Senna uniflora (Mill.) H.S.Irwin & Barneby

  • Authors

    Howard S. Irwin, Rupert C. Barneby

  • Authority

    Irwin, Howard S. & Barneby, Rupert C. 1982. The American Cassiinae. A synoptical revision of Leguminosae tribe Cassieae subtrib Cassiinae in the New World. Mem. New York Bot. Gard. 35, part 1: 1-454.

  • Family

    Caesalpiniaceae

  • Scientific Name

    Senna uniflora (Mill.) H.S.Irwin & Barneby

  • Type

    Holotypus, labelled "Campeachy, Houston, 1730," ticketed by Houston and by Miller, BM (plant second from left only)! = BH Neg. 5165 = NY Neg. 113.—C. sericea Swartz, Prod. 66. 1788 & Fl. Ind. Occ. 2(1): 724. 1798, nom. substit. illegit. C. monantha DeCand

  • Synonyms

    Cassia uniflora Mill., Sericeocassia uniflora Britton, Cassia ornithopoides Lam., Cassia sensitiva Jacq., Cassia ciliata Hoffmanns., Emelista mucronulosa Pittier

  • Description

    Species Description - Coarse malodorous monocarpic herbs from shallow blackish root, usually stiffly erect and simple or paniculately few-branched distally, rarely branched from base, diminutive when starved or crowded but commonly at anthesis 2-12, rarely 20 dm tall, variably pubescent with extremely fine short whitish villi mixed with stouter, forwardly subappressed or some spreading rufescent setae up to (0.8-)l-2 mm, only the lower stem and some early lvs glabrate, the subconcolorous lfts always setose dorsally (especially along veins) and setose-ciliate, on the upper face thinly or densely (even subvelutinously) villosulous, the shortly pedunculate racemes of few small short-pedicelled fls axillary to and shorter than all major lvs. Stipules erect or subfalcately erect, narrowly linear-attenuate or -caudate (5-)7-24 x 0.3-1.2 mm, the thinly herbaceous blades asymmetrically 1-nerved, deciduous before the lf. Lvs (disregarding those of late depauperate branchlets) 5-16 cm; petiole including moderately swollen pulvinus 1.5-4(-4.5) cm, at middle 0.7-1.7 mm diam, bluntly 3-ribbed dorso-laterally, narrowly margined and open-sulcate ventrally; rachis (1-) 1.5-6(-6.5) cm, usually a little longer than the petiole; glands between all except the distal (or distal and penultimate) pairs, stipitate, the slender stipe villosulous, the whole in profile 2-4.5(-5) mm tall, the narrowly lance-attenuate body 0.2-0.4 mm diam; pulvinules 1.2-2.3 mm; lfts 3-5 pairs, ± accrescent distally but either the distal or the penultimate pair largest, these broadly obovate- cuneate, obovate, or subrhombic-obovate 2-5.5 x 1-3.1(-3.4) cm, 1.5-2 times as long as wide, at apex rounded or depressed-deltate-acuminulate, conspicuously mucronate, at oblique base inequilaterally rounded or distally cuneate, the midrib and 4-6 pairs of camptodrome secondary veins immersed or almost so above, sharply prominulous and often pallid beneath, the tertiary venulation imperceptible or almost so. Peduncles (3-)5-17(-20) mm; racemes shortly or subumbellately 2-6(-7)-fld, the axis 0-4(-7) mm in fruit; bracts resembling stipules but smaller, 2-7(-10) mm; pedicels at anthesis no longer than sepals, often but not always subtended on one side or another by a gland resembling those of petiole, in fruit stiffly erect-ascending, much thickened, 2.5-5.5 mm; fl-buds nodding subglobose, pilosulous at or toward the base but glabrate distally; sepals thin-textured, greenish at middle but pallid or yellowish toward margins, moderately graduated, oblong-obovate or suborbicular, the longer inner ones up to 3-4.3 mm; petals yellow, often fading (or drying) brick-red, not strongly veined, glabrous dorsally, fleetingly expanded and lasting no more than 1 day, sometimes remaining crumpled and scarcely longer than calyx, in outline obovate-cuneate obtuse or subemarginate, the 2 abaxial ones slightly oblique, the longest petal (3-)4-8 mm; androecium glabrous, the 3 staminodes minute, the 7 fertile members all similar but slightly accrescent toward abaxial side of fl, the filaments 0.6-1.7 mm, the anthers lanceolate or lance-ovate in outline 0.9-2.4 mm, slightly incurved, contracted near apex into a beak 0.2-0.5 mm, this precociously dehiscent into a 1-pored pollen-cup facing inward; ovary densely white-setose-pilose; style (1.2-) 1.4-2.4 mm, strongly incurved, at apex dilated and (0.35-)0.4-0.6 mm diam at the truncate orifice; ovules (5-)7-12. Pod erect, long persistent (even after fall of all lvs), sessile or almost so, linear- oblong in outline, straight or slightly incurved, 2.5-5.5 x 0.3-0.4(-0.45) cm, bluntly compressed-tetragonal, bicarinate by the thick cordlike sutures, the turgid valves at first firm green, turning brown or ultimately blackish, venulose and rufous-setose, deeply impressed-sulcate over each intraseminal septum and thus appearing but not truly lomentaceous, the seminal cavities (3-)3.5-5 mm long; dehiscence tardy, basipetal through both sutures; seeds obliquely descending across the cavity, irregularly compressed-rhomboid 3.2-4.4 x 2-3 mm, the testa smooth or minutely granular, brownish-olivaceous or finally castaneous, crackled or eventually flaking, the lustrous oblanceolate areole straight or commonly incipiently sigmoid, nearly as long as the seed-face, 2.8-4.2 x 0.6-1 mm.—Collections: 170.—Fig. 10 (androecium), 14 (pod + seed).

    Distribution and Ecology - Waste places, both urban and rural, disturbed brush-woodlands, savannas, shores and beaches, becoming a troublesome colonial weed of pastures where avoided by herbivores, primarily of the lowlands but ascending to 700 m in Brazil, 1200(-1750) m in Mexico and 1300 m in Honduras, bicentrically dispersed in eastern Brazil and in n. Central America, Mexico and the Antilles, sporadically weedy elsewhere: Brazil (s. Maranhao to Ceara, Bahia, n.-w. Minas Gerais and e.-centr. Goias); Bahamas, Cuba, Jamaica, Hispaniola, Puerto Rico; Mexico (s. Tamaulipas to Yucatan Peninsula, Chiapas, across the s. states to Jalisco and thence n. along the Coastal Plain to s. Sonora); Guatemala, Belize, El Salvador to Nicaragua; Barbados; n. Venezuela (Lara, e. to Nueva Esparta); Ecuador (Galapagos Is.).—Fl. throughout the year except when drought-inhibited, sometimes surviving the dry season and regenerating as softly woody herbs.

  • Common Names

    Charamasca, frijolillo, xtulu-baya, pica pica, matopasto

  • Distribution

    Maranhão Brazil South America| Ceará Brazil South America| Bahia Brazil South America| Minas Gerais Brazil South America| Goiás Brazil South America| Bahamas South America| Cuba South America| Jamaica South America| West Indies| Puerto Rico South America| Tamaulipas Mexico North America| Yucatán Mexico North America| Chiapas Mexico North America| Jalisco Mexico North America| Sonora Mexico North America| Guatemala Central America| Belize Central America| El Salvador Central America| Nicaragua Central America| Barbados South America| Lara Venezuela South America| Nueva Esparta Venezuela South America| Galápagos Islands Ecuador South America|