Parapiptadenia Brenan, Kew Bull. 17(2): 228. 1963.
publication ID |
https://dx.doi.org/10.3897/phytokeys.240.101716 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/D2E23425-72E0-A73F-8C89-9C23C1C8A875 |
treatment provided by |
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scientific name |
Parapiptadenia Brenan, Kew Bull. 17(2): 228. 1963. |
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Parapiptadenia Brenan, Kew Bull. 17(2): 228. 1963. View in CoL
Figs 172 View Figure 172 , 173 View Figure 173 , 179 View Figure 179
Type.
Parapiptadenia rigida (Benth.) Brenan [≡ Piptadenia rigida Benth.]
Description.
Trees; indumentum composed of simple trichomes; brachyblasts absent; branches and leaves unarmed, not odoriferous. Stipules present or absent. Leaves bipinnate; extrafloral nectaries on the petiole, and usually between the distal pair of pinnae and leaflets; pinnae 1-8 pairs, opposite; leaflets (1) 2-26 pairs, opposite, elliptic to oblong. Inflorescence units cylindrical spikes, solitary, axillary or supra-axillary to coevally developing leaves. Flowers 5-merous, reddish, rarely yellowish; calyx gamosepalous, campanulate; corolla gamopetalous, campanulate to tubular; stamens 10, anthers with an apical gland; pollen in 8, 12 or 16-grained polyads; ovary included in the corolla. Fruit a legume, flat-compressed, valves undulate above the seeds (rarely plane). Seeds flat-compressed, dark, winged, pleurogram absent.
Chromosome number.
2 n = 26 ( Goldblatt 1981a).
Included species and geographic distribution.
Six species, four from north-eastern Brazil, one extending also to south-eastern Brazil; and two occurring in southern Brazil, Argentina, Paraguay, and Uruguay, one of which also reaches Bolivia, western Brazil and Peru (Fig. 179 View Figure 179 ).
Ecology.
Sub-tropical forests, rainforests, seasonally dry tropical forests and woodlands.
Etymology.
From para (Greek = next to) and Piptadenia piptadenia , in reference to the close taxonomic relationship to the genus Piptadenia ( Brenan 1963b).
Human uses.
Parapiptadenia rigida has medicinal properties, is used as fodder, timber, firewood, an ornamental, as a source of saponins, gum, tannins, cellulose, for paper production, and for ecological restoration ( Burkart 1979; Carvalho 2003).
Notes.
In addition to Anadenanthera Speg., Parapiptadenia is the only segregate from Piptadenia that was confirmed as monophyletic ( Jobson and Luckow 2007; Simon et al. 2016; Ribeiro et al. 2018; Borges et al. 2022). The genus commonly includes plants with reddish flowers, although these are yellow or cream in a few species [e.g., Pa. rigida (Benth.) Brenan], and legumes with undulate valves above the seeds. Most genera in the Stryphnodendron clade have yellow or cream inflorescences and either follicles or indehiscent fruits, except for Stryphnodendron and Naiadendron , which include some species with reddish inflorescences and legumes, respectively.
Taxonomic references.
Brenan (1963b); Caccavari (2002); Lewis (1993); Lima and Lima (1984); Vaz and Lima (1980).
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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SubFamily |
Caesalpinioideae |
Tribe |
Mimoseae |