manna ash การใช้
- The Manna ash ( " Fraxinus ornus " ) is also a known host, although it is less susceptible than the other European ash species.
- On shallow carbon grounds in the vicinity of the waterfall, there are termofil forests and underbrushes of eastern hornbeam and autumn locust as well as eastern hornbeam and manna ash.
- Lower down, below, there are large forests of holm oak, downy oak and cork oak, and around Castebouono and Pollina the rare manna ash is still farmed.
- The Manna Ash, native to southern Europe and southwest Asia, produces a blue-green sap, which has medicinal value as a mild laxative, demulcent, and weak expectorant.
- In a modern botanical context, manna is often used to refer to the secretions of various plants, especially of certain shrubs and trees, and in particular the sugars obtained by evaporating the sap of the Manna Ash, extracted by making small cuts in the bark.
- The genus name comes directly from the Latin " cicada " meaning " buzzer ", while the species name " orni " possibly comes from " Fraxinus ornus " ( Manna Ash or South European Flowering Ash ), where this cicada often lay its eggs deep in branches.
- ""'Fraxinus ornus " "'( "'manna ash "'or "'South European flowering ash "') is a species of " Fraxinus " native to southern Europe and southwestern Asia, from Spain and Italy north to Austria, Poland and the Czech Republic, and east through the Balkans, Turkey, and western Syria to Lebanon and Armenia.