1. 19/07/1996 Information about using Chaya to feed pigs.
  2. 01/01/2014 Que feriez-vous si une catastrophe frappait la communauté dans laquelle vous travaillez? Quelles mesures pouvez-vous prendre si une telle situation se produit? Et quelles mesures peut-on prendre à l’avance pour réduire au minimum les dommages causés par un événement catastrophique majeur comme le...
  3. 28/02/2017 K[] est une commune rurale située à l’ouest du Burkina. Il ya de cela dix ans, un missionnaire américain avait introduit la Chaya qui est devenue un légume-feuille bien connu et bien consommé des paysans de K[]. Nous avons été surpris de savoir que les habitants ont fait des feuilles de chaya une...
  4. 20/01/2003 Chaya is considered to be one of the five most important food plants ECHO distributes.It achieves this rank because of its ability to thrive in both arid and rainy regions, its little need for care or extra fertility, its lack of insect or disease pests, and its exceptional nutritional value.”
  5. 20/01/2003 Chaya is sometimes dubbed "the spinach tree." It is a fast growing drought and disease-resistant shrub that provides large quantities of edible, very nutritious leaves.
  6. 20/01/2003 In EDN Issue 72, we asked readers how chaya grows in various climates; whether or not it is accepted locally as a green vegetable; and if so, how it is usually prepared and served. Thank you to those of you who responded!We received reports from many different countries. Chaya has been found to...
  7. 20/07/2003 In response to the articles on leaf protein concentrate and on chaya in EDN Issue 78, a reader asked whether or not leaf protein concentrate (LPC) could safely be made from chaya.
  8. Miracles in Action has brochures about chaya available in English and Spanish. A collection of recipes for chaya, in Spanish, is also available for download: Chaya Folleto – Español Chaya brochure – English Recetas con Chaya Miracles in Action seeks out under-served pockets of need in rural...
  9. 19/06/1995 Dave Morneauin the Central Plateau of Haiti asked us about the Haitian beekeepers’ belief that neem(Azadirachta indica) or chinaberry (Melia azedarach) blossom nectar is harmful to honeybees, since leaves and seeds are widely used to control insects. Joy Niland, Food Gardens Foundation, South...
  10. 17/07/2017 Les feuilles de cultures tropicales comme le chaya (Cnidoscolus aconitifolius) et le manioc (Manihot esculenta) contiennent des glycosides cyanogénétiques, des substances toxiques qui libèrent de l'acide cyanhydrique (HCN, également appelé cyanure ou acide prussique) lorsque les cellules sont...