psophocarpus
tetragonolobus
Description:
The goa bean is a climbing plant that may cover small shrubs and
trees. Its bean pods are 22 centimeters long, its leaves 15 centimeters
long, and its flowers are bright blue. The mature pods are 4-angled,
with jagged wings on the pods.
Habitat
and Distribution: This plant grows in tropical Africa, Asia,
the East Indies, the Philippines, and Taiwan. This member of the
bean (legume) family serves to illustrate a kind of edible bean
common in the tropics of the Old World. Wild edible beans of this
sort are most frequently found in clearings and around abandoned
garden sites. They are more rare in forested areas.
Edible
Parts: You can eat the young pods like string beans. The mature
seeds are a valuable source of protein after parching or roasting
them over hot coals. You can germinate the seeds (as you can many
kinds of beans) in damp moss and eat the resultant sprouts. The
thickened roots are edible raw. They are slightly sweet, with the
firmness of an apple. You can also eat the young leaves as a vegetable,
raw or steamed.
|
| |
 |
| Hackberry
|
Celtis
species
Description:
Hackberry trees have smooth, gray bark that often has corky warts
or ridges. The tree may reach 39 meters in height. Hackberry trees
have long-pointed leaves that grow in two rows. This tree bears
small, round berries that can be eaten when they are ripe and fall
from the tree. The wood of the hackberry is yellowish.
Habitat
and Distribution: This plant is widespread in the United States,
especially in and near ponds.
Edible
Parts: Its berries are edible when they are ripe and fall from
the tree.
|
| |
 |
| Hazelnut
or wild filbert |
Corylus
species
Description:
Hazelnuts grow on bushes 1.8 to 3.6 meters high. One species in
Turkey and another in China are large trees. The nut itself grows
in a very bristly husk that conspicuously contracts above the nut
into a long neck. The different species vary in this respect as
to size and shape.
Habitat
and Distribution: Hazelnuts are found over wide areas in the
United States, especially the eastern half of the country and along
the Pacific coast. These nuts are also found in Europe where they
are known as filberts. The hazelnut is common in Asia, especially
in eastern Asia from the Himalayas to China and Japan. The hazelnut
usually grows in the dense thickets along stream banks and open
places. They are not plants of the dense forest.
Edible
Parts: Hazelnuts ripen in the autumn when you can crack them
open and eat the kernel. The dried nut is extremely delicious. The
nut's high oil content makes it a good survival food. In the unripe
stage, you can crack them open and eat the fresh kernel.
|
| |
 |
| Horseradish
Tree |
Moringa
pterygosperma
Description:
This tree grows from 4.5 to 14 meters tall. Its leaves have a fernlike
appearance. Its flowers and long, pendulous fruits grow on the ends
of the branches. Its fruit (pod) looks like a giant bean. Its 25-to
60-centimeter-long pods are triangular in cross section, with strong
ribs. Its roots have a pungent odor.
Habitat
and Distribution: This tree is found in the rain forests and
semi-evergreen seasonal forests of the tropical regions. It is widespread
in India, Southeast Asia, Africa, and Central America. Look for
it in abandoned fields and gardens and at the edges of forests.
Edible
Parts: The leaves are edible raw or cooked, depending on their
hardness. Cut the young seedpods into short lengths and cook them
like string beans or fry them. You can get oil for frying by boiling
the young fruits of palms and skimming the oil off the surface of
the water. You can eat the flowers as part of a salad. You can chew
fresh, young seedpods to eat the pulpy and soft seeds. The roots
may be ground as a substitute for seasoning similar to horseradish.
|
| |
 |
| Iceland
Moss |
Cetraria
islandica
Description:
This moss grows only a few inches high. Its color may be gray, white,
or even reddish.
Habitat
and Distribution: Look for it in open areas. It is found only
in the arctic.
Edible
Parts: All parts of the Iceland moss are edible. During the
winter or dry season, it is dry and crunchy but softens when soaked.
Boil the moss to remove the bitterness. After boiling, eat by itself
or add to milk or grains as a thickening agent. Dried plants store
well.
|
| |
 |
| Indian
potato or Eskimo potato |
Claytonia
species
Description:
All Claytonia species are somewhat fleshy plants only a few centimeters
tall, with showy flowers about 2.5 centimeters across.
Habitat
and Distribution: Some species are found in rich forests where
they are conspicuous before the leaves develop. Western species
are found throughout most of the northern United States and in Canada.
Edible
Parts: The tubers are edible but you should boil them before
eating.
|
| |
 |
| Juniper |
Juniperus
species
Description:
Junipers, sometimes called cedars, are trees or shrubs with very
small, scale like leaves densely crowded around the branches. Each
leaf is less than 1.2 centimeters long. All species have a distinct
aroma resembling the well-known cedar. The berrylike cones are usually
blue and covered with a whitish wax.
Habitat
and Distribution: Look for junipers in open, dry, sunny areas
throughout North America and northern Europe. Some species are found
in southeastern Europe, across Asia to Japan, and in the mountains
of North Africa.
Edible
Parts: The berries and twigs are edible. Eat the berries raw
or roast the seeds to use as a coffee substitute. Use dried and
crushed berries as a seasoning for meat. Gather young twigs to make
a tea.
Caution!
Many plants may be called cedars but are not related to junipers
and may be harmful. Always look for the berrylike structures, needle
leaves, and resinous, fragrant sap to be sure the plant you have
is a juniper.
|
| |
 |
| Lotus |
Nelumbo
species
Description:
There are two species of lotus: one has yellow flowers and the other
pink flowers. The flowers are large and showy. The leaves, which
may float on or rise above the surface of the water, often reach
1.5 meters in radius. The fruit has a distinctive flattened shape
and contains up to 20 hard seeds.
Habitat
and Distribution: The yellow-flowered lotus is native to North
America. The pink-flowered species, which is widespread in the Orient,
is planted in many other areas of the world. Lotuses are found in
quiet fresh water.
Edible
Parts: All parts of the plant are edible raw or cooked. The
underwater parts contain large quantities of starch. Dig the fleshy
portions from the mud and bake or boil them. Boil the young leaves
and eat them as a vegetable. The seeds have a pleasant flavor and
are nutritious. Eat them raw, or parch and grind them into flour.
|
| |
 |
| Malanga |
Xanthosoma
caracu
Description:
This plant has soft, arrow-shaped leaves, up to 60 centimeters long.
The leaves have no aboveground stems.
Habitat
and Distribution: This plant grows widely in the Caribbean region.
Look for it in open, sunny fields.
Edible
Parts: The tubers are rich in starch. Cook them before eating
to destroy a poison contained in all parts of the plant.
WARNING!!!
Always cook before eating.
|
| |
 |
| Mango |
Mangifera
indica
Description:
This tree may reach 30 meters in height. It has alternate, simple,
shiny, dark green leaves. Its flowers are small and inconspicuous.
Its fruits have a large single seed. There are many cultivated varieties
of mango. Some have red flesh, others yellow or orange, often with
many fibers and a kerosene taste.
Habitat
and Distribution: This tree grows in warm, moist regions. It
is native to northern India, Burma, and western Malaysia. It is
now grown throughout the tropics.
Edible
Parts: The fruits area nutritious food source. The unripe fruit
can be peeled and its flesh eaten by shredding it and eating it
like a salad. The ripe fruit can be peeled and eaten raw. Roasted
seed kernels are edible.
Caution!
If you are sensitive to poison ivy, avoid eating mangoes, as
they cause a severe reaction in sensitive individuals.
|
| |
 |
| Manioc |
Manihot
utillissima
Description:
Manioc is a perennial shrubby plant, 1 to 3 meters tall, with jointed
stems and deep green, fingerlike leaves. It has large, fleshy rootstocks.
Habitat
and Distribution: Manioc is widespread in all tropical climates,
particularly in moist areas. Although cultivated extensively, it
maybe found in abandoned gardens and growing wild in many areas.
Edible
Parts: The rootstocks are full of starch and high in food value.
Two kinds of manioc are known: bitter and sweet. Both are edible.
The bitter type contains poisonous hydrocyanic acid. To prepare
manioc, first grind the fresh manioc root into a pulp, then cook
it for at least 1 hour to remove the bitter poison from the roots.
Then flatten the pulp into cakes and bake as bread. Manioc cakes
or flour will keep almost indefinitely if protected against insects
and dampness. Wrap them in banana leaves for protection.
Caution!
For safety, always cook the roots of either type.
|
| |
 |
| Marsh
Marigold |
Caltha
palustris
Description:
This plant has rounded, dark green leaves arising from a short stem.
It has bright yellow flowers.
Habitat
and Distribution: This plant is found in bogs, lakes, and slow-moving
streams. It is abundant in arctic and subarctic regions and in much
of the eastern region of the northern United States.
Edible
Parts: All parts are edible if boiled.
Caution!
As with all water plants, do not eat this plant raw. Raw
water plants may carry dangerous organisms that are removed only
by cooking.
|
| |
 |
| Mulberry |
Morus
species
Description:
This tree has alternate, simple, often lobed leaves with rough surfaces.
Its fruits are blue or black and many seeded.
Habitat
and Distribution: Mulberry trees are found in forests, along
roadsides, and in abandoned fields in Temperate and Tropical Zones
of North America, South America, Europe, Asia, and Africa.
Edible
Parts: The fruit is edible raw or cooked. It can be dried for
eating later.
Caution!
When eaten in quantity, mulberry fruit acts as a laxative.
Green, unripe fruit can be hallucinogenic and cause extreme nausea
and cramps.
Other
Uses: You can shred the inner bark of the tree and use it to
make twine or cord.
|
| |
 |
| Nettle |
Urtica
and Laportea species
Description:
These plants grow several feet high. They have small, inconspicuous
flowers. Fine, hairlike bristles cover the stems, leafstalks, and
undersides of leaves. The bristles cause a stinging sensation when
they touch the skin.
Habitat
and Distribution: Nettles prefer moist areas along streams or
at the margins of forests. They are found throughout North America,
Central America, the Caribbean, and northern Europe.
Edible
Parts: Young shoots and leaves are edible. Boiling the plant
for 10 to 15 minutes destroys the stinging element of the bristles.
This plant is very nutritious.
Other
Uses: Mature stems have a fibrous layer that you can divide
into individual fibers and use to weave string or twine.
|
| |
 |
| Nipa
Palm |
Nipa
fruticans
Description:
This palm has a short, mainly underground trunk and very large,
erect leaves up to 6 meters tall. The leaves are divided into leaflets.
A flowering head forms on a short erect stern that rises among the
palm leaves. The fruiting (seed) head is dark brown and may be 30
centimeters in diameter.
Habitat
and Distribution: This palm is common on muddy shores in coastal
regions throughout eastern Asia.
Edible
Parts: The young flower stalk and the seeds provide a good source
of water and food. Cut the flower stalk and collect the juice. The
juice is rich in sugar. The seeds are hard but edible.
Other
Uses: The leaves are excellent as thatch and coarse weaving
material.
|
| |
 |
| Oak
|
Quercus
species
Description:
Oak trees have alternate leaves and acorn fruits. There are two
main groups of oaks: red and white. The red oak group has leaves
with bristles and smooth bark in the upper part of the tree. Red
oak acorns take 2 years to mature. The white oak group has leaves
without bristles and a rough bark in the upper portion of the tree.
White oak acorns mature in 1 year.
Habitat
and Distribution: Oak trees are found in many habitats throughout
North America, Central America, and parts of Europe and Asia.
Edible
Parts: All parts are edible, but often contain large quantities
of bitter substances. White oak acorns usually have a better flavor
than red oak acorns. Gather and shell the acorns. Soak red oak acorns
in water for 1 to 2 days to remove the bitter substance. You can
speed up this process by putting wood ashes in the water in which
you soak the acorns. Boil the acorns or grind them into flour and
use the flour for baking. You can use acorns that you baked until
very dark as a coffee substitute.
Caution!
Tannic acid gives the acorns their bitter taste. Eating an
excessive amount of acorns high in tannic acid can lead to kidney
failure. Before eating acorns, leach out this chemical.
Other
Uses:
Oak wood is excellent for building or burning. Small oaks can be
split and cut into long thin strips (3 to 6 millimeters thick and
1.2 centimeters wide) used to weave mats, baskets, or frameworks
for packs, sleds, furniture, etc. Oak bark soaked in water produces
a tanning solution used to preserve leather.
|
| |
 |
| Orach |
Atriplex
species
Description:
This plant is vine like in growth and has arrowhead-shaped, alternate
leaves up to 5 centimeters long. Young leaves maybe silver-colored.
Its flowers and fruits are small and inconspicuous.
Habitat
and Distribution: Orach species are entirety restricted to salty
soils. They are found along North America's coasts and on the shores
of alkaline lakes inland. They are also found along seashores from
the Mediterranean countries to inland areas in North Africa and
eastward to Turkey and central Siberia.
Edible
Parts: The entire plant is edible raw or boiled.
|
| |
 |
| Palmetto
Palm |
Sabal
palmetto
Description:
The palmetto palm is a tall, unbranched tree with persistent leaf
bases on most of the trunk. The leaves are large, simple, and palmately
lobed. Its fruits are dark blue or black with a hard seed.
Habitat
and Distribution: The palmetto palm is found throughout the
coastal regions of the southeastern United States.
Edible
Parts: The fruits are edible raw. The hard seeds may be ground
into flour. The heart of the palm is a nutritious food source at
any time. Cut off the top of the tree to obtain the palm heart.
|
| |
 |
| Papaya
or Paw-Paw |
Carica
papaya
Description:
The papaya is a small tree 1.8 to 6 meters tall, with a soft, hollow
trunk. When cut, the entire plant exudes a milky juice. The trunk
is rough and the leaves are crowded at the trunk's apex. The fruit
grows directly from the trunk, among and below the leaves. The fruit
is green before ripening. When ripe, it turns yellow or remains
greenish with a squash like appearance.
Habitat
and Distribution: Papaya is found in rain forests and semi-evergreen
seasonal forests in tropical regions and in some temperate regions
as well. Look for it in moist areas near clearings and former habitations.
It is also found in open, sunny places in uninhabited jungle areas.
Edible
Parts: The ripe fruit is high in vitamin C. Eat it raw or cock
it like squash. Place green fruit in the sun to make it ripen quickly.
Cook the young papaya leaves, flowers, and stems carefully, changing
the water as for taro.
WARNING!!!
Be careful not to get the milky sap from the unripe fruit into
your eyes. It will cause intense pain and temporarysometimes
even permanentblindness.
Other
Uses: Use the milky juice of the unripe fruit to tenderize tough
meat. Rub the juice on the meat.
|
| |
 |
| Persimmon |
Diospyros
virginiana and other species
Description:
These trees have alternate, dark green, elliptic leaves with entire
margins. The flowers are inconspicuous. The fruits are orange, have
a sticky consistency, and have several seeds.
Habitat
and Distribution: The persimmon is a common forest margin tree.
It is wide spread in Africa, eastern North America, and the Far
East.
Edible
Parts: The leaves are a good source of vitamin C. The fruits
are edible raw or baked. To make tea, dry the leaves and soak them
in hot water. You can eat the roasted seeds.
Caution!
Some persons are unable to digest persimmon pulp. Unripe
persimmons are highly astringent and inedible.
|
| |
 |
| Pincushion
Cactus |
Mammilaria
species
Description:
Members of this cactus group are round, short, barrel-shaped, and
without leaves. Sharp spines cover the entire plant.
Habitat
and Distribution: These cacti are found throughout much of the
desert regions of the western United States and parts of Central
America.
Edible
Parts: They are a good source of water in the desert.
|
| |
 |
| Pine |
Pinus
species
Description:
Pine trees are easily recognized by their needlelike leaves grouped
in bundles. Each bundle may contain one to five needles, the number
varying among species. The tree's odor and sticky sap provide a
simple way to distinguish pines from similar looking trees with
needlelike leaves.
Habitat
and Distribution: Pines prefer open, sunny areas. They are found
throughout North America, Central America, much of the Caribbean
region, North Africa, the Middle East, Europe, and some places in
Asia.
Edible
Parts: The seeds of all species are edible. You can collect
the young male cones, which grow only in the spring, as a survival
food. Boil or bake the young cones. The bark of young twigs is edible.
Peel off the bark of thin twigs. You can chew the juicy inner bark;
it is rich in sugar and vitamins. Eat the seeds raw or cooked. Green
pine needle tea is high in vitamin C.
Other
Uses: Use the resin to waterproof articles. Also use it as glue.
Collect the resin from the tree. If there is not enough resin on
the tree, cut a notch in the bark so more sap will seep out. Put
the resin in a container and heat it. The hot resin is your glue.
Use it as is or add a small amount of ash dust to strengthen it.
Use it immediately. You can use hardened pine resin as an emergency
dental filling.
|
| |
 |
| Plantain,
broad and narrow leaf |
Plantago
species
Description:
The broad leaf plantain has leaves over 2.5 centimeters across that
grow close to the ground. The flowers are on a spike that rises
from the middle of the cluster of leaves. The narrow leaf plantain
has leaves up to 12 centimeters long and 2.5 centimeters wide, covered
with hairs. The leaves form a rosette. The flowers are small and
inconspicuous.
Habitat
and Distribution: Look for these plants in lawns and along roads
in the North Temperate Zone. This plant is a common weed throughout
much of the world.
Edible
Parts: The young tender leaves are edible raw. Older leaves
should be cooked. Seeds are edible raw or roasted.
Other
Uses: To relieve pain from wounds and sores, wash and soak the
entire plant for a short time and apply it to the injured area.
To treat diarrhea, drink tea made from 28 grams (1 ounce) of the
plant leaves boiled in 0.5 liter of water. The seeds and seed husks
act as laxatives.
|
| |
 |
| Pokeweed |
Phytolacca
americana
Description:
This plant may grow as high as 3 meters. Its leaves are elliptic
and up to 1 meter in length. It produces many large clusters of
purple fruits in late spring.
Habitat
and Distribution: Look for this plant in open, sunny areas in
forest clearings, in fields, and along roadsides in eastern North
America, Central America, and the Caribbean.
Edible
Parts: The young leaves and stems are edible cooked. Boil them
twice, discarding the water from the first boiling. The fruits are
edible if cooked.
Caution!
All parts of this plant are poisonous if eaten raw. Never eat
the underground portions of the plant as these contain the highest
concentrations of the poisons. Do not eat any plant over 25 centimeters
tall or when red is showing in the plant.
Other
Uses: Use the juice of fresh berries as a dye.
|
| |
 |
| Prickly-Pear
Cactus |
Opuntia
species
Description:
This cactus has flat, pad like stems that are green. Many round,
furry dots that contain sharp-pointed hairs cover these stems.
Habitat
and Distribution: This cactus is found in arid and semiarid
regions and in dry, sandy areas of wetter regions throughout most
of the United States and Central and South America. Some species
are planted in arid and semiarid regions of other parts of the world.
Edible
Parts: All parts of the plant are edible. Peel the fruits and
eat them fresh or crush them to prepare a refreshing drink. Avoid
the tiny, pointed hairs. Roast the seeds and grind them to a flour.
Caution!
Avoid any prickly pear cactus like plant with milky sap.
Other
Uses: The pad is a good source of water. Peel it carefully to
remove all sharp hairs before putting it in your mouth. You can
also use the pads to promote healing. Split them and apply the pulp
to wounds.
|
| |
 |
| Purslane |
Portulaca
oleracea
Description:
This plant grows close to the ground. It is seldom more than a few
centimeters tall. Its stems and leaves are fleshy and often tinged
with red. It has paddle shaped leaves, 2.5 centimeter or less long,
clustered at the tips of the stems. Its flowers are yellow or pink.
Its seeds are tiny and black.
Habitat
and Distribution: It grows in full sun in cultivated fields,
field margins, and other weedy areas throughout the world.
Edible
Parts: All parts are edible. Wash and boil the plants for a
tasty vegetable or eat them raw. Use the seeds as a flour substitute
or eat them raw.
|
| |
 |
| Rattan
Palm |
Calamus
species
Description:
The rattan palm is a stout, robust climber. It has hooks on the
midrib of its leaves that it uses to remain attached to trees on
which it grows. Sometimes, mature stems grow to 90 meters. It has
alternate, compound leaves and a whitish flower.
Habitat
and Distribution: The rattan palm is found from tropical Africa
through Asia to the East Indies and Australia. It grows mainly in
rain forests.
Edible
Parts: Rattan palms hold a considerable amount of starch in
their young stem tips. You can eat them roasted or raw. In other
kinds, a gelatinous pulp, either sweet or sour, surrounds the seeds.
You can suck out this pulp. The palm heart is also edible raw or
cooked.
Other
Uses: You can obtain large amounts of potable water by cutting
the ends of the long stems (see Chapter 6). The stems can be used
to make baskets and fish traps.
|
| |
 |
| Reed |
Phragmites
australis
Description:
This tall, coarse grass grows to 3.5 meters tall and has gray-green
leaves about 4 centimeters wide. It has large masses of brown flower
branches in early summer. These rarely produce grain and become
fluffy, gray masses late in the season.
Habitat
and Distribution: Look for reed in any open, wet area, especially
one that has been disturbed through dredging. Reed is found throughout
the temperate regions of both the Northern and Southern Hemispheres.
Edible
Parts: All parts of the plant are edible raw or cooked in any
season. Harvest the stems as they emerge from the soil and boil
them. You can also harvest them just before they produce flowers,
then dry and beat them into flour. You can also dig up and boil
the underground stems, but they are often tough. Seeds are edible
raw or boiled, but they are rarely found.
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| Reindeer
Moss |
Cladonia
rangiferina
Description:
Reindeer moss is a low-growing plant only a few centimeters tall.
It does not flower but does produce bright red reproductive structures.
Habitat
and Distribution: Look for this lichen in open, dry areas. It
is very common in much of North America.
Edible
Parts: The entire plant is edible but has a crunchy, brittle
texture. Soak the plant in water with some wood ashes to remove
the bitterness, then dry, crush, and add it to milk or to other
food.
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| Rock
Tripe |
Umbilicaria
species
Description:
This plant forms large patches with curling edges. The top of the
plant is usually black. The underside is lighter in color.
Habitat
and Distribution: Look on rocks and boulders for this plant.
It is common throughout North America.
Edible
Parts: The entire plant is edible. Scrape it off the rock and
wash it to remove grit. The plant may be dry and crunchy; soak it
in water until it becomes soft. Rock tripes may contain large quantities
of bitter substances; soaking or boiling them in several changes
of water will remove the bitterness.
Caution!
There are some reports of poisoning from rock tripe, so apply
the Universal Edibility Test.
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| Rose
Apple |
Eugenia
jambos
Description:
This tree grows 3 to 9 meters high. It has opposite, simple, dark
green, shiny leaves. When fresh, it has fluffy, yellowish-green
flowers and red to purple egg-shaped fruit.
Habitat
and Distribution: This tree is widely planted in all of the
tropics. It can also be found in a semiwild state in thickets, waste
places, and secondary forests.
Edible
Parts: The entire fruit is edible raw or cooked.
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| Sago
Palm |
Metroxylon
sagu
Description:
These palms are low trees, rarely over 9 meters tall, with a stout,
spiny trunk. The outer rind is about 5 centimeters thick and hard
as bamboo. The rind encloses a spongy inner pith containing a high
proportion of starch. It has typical palm like leaves clustered
at the tip.
Habitat
and Distribution: Sago palm is found in tropical rain forests.
It flourishes in damp lowlands in the Malay Peninsula, New Guinea,
Indonesia, the Philippines, and adjacent islands. It is found mainly
in swamps and along streams, lakes, and rivers.
Edible
Parts: These palms, when available, are of great use to the
survivor. One trunk, cut just before it flowers, will yield enough
sago to feed a person for 1 year. Obtain sago starch from nonflowering
palms. To extract the edible sage, cut away the bark lengthwise
from one half of the trunk, and pound the soft, whitish inner part
(pith) as fine as possible. Knead the pith in water and strain it
through a coarse cloth into a container. The fine, white sago will
settle in the container. Once the sago settles, it is ready for
use. Squeeze off the excess water and let it dry. Cook it as pancakes
or oatmeal. Two kilograms of sago is the nutritional equivalent
of 1.5 kilograms of rice. The upper part of the trunk's core does
not yield sage, but you can roast it in lumps over a fire. You can
also eat the young sago nuts and the growing shoots or palm cabbage.
Other
Uses: Use the stems of tall sorghums as thatching materials.
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| Sassafras |
Sassafras
albidum
Description:
This shrub or small tree bears different leaves on the same plant.
Some leaves will have one lobe, some two lobes, and some no lobes.
The flowers, which appear in early spring, are small and yellow.
The fruits are dark blue. The plant parts have a characteristics
root beer smell.
Habitat
and Distribution: Sassafras grows at the margins of roads and
forests, usually in open, sunny areas. It is a common tree throughout
eastern North America.
Edible
Parts: The young twigs and leaves are edible fresh or dried.
You can add dried young twigs and leaves to soups. Dig the underground
portion, peel off the bark, and let it dry. Then boil it in water
to prepare sassafras tea.
Other
Uses: Shred the tender twigs for use as a toothbrush.
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| Saxaul |
Haloxylon
ammondendron
Description:
The saxaul is found either as a small tree or as a large shrub with
heavy, coarse wood and spongy, water-soaked bark. The branches of
the young trees are vivid green and pendulous. The flowers are small
and yellow.
Habitat
and Distribution: The saxaul is found in desert and arid areas.
It is found on the arid salt deserts of Central Asia, particularly
in the Turkestan region and east of the Caspian Sea.
Edible
Parts: The thick bark acts as a water storage organ. You can
get drinking water by pressing quantities of the bark. This plant
is an important some of water in the arid regions in which it grows.
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| Screw
Pine |
Pandanus
species
Description:
The screw pine is a strange plant on stilts, or prop roots, that
support the plant above-ground so that it appears more or less suspended
in midair. These plants are either shrubby or treelike, 3 to 9 meters
tall, with stiff leaves having saw like edges. The fruits are large,
roughened balls resembling pineapples, but without the tuft of leaves
at the end.
Habitat
and Distribution: The screw pine is a tropical plant that grows
in rain forests and semi-evergreen seasonal forests. It is found
mainly along seashores, although certain kinds occur inland for
some distance, from Madagascar to southern Asia and the islands
of the southwestern Pacific. There are about 180 types.
Edible
Parts: Knock the ripe fruit to the ground to separate the fruit
segments from the hard outer covering. Chew the inner fleshy part.
Cook fruit that is not fully ripe in an earth oven. Before cooking,
wrap the whole fruit in banana leaves, breadfruit leaves, or any
other suitable thick, leathery leaves. After cooking for about 2
hours, you can chew fruit segments like ripe fruit. Green fruit
is inedible.
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| Sea
Orach |
Atriplex
halimus
Description:
The sea orach is a sparingly branched herbaceous plant with small,
gray-colored leaves up to 2.5 centimeters long. Sea orach resembles
Iamb's quarter, a common weed in most gardens in the United States.
It produces its flowers in narrow, densely compacted spikes at the
tips of its branches.
Habitat
and Distribution: The sea orach is found in highly alkaline
and salty areas along seashores from the Mediterranean countries
to inland areas in North Africa and eastward to Turkey and central
Siberia. Generally, it can be found in tropical scrub and thorn
forests, steppes in temperate regions, and most desert scrub and
waste areas.
Edible
Parts: Its leaves are edible. In the areas where it grows, it
has the healthy reputation of being one of the few native plants
that can sustain man in times of want.
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| Sheep
Sorrel |
Rumex
acerosella
Description:
These plants are seldom more than 30 centimeters tall. They have
alternate leaves, often with arrowlike bases, very small flowers,
and frequently reddish stems.
Habitat
and Distribution: Look for these plants in old fields and other
disturbed areas in North America and Europe.
Edible
Parts: The plants are edible raw or cooked.
Caution!
These plants contain oxalic acid that can be damaging if too
many plants are eaten raw. Cooking seems to destroy the chemical.
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| Sorghum |
Sorghum
species
Description:
There are many different kinds of sorghum, all of which bear grains
in heads at the top of the plants. The grains are brown, white,
red, or black. Sorghum is the main food crop in many parts of the
world.
Habitat
and Distribution: Sorghum is found worldwide, usually in warmer
climates. All species are found in open, sunny areas.
Edible
Parts: The grains are edible at any stage of development. When
young, the grains are milky and edible raw. Boil the older grains.
Sorghum is a nutritious food.
Other
Uses: Use the stems of tall sorghum as building materials.
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| Spatterdock
or Yellow Water Lily |
Nuphar
species
Description:
This plant has leaves up to 60 centimeters long with a triangular
notch at the base. The shape of the leaves is somewhat variable.
The plant's yellow flowers are 2.5 centimeter across and develop
into bottle-shaped fruits. The fruits are green when ripe.
Habitat
and Distribution: These plants grow throughout most of North
America. They are found in quiet, fresh, shallow water (never deeper
than 1.8 meters).
Edible
Parts: All parts of the plant are edible. The fruits contain
several dark brown seeds you can parch or roast and then grind into
flour. The large rootstock contains starch. Dig it out of the mud,
peel off the outside, and boil the flesh. Sometimes the rootstock
contains large quantities of a very bitter compound. Boiling in
several changes of water may remove the bitterness.
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| Sterculia |
Sterculia
foetida
Description:
Sterculias are tall trees, rising in some instances to 30 meters.
Their leaves are either undivided or palmately lobed. Their flowers
are red or purple. The fruit of all sterculias is similar in aspect,
with a red, segmented seedpod containing many edible black seeds.
Habitat
and Distribution: There are over 100 species of sterculias distributed
through all warm or tropical climates. They are mainly forest trees.
Edible
Parts: The large, red pods produce a number of edible seeds.
The seeds of all sterculias are edible and have a pleasant taste
similar to cocoa. You can eat them like nuts, either raw or roasted.
Caution!
Avoid eating large quantities. The seeds may have a laxative
effect.
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| Strawberry |
Fragaria
species
Description:
Strawberry is a small plant with a three-leaved growth pattern.
It has small, white flowers usually produced during the spring.
Its fruit is red and fleshy.
Habitat
and Distribution: Strawberries are found in the North Temperate
Zone and also in the high mountains of the southern Western Hemisphere.
Strawberries prefer open, sunny areas. They are commonly planted.
Edible
Parts: The fruit is edible fresh, cooked, or dried. Strawberries
are a good source of vitamin C. You can also eat the plant's leaves
or dry them and make a tea with them.
WARNING!!!
Eat only white-flowering true strawberries. Other similar plants
without white flowers can be poisonous.
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| Sugarcane |
Saccharum
officinarum
Description:
This plant grows up to 4.5 meters tall. It is a grass and has grasslike
leaves. Its green or reddish stems are swollen where the leaves
grow. Cultivated sugarcane seldom flowers.
Habitat
and Distribution: Look for sugarcane in fields. It grows only
in the tropics (throughout the world). Because it is a crop, it
is often found in large numbers.
Edible
Parts: The stem is an excellent source of sugar and is very
nutritious. Peel the outer portion off with your teeth and eat the
sugarcane raw. You can also squeeze juice out of the sugarcane.
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| Sugar
Palm |
Arenga
pinnata
Description:
This tree grows about 15 meters high and has huge leaves up to 6
meters long. Needlelike structures stick out of the bases of the
leaves. Flowers grow below the leaves and form large conspicuous
dusters from which the fruits grow.
Habitat
and Distribution: This palm is native to the East Indies but
has been planted in many parts off the tropics. It can be found
at the margins of forests.
Edible
Parts: The chief use of this palm is for sugar. However, its
seeds and the tip of its stems are a survival food. Bruise a young
flower stalk with a stone or similar object and collect the juice
as it comes out. It is an excellent source of sugar. Boil the seeds.
Use the tip of the stems as a vegetable.
Caution!
The flesh covering the seeds may cause dermatitis.
Other Uses: The shaggy material at the base of the leaves
makes an excellent rope as it is strong and resists decay.
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| Sweetsop |
Annona
squamosa
Description:
This tree is small, seldom more than 6 meters tall, and multi-branched.
It has alternate, simple, elongate, dark green leaves. Its fruit
is green when ripe, round in shape, and covered with protruding
bumps on its surface. The fruit's flesh is white and creamy.
Habitat
and Distribution: Look for sweetsop at margins of fields, near
villages, and around homesites in tropical regions.
Edible
Parts: The fruit flesh is edible raw.
Other
Uses: You can use the finely ground seeds as an insecticide.
Caution!
The ground seeds are extremely dangerous to the eyes.
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| Tamarind |
Tamarindus
indica
Description:
The tamarind is a large, densely branched tree, up to 25 meters
tall. Its has pinnate leaves (divided like a feather) with 10 to
15 pairs of leaflets.
Habitat
and Distribution: The tamarind grows in the drier parts of Africa,
Asia, and the Philippines. Although it is thought to be a native
of Africa, it has been cultivated in India for so long that it looks
like a native tree. It is also found in the American tropics, the
West Indies, Central America, and tropical South America.
Edible
Parts: The pulp surrounding the seeds is rich in vitamin C and
is an important survival food. You can make a pleasantly acid drink
by mixing the pulp with water and sugar or honey and letting the
mixture mature for several days. Suck the pulp to relieve thirst.
Cook the young, unripe fruits or seedpods with meat. Use the young
leaves in soup. You must cook the seeds. Roast them above a fire
or in ashes. Another way is to remove the seed coat and soak the
seeds in salted water and grated coconut for 24 hours, then cook
them. You can peel the tamarind bark and chew it.
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| Taro,
cocoyam, elephant ears, eddo, dasheen |
Colocasia
and Alocasia species
Description:
All plants in these groups have large leaves, sometimes up to 1.8
meters tall, that grow from a very short stem. The rootstock is
thick and fleshy and filled with starch.
Habitat
and Distribution: These plants grow in the humid tropics. Look
for them in fields and near homesites and villages.
Edible
Parts: All parts of the plant are edible when boiled or roasted.
When boiling, change the water once to get rid of any poison.
Caution!
If eaten raw, these plants will cause a serious inflammation
of the mouth and throat.
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| Thistle |
Cirsium
species
Description:
This plant may grow as high as 1.5 meters. Its leaves are long-pointed,
deeply lobed, and prickly.
Habitat
and Distribution: Thistles grow worldwide in dry woods and fields.
Edible
Parts: Peel the stalks, cut them into short sections, and boil
them before eating. The roots are edible raw or cooked.
Caution!
Some thistle species are poisonous.
Other
Uses: Twist the tough fibers of the stems to make a strong twine.
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| Ti |
Cordyline
terminalis
Description:
The ti has unbranched stems with strap like leaves often clustered
at the tip of the stem. The leaves vary in color and may be green
or reddish. The flowers grow at the plant's top in large, plume
like clusters. The ti may grow up to 4.5 meters tall.
Habitat
and Distribution: Look for this plant at the margins of forests
or near home sites in tropical areas. It is native to the Far East
but is now widely planted in tropical areas worldwide.
Edible
Parts: The roots and very tender young leaves are good survival
food. Boil or bake the short, stout roots found at the base of the
plant. They are a valuable source of starch. Boil the very young
leaves to eat. You can use the leaves to wrap other food to cook
over coals or to steam.
Other
Uses: Use the leaves to cover shelters or to make a rain cloak.
Cut the leaves into liners for shoes; this works especially well
if you have a blister. Fashion temporary sandals from the ti leaves.
The terminal leaf, if not completely unfurled, can be used as a
sterile bandage. Cut the leaves into strips, then braid the strips
into rope.
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| Tree
Fern |
Various
genera
Description:
Tree ferns are tall trees with long, slender trunks that often have
a very rough, bark like covering. Large, lacy leaves uncoil from
the top of the trunk.
Habitat
and Distribution: Tree ferns are found in wet, tropical forests.
Edible
Parts: The young leaves and the soft inner portion of the trunk
are edible. Boil the young leaves and eat as greens. Eat the inner
portion of the trunk raw or bake it.
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| Tropical
Almond |
Terminalia
catappa
Description:
This tree grows up to 9 meters tall. Its leaves are evergreen, leathery,
45 centimeters long, 15 centimeters wide, and very shiny. It has
small, yellowish-green flowers. Its fruit is flat, 10 centimeters
long, and not quite as wide. The fruit is green when ripe.
Habitat
and Distribution: This tree is usually found growing near the
ocean. It is a common and often abundant tree in the Caribbean and
Central and South America. It is also found in the tropical rain
forests of southeastern Asia, northern Australia, and Polynesia.
Edible
Parts: The seed is a good source of food. Remove the fleshy,
green covering and eat the seed raw or cooked.
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| Walnut |
Juglans
species
Description:
Walnuts grow on very large trees, often reaching 18 meters tall.
The divided leaves characterize all walnut spades. The walnut itself
has a thick outer husk that must be removed to reach the hard inner
shell of the nut.
Habitat
and Distribution: The English walnut, in the wild state, is
found from southeastern Europe across Asia to China and is abundant
in the Himalayas. Several other species of walnut are found in China
and Japan. The black walnut is common in the eastern United States.
Edible
Parts: The nut kernel ripens in the autumn. You get the walnut
meat by cracking the shell. Walnut meats are highly nutritious because
of their protein and oil content.
Other
Uses: You can boil walnuts and use the juice as an anti-fungal
agent. The husks of "green" walnuts produce a dark brown
dye for clothing or camouflage. Crush the husks of "green"
black walnuts and sprinkle them into sluggish water or ponds for
use as fish poison.
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| Water
Chestnut |
Trapa
natans
Description:
The water chestnut is an aquatic plant that roots in the mud and
has finely divided leaves that grow underwater. Its floating leaves
are much larger and coarsely toothed. The fruits, borne underwater,
have four sharp spines on them.
Habitat
and Distribution: The water chestnut is a freshwater plant only.
It is a native of Asia but has spread to many parts of the world
in both temperate and tropical areas.
Edible
Parts: The fruits are edible raw and cooked. The seeds are also
a source of food.
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| Water
Lettuce |
Ceratopteris
species
Description:
The leaves of water lettuce are much like lettuce and are very tender
and succulent. One of the easiest ways of distinguishing water lettuce
is by the little plantlets that grow from the margins of the leaves.
These little plantlets grow in the shape of a rosette. Water lettuce
plants often cover large areas in the regions where they are found.
Habitat
and Distribution: Found in the tropics throughout the Old World
in both Africa and Asia. Another kind is found in the New World
tropics from Florida to South America. Water lettuce grows only
in very wet places and often as a floating water plant. Look for
water lettuce in still lakes, ponds, and the backwaters of rivers.
Edible
Parts: Eat the fresh leaves like lettuce. Be careful not to
dip the leaves in the contaminated water in which they are growing.
Eat only the leaves that are well out of the water.
Caution!
This plant has carcinogenic properties and should only be used
as a last resort.
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| Water
Lily |
Nymphaea
odorata
Description:
These plants have large, triangular leaves that float on the water's
surface, large, fragrant flowers that are usually white, or red,
and thick, fleshy rhizomes that grow in the mud.
Habitat
and Distribution: Water lilies are found throughout much of
the temperate and subtropical regions.
Edible
Parts: The flowers, seeds, and rhizomes are edible raw or cooked.
To prepare rhizomes for eating, peel off the corky rind. Eat raw,
or slice thinly, allow to dry, and then grind into flour. Dry, parch,
and grind the seeds into flour.
Other
Uses: Use the liquid resulting from boiling the thickened root
in water as a medicine for diarrhea and as a gargle for sore throats.
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| Water
Plantain |
Alisma
plantago-aquatica
Description:
This plant has small, white flowers and heart-shaped leaves with
pointed tips. The leaves are clustered at the base of the plant.
Habitat
and Distribution: Look for this plant in fresh water and in
wet, full sun areas in Temperate and Tropical Zones.
Edible
Parts: The rootstocks are a good source of starch. Boil or soak
them in water to remove the bitter taste.
Caution!
To avoid parasites, always cook aquatic plants.
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| Wild
Caper |
Capparis
aphylla
Description:
This is a thorny shrub that loses its leaves during the dry season.
Its stems are gray-green and its flowers pink.
Habitat
and Distribution: These shrubs form large stands in scrub and
thorn forests and in desert scrub and waste. They are common throughout
North Africa and the Middle East.
Edible
Parts: The fruit and the buds of young shoots are edible raw.
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| Wild
Crab Apple or Wild Apple |
Malus
species
Description:
Most wild apples look enough like domestic apples that the survivor
can easily recognize them. Wild apple varieties are much smaller
than cultivated kinds; the largest kinds usually do not exceed 5
to 7.5 centimeters in diameter, and most often less. They have small,
alternate, simple leaves and often have thorns. Their flowers are
white or pink and their fruits reddish or yellowish.
Habitat
and Distribution: They are found in the savanna regions of the
tropics. In temperate areas, wild apple varieties are found mainly
in forested areas. Most frequently, they are found on the edge of
woods or in fields. They are found throughout the Northern Hemisphere.
Edible
Parts: Prepare wild apples for eating in the same manner as
cultivated kinds. Eat them fresh, when ripe, or cooked. Should you
need to store food, cut the apples into thin slices and dry them.
They are a good source of vitamins.
WARNING!!!
Apple seeds contain cyanide compounds. Do not eat.
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| Wild
Desert Gourd or Colocynth |
Citrullus
colocynthis
Description:
The wild desert gourd, a member of the watermelon family, produces
an 2.4- to 3-meter-long ground-trailing vine. The perfectly round
gourds are as large as an orange. They are yellow when ripe.
Habitat
and Distribution: This creeping plant can be found in any climatic
zone, generally in desert scrub and waste areas. It grows abundantly
in the Sahara, in many Arab countries, on the southeastern coast
of India, and on some of the islands of the Aegean Sea. The wild
desert gourd will grow in the hottest localities.
Edible
Parts: The seeds inside the ripe gourd are edible after they
are completely separated from the very bitter pulp. Roast or boil
the seeds their kernels are rich in oil. The flowers are edible.
The succulent stem tips can be chewed to obtain water.
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| Wild
Dock and Wild Sorrel |
Rumex
crispus and Rumex acetosella
Description:
Wild dock is a stout plant with most of its leaves at the base of
its stem that is commonly 15 to 30 centimeters brig. The plants
usually develop from a strong, fleshy, carrot like taproot. Its
flowers are usually very small, growing in green to purplish plume
like clusters. Wild sorrel similar to the wild dock but smaller.
Many of the basal leaves are arrow-shaped but smaller than those
of the dock and contain a sour juice.
Habitat
and Distribution: These plants can be found in almost all climatic
zones of the world, in areas of high as well as low rainfall. Many
kinds are found as weeds in fields, along roadsides, and in waste
places.
Edible
Parts: Because of tender nature of the foliage, the sorrel and
the dock are useful plants, especially in desert areas. You can
eat their succulent leaves fresh or slightly cooked. To take away
the strong taste, change the water once or twice during cooking.
This latter tip is a useful hint in preparing many kinds of wild
greens.
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| Wild
Fig |
Ficus
species
Description:
These trees have alternate, simple leaves with entire margins. Often,
the leaves are dark green and shiny. All figs have a milky, sticky
juice. The fruits vary in size depending on the species, but are
usually yellow-brown when ripe.
Habitat
and Distribution: Figs are plants of the tropics and semitropics.
They grow in several different habitats, including dense forests,
margins of forests, and around human settlements.
Edible
Parts: The fruits are edible raw or cooked. Some figs have little
flavor.
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| Wild
gourd or luffa sponge |
Luffa
cylindrica
Description:
The luffa sponge is widely distributed and fairly typical of a wild
squash. There are several dozen kinds of wild squashes in tropical
regions. Like most squashes, the luffa is a vine with leaves 7.5
to 20 centimeters across having 3 lobes. Some squashes have leaves
twice this size. Luffa fruits are oblong or cylindrical, smooth,
and many-seeded. Luffa flowers are bright yellow. The luffa fruit,
when mature, is brown and resembles the cucumber.
Habitat
and Distribution: A member of the squash family, which also
includes the watermelon, cantaloupe, and cucumber, the luffa sponge
is widely cultivated throughout the Tropical Zone. It may be found
in a semiwild state in old clearings and abandoned gardens in rain
forests and semi-evergreen seasonal forests.
Edible
Parts: You can boil the young green (half-ripe) fruit and eat
them as a vegetable. Adding coconut milk will improve the flavor.
After ripening, the luffa sponge develops an inedible sponge like
texture in the interior of the fruit. You can also eat the tender
shoots, flowers, and young leaves after cooking them. Roast the
mature seeds a little and eat them like peanuts.
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| Wild
Grape |
Vitis
species
Description:
The wild grape vine climbs with the aid of tendrils. Most grape
vines produce deeply lobed leaves similar to the cultivated grape.
Wild grapes grow in pyramidal, hanging bunches and are black-blue
to amber, or white when ripe.
Habitat
and Distribution: Wild grapes are distributed worldwide. Some
kinds are found in deserts, others in temperate forests, and others
in tropical areas. Wild grapes are commonly found throughout the
eastern United States as well as in the southwestern desert areas.
Most kinds are rampant climbers over other vegetation. The best
place to look for wild grapes is on the edges of forested areas.
Wild grapes are also found in Mexico. In the Old World, wild grapes
are found from the Mediterranean region eastward through Asia, the
East Indies, and to Australia. Africa also has several kinds of
wild grapes.
Edible
Parts: The ripe grape is the portion eaten. Grapes are rich
in natural sugars and, for this reason, are much sought after as
a source of energy-giving wild food. None are poisonous.
Other
Uses: You can obtain water from severed grape vine stems. Cut
off the vine at the bottom and place the cut end in a container.
Make a slant-wise cut into the vine about 1.8 meters upon the hanging
part. This cut will allow water to flow from the bottom end. As
water diminishes in volume, make additional cuts further down the
vine.
Caution!
To avoid poisoning, do not eat grapelike fruits with only a
single seed (monoseed).
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| Wild
Onion |
Allium
species
Description:
Allium cernuum is an example of the many species of wild onions
and garlics, all easily recognized by their distinctive odor.
Habitat
and Distribution: Wild onions and garlics are found in open,
sunny areas throughout the temperate regions. Cultivated varieties
are found anywhere in the world.
Edible
Parts: The bulbs and young leaves are edible raw or cooked.
Use in soup or to flavor meat.
Caution!
There are several plants with onion like bulbs that are extremely
poisonous. Be certain that the plant you are using is a true onion
or garlic. Do not eat bulbs with no onion smell.
Other
Uses: Eating large quantities of onions will give your body
an odor that will help to repel insects. Garlic juice works as an
antibiotic on wounds.
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| Wild
Pistachio |
Pistacia
species
Description:
Some kinds of pistachio trees are evergreen, while others lose their
leaves during the dry season. The leaves alternate on the stem and
have either three large leaves or a number of leaflets. The fruits
or nuts are usually hard and dry at maturity.
Habitat
and Distribution: About seven kinds of wild pistachio nuts are
found in desert, or semidesert areas surrounding the Mediterranean
Sea to Turkey and Afghanistan. It is generally found in evergreen
scrub forests or scrub and thorn forests.
Edible
Parts: You can eat the oil nut kernels after parching them over
coals.
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| Wild
Rice |
Zizania
aquatica
Description:
Wild rice is a tall grass that averages 1 to 1.5 meters in height,
but may reach 4.5 meters. Its grain grows in very loose heads at
the top of the plant and is dark brown or blackish when ripe.
Habitat
and Distribution: Wild rice grows only in very wet areas in
tropical and temperate regions.
Edible
Parts: During the spring and summer, the central portion of
the lower sterns and root shoots are edible. Remove the tough covering
before eating. During the late summer and fail, collect the straw-covered
husks. Dry and parch the husks, break them, and remove the rice.
Boil or roast the rice and then beat it into flour.
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| Wild
Rose |
Rosa
species
Description:
This shrub grows 60 centimeters to 2.5 meters high. It has alternate
leaves and sharp prickles. Its flowers may be red, pink, or yellow.
Its fruit, called rose hip, stays on the shrub year-round.
Habitat
and Distribution: Look for wild roses in dry fields and open
woods throughout the Northern Hemisphere.
Edible
Parts: The flowers and buds are edible raw or boiled. In an
emergency, you can peel and eat the young shoots. You can boil fresh,
young leaves in water to make a tea. After the flower petals fall,
eat the rose hips; the pulp is highly nutritious and an excellent
source of vitamin C. Crush or grind dried rose hips to make flour.
Caution!
Eat only the outer portion of the fruit as the seeds of some
species are quite prickly and can cause internal distress.
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| Wood
Sorrel |
Oxalis
species
Description:
Wood sorrel resembles shamrock or four-leaf clover, with a bell-shaped
pink, yellow, or white flower.
Habitat
and Distribution: Wood sorrel is found in Temperate Zones worldwide,
in lawns, open areas, and sunny woods.
Edible
Parts: Cook the entire plant.
Caution!
Eat only small amounts of this plant as it contains a fairly
high concentration of oxalic acid that can be harmful.
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| Yam |
Dioscorea
species
Description:
These plants are vines that creep along the ground. They have alternate,
heart-or arrow-shaped leaves. Their rootstock may be very large
and weigh many kilograms.
Habitat
and Distribution: True yams are restricted to tropical regions
where they are an important food crop. Look for yams in fields,
clearings, and abandoned gardens. They are found in rain forests,
semievergreen seasonal forests, and scrub and thorn forests in the
tropics. In warm temperate areas, they are found in seasonal hardwood
or mixed hardwood-coniferous forests, as well as some mountainous
areas.
Edible
Parts: Boil the rootstock and eat it as a vegetable.
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| Yam
Bean |
Pachyrhizus
erosus
Description:
The yam bean is a climbing plant of the bean family, with alternate,
three-parted leaves and a turnip like root. The bluish or purplish
flowers are pea like in shape. The plants are often so rampant that
they cover the vegetation upon which they are growing.
Habitat
and Distribution: The yam bean is native to the American tropics,
but it was carried by man years ago to Asia and the Pacific islands.
Now it is commonly cultivated in these places, and is also found
growing wild in forested areas. This plant grows in wet areas of
tropical regions.
Edible
Parts: The tubers are about the size of a turnip and they are
crisp, sweet, and juicy and have a nutty flavor. They are nourishing
and at the same time quench the thirst. Eat them raw or boiled.
To make flour, slice the raw tubers, let them dry in the sun, and
grind into a flour that is high in starch and may be used to thicken
soup.
Caution!
The raw seeds are poisonous.
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