Tetrapterocarpon Humbert, Compt. Rend. Hebd. Seances Acad. Sci. 208: 374. 1939.
publication ID |
https://dx.doi.org/10.3897/phytokeys.240.101716 |
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https://treatment.plazi.org/id/5F1E6391-19F6-B88A-D3B8-E94C9A67679B |
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scientific name |
Tetrapterocarpon Humbert, Compt. Rend. Hebd. Seances Acad. Sci. 208: 374. 1939. |
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Tetrapterocarpon Humbert, Compt. Rend. Hebd. Seances Acad. Sci. 208: 374. 1939. View in CoL
Figs 7 View Figure 7 , 9 View Figure 9
Type.
Tetrapterocarpon geayi Humbert
Description.
Unarmed trees or shrubs, dioecious; brachyblasts absent. Stipules inconspicuous, minute and caducous. Leaves bipinnate, ending in a terminal pinna; leaflets alternate. Inflorescences axillary, spike-like racemes of small, subsessile flowers, usually aggregated into panicles. Flowers unisexual, actinomorphic, 4-merous (sepals and petals 4 per flower), greenish; sepals equal, petals equal, both whorls imbricate in young bud; androecium diplostemonous in staminate flowers, with one whorl of 4 fertile stamens, their filaments with an apical tuft of hairs behind the anthers, and one whorl of 4 hairy staminodes, lacking anthers; pollen with a scabrate-punctate sculpture pattern; pistillate flowers with a stipitate, compressed-fusiform ovary, stigma capitate and bilobed. Fruits membranous, indehiscent, compressed, 4-winged (in two unequal pairs), 1-seeded (Fig. 7B View Figure 7 ). Seeds trapezoid, subterete, club-shaped, pleurogram lacking.
Chromosome number.
Unknown.
Included species and geographic distribution.
Two species, both endemic to Madagascar (Fig. 9 View Figure 9 ).
Ecology.
Seasonally dry tropical to xerophytic forest and thicket, on limestone, basalt, or sand.
Etymology.
From Greek, tetra - (= four), ptero - (= winged) and carpos (= fruit), the fruits have four dry, papery wings in unequal pairs.
Human uses.
Tetrapterocarpon geayi is used locally for carpentry, cart construction and to make charcoal (Du Puy and Rabevohitra 2002).
Notes.
Although placed in the Dimorphandra group of the Caesalpinieae by Polhill and Vidal (1981), the genus was resolved as sister to an Acrocarpus - Ceratonia clade in a study of the " Umtiza clade" by Herendeen et al. (2003b), sharing with these two genera a bipinnate leaf with an unequal leaflet base, and this relationship is supported in the phylogenomic analysis of Ringelberg et al. (2022) (Fig. 6 View Figure 6 ).
Taxonomic references.
Du Puy and Rabevohitra (2002); Lewis (2005b).
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.
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