C. L. Lundell

Creator(s):
  • Field Museum of Natural History - Botany Department
  • Field Museum of Natural History - Botany Department
Creator role(s):
  • Creator
  • Creator
  • Cucurbita lundelliana L. H. Bailey, Guatemala, C. L. Lundell 18287, F
    Creator: Field Museum of Natural History - Botany Department
    Creator: NEIU Team
    (c) Field Museum of Natural History - CC BY-NC 4.0
    Description: Cucurbita lundelliana L. H. Bailey, Guatemala, C. L. Lundell 18287, F
  • Cucurbita lundelliana L. H. Bailey, Guatemala, C. L. Lundell 18287, F
    Creator: Field Museum of Natural History - Botany Department
    Creator: NEIU Team
    (c) Field Museum of Natural History - CC BY-NC 4.0
    Description: Cucurbita lundelliana L. H. Bailey, Guatemala, C. L. Lundell 18287, F
Current Determination: Cucurbita lundelliana L. H. Bailey
Family: Cucurbitaceae
Habitat/Microhabitat: along lakeshore

Collector(s): C. L. Lundell
Collection Date: 15 July 1975
Description: Uses: Fruto comestible; ayote de caballo y forraje para pájaros (Arellano et al. 2003:170). Bitter fruit disputed, applied to cutaneous infection, for lice and sarna (Atran 1993:Table 1). Miscellaneous products (Balick et al. 2000:75). Common names: Peten gourd, Madre de Calabaza (voucher). Bulut (Anderson et al. 2003:303). Burut, xburut, calabacitas silvestres, calabaza, calabacilla de monte (Arellano et al. 2003:170). Peten gourd, xburut', ixb'ulut', b'ulut' (Atran 1993:Table 1). Bitter pumpkin, wild pumpkin (Balick et al. 2000:75). Bitter pumpkin, wild pumpkin (Balick et al. 2000:75).
Catalog Subset: Economic Botany
Catalog Project: Mesoamerican Ethnobotany
EMu IRN: 2114860
OccurenceID: 47258569-ffdd-463b-883b-8a28ef78976e

Disclaimer: The Field Museum's online Botanical Collections Database may contain specimens and historical records that are culturally sensitive. Some records may also include offensive language. These records do not reflect the Field Museum’s current viewpoint but rather the social attitudes and circumstances of the time period when specimens were collected or cataloged.

We welcome feedback. The web database is not a complete record of the Museum’s botanical holdings, and documentation for specimens will vary due to when and how they were collected as well as how recently they were acquired. While efforts are made to ensure the accuracy of the information available on this website, some content may contain errors. We work with communities and stakeholders around the world to interpret the collections in order to promote a greater understanding of global heritage and, through consultation, will revise or remove information that is inaccurate or inappropriate.  We encourage and welcome members of communities, scholars, and others to contact us to confirm or clarify data found here.