Dendrocnide_meyeniana
Dendrocnide meyeniana
Species of tree
Dendrocnide meyeniana or the poisonous wood nettle is a species of tree in the family Urticaceae, native to the thickets and secondary forests of Taiwan and the Philippines. The specific epithet meyeniana honors Franz Meyen, who collected the type specimen in Manila during his world cruise. [1]
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In the Philippines, Dendrocnide meyeniana is commonly referred to as lipa, lipang kalabaw (lit. 'carabao lipa', to distinguish it from Laportea interrupta, a nettle shrub locally named lipang aso, the "dog lipa"), or more rarely, apariagua. The city of Lipa in Batangas is named after this plant. Locals distinguish it primarily by the short stinging hairs[2] on its twigs. It is also known as bulan-bulan in regions where Bisayan languages are dominant.[3]
In Taiwanese Mandarin, it is widely known as yǎoréngǒu (Chinese: 咬人狗; Pe̍h-ōe-jī: kā-lâng-káu; lit. 'biting people dog'), a name which has been used since the early Qing period referring to the skin irritation or inflammation its stinging hairs may cause.[4][5] Among the Taiwanese indigenous peoples, it is known as valjulu by the Paiwan people,[6] and as lingatren by the Puyuma people;[7] both ethnic groups have the custom of whipping adolescents with the plant as a rite of passage or a corporal punishment.[6][8]