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Breadfruit is a multipurpose species and all parts of the tree are used. It is an essential component of
home gardens and traditional agroforestry systems, creating a lush overstory that shelters a wide range
of cultivated and native plants. In the Pacific, breadfruit agroforests have protected mountain slopes
from erosion for more than two millennia. The trees have a beneficial impact on the natural environment
creating organic mulch, shade, and a cooler micro-climate beneath the canopy. They give shelter and food
to important pollinators and seed dispersers such as honeybees, birds, and fruit bats. A breadfruit tree
yields food, construction materials, medicine, cordage, glue, insect repellent, and animal feed.
The trunk may be as large as 2 meters in diameter and grow to a height of 4 meters before branching. The
wood is light and durable with a light golden color that darkens with age. It is used for the construction
of houses and canoes because it resists termites and marine worms. The hulls of outrigger canoes are often
fashioned from a single log and are still made in parts of Micronesia and Melanesia. The wood is carved into
attractive bowls, statues, handicrafts, furniture, and other items. Older trees are an important source of
firewood, especially on the atoll islands. Sticky white latex is present in all parts of the tree and has
been used for glue, caulk, and even chewing gum. Bees are attracted to and harvest droplets of latex from
the surface of the fruit. The inner bark, or bast, can be made into bark cloth or cordage. The leaves are
used as fans, to wrap foods that are cooked in traditional earth ovens, and as biodegradable plates.
Leaves, bark, and latex are all used medicinally.
Tree
| Timber
| Bark
| Leaves
| Male Flowers
| Medicinal Uses
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