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・ Cyclophoridae
・ Cyclophoroidea
・ Cyclophorus
・ Cyclophorus (gastropod)
・ Cyclophorus fulguratus
・ Cyclophorus horridulum
・ Cyclophosphamide
・ Cyclophragma
・ Cyclophragma centralistrigata
・ Cyclophyllidea
・ Cyclophyllum
・ Cyclophyllum coprosmoides
・ Cyclophyllum longipetalum
・ Cyclopia
・ Cyclopia (disambiguation)
Cyclopia (plant)
・ Cyclopia intermedia
・ Cyclopiazonic acid
・ Cyclopidae
・ Cyclopides
・ Cyclopis
・ Cycloplane C-1
・ Cycloplegia
・ Cyclopogon
・ Cyclopogon cranichoides
・ Cyclopogon elatus
・ Cyclopogon elegans
・ Cyclopoida
・ Cycloponympha
・ Cycloponympha hermione


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Cyclopia (plant) : ウィキペディア英語版
Cyclopia (plant)

''Cyclopia'', better known by the common name Honeybush, or Heuningbos in Afrikaans, is a genus of some 20 species of flowering plants in the legume family, Fabaceae, of the subfamily Faboideae. The description was published by Étienne Pierre Ventenat in 1808. The name ''Ibbetsonia'', published two years later, is regarded as a synonym of this genus;〔 John Sims had commemorated the physiologist Agnes Ibbetson with this name.
==Cultivation and Use==
The leaves of honeybush are commonly used to make herbal teas. It grows only in small areas in the southwest and southeast of South Africa and has many similarities with rooibos.
Honeybush is so named because the flowers smell of honey. The taste of honeybush tea is similar to that of rooibos but a little sweeter. In some rural districts it used to be common practice to keep a kettle of honeybush tea infusing on the stove ready for drinking while scenting the whole house — unlike tea prepared from ''Camellia sinensis'', the product does not turn bitter with long-term simmering.
There are dozens of species of honeybush tea found in the wild, of which mainly 4 or 5 are in widespread home or commercial use. These are:〔(【引用サイトリンク】 Agri-Probe )
* ''Cyclopia intermedia'', known as 'bergtee' (mountain tea), found between Port Elizabeth and the edge of the Langkloof
* ''Cyclopia genistoides'', known as 'kustee' (coastal tea), found mostly in the Western Cape near Yzerfontein and Darling and also thriving in the South Cape if cultivated
* ''Cyclopia maculata'', grown in the Outeniqua area near George
* ''Cyclopia sessiliflora'', known as 'Heidelberg-tee', named after the town Heidelberg in South Africa, where it grows in the local mountain range
* ''Cyclopia subternata'', known as 'vleitee' (marshland tea) or 'valleitee' (valley tea)
Some species can be cultivated whereas others have resisted all attempts at cultivation and must be harvested in the wild. It is not always easy to discover what the seeds need to enable them to germinate; some kinds bear elaiosomes and might be dependent on the services of particular ants or birds. ''Cyclopia intermedia'' (mountain tea) is one of the teas that is harvested in the Kouga mountains where it grows naturally. Mountain tea regenerates within three years after harvesting or devastation by fire; consequently less than one third of the mountain yield is available for harvesting each year by rotation.〔()〕
Mountain tea and valley tea flower in September/October whereas coastal tea flowers in May/June.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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