| Literature DB >> 34753985 |
Thomas Haevermans1, Annette Hladik2, Claude-Marcel Hladik2, Jacqueline Razanatsoa3, Agathe Haevermans4, Vololoniaina Jeannoda5, Patrick Blanc6.
Abstract
Madagascar's emblematic traveller's tree is a monospecific genus within Strelitziaceae, the family of the South African bird of paradise. Until now, this endemic genus consisted of a single species: Ravenala madagascariensis Sonn., which is grown everywhere in the tropics as an ornamental plant. The plant is immediately recognizable for its huge fan-forming banana-like leaves and is locally referred to in Magagascar by several vernacular names. "Variants" have been mentioned in the literature, but without any attempt to recognize formal taxa based on diagnostic features. In this paper, we formally describe five new species and fix the application of the name R. madagascariensis to the populations growing on the eastern coast of Madagascar, with the epitype growing in the marshy Fort-Dauphin area in the south. This paper has numerous implications for conservation biology and other domains of life sciences, due to the importance of this genus for the conservation of Madagascan ecosystems, the ornamental plant trade, as well as for its invasive status in several tropical areas.Entities:
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Year: 2021 PMID: 34753985 PMCID: PMC8578647 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-021-01161-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Distribution of identified specimens and observations of genus Ravenala in Madagascar. (a) R. agatheae (blue), R. hladikorum (green), and R. madagascariensis (red). (b) R. blancii (red), R. grandis (green), and R. menahirana (blue). Maps generated using R version 4.0.5 (https://www.r-project.org/) and Rstudio version 1.3.1093 (https://www.rstudio.com/) softwares.
Figure 2Comparison of non-opened fruit apices. (a) R. agatheae. (b) R. blancii. (c) R. hladikorum. (d) R. grandis. (e) R. madagascariensis. (f) R. menahirana. Ink drawings on polyester tracing paper by Agathe Haevermans©.
Figure 3Comparison of petiole bases. (a) R. agatheae. (b) R. blancii. (c) R. grandis. (d) R. madagascariensis. (e) R. menahirana. (f) R. hladikorum. Photographs Thomas Haevermans©.
Figure 4Comparison of inflorescences. (a) R. agatheae. (b) R. blancii. (c) R. grandis. (d) R. madagascariensis. (e) R. menahirana. (f) R. hladikorum. Photographs Thomas Haevermans©.
Figure 5Species of Ravenala in their natural habitat. (a) R. agatheae. (b) R. blancii. (c) R. grandis. (d) R. madagascariensis. (e) R. menahirana. (f) R. hladikorum. Photographs Thomas Haevermans©.
Figure 7Ravenala blancii. (a) juvenile plant habit with roots. (b) juvenile plant showing the arrangement of laminae. (c) adult plant habit. (d) mature infructescence segment. (e) juvenile leaf showing the attenuate base of the lamina. (f) inflorescence with sub-simultaneous opening of the flowers. (g) young infructescence with already degraded bracts. (h) seeds with arilla. (i) open flower. (j) details of the stigma. (k) style. Ink drawings on polyester tracing paper by Agathe Haevermans© from specimens Hladik 6790, 6239, 6650, Haevermans et al. 832, and observations in-situ.
Comparison of the main distinctive morphological characters for the six species of Ravenala.
| Habit | Suckering | Solitary | Solitary | Solitary | Suckering | Solitary |
| Adult dimensions (m) | 6–10 | 10–15 | 20–30 | 10–15 | 6–12 | 6–10 |
| Leaves lamina color | Dark green | Dark green | Light green | Dark green | Light green | Dark green |
| Leaves simultaneously alive | 9–22 | 9–16 | 15–30 | 9–18 | 14–26 | 12–18 |
| Petiole color | Tricolor (white, green, red) | Green | Dark green/Yellowish | Greenish-yellow | Yellowish green | Dark red |
| Sheath margin dvp. | Very developed (10 mm+) | Undeveloped | Developped (0–9 mm) | Very developed (10 mm+) | Developed (0–9 mm) | Very developed (10 mm+) |
| Sheath margin shape | Dryish papyraceous | Eroded | Entire/split | Brown papyraceous, split | Not dry, entire/split | Dark red dry zigzag |
| Petiole & dry infr. persistence | Yes | No | No | No | No | No |
| Juvenile lamina | Non-decurrent | Decurrent | Non-decurrent | Non-decurrent | Non-decurrent | Non-decurrent |
| Juvenile lamina distribution | Irregular fan | Torus shape | Irregular fan | Irregular fan | Irregular fan | Irregular fan |
| Adult leaves distribution | Regular fan | Regular fan | Regular fan | Irregular fan | Regular fan | Irregular fan |
| Bracts #/Infl. | 10–14 | 4–6 | 10–20 | 4–7 | 8–16 | 10–12 |
| Bracts L/l | 450–500 | 160–350 | 440–540 | 150–510 | 200–450 | 260–360 |
| Bracts persistence | Siff and coriaceous | Torn and degraded | Siff and coriaceous | Siff and coriaceous | Siff and coriaceous | Siff and coriaceous |
| Infructescence imbrication | Compact | Compact | Lax | Compact | Lax | Compact |
| Flower length (+ovary) in mm | 260–310 | 165–280 | 300 | 240–320 | 240–280 | 220–250 |
| Free vs fused petals ratio | Much shorter (0.6) | Subequal (1) | Slightly smaller (0.8) | Slightly smaller (0.9) | Slightly smaller (0.8) | Subequal (1) |
| Stamens size vs perianth | Similar | Similar | Much shorter | Similar | Similar | Similar |
| Fruit apex | Conical | Conical | Truncated | Truncated | Conical | Truncated with bony mucro |