Red Pineapple

Ananas comosus var. bracteatus (Lindl.) Coppens & F.Leal

Bromeliaceae

Location in our garden

Principal

Synonym

Ananas bracteatus (Lindl.) Schult. & Schult.f.

Ananas bracteatus var. albus L.B.Sm.

Ananas bracteatus var. rudis Bertoni

Habitus

Herbaceous. Short lived perennial terrestrial plant that grows up to about 90 cm

Part Used

  • Leaves
  • Fruit

Growing Requirements

  • Full Sunshine
  • Drought Resistant

Habitat

  • Terrestrial

Overview

It is native to Northeast Argentina, Bolivia, Northeast Brazil, Southern Brazil, Southeast Brazil, Colombia, Ecuador, Paraguay. This plant is one of the most unique and exotic house plants in the world because of its color. The fruit is edible.

Vernacular Names

Red pineapple, Wild pineapple (English), Ananas marron, Ananas requin, Ananas sauvage (French), Rote ananas, Zierananas (German), Pinyang pula (Tagalog-Phillipine), Pseudo-ananás, Abacaxi-ornamental, Abacaxi-vermelho, Ananás-ornamental, Ananás-vermelho, Gravatá-de-cerca, Gravatá-de-rede (Portuguese), Piña de playon, Ananas do mato, Ananas de cerca, Ananas bravo, Caraguatá (Spanish).

Agroecology

The plant grows in deciduous or semi-deciduous tropical forests up to 500 m asl with full sun and dry soils/drought. This variety will lose its red coloration and become only green and white/cream under too much shade.

Morphology

  • Fruit - a small to medium, syncarp (leafy-topped, compound pineapple fruit), formed by the fusion of the ripe ovaries with the base of the sepals and the bracts and with the bark of the floral axis; the skin is tough and waxy, brownish pink to scarlet in colour; the flesh is pink-yellow in colour; the ripe fruit is more or less palatable (depending on clones), but it is smaller (less than one kilo), usually full of seeds, fibrous, lacking in juice and less fleshy than commercial pineapples, but very attractive.
  • Inflorescence - the floral scape is up to about 50 cm long, robust and straight, develops at the center of the rosette and ends with an inflorescence formed by showy, spiny, imbricate bracts, with serrate, pink or bright red margins, which surround the small violet-purple or reddish pink flowers and with, on the top, a thick coma (tuft of leaves); this plant is monocarpic and will bear one flower stalk at a time though there may be 2 or 3 heads.
  • Leaves - many, evergreen, arching, arranged in a spiral in a spreading rosette, simple, ribbon-like, long-attenuate, acuminate, pungent, up to 1,5 (or more) cm long and not over 40 mm wide above the dilated base, coriaceous, fibrous, solid dark green with a red hue with subdensely serrate margins with sharp spines that curve up toward the leaf tips.
  • Stem - almost acaulescent or with a very short, trunk-like stem a the base of the rosette.

Cultivation

It can be cultivated by a sucker in open air in the tropical and humid subtropical climate countries, with temperatures which it is good to keep over the 14 °C, best 20-24 °C.

Chemical Constituents

Bromelain, a proteolytic enzyme, cholestanodiol, stigmasterol, sitosterol, 2-glyceryl ester of p-coumaric acid, a new compound 2-glyceryl ester of ferulic acid.

Traditional Medicinal Uses

  • In the Phillipines, root decoction is used for diarrhea.
  • In the Indian Ocean, Caribbean, and South America, decoction of leaves is considered abortive.
  • Studies have suggested antioxidant and anti-inflammatory properties.

Part Used

Reference Sources

  1. Flora & Fauna Web. 2021. Ananas bracteatus 'Striatus'. https://www.nparks.gov.sg/florafaunaweb/flora/1/6/1662. 26 October 2021.
  2. Phillipine Alternative Medicine. 2021. Pinyang pula. http://www.stuartxchange.org/RedPineapple. 26 October 2021.
  3. Plant of the World Online. 2021. Ananas comosus var. bracteatus (Lindl.) Coppens & F.Leal. http://www.plantsoftheworldonline.org/taxon/urn:lsid:ipni.org:names:20010453-1. 26 October 2021.
  4. The Encyclopedia of Bromeliads. 2021. Ananas comosus var. bracteatus (Lindl.) Coppens & F.Leal. http://www.llifle.com/Encyclopedia/BROMELIADS/Family/Bromeliaceae/23911/Ananas_comosus_var._bracteatus. 26 October 2021.