Caesalpinia L., Sp. Pl. 1: 380. 1753.
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https://dx.doi.org/10.3897/phytokeys.240.101716 |
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https://treatment.plazi.org/id/19575983-FA45-E0A9-145A-28F708475EA9 |
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Caesalpinia L., Sp. Pl. 1: 380. 1753. |
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Caesalpinia L., Sp. Pl. 1: 380. 1753. View in CoL
Figs 35 View Figure 35 , 53 View Figure 53
Poinciana L., Sp. Pl. 1: 380. 1753. Type: Poinciana pulcherrima L. [≡ Caesalpinia pulcherrima (L.) Sw.]
Caesalpinia sect. Brasilettia DC., Prodr. [A.P. de Candolle] 2: 481. 1825. Type: Caesalpinia brasiliensis L.
Brasilettia (DC.) Kuntze, Revis. Gen. Pl. 1: 164. 1891. Type: Brasilettia brasiliensis (L.) Kuntze [≡ Caesalpinia brasiliensis L.]
Type.
Description.
Shrubs or small trees, usually armed with curved deflexed prickles. Stipules minute, caducous or apparently lacking. Leaves bipinnate, pinnae (1) 2-6 pairs, opposite; leaflets 3-13 pairs per pinna, alternate to opposite. Inflorescence a terminal or axillary raceme or panicle. Flowers pedicellate, bisexual, zygomorphic; hypanthium persistent as a cup at the apex of the pedicel as the fruit matures, if the fruit stipitate then the stipe exerted from the hypanthial cup, or the whole calyx persistent (e.g., in Caesalpinia pulcherrima (L.) Sw.); sepals 5, caducous or persistent, eglandular, the lower sepal strongly cucullate and covering the other 4 sepals in bud; petals 5, variable in colour (yellow, white, red, orange or green), the corolla also variable in shape; stamens 10, free, the filaments pubescent; ovary glabrous and eglandular. Fruit a wingless, unarmed, coriaceous, glabrous, eglandular, explosively dehiscent legume, with twisting valves, 3-7-seeded. Seeds laterally compressed.
Chromosome number.
2 n = 24 ( C. bahamensis Lam., C. pulcherrima ) ( Darlington and Wylie 1956; Fedorov 1969).
Included species and geographic distribution.
Nine species restricted to the Neotropics (apart from the pantropically cultivated C. pulcherrima ). One species ( C. cassioides Willd.) occurs in the northern Andes from Peru to Colombia, one ( C. pulcherrima ) is likely native in Guatemala and the state of Sonora in Mexico (but is widely cultivated), C. nipensis Urb. is endemic to Cuba, and all other species are also Caribbean in distribution (Fig. 53 View Figure 53 ).
Ecology.
Seasonally dry tropical forests, coastal thicket, bushlands and thorn scrubs, dry plains, and riparian woodlands, on soils derived from limestone or sandstone.
Etymology.
Named by Linnaeus for Andrea Cesalpino (1519-1603), Italian naturalist, botanical collector, systematist and philosopher, physician to Pope Clement VIII, professor of medicine and botany in Pisa and Rome.
Human uses.
Caesalpinia pulcherrima is widely cultivated pantropically as a garden and park ornamental and has various medicinal properties ( Lewis 2005b). The species includes red, orange, and yellow-flowered forms and cultivated specimens are usually unarmed and lack bristles (unlike wild specimens which are armed and bristly).
Notes.
Caesalpinia , as recently re-circumscribed ( Gagnon et al. 2016), is reduced to nine species, although a detailed taxonomic revision is needed to properly delimit species and synonymy. Palaeotropical species previously included in Caesalpinia s.s., sensu Lewis (2005b), have been transferred to other genera, notably Denisophytum and Gelrebia ( Gagnon et al. 2016). While Brasilettia (DC.) Kuntze is a synonym of Caesalpinia , the genus Brasilettia sensu Britton and Rose (1930) included eight species which are now all placed in the genus Coulteria Kunth. The variation in corolla colour and shape in Caesalpinia species is related to different pollination systems: bees, butterflies, birds, and bats.
Taxonomic references.
Barreto Valdés (2013); Britton and Rose (1930); Gagnon et al. (2016); Lewis (2005b); Macbride (1943); Ulibarri (1996).
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