Encyclopedia

Rubber-Bearing Plants

The following article is from The Great Soviet Encyclopedia (1979). It might be outdated or ideologically biased.

Rubber-Bearing Plants

 

plants that form and contain natural rubber in certain of their parts.

Depending on the tissues in which the rubber accumulates, rubber-bearing plants are divided into latex plants (the rubber contained in a milky sap, or latex), parenchymal (in the parenchyma of the axial organs, the stems and roots), and chlorenchy-mal (in the green tissues of young shoots and leaves). Latex trees are of commercial importance, since they both store rubber in comparatively large quantities and surrender it easily. The most important of these plants is the Para rubber tree (Hevea brasilien-sis), which provides 95 percent of the world’s natural rubber. The remaining 5 percent is obtained from other tropical latex trees of the genera Sapium and Manihot (family Euphorbiaceae), Ficus and Castilloa (family Moraceae), and Landolphia (family Apocynaceae). The herbaceous latex-bearing plants of the family Compositae—the tau saghyz (Scorzonera tau-saghyz), the kok-saghyz {Taraxacum kok-saghyz), and the krym-saghyz (7– gym-nanthum) —which grow in the temperate zone (including that of the USSR), contain small amounts of rubber in the roots. They are not cultivated, however, being commercially unimportant. The parenchymal rubber-bearing plants include the Mexican guayule (family Compositae). Chlorenchymal rubber-bearing plants (for example, a number of species of genera Senecio and Centaurea) are not used industrially.

REFERENCES

Il’in, M. M., and P. A. Iakimov. “Kauchukonosy i guttaperchenosy SSSR.” In RastiteVnoe syrye SSSR, vol. 1. Moscow-Leningrad, 1950. Pages 61-142.
Zhukovskii, P. M. KuVturnye rasteniia i ikh sorodichi, 2nd ed. Leningrad, 1964.
Siniagin, I. I. Tropicheskoe zemledelie. Moscow, 1968.
Franke, G. Nutzpflanzen der Tropen und Subtropen, vol. 1. Leipzig, 1967.

V. N. VEKHOV

The Great Soviet Encyclopedia, 3rd Edition (1970-1979). © 2010 The Gale Group, Inc. All rights reserved.
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During the Soviet regime from 1930 to 1940 dandelion kok-saghyz attracted much attention as one of the domestic rubber-bearing plants, with roots containing an average of 3-10,6 percent of rubber which could serve as raw material for its production.
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