Guardian Nature School Team Contact Blog Project Noah Facebook Project Noah Twitter

A worldwide community photographing and learning about wildlife

Join Project Noah!
nature school apple icon

Project Noah Nature School visit nature school

Noni (from flower to ripe fruit)

Morinda citrifolia

Description:

The plant bears flowers and fruits all year round. The fruit is a multiple fruit that has a pungent odour when ripening, and is hence also known as cheese fruit or even vomit fruit. It is oval in shape and reaches 4–7 centimetres (1.6–2.8 in) size. At first green, the fruit turns yellow then almost white as it ripens. It contains many seeds.

Habitat:

grows in shady forests as well as on open rocky or sandy shores. It is tolerant of saline soils, drought conditions, and secondary soils. It is therefore found in a wide variety of habitats: volcanic terrains, lava-strewn coasts, and clearings or limestone outcrops.

Notes:

Morinda citrifolia, commonly known as great morinda, Indian mulberry, nunaakai (Tamil Nadu, India) , dog dumpling (Barbados), mengkudu (Indonesia and Malaysia), Kumudu (Balinese), pace (Javanese), beach mulberry, cheese fruit or noni (from Hawaiian) is a tree in the coffee family, Rubiaceae. Morinda citrifolia's native range extends through Southeast Asia and Australasia, and the species is now cultivated throughout the tropics and widely naturalised. Despite its strong smell and bitter taste, the fruit is nevertheless eaten as a famine food and, in some Pacific islands, even a staple food, either raw or cooked. Southeast Asians and Australian Aborigines consume the fruit raw with salt or cook it with curry. The seeds are edible when roasted.

Species ID Suggestions



Sign in to suggest organism ID

5 Comments

"Beautifully taken! Ants like its taste very much!"

Wild Things
Wild Things 12 years ago

Thanks for the information

MediyansyahTaharani
MediyansyahTaharani 12 years ago

thank you :)

elapj
elapj 12 years ago

So this is the Noni fruit where the Noni juice is from, right? Interesting! I've never seen one before. You have a great series of pictures there. Thanks for sharing!

alicelongmartin
alicelongmartin 12 years ago

Excellent picture series and excellent information.

Malang, Jawa Timur, Indonesia

Spotted on Jul 1, 2011
Submitted on Jul 1, 2011

Related Spottings

Great morinda [S] Mengkudu, Noni Noni Great Morinda

Nearby Spottings

Spotting Damselfly Damselfly Hepialidae

Reference

Noah Guardians
Noah Sponsors
join Project Noah Team

Join the Project Noah Team