Aspidostemon percoriaceum
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.5186799 |
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https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03AE87F6-5D49-FFD8-16DF-7289FCBEFDF4 |
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Carolina |
scientific name |
Aspidostemon percoriaceum |
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23. Aspidostemon percoriaceum View in CoL
(Kosterm.) Rohwer ( Fig. 14C View FIG )
Botanische Jahrbücher für Systematik, Pflanzengeschichte und Pflanzengeographie 109: 75 (1987) GoogleMaps . — Cryptocarya percoriacea Kosterm. , Bulletin du Jardin botanique de l’État 27: 182 (1957). — Type: Madagascar, Antetezana GoogleMaps , Foulpointe, [17°47’S, 49°29’E], 21.VI.1950, fr., Service Forestier 1983 (holo-, P; iso-, MO, P).
DESCRIPTION
Tree of unknown size. Twigs terete, glabrous, lenticellate; terminal buds glabrous. Leaves opposite, 7-13 × 2.5-5 cm, elliptic to broadly elliptic, glabrous, coriaceous or firmly chartaceous, the base acute, apex bluntly acuminate, acumen c. 5 mm long, margin flat, the upper surface more or less shiny, reticulation immersed, lower surface with weakly raised reticulation; lateral veins c. 10; petioles 7- 10 mm long, canaliculate. Inflorescences and flowers not known. Old floral remains with short, broad tepals, much shorter than long; stamens 6, much wider than long, locelli apical, large; staminodia III with a large, flattened tip, these fused into a shield; stamens and staminodia papillose. Infructescences 5 mm long, glabrous. Fruits narrowly ellipsoid, 20 × 8 mm, smooth, crowned with floral remnants.
REMARKS
Aspidostemon percoriaceum is best recognized by its rather broad leaves with a blunt acumen. Nearly all mature leaves are at least 4 cm wide. In most species of Aspidostemon the tip of the fruit with the floral remnants is much smaller in diameter than the fruit itself, but in A. percoriaceum the tip of the fruit is c. 5 mm in diameter, not much smaller than the fruit itself. Kostermans (1957) cited a second collection, Service Forestier 10934, under A. percoriaceum . This specimen has densely pubescent terminal buds and belongs to a different species. The only known collection is from the E coast ( Fig. 15 View FIG ). Vernacular names and altitudnal distribution have not been recorded.
PHENOLOGY
Fruits: June.
No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.
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