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Soapberry

Also known as: Chinaberry

Sapindus saponaria L.

[=Sapindus drummondii Hook. ]

Images

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Soapberry flowers
Soapberry fruit
Soapberry leaves
Soapberry
Soapberry fruit in early spring
Soapberry fruit in winter
Soapberry flowers
Soapberry fruit in early spring
Soapberry inflorescence
Soapberry bark
Soapberry bud

Morphology

Trunk
Erect; bark grayish brown, fissures shallow, ridges short, sometimes thin plates; wood yellowish brown, hard.
Twigs
Grayish brown, brittle, pubescent; leaf scars crescent-shaped to half-round; buds brown, ovoid, .08 to .1 inch, apex obtuse, scales sparsely to densely pubescent.
Leaves
Deciduous, alternate, even-pinnately compound, 8 to 14 inches long; petiole 1.6 to 2 inches, glabrate or minutely pubescent to pubescent; leaflets (8-)12-20, alternate, elliptic-lanceolate to lanceolate, sickle-shaped, 1.6 to 3.6 inches long, .8 to 1.2 inch wide, base rounded to truncate, asymmetric, margins entire, apex acuminate, lower surface green, minutely pubescent to pubescent along main veins, upper surface green, glabrous or main vein sometimes minutely pubescent to pubescent.
Flowers
Inflorescences terminal on new growth, panicles, 10-50-flowered, pyramidal, 6 to 8 inches long, 6 to 8 inches wide; peduncles .8 to 2.8 inches long, densely covered with minute pubescence. Flowers unisexual, radially symmetric; sepals (4-)5, connate basally, lobes yellowish green, broadly ovate, .04 to .08 inch; petals (4-)5, distinct, white, .1 to .16 inch; staminate: stamens (7-)8-10, .16 to .2 inch; pistillate: pistil 1; style 1; stigma shallowly 3-lobed.
Fruit
September-October; berries, yellowish, translucent, spherical, .5 to .6 inch diameter, usually becoming wrinkled; seed 1, black, obovoid, .3 to .35 inch long, .25 to .3 inch wide, somewhat glossy, minutely pitted.

Ecology

Habitat
Stream banks, rocky slopes, woodlands, prairie ravines, waste places.
Distribution
Scattered throughout Kansas

Additional Notes

Comments

Soapberry often forms thickets or colonies by root-suckers. The plants contain saponin, and the ground flesh of the fruits has been used as a soap substitute. Handling of the fruits can cause skin irritation.

Synonyms

Alternative scientific names that have been used for this plant.

Scientific Name: Sapindus drummondii

Full Citation: Sapindus drummondii Hook.

Quick Facts
Plant Type
Tree
Family
Sapindaceae - Soapberry Family
Height
To 40 feet
Origin
Native
Last Updated
2019-08-11
Flowering Period
Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec

Blooms: May, June, July