Many important plant species in Kahuzi-Biega National Park and surrounding areas in the Albertine Rift, Kivu Region, Democratic Republic of Congo, are threatened with extinction. Some of these plants are harvested and their oil extracted and used as medicines or as food.
Most of theses plants have not been evaluated to determine their oil content and its characteristics.
Researcher Kazadi Mizanga – working for the Laboratory of Phytochemistry of the Natural Resources Research Centre (CRSN/LWIRO) – conducted a study to determine the oil content and its characteristics for selected 11 wild plants species in Kivu Region, D.R. Congo.
The species in this study were Carapa or African crabwood (Carapa grandiflora), Tallicoonah oil tree (Carapa procera), Balloon plant (Cardiospermum halicacabum), Umbrella tree (Maesopsis eminii), Millettia dura, Millettia (Myrianthus arboreus), Myrianthus holstii, African Oil Bean (Pentaclethra macrophylla), East African yellow wood (Podocarpus usambarensis), Fish bean (Tephrosia vogelii) and African breadfruit (Treculia Africana). The identification and quantification of the fatty acids were undertaken using Gas Chromatography.
The seed oil content of these 11 species ranged from 17.2 to 64.4%. The highest oil content was obtained from P. usambarensis and the lowest from T. vogelii. Twenty four fatty acids were found and 18 of these were identified including α-linolenic acid, linoleic acid, oleic acid, stearic acid and palmitic acid. There were also remarkable occurrences of long chain fatty acids particularly lignoceric acid (9.8% in P. macrophylla oil) and behenic acid (7.3% in M. dura oil, 6.3% in P. macrophylla oil and 5.8% in T. vogelii oil).
The plant seed oil contents reported in this study are high compared to some food crops such as soybean and olive seed. The oils of the plants studied here have potential for use in food especially M. eminii, P. usambarensis and T. vogelii oils because of their essential fatty acids content; M. arboreus and M. holstii oils due to their high linoleic acid content; M. eminii oil because it has fatty acid with similarities with to that of groundnut oil and C. procera oil which was found to be more stable as deep frying oil. Some of the oils from the studied wild plants showed good promise in use in the cosmetic industry and particularly most promising are C. grandiflora, C. procera, M. arboreus, M. holstii and P. usambarensis seed oil due to their fatty acids profile and high unsaponifiable matter content.
These plant oils may also have good application as biofuels and the most promising are those of high density and relative low melting point as T. vogelii, T. africana, M. arboreus, M. holstii, C. grandiflora, M. dura and C. procera. P. macrophylla, P. usambarensis, M. dura and T. vogelii seed oils may be sources for long chain fatty acids which have important chemotaxonomic significance.
Kazadi Mizanga’s personal mission is to conserve plants species by highlighting new sustainable ways of exploitation of these species of these species by documenting and validating their uses.
Kazadi Minzangi
Study of oil from wild plants of Kivu, DR Congo
Oil content and physicochemical characteristics of oils from wild plants of Kivu region, Democratic Republic of Congo
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