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Clove

Clove

Syzygium aromaticum

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Clove (Syzygium aromaticum) is a tropical evergreen tree of the family Myrtaceae, best known for its unopened flower buds — the aromatic spice called "cloves" that has shaped global trade, cuisine, and medicine for millennia.

• Cloves are the dried, nail-shaped flower buds of the clove tree, harvested before they open
• The English name "clove" derives from the Latin "clavus" meaning "nail," referencing the bud's distinctive shape
• One of the most valuable spices in human history — at times worth more than gold by weight
• A cornerstone of the historic Spice Trade that drove European colonial expansion into Southeast Asia
• Belongs to the Myrtaceae family, which also includes eucalyptus, guava, and allspice

Taxonomy

Kingdom Plantae
Phylum Tracheophyta
Class Magnoliopsida
Order Myrtales
Family Myrtaceae
Genus Syzygium
Species Syzygium aromaticum
The clove tree is native to the Maluku Islands (historically known as the "Spice Islands") of eastern Indonesia.

• Endemic to a small group of volcanic islands in the Maluku archipelago, including Ternate, Tidore, Bacan, Makian, and Moti
• These islands' volcanic soils and tropical maritime climate created ideal conditions for clove evolution
• The genus Syzygium is one of the largest genera of flowering trees, with over 1,000 species distributed across tropical Asia, Australia, and the Pacific
• Syzygium aromaticum diverged within this diverse genus, adapting to the specific ecological niche of the Maluku Islands

Historical dispersal:
• Arab and Indian traders transported cloves to the Middle East and South Asia as early as the 4th century CE
• By the medieval period, cloves reached Europe via overland and maritime trade routes
• Portuguese colonized the Maluku Islands in the 16th century to monopolize clove production
• The Dutch East India Company (VOC) later enforced a brutal monopoly, restricting cultivation to Ambon and a few islands
• French smuggled clove seedlings to Mauritius and Réunion in the early 19th century, breaking the Dutch monopoly
• Today, major producers include Indonesia, Madagascar, Tanzania (Zanzibar), Sri Lanka, and India
The clove tree is a medium-sized tropical evergreen tree with a distinctive conical to pyramidal crown.

Tree Architecture:
• Height: typically 8–12 m in cultivation, occasionally reaching 15–20 m in the wild
• Trunk: straight, grey-brown bark, up to 30 cm in diameter
• Crown: dense, conical to pyramidal, with branches arising relatively low on the trunk
• Canopy spread: approximately 5–8 m at maturity

Leaves:
• Opposite, simple, elliptic to oblong-elliptic
• Size: approximately 5–15 cm long, 2.5–6 cm wide
• Texture: thick, leathery (coriaceous), glossy dark green above, paler beneath
• Aromatic when crushed — release intense eugenol-scented volatile oils
• Entire margins, acute to acuminate apex, cuneate base
• Prominent midrib with intramarginal veins characteristic of Myrtaceae

Flowers:
• Arranged in terminal cymose clusters (cymes), typically 3–20 buds per cluster
• Buds are the commercially harvested product — picked when they reach ~1.5–2 cm long, just before opening
• Color progression: pale green → pinkish-red → fully open to small yellow flowers
• Each bud has a long calyx tube topped by four unopened petals forming a central dome
• Four sepals; petals are numerous, free, and bright yellow when fully open
• Stamens are numerous, conspicuous, and yellow — the most visually prominent part of the open flower
• Flowers are hermaphroditic and insect-pollinated

Fruit & Seeds:
• Berry-like drupe, ovoid to ellipsoid, approximately 2–3 cm long
• Color: dark purple to nearly black when ripe
• Contains a single large seed (~1.5 cm)
• Fruit is edible but less commercially significant than the buds

Root System:
• Relatively shallow but spreading root system
• Well-drained volcanic soils promote optimal root development
Clove trees thrive in tropical lowland environments with specific climatic and edaphic requirements.

Native Habitat:
• Tropical maritime climate of the Maluku Islands, Indonesia
• Lowland tropical forests, typically below 200 m elevation in the native range
• Volcanic soils rich in organic matter with excellent drainage

Climate Requirements:
• Temperature: optimal range 20–30°C; sensitive to frost and prolonged temperatures below 10°C
• Rainfall: 1,500–2,500 mm annually, preferably well-distributed year-round
• Humidity: high relative humidity (70–90%) promotes healthy growth and bud development
• Wind: young trees are sensitive to strong winds; mature trees tolerate moderate wind

Soil Preferences:
• Deep, fertile, well-drained volcanic or loamy soils
• pH range: 5.5–6.5 (slightly acidic)
• Intolerant of waterlogged or poorly drained soils

Pollination & Reproduction:
• Flowers are pollinated primarily by insects (bees, flies)
• Trees begin bearing at approximately 5–7 years of age
• Full production is reached at 15–20 years
• A mature tree can produce 3–7 kg of dried cloves per year
• Productive lifespan can exceed 50–100 years under favorable conditions

Ecological Interactions:
• Clove trees provide habitat and food for various tropical bird and insect species
• The aromatic oils in leaves and buds serve as natural defense against herbivores and pathogens
Clove is cultivated primarily as a commercial spice crop in tropical regions worldwide, though it can be grown as an ornamental container plant in temperate climates.

Light:
• Full sun to partial shade; young trees benefit from light shade
• In tropical cultivation, full sun exposure maximizes bud production

Soil:
• Deep, well-drained, fertile loam or volcanic soil
• pH 5.5–6.5; rich in organic matter
• Avoid heavy clay or waterlogged soils

Watering:
• Consistent moisture is essential, especially during dry periods
• Young trees require regular irrigation
• Mature trees are moderately drought-tolerant but yield suffers without adequate rainfall
• Mulching helps retain soil moisture and regulate temperature

Temperature:
• Optimal: 20–30°C year-round
• Cannot tolerate frost; temperatures below 5°C can be fatal
• In temperate regions, must be grown in greenhouses or as indoor container plants

Propagation:
• Primarily by seed — seeds lose viability rapidly and must be planted fresh (within 1–2 weeks of harvest)
• Germination occurs in 2–6 weeks at 25–30°C
• Vegetative propagation by cuttings or grafting is possible but less common
• Seedlings are typically grown in nurseries for 1–2 years before transplanting

Harvesting:
• Flower buds are hand-picked just before they open, when they turn from green to pinkish-red
• Harvesting is labor-intensive and typically done over 2–3 months per year
• Buds are dried in the sun for 3–5 days until they turn dark brown and hard
• Dried cloves should constitute approximately 30% of the fresh bud weight

Common Problems:
• Clove leaf spot (fungal disease) — managed with proper spacing and air circulation
• Stem borers and scale insects — monitored and treated as needed
• Dieback in poorly drained soils
• Slow growth in suboptimal temperatures

Fun Fact

Cloves have played a disproportionately large role in human history relative to their small size: • The Dutch East India Company (VOC) maintained a brutal monopoly on clove production in the 17th and 18th centuries, restricting cultivation to a single island (Ambon) and destroying trees on all other islands — one of history's most extreme acts of agricultural control • In ancient China (Han Dynasty, 206 BCE–220 CE), court officials were required to hold cloves in their mouths when addressing the emperor, to ensure their breath was sweet • Clove oil contains 70–90% eugenol, a compound so potent it was the original basis for modern dentistry — dentists still use eugenol-based compounds today for toothache relief and temporary fillings • During the Black Death in 14th-century Europe, cloves were believed to ward off plague, and "pomanders" (clove-studded oranges) were carried as protective talismans • Zanzibar and Pemba Islands (off Tanzania) became so dependent on clove production that the crop once accounted for over 80% of export earnings, earning the nickname "The Spice Islands of Africa" • A single clove tree can remain productive for over 100 years, and some ancient trees in the Maluku Islands are still bearing fruit after centuries • Clove is one of the few spices used in significant quantities in both Eastern and Western cuisines — from Indonesian kretek cigarettes to European mulled wine to Indian garam masala

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