Difference between revisions of "Dypsis turkii"

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image:797f20d0-273f-4ea6-a0cd-8205dca0928b.jpg|Ambatovaky, Madagascar. Photo by Dr. John Dransfield, Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew/Palmweb.
 
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==External Links==
 
==External Links==

Revision as of 00:03, 4 June 2015

Dypsis (DIP-sis)
turkii (TOOR-kee)
4b083777-f0ba-48d0-9c73-9f739c8aa96e.jpg
Ambatovaky, Madagascar. Photo by Dr. William J. Baker, Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew/Palmweb.
Scientific Classification
Genus: Dypsis (DIP-sis)
Species:
turkii (TOOR-kee)
Synonyms
None set.
Native Continent
Africa
Africa.gif
Morphology
Habit: Solitary.
Leaf type: Entire bifid.
Culture
Survivability index
Common names
Sinkiaramboalavo.

Habitat and Distribution

Endemic to Madagascar. Occurring in rain forest on slopes and near valley bottoms on quartzite, at elevations of 400-800 m above sea level, locally common in the undergrowth.

Ambatovaky, Madagascar. Photo by Dr. John Dransfield, Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew/Palmweb.

Description

Slender, solitary, short-stemmed litter-trapping palm. Stem up to 1m tall, usually less, often partially buried in leaf-litter and hence the palm appearing acaulescent, about 8-15 mm in diam., internodes 4-20 mm long. Leaves 7-9 in the crown, 1 < apparently marcescent; sheaths yellow-green, with reddish margins when young, drying rich red-brown, 8-9 cm long, open for ± their entire length, tubular in basal 2-3 cm, striate, abaxially bearing numerous reddish brown fimbriate-margined scales distally, scales very sparse proximally, two rounded auricles present, one on each side of the petiole, to 1.5 x 1.5 mm; petiole absent, very short or to 4 cm long, 3.5 x 2 mm in cross section; leaf blade entire-bifid, 29-65 cm long, with 10-14 adaxial ribs diverging at an angle of about 25° from the rachis, the blade divided to one half to two thirds, about 9-12 cm wide just below the sinus, the two apical segments somewhat cucullate at the tips and shallowly toothed, the teeth corresponding to the main folds of the blade, rachis 10-26 cm long bearing scattered reddish brown scales, lamina bearing very sparse, scattered minute grey or reddish scales adaxially, abaxially with scattered punctiform reddish scales along the main ribs. Inflorescences interfoliar, very slender, exceeding the leaves, often greatly so, 72-150 cm long, branching to two orders, all branches diverging at an acute angle of about 20-25°; peduncle about 28°, 70 cm long, about 1.5-2 mm in diam.; prophyll tightly sheathing the base of the peduncle, inserted about 4 cm above the base, to about 8-10 cm long, 4 mm wide, striate and bearing scattered reddish brown scales; peduncular bract similar to the prophyll, about 24-26 cm long; rachis 40-80 cm long; rachis bracts triangular, about 3 x 1.5 mm; first order branches about 6-8, distant, the proximal 2-3 branches branched to the second order, the distal unbranched, each with a conspicuous basal pulvinus and a long basal section devoid of branches or flowers; rachillae very slender, 4-8 cm long, about 0.75 mm in diam, drying striate, bearing scattered brown scales; triads about 5 mm distant near the base of the floriferous portion of the rachilla, about 2 mm distant distally; rachilla bracts minute. Staminate flowers globose, about 1.5 mm in diam.; sepals about 0.6 x 0.8 mm, imbricate, broadly triangular with rounded bases, irregularly keeled and apiculate, faintly striate; petals triangular valvate, about 1.2 x 0.8 mm, striate, glabrous; stamens 3, antesepalous, staminal tube 0.6 mm high, about 0.6 mm wide, free portion of filaments about 0.2 mm high, about 0.4 mm wide, staminodes absent, anthers didymous mostly held within the staminal tube, about 0.5 mm high, 0.4 mm wide at base; pistillode minute, 3-lobed. Pistillate flowers globose 2.5 x 2.5 mm; sepals 1 x 1.5 mm, striate, irregularly emarginate and keeled; petals broad triangular 2 x 1.8 mm, imbricate with triangular valvate tips, very thick and fleshy, glabrous; staminodes 6, irregular, tooth-like, sometimes connate laterally, about 0.4 x 0.2 mm; ovary eccentrically spherical, 1.5 x 2 mm, stigmas 3, eccentrically subapical, 0.6 x 0.1 mm; ovule laterally attached. Fruit ripening glistening bright red, broadly ellipsoid 14 x 8 mm, stigmatic remains subbasal; epicarp smooth; mesocarp 4 mm thick; endocarp striate. Seed ellipsoid, 11 x 4 mm, homogeneous, embryo lateral towards the base. (J. Dransfield. 2003)/Palmweb.

The inflorescences of this species are unlike those of any other taxon in the genus. The palm is generally short-stemmed, occasionally almost acaulescent. The leaves, usually lacking a long, well-defined petiole tend to trap leaf litter, so that the leaf bases are sometimes entirely obscured. The inflorescences emerge from the crown and arch out between the leaf bases and on to the forest floor; the extremely slender rachillae may be presented over the ground or lie on the surface among the leaf litter. The flowers as in so many taxa of Dypsis with three staminate flowers where the anthers are rounded, are extremely small but, unusually, are held on slender, or almost thread-like rachillae. Only in D. remotiflora are the rachillae so slender, but here the inflorescence is short, little if any longer than the leaves and quite different from the very long inflorescences of this new species. (J. Dransfield. 2003)/Palmweb.

Culture

Comments and Curiosities

Palm novelties continue to be discovered in Madagascar. Some, like the one described here, are local endemics that have come to light when botanists have explored areas previously not thoroughly surveyed. There are also several really interesting undescribed palms that are currently known only from seeds or seedlings in the horticultural trade, ad not yet represented by complete herbarium material collected in the wild. The subject of this paper is an atonishing new species of Dypsis with unusual inflorescences unlike those of any other palm in Madagascar. The species is named for Dan Turk, environmental officer of the Fiangonana Jesosy Madagasikara, who recognised it to be undescribed when he collected it on an isolated hill still covered in forest to the northeast of Betampona reserve in Eastern Madagascar. I examined this specimen in Antananarivo but it has yet to arrive in Kew. The species was also collected by Anja Byg in Zahamena, during field work funded by the International Palm Society. She too was uanble to key it out in Palms of Madagascar (Dransfield and Beentje 1995) and suspected it to be undescribed. Finally in 1999 Bill Baker and I discovered it to be locally common in the southern margin of the Ambatovaky reserve and in forest fragments between Ambatovaky and Soanierana Ivongo. It thus has a distribution in upland forest on the eastern escarpment of Madagascar, northwest of Toamasina. (J. Dransfield. 2003)/Palmweb.



External Links

References

Phonetic spelling of Latin names by edric.

Special thanks to Geoff Stein, (Palmbob) for his hundreds of photos.

Special thanks to Palmweb.org, Dr. John Dransfield, Dr. Bill Baker & team, for their volumes of information and photos.

Glossary of Palm Terms; Based on the glossary in Dransfield, J., N.W. Uhl, C.B. Asmussen-Lange, W.J. Baker, M.M. Harley & C.E. Lewis. 2008. Genera Palmarum - Evolution and Classification of the Palms. Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew. All images copyright of the artists and photographers (see images for credits).

Dransfield, J.2003. Dypsis turkii. Palms 47 (1): 26-30.


Many Special Thanks to Ed Vaile for his long hours of tireless editing and numerous contributions.

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