Fillaeopsis Harms, Bot. Jahrb. 26: 258. 1899.
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https://dx.doi.org/10.3897/phytokeys.240.101716 |
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https://treatment.plazi.org/id/91F80120-F557-E99B-961E-03356FCA251D |
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Fillaeopsis Harms, Bot. Jahrb. 26: 258. 1899. |
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Fillaeopsis Harms, Bot. Jahrb. 26: 258. 1899. View in CoL
Figs 127 View Figure 127 , 130 View Figure 130
Type.
Fillaeopsis discophora Harms
Description.
Large, often buttressed, trees 24-40 m, 40-80 (100) cm diameter (Fig. 127C View Figure 127 ), unarmed, bark smooth with vertical fissures, slash exuding pale yellow sticky latex, brachyblasts absent. Stipules not observed. Leaves bipinnate, extrafloral nectaries absent; pinnae 1-3 pairs, opposite; leaflets alternate, 4-6 (10) per pinna, venation brochidodromous. Inflorescence a panicle of spiciform racemes, axillary or terminal (Fig. 127G View Figure 127 ), flowers abscising to leave peg-like pedicels. Flowers very waxy and shiny on herbarium sheets; calyx broadly open, 5-lobed, probably somewhat succulent; petals 5, fleshy, free; stamens 10, free, anthers ovate with a sessile, globose apical gland; pollen in tetrahedral tetrads with tricolporate grains, exine smooth (perforated), columellae present; large intra-staminal nectary disk surrounding the ovary; ovary sessile, stigma porate. Fruits very large, 60-80 × 15-20 cm, broadly oblong (Fig. 127L View Figure 127 ), flattened, dehiscent along both sutures, 8-10-seeded; valves papery to coriaceous, outer layer waxy, with raised reticulate venation, endocarp smooth, papery, brown with whitish fibrous layers between the seeds which are transverse in legume. Seeds large, flattened, membranous-winged, 10-15 × 2.5-4 cm, wing to 2.5-3 cm wide (Fig. 127M View Figure 127 ), testa membranous, funicle attached near the middle of the seed, pleurogram absent, endosperm lacking.
Chromosome number.
Unknown.
Included species and geographic distribution.
Monospecific ( F. discophora ), restricted to central Africa in Cameroon, Central African Republic, Democratic Republic of Congo, Equatorial Guinea, Gabon, Nigeria, Republic of Congo (Fig. 130 View Figure 130 ).
Ecology.
Large canopy-emergent trees growing in closed-canopy evergreen lowland tropical rainforests (Fig. 127C View Figure 127 ). Seeds wind-dispersed.
Etymology.
From Greek Fillaea - (a legume genus name, now a synonym of Erythrophleum ), and - opsis (= appearance) and hence named for its resemblance to the genus Fillaea .
Human uses.
The wood is light and mainly used for veneer and plywood ( Yvon 1975).
Notes.
Fillaeopsis forms its own monogeneric (and monospecific) lineage embedded in the grade that subtends the core mimosoid clade (Fig. 126 View Figure 126 ). The fruits of Fillaeopsis and the winged seeds are amongst the largest known in Mimoseae , indeed across all Caesalpinioideae (Fig. 127L, M View Figure 127 ), underpinning wind dispersal of the seeds, which also characterises the genera Plathymenia and Newtonia .
The leaves of Fillaeopsis are very similar to those of Cylicodiscus , although flowers and fruits of the two genera are quite different. When sterile the two genera can be distinguished by the following characters: Fillaeopsis lacks a gland at the apex of the petiole, whereas Cylicodiscus has a small, sunken gland; leaflets of Fillaeopsis have a conspicuous marginal vein and are elliptical in shape, whereas leaflets of Cylicodiscus have an inconspicuous marginal vein and are ovate.
Taxonomic references.
Harms (1899); Villiers (1989), both with illustrations.
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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