Taxon Details: Lecythis schomburgkii O.Berg
Taxon Profile:
Family:
Lecythidaceae (Magnoliophyta)
Lecythidaceae (Magnoliophyta)
Scientific Name:
Lecythis schomburgkii O.Berg
Lecythis schomburgkii O.Berg
Accepted Name:
This name is currently accepted.
This name is currently accepted.
Description:
Author: S. A. Mori
Type: Guyana. Without locality, 1868 (fl), Rich. Schomburgk 792 (lectotype, BM, designated Fl. Neotrop. Monogr. 21(II). 1990; isolectotypes, CGE, E-GL, G, INPA, K-4 sheets, L, NY, OXF, P, U).
Description: Small trees, to 12 m tall. Leaves: petioles 4-10 mm long, minutely puberulous; blades oblong or elliptic to orbiculate, 5-8.5 x 3-5.3 cm, glabrous except for fine pubescence on abaxial midrib, coriaceous, the base rounded to truncate, the margins entire, the apex acute to obtuse, the acumen rounded; secondary veins in 6-10 pairs. Inflorescences terminal or in axils of uppermost leaves, simple racemes, the rachises 3-10 cm long, pubescent; pedicels jointed, 1-1.5 mm long below, 2 mm long above joint, the bract and bracteoles caducous. Flowers 3-4 cm diam.; calyx with 6 widely ovate lobes, 5-5.5 x 3.5-4.5 mm, with longitudinally oriented mucilage containing ducts (best seen in cross ssection); petals 6, widely obovate, 22 x 15 mm, yellow; androecium: staminal ring with 150-160 stamens, the filaments dimorphic, the outermost expanded unilaterally at apex, 1.8 mm long, the inner ones not expanded; hood 11-14 x 9-16 mm, with antherless, curved inwards appendages; appendage-free ligule 6 x 5.5 mm; hypanthium puberulous; ovary 4(-5)-locular, with 4-8 ovules in each locule, the summit truncate, the style bent away from ligule, 2-4 mm long. Fruits turbinate, 6 x 5.5 cm, the calycine ring inserted near apex, the exocarp smooth, dotted with white lenticels; operculum flat, slightly umbonate. Seeds 3 x 1.5-2 cm, the major veins connected by a raised reticulum of secondary veins; aril not observed.
Common names: Brazil: macacarecuia. Although this name has been reported for L. schomburgkii (Mori & Prance, 1990), it is more widely and appropriately applied to Eschweilera tenuifolia, a common riverine species along the Negro and Orinoco. Macacarecuia means "monkey's bailing cup" and therefore should be rejected as a common name for L. schomburgkii which is a savanna species with a turbinate fruit that would not be useful for bailing boats.
Distribution: Known only from Roraima, Brazil and adjacent Guyana.
Ecology: A small tree most often reported from along rivers but may also occur in savanna.
Phenology: Flowers have been collected in Jul, Sep, and Nov. Immature fruits have been gathered in Jan and Feb.
Pollination: No observations recorded but the floral morphology and color suggest that bees are the pollinators.
Dispersal: No observations recorded but it is likely that this species possesses a basal aril sought after by bats.
Predation: No observations recorded.
Field characters: A small tree with white petals; white androecial hood with yellow at the entrance to the flower; and turbinate fruits.
Taxonomic notes: The closest relative of L. schomburgkii is most certainly L. chartacea. The smaller stature and more rounded, bluntly tipped, coriaceous leaves of the former distinguish it from the latter.
Conservation: IUCN Red List: Vulnerable B1+2c ver 2.3 (Pires O'Brien, J. 1998. Lecythis schomburgkii. In: IUCN 2013. IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. Version 2013.2. www.iucnredlist.org. Downloaded on 21 March 2014.).
Uses: None recorded.
Etymology: The species epithet honors Richard Schomburgk (1811-1891), the collector of the type.
Source: This species page is based on Mori in Mori & Prance, 1990.
Acknowledgements: We are grateful to P. J. M. Maas for allowing us to use his image to illustrate the characters of this species.
Author: S. A. Mori
Type: Guyana. Without locality, 1868 (fl), Rich. Schomburgk 792 (lectotype, BM, designated Fl. Neotrop. Monogr. 21(II). 1990; isolectotypes, CGE, E-GL, G, INPA, K-4 sheets, L, NY, OXF, P, U).
Description: Small trees, to 12 m tall. Leaves: petioles 4-10 mm long, minutely puberulous; blades oblong or elliptic to orbiculate, 5-8.5 x 3-5.3 cm, glabrous except for fine pubescence on abaxial midrib, coriaceous, the base rounded to truncate, the margins entire, the apex acute to obtuse, the acumen rounded; secondary veins in 6-10 pairs. Inflorescences terminal or in axils of uppermost leaves, simple racemes, the rachises 3-10 cm long, pubescent; pedicels jointed, 1-1.5 mm long below, 2 mm long above joint, the bract and bracteoles caducous. Flowers 3-4 cm diam.; calyx with 6 widely ovate lobes, 5-5.5 x 3.5-4.5 mm, with longitudinally oriented mucilage containing ducts (best seen in cross ssection); petals 6, widely obovate, 22 x 15 mm, yellow; androecium: staminal ring with 150-160 stamens, the filaments dimorphic, the outermost expanded unilaterally at apex, 1.8 mm long, the inner ones not expanded; hood 11-14 x 9-16 mm, with antherless, curved inwards appendages; appendage-free ligule 6 x 5.5 mm; hypanthium puberulous; ovary 4(-5)-locular, with 4-8 ovules in each locule, the summit truncate, the style bent away from ligule, 2-4 mm long. Fruits turbinate, 6 x 5.5 cm, the calycine ring inserted near apex, the exocarp smooth, dotted with white lenticels; operculum flat, slightly umbonate. Seeds 3 x 1.5-2 cm, the major veins connected by a raised reticulum of secondary veins; aril not observed.
Common names: Brazil: macacarecuia. Although this name has been reported for L. schomburgkii (Mori & Prance, 1990), it is more widely and appropriately applied to Eschweilera tenuifolia, a common riverine species along the Negro and Orinoco. Macacarecuia means "monkey's bailing cup" and therefore should be rejected as a common name for L. schomburgkii which is a savanna species with a turbinate fruit that would not be useful for bailing boats.
Distribution: Known only from Roraima, Brazil and adjacent Guyana.
Ecology: A small tree most often reported from along rivers but may also occur in savanna.
Phenology: Flowers have been collected in Jul, Sep, and Nov. Immature fruits have been gathered in Jan and Feb.
Pollination: No observations recorded but the floral morphology and color suggest that bees are the pollinators.
Dispersal: No observations recorded but it is likely that this species possesses a basal aril sought after by bats.
Predation: No observations recorded.
Field characters: A small tree with white petals; white androecial hood with yellow at the entrance to the flower; and turbinate fruits.
Taxonomic notes: The closest relative of L. schomburgkii is most certainly L. chartacea. The smaller stature and more rounded, bluntly tipped, coriaceous leaves of the former distinguish it from the latter.
Conservation: IUCN Red List: Vulnerable B1+2c ver 2.3 (Pires O'Brien, J. 1998. Lecythis schomburgkii. In: IUCN 2013. IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. Version 2013.2. www.iucnredlist.org. Downloaded on 21 March 2014.).
Uses: None recorded.
Etymology: The species epithet honors Richard Schomburgk (1811-1891), the collector of the type.
Source: This species page is based on Mori in Mori & Prance, 1990.
Acknowledgements: We are grateful to P. J. M. Maas for allowing us to use his image to illustrate the characters of this species.
Narratives:
Leaf morphology and anatomy of Lecythis schomburgkii.
Inflorescence and flower morphology and anatomy of Lecythis schomburgkii.
Leaf morphology and anatomy of Lecythis schomburgkii.
Inflorescence and flower morphology and anatomy of Lecythis schomburgkii.
Flora and Monograph Treatment(s):
Lecythis schomburgkii O.Berg: [Article] Prance, Ghillean T. & Mori, S. A. 1979. Lecythidaceae - Part I. The actinomorphic-flowered New World Lecythidaceae (Asteranthos, Gustavia, Grias, Allantoma & Cariniana). Fl. Neotrop. Monogr. 21: 1-270.
Lecythis schomburgkii O.Berg: [Article] Prance, Ghillean T. & Mori, S. A. 1979. Lecythidaceae - Part I. The actinomorphic-flowered New World Lecythidaceae (Asteranthos, Gustavia, Grias, Allantoma & Cariniana). Fl. Neotrop. Monogr. 21: 1-270.
Related Objects:
• B. Hoffman 967, Guyana
• M. J. Jansen-Jacobs 4674, Guyana
• M. J. Jansen-Jacobs nr1598, Guyana
• M. J. Jansen-Jacobs nr1598, Guyana
• J. A. Silva 525, Brazil
• R. H. Schomburgk 792, isolectotype; South America
• P. J. M. Maas 7393, Guyana
• P. J. M. Maas 7153, Guyana
• N. A. Rosa 1425, Brazil
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• P. Acevedo-RodrÃguez 3269, Guyana
• M. J. Jansen-Jacobs 4674, Guyana
• M. J. Jansen-Jacobs nr1598, Guyana
• M. J. Jansen-Jacobs nr1598, Guyana
• J. A. Silva 525, Brazil
• R. H. Schomburgk 792, isolectotype; South America
• P. J. M. Maas 7393, Guyana
• P. J. M. Maas 7153, Guyana
• N. A. Rosa 1425, Brazil
• N. A. Rosa 1425, Brazil
• P. Acevedo-RodrÃguez 3269, Guyana