Solanaceae

Capsicum frutescens

L., 1753

Tabasco / Pili-pili

LC

Description

A semi-wild species with small, upward-pointing fruits, rarely exceeding 100 000 SHU. The Tabasco pepper (30 000–50 000 SHU), used since 1868 in the eponymous sauce by McIlhenny Co., is the most famous cultivar. Piri piri / pili-pili (40 000–175 000 SHU) is widely used in African, Portuguese, and Mozambican cuisines. The species naturalized throughout tropical Africa and Asia.

C. frutescens and C. chinense are closely related sister taxa; intermediate forms and natural hybrids exist. The species was traditionally classified together with C. annuum before molecular studies confirmed its distinct status.

Phylogénie

Famille

Solanaceae

Auteur

L.

Décrite en

1753

Habitat & Distribution

Loading map…

5 occurrences naturelles cartographiées

1
Tabasco state — Avery Island breeding · MexicoNorth America

Altitude

0–100m

Climat

Tropical humid

Sol

Alluvial clay

Coordonnées

18.000, -93.000

2
Coastal Mozambique — piri piri · MozambiqueAfrica

Altitude

0–200m

Climat

Tropical savanna

Coordonnées

-19.000, 35.000

3
Central Uganda — pili-pili · UgandaAfrica

Altitude

900–1500m

Coordonnées

0.300, 32.600

4
Luzon — Siling labuyo · PhilippinesAsia

Altitude

0–500m

Climat

Tropical monsoon

Coordonnées

14.800, 121.000

5
Bahia — Malagueta production · BrazilSouth America

Altitude

0–500m

Coordonnées

-12.900, -38.500

Conservation

Statut IUCN

LC
Communauté

Aucun cultivateur encore

Sois le premier à ajouter cette espèce à ta collection !