Arrabidaea chica var. angustifolia Bureau & K.Schum.
Arrabidaea chica var. cuprea Bureau & K.Schum.
Arrabidaea chica f. cuprea (Cham.) Sandwith
Arrabidaea chica var. thyrsoidea (DC.) Bureau
Arrabidaea cuprea Pittier
Arrabidaea cuprea (Cham.) Bornm.
Arrabidaea larensis Pittier
Arrabidaea rosea DC.
Bignonia chica Bonpl.
Bignonia cuprea Cham.
Bignonia cuprea var. grandiflora Cham.
Bignonia cuprea var. parviflora Cham.
Bignonia rosea DC.
Bignonia rubescens S.Moore
Bignonia rufescens DC.
Bignonia thyrsoidea DC.
Bignonia triphylla Willd. ex DC.
Lundia chica (Bonpl.) Seem.
Temnocydia carajura Mart. ex DC.
Vasconcellia acutifolia Mart. ex DC.
Fridericia chica, the cricket-vine, puca panga, chica, carayurú (Spanish), carajuru or crajiru (Portuguese), is a medicinal plant in the family Bignoniaceae, also used for cosmetics. An orange-red dye called chica, crajiru or carayurú is obtained from boiling the leaves.[2] It is used by some native South American peoples to stain the skin.[3]
A Mura chief with his face painted with the chica dye
Fridericiachica, the cricket-vine, puca panga, chica, carayurú (Spanish), carajuru or crajiru (Portuguese), is a medicinal plant in the family Bignoniaceae...
subdistrict Fridericiachica, also called chica, a plant the title character of The Chica Show, an American animated television series Chica, an animatronic...
leaves and stems are used to enervate bees while gathering honey. Fridericiachica is the source of a red pigment used in the Amazon Basin for body paint...