Zanthoxylum - Selected Species

Selected Species

  • Zanthoxylum acanthopodium – Andaliman; Chinese: 刺花椒 (ci hua jiao)
  • Zanthoxylum ailanthoides – Chinese: 椿叶花椒 (chun ye hua jiao), 越椒 (yue-jiao), 食茱萸 (shi zhu yu); Japanese: カラスザンショウkarasu-zanshō.
  • Zanthoxylum alatum – Winged Prickly-ash.
  • Zanthoxylum albuquerquei (Peru)
  • Zanthoxylum americanum – Toothache Tree, Northern Prickly-ash (Eastern and Central United States)
  • Zanthoxylum armatum – Bamboo-leaf Prickly-ash; Chinese: 竹叶花椒 (zhu ye hua jiao), 竹葉(花)椒(zhu-ye-(hua)-jiao, "bamboo-leaved Z."), 狗椒 (gou-jia "dog Z."),
  • Zanthoxylum atchoum (Côte d'Ivoire)
  • Zanthoxylum beecheyanum
  • Zanthoxylum belizense (Central America)
  • Zanthoxylum bifoliolatum – Maricao Prickly-ash
  • Zanthoxylum brachyacanthum – Thorny Yellowwood (Australia)
  • Zanthoxylum bungeanum – Northern China peppercorn; Chinese: 花椒(hua jiao)
  • Zanthoxylum buesgenii
  • Zanthoxylum capense
  • Zanthoxylum caribaeum – Yellow Prickly-ash
  • Zanthoxylum chevalieri (Ghana)
  • Zanthoxylum clava-herculis – Hercules' Club, Southern Prickly-ash (southeastern United States)
  • Zanthoxylum coco – Coco, Smelly Sauco (Argentina, Bolivia)
  • Zanthoxylum coreanum – Korean Lime Tree
  • Zanthoxylum coriaceum – Biscayne Prickly-ash
  • Zanthoxylum davyi
  • Zanthoxylum delagoense (Mozambique)
  • Zanthoxylum deremense (Malawi, Tanzania)
  • Zanthoxylum dipetalum – Kāwaʻu (Hawaii)
  • Zanthoxylum fagara – Lime Prickly-ash (Neotropics)
  • Zanthoxylum ferrugineum (Central America)
  • Zanthoxylum flavum – West Indian Satinwood (Caribbean)
  • Zanthoxylum gentlei (Belize, Guatemala, Honduras)
  • Zanthoxylum harrisii (Jamaica)
  • Zanthoxylum hartii (Jamaica)
  • Zanthoxylum hawaiiense – Aʻe, Hawaiʻi Prickly-ash (Hawaii)
  • Zanthoxylum heterophyllum (Mauritius, Réunion)
  • Zanthoxylum hirsutum – Texas Hercules' Club
  • Zanthoxylum holtzianum (Tanzania)
  • Zanthoxylum humile
  • Zanthoxylum hyemale
  • Zanthoxylum integrifoliolum (The Philippines, Taiwan)
  • Zanthoxylum kauaense – Aʻe, Kauaʻi Prickly-ash (Hawaii)
  • Zanthoxylum leprieurii
  • Zanthoxylum limonella – Makhwaen (Thai: มะแขว่น)
  • Zanthoxylum lindense (Tanzania)
  • Zanthoxylum martinicense – White Prickly-ash
  • Zanthoxylum monophyllum – Yellow Prickle
  • Zanthoxylum nadeaudii (French Polynesia)
  • Zanthoxylum negrilense (Jamaica)
  • Zanthoxylum nitidum – Shining Prickly-ash; Chinese: 两面针(liang mian zhen "both side needles")
  • Zanthoxylum oahuense – Aʻe, Oʻahu Prickly-ash (Island of Oʻahu in Hawaii)
  • Zanthoxylum ocumarense
  • Zanthoxylum ovatifoliolatum
  • Zanthoxylum naranjillo – Naranjillo
  • Zanthoxylum panamense (Honduras, Costa Rica, Panama)
  • Zanthoxylum parvum – Tickletongue
  • Zanthoxylum pinnatum
  • Zanthoxylum piperitum – Japanese Pepper Tree, Japan Pepper, Sanshō; Japanese: 山椒(サンショウ)sanshō; Korean: 초피나무(chopi-namu)
  • Zanthoxylum planispinumZ. armatum
  • Zanthoxylum procerum (Central America)
  • Zanthoxylum psammophilum (Côte d'Ivoire)
  • Zanthoxylum punctatum – Dotted Prickly-ash
  • Zanthoxylum rhetsa – Chirphal, Teppal, Tirphal, Indian Pepper
  • Zanthoxylum rhoifolium
  • Zanthoxylum schinifolium – Mastic-leaved Prickly-ash; Wild Zanthoxylum; Chinese: 香椒子 (xiang-jiao-zi "aromatic Z."), 青花椒 (qing-hua-jiao "green Z."); Japanese: イヌザンショウ (inu-zanshō); Korean: 산초나무(山椒__; sancho-namu)
  • Zanthoxylum simulans – Chinese Prickly-ash, Sichuan pepper, Sichuan Zanthoxylum, Sichuan peppercorn; Chinese: 野花椒 (ye hua jiao), 川椒 (chuan-jiao, lit. "Sichuan pepper")(Eastern China, Taiwan)
  • Zanthoxylum spinifex – Niaragato
  • Zanthoxylum thomasianum – St. Thomas Prickly-ash (Puerto Rico, British Virgin Islands, United States Virgin Islands)
  • Zanthoxylum zanthoxyloides ; Senegal pricky-ash

Read more about this topic:  Zanthoxylum

Famous quotes containing the words selected and/or species:

    The final flat of the hoe’s approval stamp
    Is reserved for the bed of a few selected seed.
    Robert Frost (1874–1963)

    For my own part I think no innocent species of wit or pleasantry should be suppressed: and that a good pun may be admitted among the smaller excellencies of lively conversation.
    James Boswell (1740–1795)