Indopiptadenia Brenan, Kew Bull. 10(2): 178. 1955.
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https://dx.doi.org/10.3897/phytokeys.240.101716 |
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https://treatment.plazi.org/id/F26769C2-2BF0-F25E-D9CF-F719DEFAD07E |
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Indopiptadenia Brenan, Kew Bull. 10(2): 178. 1955. |
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Indopiptadenia Brenan, Kew Bull. 10(2): 178. 1955. View in CoL
Figs 135 View Figure 135 , 136 View Figure 136
Type.
Indopiptadenia oudhensis (Brandis) Brenan [≡ Piptadenia oudhensis Brandis]
Description.
Trees 3-12 m tall (Fig. 135A View Figure 135 ), variably unarmed or armed with scattered internodal prickles on shoots, and trunk with prominent scattered conical protuberances terminating in a sharp point (Fig. 135B, C View Figure 135 ); brachyblasts absent. Stipules small, lanceolate, caducous. Leaves bipinnate, extrafloral nectaries between first pair of pinnae or at apex of petiole and often between leaflets, shallow cupular or flat and pad-like, oval; pinnae 1-2 pairs, opposite; leaflets 1 (2) pairs per pinna, opposite, venation pinnate, brochidodromous. Inflorescence a spiciform raceme, not enveloped in fused bracts; solitary in leaf axils or grouped in secondary terminal racemes (Fig. 135F View Figure 135 ); pedicels flattened, pad-like, somewhat glandular, persistent on the receptacle after anthesis. Flowers greenish-yellow, lacking a hypanthium; sepals 5, valvate; petals 5, free, valvate; stamens 10, free, anthers dorsifixed, bearing a minute, deciduous claviform apical gland of the piptadenioid type (sensu Luckow and Grimes 1997); pollen in tricolporate monads, exine smooth (perforated), columellae present; ovary sessile, stigma funnel-shaped. Fruits straight, plano-compressed, narrowly linear (Fig. 135H View Figure 135 ), 15-20-seeded, valves coriaceous, dehiscent through both sutures. Seeds oblique, strongly flattened with a membranous wing, pleurogram absent, testa thin, funicle attached medially.
Chromosome number.
Unknown.
Included species and geographic distribution.
Monospecific ( I. oudhensis ), occupying a narrow band restricted to the Terai region of the outlying lowest foothills of the Himalayas at scattered localities almost entirely within Nepal and just barely traversing the border into northern India in a few places (Fig. 136 View Figure 136 ).
Ecology.
Seasonal deciduous or semi-evergreen monsoon forests and disturbed riverine vegetation (Fig. 135A View Figure 135 ) in the outlying foothills of the Himalayas, at 150-900 m elevation, mainly in gravelly and sandy soils. Deciduous. Seed dispersal passive, or possibly wind-dispersed.
Etymology.
Indopiptadenia refers to the superficial resemblance to the genus Piptadenia and Indo- (from India).
Human uses.
The leaves are used locally for fodder and the wood as fuel and timber. The wood is very hard, strong, and durable ( Bajpai et al. 2014).
Notes.
Indopiptadenia remained poorly known, based on just a handful of collections, until Bajpai et al. (2014) published a detailed and amply illustrated account of the morphology and distribution of the genus. Indopiptadenia was segregated from Piptadenia by Brenan (1955) and later placed in the informal Newtonia group ( Lewis and Elias 1981). Indopiptadenia is now known to be robustly supported as sister to the re-circumscribed Prosopis s.s. (Fig. 132 View Figure 132 ; Hughes et al. 2022a; Ringelberg et al. 2022). Originally described as unarmed, Indopiptadenia often has small internodal prickles (shared with Prosopis s.s.) and characteristic conical sharply-tipped woody protuberances on the mature stems (Fig. 135B, C View Figure 135 ), strongly reminiscent of the stems of young trees of Cylicodiscus (Fig. 133C View Figure 133 ). The rupturing of the walls in immature fruits observed by Bajpai et al. (2014) is probably attributable to damage to the fruits, possibly by birds.
Taxonomic references.
Bajpai et al. (2014); Brenan (1955); Duthie (1906), with illustration.
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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