Archidendropsis I.C. Nielsen, Fl. Nouv.- Caledon . Depend . 12: 66. 1983.
publication ID |
https://dx.doi.org/10.3897/phytokeys.240.101716 |
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https://treatment.plazi.org/id/0F37B487-B2F3-0FA8-5DA5-685B75617517 |
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scientific name |
Archidendropsis I.C. Nielsen, Fl. Nouv.- Caledon . Depend . 12: 66. 1983. |
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Archidendropsis I.C. Nielsen, Fl. Nouv.- Caledon. Depend. 12: 66. 1983. View in CoL
Figs 227 View Figure 227 , 228 View Figure 228 , 232 View Figure 232
Albizia sect. Spiciflorae Benth., London J. Bot. 3: 85. 1844. Type: Albizia fulgens (Labill.) Benth. [≡ Acacia fulgens Labill. (≡ Archidendropsis fulgens (Labill.) I.C. Nielsen)]
Albizia sect. Spiciflorae Benth. ser. Platyspermae Benth., Trans. Linn. Soc., London 30: 558. 1875. Type not designated.
Type.
Archidendropsis fulgens (Labill.) I.C. Nielsen [≡ Acacia fulgens Labill.]
Description.
Unarmed trees or shrubs. Stipules small ovate or filiform and often caducous, or large auriculate, orbicular, or cordate and persistent, never thorny. Leaves bipinnate, pinnae 1-14 pairs; leaflets 1-25 pairs per pinna, opposite or alternate; extrafloral nectaries circular, elliptic or obtriangular, on leaf rachis and sometimes also on the pinnae. Inflorescences in axillary or terminal spikes, spiciform racemes, racemes or in one species [ A. fournieri (Vieill.) I.C. Nielsen] capitate, but when capitate the calyx and corolla are glabrous. Flowers uniform, bisexual, 4- or 5-merous, red, white, green, yellow or pink, usually subtended by very small tetrameric or pentameric bracts; calyx gamosepalous, cupular to campanulate; corolla gamopetalous, funnel shaped; stamens numerous, filaments united into a tube at the base; pollen in 16 or 32-celled polyads, tectum with non-isometric channels; ovaries mostly one, several in A. oblonga (Hemsl.) I.C. Nielsen. Fruits usually flat and dehiscent along both sutures, not partitioned inside and endocarp not separating from the exocarp. Seeds flattened or swollen, narrowly winged when flattened, thin-walled and lacking a pleurogram.
Chromosome number.
Unknown.
Included species and geographic distribution.
Eleven species from New Caledonia, New Britain, the Solomon Islands and on the island of New Guinea (Fig. 232 View Figure 232 ).
Ecology.
Most species with a restricted area of distribution, found in rainforests, gallery forest, wooded ravines, or mesophyllous forest.
Etymology.
From the generic name Archidendron with the Latin suffix -opsis, referring to the similarity to that genus.
Human uses.
Unknown.
Notes.
Archidendropsis was published as "Gen. B" by Nielsen (1981b). The genus is now restricted to the former Archidendropsis subg. Archidendropsis after the erection of Heliodendron by Brown et al. (2022). Further sampling of species of Archidendropsis in phylogenetic studies would be beneficial, particularly to ascertain the relationships of the capitulate-flowered A. fournieri and the non-New Caledonian representatives of Archidendropsis .
Taxonomic references.
Cowan (1998); Nielsen (1983); Nielsen et al. (1983b).
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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Caesalpinioideae |
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Archidendron |