Scientific Classification
- Kingdom: Plantae
- Clade: Angiosperms → Monocots → Asparagales
- Family: Orchidaceae
- Genus: Vanilla
- Species: Vanilla planifolia
Common Names
- Bourbon vanilla
- Madagascar vanilla
- Mexican vanilla
- Flat-leaved vanilla
Botanical Description
- Growth form: A tropical climbing vine (liana) that can reach 10–30 m in height in natural habitats.
- Leaves: Thick, fleshy, dark green, oblong, and alternate.
- Stems: Succulent and aerial, capable of twining around supports.
- Roots: Aerial roots that absorb moisture and nutrients from the air.
Flowers
- Appearance: Greenish-yellow, fragrant, about 5–6 cm across.
- Pollination: Self-pollination is rare; natural pollinators include certain bees (e.g., Melipona in Mexico). In most commercial plantations, hand pollination is performed.
- Flowering season: Usually occurs 3–4 years after planting; individual flowers last 1 day, requiring timely pollination.
Fruit
- Type: Pod (commonly called “vanilla bean”).
- Size: 15–20 cm long, green when unripe.
- Maturation: 8–9 months after pollination; harvested when fully developed.
- Processing: Requires curing, drying, and fermentation to develop the characteristic vanilla flavor and aroma.
Cultivation
- Climate: Tropical, warm, humid, ideally 21–32°C with 80% humidity.
- Light: Partial shade, often grown under shade trees.
- Soil: Well-drained, rich, loamy soils; pH 6–7.
- Propagation: Mainly via stem cuttings; tissue culture is possible but less common commercially.
- Support: Needs trellis, tree, or stake to climb.
Economic Importance
- Primary use: Flavoring in foods, beverages, and cosmetics.
- By-products: Vanilla extract, oleoresins, perfumes.
- Global production: Madagascar, Indonesia, Mexico, Tahiti.
Health & Medicinal Uses
- Antioxidant properties
- Mild anti-inflammatory effects
- Aromatherapy for stress relief
Interesting Facts
- Vanilla planifolia is the only commercially significant source of natural vanillin.
- Hand-pollination was invented in 1841 in Réunion and Madagascar, enabling large-scale production.
- It is the second-most expensive spice in the world after saffron due to labor-intensive cultivation.
If you want, I can also create a farmer-friendly cultivation and production guide for Vanilla planifolia specifically tailored for tropical plantations, including planting, support structures, pollination, and curing methods.
Do you want me to prepare that?