Dehaasia: Difference between revisions

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{{taxobox
{{taxobox
|name = ''Dehaasia''
|name = ''Dehaasia''
|image =002 Taiping Lake Garden Trees.jpg
|image =
|image_caption = Tree with the white bark in Taiping (Malaysia)
|image_caption =
|regnum = [[Plant]]ae
|regnum = [[Plant]]ae
|unranked_divisio = [[Angiosperm]]s
|unranked_divisio = [[Angiosperm]]s
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'''''Dehaasia''''' is a genus of [[evergreen]] or [[deciduous]] trees or shrubs belonging to the Laurel family, [[Lauraceae]]. It is a botanical genus to 53 [[species]] of [[flowering plants]] belonging to the family [[Lauraceae]]. Distributed from continental [[Asia]], from India to China, and islands from Borneo, New Guinea, Java, and Indonesia. The genus was described by [[Carl Ludwig Blume]] and published in ''Rumphi 1: 161'' in 1837. (Jun 1837).<ref name = Trop>{{cite web|url=http://www.tropicos.org/Name/40022976 |title=Name - !!Dehaasia Blume |publisher=Tropicos |date= |accessdate=2011-11-11}}</ref>
'''''Dehaasia''''' is a genus of [[evergreen]] or [[deciduous]] trees or shrubs belonging to the Laurel family, [[Lauraceae]]. It is a botanical genus to 53 [[species]] of [[flowering plants]] belonging to the family [[Lauraceae]]. Distributed from continental [[Asia]], from India to China, and islands from Borneo, New Guinea, Java, and Indonesia. The genus was described by [[Carl Ludwig Blume]] and published in ''Rumphi 1: 161'' in 1837. (Jun 1837).<ref name = Trop>{{cite web|url=http://www.tropicos.org/Name/40022976 |title=Name - !!Dehaasia Blume |publisher=Tropicos |date= |accessdate=2011-11-11}}</ref>


==Overview==
== Characteristics ==
About 35 species in Cambodia, China, Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, Myanmar, Philippines,<ref>http://plants.jstor.org/specimen/mo-247194</ref> Thailand, Vietnam, with the center of diversity in west Malaysia; three species in China, two endemic.<ref name="harvard1">http://flora.huh.harvard.edu/china/PDF/PDF07/Dehaasia.pdf</ref><ref>http://www.cvh.org.cn/lsid/index.php?lsid=urn:lsid:cvh.org.cn:names:g_1986</ref>
About 35 species in Cambodia, China, Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, Myanmar, Philippines, Thailand, Vietnam, with the center of diversity in west Malaysia; three species in China, two endemic.<ref name="harvard1">http://flora.huh.harvard.edu/china/PDF/PDF07/Dehaasia.pdf</ref>
[[Alseodaphne]], Dehaasia and [[Nothaphoebe]] are, morphologically, three closely related but distinct genera near to the Persea subgroup of the Lauraceae.
Shrubs or small hermaphrodite trees, up to 5 m tall. They are [[bush]] or [[tree]]s of medium size.<ref>http://flora.huh.harvard.edu/china/PDF/PDF07/Dehaasia.pdf</ref> in tropical montane forest, lowland rainforest,<ref>http://www.wildsidephotography.ca/gallery/Database/26000_G</ref> subtropical coastal lowland rainforest, [[Cloud forest]], and [[Laurel forest]].
The leaves are bright green to dark green, shiny and alternate.<ref>http://www.efloras.org/florataxon.aspx?flora_id=2&taxon_id=109471</ref><ref>http://www.efloras.org/object_page.aspx?object_id=112365&flora_id=2</ref>
The [[bark]] is usually whitish<ref>http://flora.huh.harvard.edu/china/pdf/pdf07/Dehaasia.pdf</ref> to grey, soft, papery, peels easily, with the [[xylem]] yellow. Branchlets yellow-white initially but soon grayed, slender, glabrous, warty, lenticellate, with distinctive leaf scars; young ones more or less angled;<ref>http://flora.huh.harvard.edu/china/pdf/pdf07/Dehaasia.pdf</ref> innovation covered with long and finely appressed hairs. White twigs, thin and stiff, with visible signs of scarring produced by the leaves.<ref>http://www.jstor.org/discover/10.2307/4111844?uid=3737952&uid=2&uid=4&sid=47699015062327</ref><ref>http://www.cvh.org.cn/lsid/index.php?lsid=urn:lsid:cvh.org.cn:names:cnpc_62988&vtype=tax,img,spm,ref,link</ref> The [[sheet]]s are grouped at the apex of the twig: The [[inflorescence]]s in [[tassel]]s arm, generally thin with many [[bracts]] with few flowers, usually upright and branched at right angles.<ref>http://flora.huh.harvard.edu/china/pdf/pdf07/Dehaasia.pdf</ref><ref>http://www.efloras.org/object_page.aspx?object_id=112365&flora_id=2</ref> The [[fruit]] is black-dark and shiny, generally scarlet but sometimes yellow or green.<ref>http://131.230.176.4/cgi-bin/dol/dol_terminal.pl?taxon_name=Dehaasia_cairocan&rank=binomial</ref> Usually ovoid, rarely globose with an [[exocarp]] fleshy and meaty. Some species have a red or scarlet dome.<ref>http://www.phytoimages.siu.edu/imgs/pelserpb/r/Lauraceae_Dehaasia_cairocan_24856.html</ref>
The dispersal of seeds is due to birds that swallow them, so the berries are shaped to attract the birds. The fruits are an important food source for some birds.


==Selected species==
==Selected species==

Revision as of 20:57, 19 May 2012

Dehaasia
Scientific classification
Kingdom:
(unranked):
(unranked):
Order:
Family:
Genus:
Dehaasia

Species

see text

Dehaasia is a genus of evergreen or deciduous trees or shrubs belonging to the Laurel family, Lauraceae. It is a botanical genus to 53 species of flowering plants belonging to the family Lauraceae. Distributed from continental Asia, from India to China, and islands from Borneo, New Guinea, Java, and Indonesia. The genus was described by Carl Ludwig Blume and published in Rumphi 1: 161 in 1837. (Jun 1837).[1]

Overview

About 35 species in Cambodia, China, Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, Myanmar, Philippines, Thailand, Vietnam, with the center of diversity in west Malaysia; three species in China, two endemic.[2]

Selected species

Some names in the repository Global Names Index of uBio:[3]

References

  1. ^ "Name - !!Dehaasia Blume". Tropicos. Retrieved 2011-11-11.
  2. ^ http://flora.huh.harvard.edu/china/PDF/PDF07/Dehaasia.pdf
  3. ^ "Global Names Index". Gni.globalnames.org. Retrieved 2011-11-11.

External links