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Lupins (Lupinus termis
printed as Lupinus albus LINN.) Click on graphic for larger image |
Lupins
Botanical: Lupinus albus (Linn.) Family: N.O. Leguminosae
---Synonyms---(French) Lupin.
(German) Wolfsbohne. ---Parts Used---Seeds, herb.
The Lupinus are a large genus of handsome plants, represented in
Europe, Asia and North and South America, the poisonous properties of
which are apparently very irregularly and unequally distributed.
A number of the species are cultivated only as ornamental plants, but
others are grown for fodder, and if not over-fed, are found highly
nutritive and wholesome. If the seeds of certain species are eaten in a
more or less mature condition, poisoning is liable to occur, great numbers
of animals sometimes being affected. These poisoning accidents have
occurred in Europe and in the United States.
The species best known - as fodder - is the WHITE LUPIN of cultivation,
Lupinus albus (Linn.) (French, Lupin; German,
Wolfsbohne), native of Southern Europe and adjacent Asia, a plant
of about 2 feet high, with leaves cut palmately into five or seven
divisions, 1 to 2 inches long, smooth above, and white, hairy, beneath.
The flowers are in terminal racemes, on short footstalks, white and rather
large, the pod 3 to 4 inches long, flattish, containing three to six
white, circular, flattened seeds, which have a bitter taste.
---History---It is probably of Egyptian or East
Mediterranean origin, and has been cultivated since the days of the
ancient Egyptians. It is now very extensively used in Italy and Sicily,
for forage, for ploughing-in to enrich the land, and for its seeds.
John Parkinson attributed wonderful virtues to the plant.
Many women, he says 'doe use the meale of Lupines mingled with the gall
of a goate and some juyce of Lemons to make into a forme of a soft
ointment.' He says that the burning of Lupin seeds drives away gnats.
- Culpepper says they are governed by Mars in Ares:
- 'The seeds, somewhat bitter in taste, opening and cleansing, good to
destroy worms. Outwardly they are used against deformities of the skin,
scabby ulcers, scald heads, and other cutaneous distempers.'
- This Lupin was cultivated by the Romans as an article of food. Pliny
says:
- 'No kind of fodder is more wholesome and light of digestion than the
White Lupine, when eaten dry. If taken commonly at meals, it will
contribute a fresh colour and a cheerful countenance.'
- Virgil, however, Dr. Fernie tells us (Herbal Simples, 1897),
designated it 'tristis Lupinus,' the sad Lupine. Dr. Fernie
further states:
- 'The seeds were used as pieces of money by Roman actors in their
plays and comedies, whence came the saying "nummus lupinus" - a spurious
bit of money.'
The YELLOW LUPIN, also a native of Southern
Europe and Western Asia, is called Lupin luteus from its yellow
flowers. The BLUEFLOWERED SPECIES of the North-eastern United States is
Lupinus perennis (Linn.), the WILD or BLUE BEAN. In the Western
United and southward into the Andes, the species are very numerous.
---Cultivation---If grown from seed, Lupins do
not often come true to type, but if propagated, they will remain true.
They must be isolated, owing to insects which might cross the pollen.
Lupins cross readily, hence isolation for propagation is absolutely
necessary.
To intensify their colouring, sulphate of ammonia and sulphate of iron
may both be employed.
Climatic conditions also more or less affect their colouring.
In a recent note in The Western Gazette (May 18, 1923) Lupins
were spoken of as probably the best crop for light land, such as the poor
land on the Suffolk coast, where Lupin growing is extending, as also on
similar land in the northern part of Nottinghamshire.
In Suffolk the Blue Lupin is the local variety, and anyone travelling
through that country in July will see whole fields devoted to it.
The great value of the plant lies in its capacity for growing
luxuriantly on land which is so light and sandy that hardly anything else
will thrive. Being a leguminous crop, it assimilates the free nitrogen of
the air, greatly enriching the soil; and on light land it is probably
quite the best plant we have for green manuring.
---Constituents---The bitter principle Lupinin
is a glucoside occurring in yellowish needles. On boiling with dilute
acids, it is decomposed into Lupigenin and a fermentable glucose.
Willstatter described the following alkaloids as occurring in the
different species: Lupinine, a crystalline powder and Lupinidine, a syrupy
liquid in LUPINUS LUTEUS and L. NIGER. Lupanine in L. ALBUS, L.
ANGUSTIFOLIUS and L. PERENNIS, a pale yellow, syrupy fluid of an intensely
bitter taste. E. Schmidt affirmed that the alkaloid of the seeds of L.
albus is not the same as that of the herbage. A carbohydrate analogous
to dextrin has been discovered in L. luteus.
According to Schwartz (1906) the seeds of LUPINUS ARABICUS contain a
crystalline substance to which he gave the name of Magolan, which is a
useful remedy in diabetes mellitus.
---Medicinal Action and Uses---The bruised seeds
of White Lupine, after soaking in water, are sometimes used as an external
application to ulcers, etc., and internally are said to be anthelmintic,
diuretic and emmenagogue.
In 1917 a 'Lupin' banquet was given in Hamburg at a botanical
gathering, at which a German Professor, Dr. Thoms, described the
multifarious uses to which the Lupin might be put. At a table covered with
a tablecloth of Lupin fibre, Lupin soup was served; after the soup came
Lupin beefsteak, roasted in Lupin oil and seasoned with Lupin extract,
then bread containing 20 per cent of Lupin, Lupin margarine and cheese of
Lupin albumen, and finally Lupin liqueur and Lupin coffee. Lupin soap
served for washing the hands, while Lupin-fibre paper and envelopes with
Lupin adhesive were available for writing.
---Other Species--- L. arboreus (the
Tree Lupin), from California and Oregon, will, when well trained, produce
a branching stem several feet in height that will live through four or
five years, forming a trunk of light soft wood of the thickness of a man's
arm.
L. polyphyllus and a few allied species from the same country
are tall, erect, herbaceous perennials with very handsome richlycoloured
spikes of flowers, which have become permanent inmates of our gardens.
Correction/Update -
2/16/01 Although the
commercial cropping of lupins is very new, lupin seed has been used
as a food since ancient times. According to Gladstones (1977), the
Mediterranean white lupin (Lupinus albus L.) has been used as
a subsistence crop for three thousand years or more and the pearl
lupin (L. mutabilis Sweet.) has been cultivated for thousands
of years in the Andean Highlands of South America. Gladstones (1977)
also observed that yellow lupin (L. luteus L.),
narrow-leafed lupin (L. angustifolius L.) and the white lupin
(L. albus L.) are used as green manure crops in traditional
agricultural systems in Morocco and Iberia (Gladstones, 1974), which
indicates that the cultivation of these species may have ancient
origins. Bitter (high alkaloid) narrow-leafed lupins were first
introduced into Northern Europe around 1850 and quickly became the
basis of the Saxony Merino Industry. A severe outbreak of lupinosis
in 1870 limited their use for grazing (Gladstones, 1977).
Lupinosis was first recognised in Germany in 1872,
when many sheep died from grazing mature lupin stems, and a few
years later it was suggested by German scientists that a mycotoxin
may be responsible (Allen, 1986). Since then, lupinosis has been
reported in the United States of America (Ostazeski and Wells,
1962), Poland (Kochman, 1957), New Zealand (Allen, 1986), Australia
(Gardiner et al., 1967) and South Africa (Van Warmelo, 1970).
Although many animals have been diagnosed with lupinosis, sheep are
particularly susceptible and are responsible for almost all of the
economic losses caused by the disease in Western Australia (Allen,
1986).
Although it had been suggested, a century earlier,
that a fungal toxin might be implicated in the disease, it was not
until 1966 that Dr. Gardiner demonstrated that non-toxic lupins
could be made toxic by inoculating and incubating them with a
mixture of fungal cultures from toxic lupins (Gardiner et
al., 1967). Gardiner (1966) had previously suggested that
lupinosis was caused by a species of Cytospora. This report
was followed by studies that showed the fungus responsible was a
species of Phomopsis (Gardiner and Petterson,1972). In 1993,
the complete life cycle of this fungus was discovered and the
perfect state described as a new species, Diaporthe toxica,
the cause of lupinosis in sheep (Williamson, 1993; Williamson
et al, 1994)
Williamson, PM. 1993. Processes Involved in the
Infection of Narrow-Leafed Lupins by Phomopsis
leptostromiformis. PhD Thesis, The University of Western
Australia. |
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