Cedrelinga Ducke, Arch. J. Bot. Rio de Janeiro 3: 70. 1922.
publication ID |
https://dx.doi.org/10.3897/phytokeys.240.101716 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/5D445EFB-AD7B-A57B-2FD0-FC8A35152AFE |
treatment provided by |
|
scientific name |
Cedrelinga Ducke, Arch. J. Bot. Rio de Janeiro 3: 70. 1922. |
status |
|
Cedrelinga Ducke, Arch. J. Bot. Rio de Janeiro 3: 70. 1922. View in CoL
Figs 241 View Figure 241 , 242 View Figure 242 , 243 View Figure 243
Type.
Cedrelinga cateniformis (Ducke) Ducke [≡ Piptadenia cateniformis Ducke]
Phylogenomic studies support Cedrelinga Ducke as related to other genera of the Ingoid clade but its phylogenetic position is not fully resolved as it appears in a mostly isolated position in a polytomy including the genus Pseudosamanea Harms and the Samanea , Jupunba , Inga and Albizia clades ( Koenen et al. 2020a; Ringelberg et al. 2022; Fig. 241 View Figure 241 ).
Description.
Unarmed emergent trees, 25-60 (65) m, to 2.5 m diameter, the trunk reddish with a rugous and striated bark, buttressed at base. Stipules absent. Leaves bipinnate, foliar glands at or near the insertion of each pair of pinnae and on the pinnae between the insertion of leaflets; pinnae 2-4 pairs, opposite; leaflets 3-4 pairs per pinna, opposite, elliptical with acute or acuminate apex, pinnately veined, glabrous. Inflorescences 8-20 flowered hemispherical capitula, grouped in terminal panicles or pseudoracemes; bracts ovate or obovate-spatulate, puberulent, persistent. Flowers 5-merous, greenish-white, glabrous except for ciliate calyx-teeth, and sometimes papillate on corolla lobe tips; calyx gamosepalous, short-campanulate; corolla gamopetalous with ovate lobes; stamens 24-30, greenish-white, united to the middle; intrastaminal disc absent; pollen in 16-celled acalymmate polyads, each pollen grain 6-porate with a finely reticulate surface; ovary shortly stipitate, ellipsoid, abruptly conic at apex, style a little longer than stamens. Fruits pendulous, indehiscent, lomentiform, linear but with deeply constricted margins forming 2-5 (6) oblong-elliptic, plano-compressed and one-seeded articles, twisted through ± 90° at each isthmus, but plane and straight between them; valves brownish, glabrous, sinuously venulose, separating through the transverse fission of the isthmus and dispersed individually. Seeds disciform.
Chromosome number.
Unknown.
Included species and geographic distribution.
Monospecific ( C. cateniformis ), across equatorial latitudes of the Amazon delta region, reaching the main tributary rivers in Bolivia, Brazil, Colombia, Ecuador, French Guiana, Guyana, Suriname, Venezuela and near the Andes in Peru ( Barneby and Grimes 1996, Lewis and Rico Arce 2005; Fig. 243 View Figure 243 ).
Ecology.
Wet or seasonally dry primary forests, especially along streams.
Etymology.
The name Cedrelinga refers to the similarity of its trunk with that of Cedrela fissilis Vell. and C. odorata L. ( ‘cedro’ in Brazilian Portuguese, family Meliaceae ) and the Tupi ‘ingá’, which is an indigenous name for several South American species of rainforest mimosoid legume genera.
Human uses.
Cedrelinga cateniformis can be used as timber, in construction, carpentry, as paper and cellulose, and in agroforestry, due to its rapid seedling development and association with nitrogen-fixing bacteria (Loureiro et al. 1979; Baluarte and Alvarez 2015). It is reported as a medicine but without information on which part of the plant is used (Lewis and Rico Arce 2005). It is known by the vernacular names “chuncho” (Ecuador), “cedrorana” (Brazil, literally fake cedar in Tupi language), “iacaiacá” (Brazil), “cachicana”, “mure”, “guaura” (Venezuela), “don-ceder” (Suriname), “huayracaspi” and “tornillo” (Peru) ( Ducke 1949).
Notes.
When describing Cedrelinga , Ducke (1922) considered it to be related to the broadly circumscribed Pithecellobium Mart. Cedrelinga was included in tribe Ingeae ( Nielsen 1981a), but Barneby and Grimes (1996) remarked that it had no obvious relatives within that tribe. Cedrelinga is one of the tallest trees and with the widest trunk diameters among Amazonian arborescent species. Despite being a large tree, it normally has a small crown and during fruiting it can be easily spotted due to the large number of pendulous fruits (usually one fruit per capitulum). The mature fruits are dry when articles break off and are dispersed by the wind. The wood of C. cateniformis has a spongy appearance due to the width of its vessels, having low density and when wet it has an unpleasant odour (Ducke 1915, 1922, 1949; Barneby and Grimes 1996).
Taxonomic references.
Barneby and Grimes (1996); da Silva et al. (1992); Ducke (1915, 1922, 1949); Lewis and Rico Arce (2005); Nielsen (1981a).
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.
Kingdom |
|
Phylum |
|
Class |
|
Order |
|
Family |