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BAMBOO

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V03, Page 303 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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BAMBOO  , the popular name for a tribe of

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grasses, Bambuseae. which are large, often tree-like, with woody stems . The stems spring from an underground root-stock and are often crowded to form dense clumps; the largest
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species reach 120 ft. in height . The slender stem is hollow, and, as generally in grasses, has well-marked
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joints or nodes, at which the cavity is closed by a strong diaphragm . The branches are numerous and in some species spiny; the narrow, often short, leaf-blade is usually jointed at the
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base and has a short stalk, by which it is attached to the long sheath . The spikelets are usually many-flowered and variously arranged in racemes or panicles . The flower differs from that of the majority of grasses in having usually three lodicules and six stamens . Many species bloom annually, but others only at intervals sometimes of many years, when the individuals of one and the same species are found in bloom over large areas . Thus on the west coast of India the simultaneous blooming of Bambusa arundinacea (fig . 1), one of the largest species, has been observed at intervals of
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thirty-two years . After ripening of the seed, the leafless flowering culms always die down . The Bambuseae contain twenty-three genera and occur through-out the tropical zone, but very unevenly distributed; they also extend into the sub-tropical and even into the temperate zone . Tropical
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Asia is richest in species; in Africa there are very few .

In Asia they extend into

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Japan and to io,000 ft. or more on the Himalayas; and in the
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Andes of South
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America they reach the snow-
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line . The fruit in Bambusa, Arundinaria and other genera resembles the grain generally characteristic of grasses, but in Dendrocalamus and others it is a nut, while rarely, as in Melocanna, it is fleshy and suggests an apple in
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size and appearance . The uses to which all the parts and products of the bamboo are applied in
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Oriental countries are almost endless . The soft and succulent shoots, when just beginning to spring, are cut off and served up at table like
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asparagus . Like that
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vegetable, also, they are earthed over to keep them longer
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fit for consumption; and they afford a continuous supply during the whole
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year, though it is more abundant in autumn . They are also salted and eaten with rice, prepared in the form of pickles or candied and preserved in
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sugar . As the plant grows older, a species of fluid is secreted in the hollow joints, in which a concrete substance once highly valued in the East for its medicinal qualities, called labaxir or tabascheer, is gradually
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developed . This substance, which has been found to be a purely siliceous 4bncretion, is possessed of
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peculiar
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optical properties . As a medicinal agent the bamboo is entirely inert, and it has never been received into the
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European materia medica . The grains of the bamboo are available for food, and the Chinese have a proverb that it produces seed more abundantly in years when the rice crop fails, which means, probably, that in times of dearth the natives look more after such a source of food . The
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Hindus eat it mixed with honey as a delicacy, equal quantities being put into a hollow joint, coated externally with clay, and thus roasted over a fire . The fleshly fruit of Melocanna is baked and eaten .

The plant is a native of India, but is sometimes cultivated as in

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Mauritius . It is, however, the stem of the bamboo which is applied to the greatest variety of uses . Joints of sufficient size form
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water buckets; smaller ones are used as bottles, and among the Dyaks of
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Borneo they are employed as cooking vessels . Bamboo is extensively used as a
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timber wood, and houses are frequently made entirely out of the products of the plant;
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complete sections of the stem form posts or columns; split up; it serves for floors or rafters; and, interwoven in lattice-
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work, it is employed for the sides of rooms, admitting
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light and air . The roof is sometimes of bamboo solely, and when split, which is accomplished with the greatest ease, it can be formed into laths or planks . It is employed in
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shipping of all kinds; some of the strongest
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plants are selected for masts of boats of moderate size, and the masts of larger vessels are sometimes formed by the union of several bamboos built up and joined together . The bamboo is employed in the construction of all kinds of agricultural and domestic implements and in the materials and implements required in fishery . Bows are made of it by the union of two pieces with many bands; and, the septa being bored out and the lengths joined together, it is employed, as we use leaden pipes, in transmitting water to reservoirs or gardens . From the light and slender stalks shafts for arrows are obtained; and in the south-west of Asia there is a certain species of equally slender growth, from which writing-pens or reeds are made . A joint forms a holder for papers or pens, and it was in a joint of bamboo that
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silk-
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worm eggs were carried from
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China to Constantinople during the reign of Justinian . The
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outer cuticle of Oriental species is so hard that it forms a sharp and durable cutting edge, and it is so siliceous that it can be used as a whetstone . This outer cuticle, cut into thin strips, is one of the most durable and beautiful materials for
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basket-making, and both in China and Japan it is largely so employed .

Strips are also

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woven into cages, chairs, beds and other articles of furniture, Oriental wicker-work in bamboo being unequalled for beauty and neatness of workmanship . In China the interior portions of the stem are beaten into a pulp and used for the manufacture of the finer varieties of paper . Bamboos are imported to a considerable extent into
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Europe for the use of basket-makers, and for
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umbrella and walking-sticks . In short, the purposes to which the bamboo is applicable are almost endless, and well justify the opinion that " it is one of the most wonderful and most beautiful productions of the tropics, and one of Nature's most valuable gifts to uncivilized man " (A . R . Wallace, The
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Malay
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Archipelago) . A number of species of bamboo are hardy under cultivation in the
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British Isles . A useful and interesting account of these and their cultivation will be found in the Bamboo Garden, by A . B . Freeman-Mitford . They are mostly natives of China and Japan and belong to the genera Arundinaria, Bambusa and Phyllostachys; but include a few Himalayan species of Arundinaria . They may be propagated by seed (though owing to the rare occurrence of fruit, this method is seldom applicable), by division and by cuttings .

They are described as hungry plants which well repay generous treatment, and will flourish in a

rich, not too stiff loam, and for the first year or two should be well mulched . They should be sheltered from winds and well watered during the growing period . When being transplanted the roots must be disturbed as little as possible . The following may be mentioned; Arundinaria simoni, a
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fine plant which in the bamboo garden at
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Kew has reached 18 ft. in height, and not infrequently flowers and fruits in Britain; A. japonica, a tall and handsome plant generally grown in gardens under the name Bambusa metake; A. nitida, " by far the daintiest and most attractive of all its genus, and remarkably hardy "; Bambusa palmata, with leaves a
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foot or more long and three inches broad; B. tesselata; B. quadrangularis, remarkable for its square stems; Phyllostachys mitis, growing to 6o ft. high in its native home, China and Japan; and P. nigra, so called from the black stem, a handsome species .

End of Article: BAMBOO
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