Mocinnodaphne

Mocinnodaphne is a neotropical genus of flowering plants in the family Lauraceae within the major group Angiosperms (flowering plants).[1] The genus includes a single species of evergreen trees, Mocinnodaphne cinnamomoidea which is distributed mostly in tropical and subtropical regions of North America and Central America.

Mocinnodaphne
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Plantae
Clade: Tracheophytes
Clade: Angiosperms
Clade: Magnoliids
Order: Laurales
Family: Lauraceae
Genus: Mocinnodaphne
Lorea-Hern.
Species:
M. cinnamomoidea
Binomial name
Mocinnodaphne cinnamomoidea
Lorea-Hern.

Overview

Mocinnodaphne trees are shrubs or little trees hermaphodite and evergreen, of 2 to 10 m tall, called Mountain laurels. Like Oreodaphne they are present in Mountain Cloud forest in tropical areas like the Sierra Madre Del Sur in Guerrero, Mexico.[2] The flowers are small, inconspicuas and bisexual. It is distinguished by the presence of only the third whorl of stamens fertile, anthers bicelled, staminodes of the fourth whorl well developed, and a cupule with persistent tepals subtending the fruit. The set of characters that make this genus distinct relates it to the cluster of genera formed by Ocotea, Nectandra, Cinnamomum, and few others.[3] The fruit are succulent, olive fruit shaped with a deep thick cup, and dispersed mostly by birds.

Mocinnodaphne is related with Aiouea, Cinnamomum, where the species were included, Nectandra, Ocotea, Oreodaphne, and Umbellularia. The three most important characters were stomatal rim width, stomata and aperture length. The more close group has a wide stomatal rim and includes all the species of Aiouea from South America, neotropical species of Cinnamomum, and Mocinnodaphne.[4]

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.