During recent years the use of cocoa has increased rapidly in some countries. The following table gives the increase per cent in consumption in 1905 over that in 1901 for the five chief consumers:—
Per cent. | |
United States | 70 |
Germany | 61 |
France | 21 |
United Kingdom | 11 |
Holland | 34 |
COCO DE MER, Double Coco-nut, a palm, Lodoicea Sechellarum, which is a native of the Seychelles Islands. The flowers are borne in enormous fleshy spadices, the male and
female on distinct plants. The fruits, which are among the
largest known, take ten years to ripen; they have a fleshy and
fibrous envelope surrounding a hard nut-like portion which is
generally two-lobed, suggesting a large double coco-nut. The
contents of the nut are edible as in the coco-nut. The empty
fruits (after germination of the seed) are found floating in the
Indian Ocean, and were known long before the palm was
discovered, giving rise to various stories as to their origin.
COCOMA, or Cucamas, a tribe of South American Indians
living on the Marañon and lower Huallaga rivers, Peru. In 1681,
at the time of the Jesuit missionaries’ first visit, they had the
custom of eating their dead and grinding the bones to a powder,
which was mixed with a fermented liquor and drunk. When expostulated
with by the Jesuits they said “it was better to be
inside a friend than to be swallowed up by the cold earth.”
They are a provident, hard-working people, partly Christianized,
and bolder than most of the civilized Indians. Their languages
show affinity to the Tupi-Guarani stock.
COCO-NUT[1] PALM (Cocos nucifera), a very beautiful and lofty
palm-tree, growing to a height of from 60 to 100 ft., with a
cylindrical stem which attains a thickness of 2 ft. The tree
terminates in a crown of graceful waving pinnate leaves. The
leaf, which may attain to 20 ft. in length, consists of a strong
mid-rib, whence numerous long acute leaflets spring, giving the
whole the appearance of a gigantic feather. The flowers are
arranged in branching spikes 5 or 6 ft. long, enclosed in a tough
spathe, and the fruits mature in bunches of from 10 to 20. The
fruits when mature are oblong, and triangular in cross section,
measuring from 12 to 18 in. in length and 6 to 8 in. in diameter.
The fruit consists of a thick external husk or rind of a fibrous
structure, within which is the ordinary coco-nut of commerce.
The nut has a very hard, woody shell, enclosing the nucleus or
kernel, the true seed, within which again is a milky liquid called
coco-nut milk. The palm is so widely disseminated throughout
tropical countries that it is impossible to distinguish its original
habitat. It flourishes with equal vigour on the coast of the
East Indies, throughout the tropical islands of the Pacific, and in
the West Indies and tropical America. It, however, attains its
greatest luxuriance and vigour on the sea shore, and it is most
at home in the innumerable small islands of the Pacific seas,
of the vegetation of which it is eminently characteristic. Its
wide distribution, and its existence in even the smallest coral
islets of the Pacific, are due to the character of the fruit, which is
eminently adapted for distribution by sea. The fibrous husk
renders the fruit light and the leathery skin prevents water-logging.
The seed will germinate readily on the sea-shore, the
seedling growing out through the soft germ-pore on the upper
end of the hard nut. The fruits dropping into the sea from trees
growing on any shores would be carried by tides and currents
to be cast up and to vegetate on distant coasts.
The coco-nut palm, being the most useful of its entire tribe to the natives of the regions in which it grows, and furnishing many valuable and important commercial products, is the subject of careful cultivation in many countries. On the Malabar and Coromandel coasts of India the trees grow in vast numbers; and in Ceylon, which is peculiarly well suited for their cultivation, it is estimated that twenty millions of the trees flourish. The wealth of a native in Ceylon is estimated by his property in coco-nut trees, and Sir J. Emerson Tennent noted a law case in a district court in which the subject in dispute was a claim to the 2520th part of ten of the precious palms. The cultivation of coco-nut plantations in Ceylon was thus described by Sir J. E. Tennent. “The first operation in coco-nut planting is the formation of a nursery, for which purpose the ripe nuts are placed in squares containing about 400 each; these are covered an inch deep with sand and seaweed or soft mud from the beach, and watered daily till they germinate. The nuts put down in April are sufficiently grown to be planted out before the rains of September, and they are then set out in holes 3 ft. deep and 20 to 30 ft. apart.... Before putting in the young plant it is customary to bed the roots with soft mud and seaweed, and for the first two years they must be watered and protected from the glare of the sun under shades made of the plaited fronds of the coco-nut palm, or the fan-like leaves of the palmyra.” The palm begins to bear fruit from the fifth to the seventh year of its age, each stock carrying from 5 to 30 nuts, the tree maturing on an average 60 nuts yearly.
The uses to which the various parts of the coco-nut palm are applied in the regions of their growth are almost endless. The nuts supply no inconsiderable proportion of the food of the natives, and the milky juice enclosed within them forms a pleasant and refreshing drink. The juice drawn from the unexpanded flower spathes forms “toddy,” which may be boiled down to sugar, or it is allowed to ferment and is distilled, when it yields a spirit which, in common with a like product from other sources, is known as “arrack.” As in other palms, the young bud cut out of the top of the tree forms an esculent vegetable, “palm cabbage.” The trunk yields a timber (known in European commerce as porcupine wood) which is used for building, furniture, firewood, &c.; the leaves are plaited into cajan fans and baskets, and used for thatching the roofs of houses; the shell of the nut is employed as a water-vessel; and the external husk or rind yields the coir fibre, with which are fabricated ropes, cordage, brushes, &c. The coco-nut palm also furnishes very important articles of external commerce, of which the principal is coco-nut oil. It is obtained by pressure or boiling from the kernels, which are first broken up into small pieces and dried in the sun, when they are known as copperah or copra. It is estimated that 1000 full-sized nuts will yield upwards of 500 ℔. of copra, from which 25 gallons of oil should be obtained. The oil is a white solid substance at ordinary temperatures, with a peculiar, rather disagreeable odour, from the volatile fatty acids it contains, and a mild taste. Under pressure it separates into a liquid and a solid portion, the latter, coco-stearin, being extensively used in the manufacture of candles. Coco-nut oil is also used in the manufacture of marine soap, which forms a lather with sea-water. Coir is also an important article of commerce, being in large demand for the manufacture of coarse brushes, door mats and woven coir-matting for lobbies and passages. A considerable quantity of fresh nuts is imported, chiefly from the West Indies, into Britain and other countries; they are familiar as the reward of the popular English amusement of “throwing at the coco-nuts”; and the contents are either eaten raw or used as material for cakes, &c., or sweetmeats (“coker-nut”).
COCYTUS (mod. Vuvo), a tributary of the Acheron, a river of Thesprotia (mod. pashalik of Iannina), which flows into the Ionian Sea about 20 m. N. of the Gulf of Arta. The name is also applied in Greek mythology to a tributary of the Acheron or of the Styx, a river in Hades. The etymology suggested is from