Cylicodiscus Harms, Nat. Pflanzenfam. Nachtr. II-IV, 1: 192. 1897.

Bruneau, Anne, de Queiroz, Luciano Paganucci, Ringelberg, Jens J., Borges, Leonardo M., Bortoluzzi, Roseli Lopes da Costa, Brown, Gillian K., Cardoso, Domingos B. O. S., Clark, Ruth P., Conceicao, Adilva de Souza, Cota, Matheus Martins Teixeira, Demeulenaere, Else, de Stefano, Rodrigo Duno, Ebinger, John E., Ferm, Julia, Fonseca-Cortes, Andres, Gagnon, Edeline, Grether, Rosaura, Guerra, Ethiene, Haston, Elspeth, Herendeen, Patrick S., Hernandez, Hector M., Hopkins, Helen C. F., Huamantupa-Chuquimaco, Isau, Hughes, Colin E., Ickert-Bond, Stefanie M., Iganci, Joao, Koenen, Erik J. M., Lewis, Gwilym P., de Lima, Haroldo Cavalcante, de Lima, Alexandre Gibau, Luckow, Melissa, Marazzi, Brigitte, Maslin, Bruce R., Morales, Matias, Morim, Marli Pires, Murphy, Daniel J., O'Donnell, Shawn A., Oliveira, Filipe Gomes, Oliveira, Ana Carla da Silva, Rando, Juliana Gastaldello, Ribeiro, Petala Gomes, Ribeiro, Carolina Lima, Santos, Felipe da Silva, Seigler, David S., da Silva, Guilherme Sousa, Simon, Marcelo F., Soares, Marcos Vinicius Batista & Terra, Vanessa, 2024, Advances in Legume Systematics 14. Classification of Caesalpinioideae. Part 2: Higher-level classification, PhytoKeys 240, pp. 1-552 : 1

publication ID

https://dx.doi.org/10.3897/phytokeys.240.101716

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/E0212E9A-34E8-8D13-261D-26079E833492

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PhytoKeys by Pensoft

scientific name

Cylicodiscus Harms, Nat. Pflanzenfam. Nachtr. II-IV, 1: 192. 1897.
status

 

Cylicodiscus Harms, Nat. Pflanzenfam. Nachtr. II-IV, 1: 192. 1897. View in CoL

Figs 132 View Figure 132 , 133 View Figure 133 , 134 View Figure 134

Cyrtoxiphus Harms, Nat. Pflanzenfam. Nachtr. II-IV 1: 203. 1897. Type: Cyrtoxiphus staudtii Harms [= Cylicodiscus gabunensis Harms]

Type.

Cylicodiscus gabunensis Harms

Although Cylicodiscus is clearly a member of the core mimosoid clade, its phylogenetic relationship to the Prosopis clade, from which it is separated by a very short branch, and to the Neltuma clade, are not well-resolved (Fig. 132 View Figure 132 ). For this reason, Cylicodiscus is here presented as a separate monogeneric lineage rather than being included in another named clade of Mimoseae .

Description.

Very large trees 25-65 m, to 70+ cm trunk diameter, bole straight cylindrical, thick wandering buttresses with knee-like outgrowths (Fig. 133A-C View Figure 133 ) and small adventitious roots at base; trunks of young trees armed with sharply tipped pyramidal scattered woody protuberances (Fig. 133D View Figure 133 ); bark fibrous, rough, black-brown; slash brownish-yellow or reddish-orange, wood very hard, brachyblasts absent. Stipules caducous. Leaves bipinnate, petiole bearing a round, sunken nectary at the apex; pinnae 1-3 pairs, opposite; leaflets 3-7 pairs per pinna, alternate, venation brochidodromous. Inflorescences of solitary, axillary spiciform racemes; unfertilised flowers abscising post-anthesis to leave peg-like pedicels (Fig. 133E View Figure 133 ). Flowers white; hypanthium absent; calyx 5-lobed, valvate; petals 5, valvate, free; stamens 10, free, anthers dorsifixed, bearing an apical globose gland; intra-staminal disk present, well-developed; pollen in tricolporate monads, exine smooth (perforated), columellae present; ovary sessile/stipitate, stigma porate. Fruits pendulous, linear oblong, strap-like, up to 1 m long, dehiscent along the ventral suture (Fig. 133F View Figure 133 ), flattened, woody, ca. 10-seeded, exocarp cracking when mature, sutural ribs flattened, 5 mm wide; mesocarp of two layers, a black glassy layer underlying the endocarp and a reticulate, cardboard-like fibrous layer below that; endocarp smooth, fibrous. Seeds ellispoid, large, to 13 cm long and 2 cm wide (Fig. 133I View Figure 133 ) surrounded by a thin papery wing 6 mm wide, testa thin, papery, pleurogram absent, the funicle attached to the short end of the seed.

Chromosome number.

Unknown.

Included species and geographic distribution.

Monospecific ( C. gabunensis ), west and central Africa in Cameroon, Côte d’Ivoire, Equatorial Guinea, Gabon, Ghana, and Nigeria, widespread but apparently uncommon (or perhaps just difficult to collect!) (Fig. 134 View Figure 134 ).

Ecology.

Very large canopy-emergent trees with massive crowns in well-drained evergreen lowland tropical Guineo-Congolan rainforest (Fig. 133A-C View Figure 133 ) and moist semi-deciduous forests. In common with several other genera of Mimoseae such as Fillaeopsis and some species of Entada , the flowers of Cylicodiscus are very small, yet give rise to very large fruits. Seeds winged and likely wind-dispersed (Fig. 133G-I View Figure 133 ).

Etymology.

From Greek cylico (= cup-shaped) and Latin discus (= disk), referring to the cup-shaped floral disk to which the stamens are attached.

Human uses.

The timber of C. gabunensis is very dense and used in heavy construction, for railway sleepers and flooring (Ndonda Makemba et al. 2019).

Notes.

Phylogenetically, Cylicodiscus is separated by a very short branch from the Prosopis clade (Fig. 132 View Figure 132 ). It is perhaps notable that both genera of the Prosopis clade, Prosopis L. and Indopiptadenia Brenan, share internodal prickles and/or sharp pyramidal scattered woody protuberances on the stem and shoots with Cylicodiscus (Figs 133D View Figure 133 , 135B, C, E View Figure 135 ). Although the relationship of Cylicodiscus to the Prosopis and Neltuma clades remains uncertain, Cylicodiscus is clearly a member of the core mimosoid clade and shares presence of armature with the other two first-branching lineages of that clade.

Taxonomic references.

Aubréville (1959) with illustration; Burkill (1995); Ndonda Makemba et al. (2019); Villiers (1989) with illustrations.

Kingdom

Plantae

Phylum

Tracheophyta

Class

Magnoliopsida

Order

Fabales

Family

Fabaceae