Ischnosiphon arouma (Aubl.) Körn.

  • Filed As

    Marantaceae
    Ischnosiphon arouma (Aubl.) Körn.

  • Collector(s)

    W. L. Balée 825 with B. G. Ribeiro, 15 Feb 1985

  • Location

    Brazil. Maranhão. Monçao Mun. Basin of the Rio Turiaçu; Ka'apor Indian Reserve; within 7km of the settlement of Urutawy.

  • Habitat

    Moist terra firme forest.

  • Description

    Forest herb. Phenology of specimen: Fertile.

  • Identifiers

    NY Barcode: 194394

    Occurrence ID: a87c2f99-0051-445b-b44c-0422b2ed3e74

  • Feedback

    Send comments on this specimen record

  • Kingdom

    Plantae

  • Division

    Magnoliophyta

  • Order

    Zingiberales

  • Family

    Marantaceae

  • All Determinations

    Ischnosiphon arouma (Aubl.) Körn. det B. L. Andersson, 1992
    Note: Was "Ischnosiphon obliquum" [name not found]

  • Region

    South America

  • Country

    Brazil

  • State/Province

    Maranhão

  • County/Municipio

    Monçao Mun.

  • Locality

    Basin of the Rio Turiaçu; Ka'apor Indian Reserve; within 7km of the settlement of Urutawy.

  • Coordinates

    -3.16603, -45.9381

  • Coordinate Uncertainty (m)

    24337

  • Georeferencing Method

    Georeferencing Quick Reference Guide, Version 2012. Located Urutawy, 19km E of Post Guajá within Alto Turiaçu Reserve (Forline, 1997). Linear extent roughly found as halved dist. betwn coordinates + Ze Doca (nearby villages difficult to find). Offset info (7km) entered into MaNIS Georef Calc to find uncert

  • Geodetic Datum

    WGS84

  • Distribution

    Map all specimens of this taxon

No. 825	Marantaceae
REPORT ANY REIDENTIFICATION OF THIS VOUCHER	iscnhosiphon obiiquun- Oroun^c^lA uio\) Koefr\
TO THE INSTITUTE OF ECONOMIC BOI ANY, NY	- deh A-
\	Municipio de Mongao: Basin of the Rio Turiagu;
Ka'apor Indian Reserve; within 7 km of the
settlement of Urutawy.
Moist terra firme forest
Habit: forest herb
Inventory voucher #CG36 (Fertile)
Use: leaf used for making manioc sleeve press
n.v.: waruma te
W.L. Balée & B.6. Ribeiro	15 Feb. 1985
Field work supported by Edward John Noble Foundation