familyMusaceae

Musaceae

A. L. Jussieu
Common names: Banana Family
Treatment appears in FNA Volume 22. Treatment on page 302.

Treelike herbs, perennial, from corm [rhizome] [corm]. True aerial stems absent. Leaves basal, in several ranks, differentiated into basal sheath, petiole, and blade; sheaths overlapping, forming unbranched pseudostem, open, ligule absent; summit of petiole not differentiated; blade with lateral-veins parallel, diverging from prominent midrib. Inflorescences 1 per aerial shoot, projecting from tip of pseudostem, pedunculate racemes of 12–20-flowered monochasial cymes (cincinni); bracts of main axis enclosing cincinni. Flowers unisexual (proximal flowers pistillate, distal flowers staminate), bilaterally symmetric; sepals and petals differentiated, sepals 3, petals 3, 3 sepals and 2 petals fused, remaining petal distinct; fertile stamens 5 (–6), not petallike; anthers 2-locular; occasionally 1 rudimentary staminode; ovary inferior, 3-carpellate, 3-locular, all locules fertile; placentation axile; ovules many per locule; style terminal, filiform; stigma 3-lobed. Fruits berries; sepals not persistent in fruit. Seeds: aril absent; endosperm copious; perisperm copious; embryo straight. x = 9, 10, 11.

Distribution

Introduced; tropical parts of Africa, Asia, Australia, and Oceania, often persisting around gardens and plantations throughout the wet tropics

Discussion

Genera 3, species ca. 40 (1 genus, 1 species, and 1 stable hybrid in the flora).

Selected References

None.

Lower Taxa

... more about "Musaceae"
Alan T. Whittemore +
A. L. Jussieu +
Banana Family +
12-20-flowered +
monochasial +
tropical parts of Africa +, Asia +, Australia +, and Oceania +  and often persisting around gardens and plantations throughout the wet tropics +
differentiated +
3-carpellate +
distinct +  and fused +
differentiated +
not differentiated +
not persistent +
2 +  and 3 +
differentiated +
not petal-like +
filiform +
Musaceae +
herb +  and arboreous +
11 +, 10 +  and 9 +