Syzygium

P. Browne ex Gaertner

Fruct. Sem. Pl. 1: 166, plate 33, fig. 1. 1788. name conserved

Etymology: Greek syzgios, joined, alluding to paired leaves and branches
Synonyms: Caryophyllus Linnaeus Jambosa Adanson
Treatment appears in FNA Volume 10.
Revision as of 20:04, 7 June 2022 by imported>Volume Importer
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
 TaxonIllustrator 
FNA10 P37 Syzygium cumini.jpgRhexia petiolata
Rhexia alifanus
Syzygium cumini

Trees or shrubs, mostly glabrous. Leaves opposite; blade venation brochidodromous. Inflorescences (1 or) 2–100-flowered, terminal or axillary, dichasia, panicles, or racemes. Flowers [3 or] 4 (or 5) -merous, sessile or pedicellate; bud turbinate, clavate, or obovoid; hypanthium forming a tube, prolonged well beyond summit of ovary, base often attenuate; calyx lobes usually distinct and well developed, in opposing subequal to equal pairs, rarely calyptrate and circumscissile at anthesis; petals white, distinct or coherent and calyptrate and falling as a unit at anthesis; stamens 50–300 [–500], borne in a ring surmounting hypanthium; ovary 2 (–4) -locular; style often persistent in developing fruit; ovules 2–90. Fruits berries, red, purple, purple-black, yellow, or reddish, globose, ellipsoid, or subglobose, usually excavated apically; calyx lobes persistent or caducous. Seeds usually 1 [or 2, rarely 3–5], reniform to subglobose; seed-coat membranous; embryo subglobose to reniform; cotyledons distinct, planoconvex, thick. x = 11.

Distribution

Introduced; s, se Asia, Africa, Pacific Islands (New Guinea), Australia

Discussion

Species ca. 1000 (3 in the flora).

Many species of Syzygium are widely cultivated throughout the tropics as fruit or ornamental trees or as hedges. They are not tolerant of cold. Two species are naturalized in southern Florida and another in southern California.

Selected References

None.

Key

1 Inflorescences 15–100-flowered, panicles; floral buds 4–5 mm; calyx lobes 0.5 × 0.5 mm, caducous; petals coherent. Syzygium cumini
1 Inflorescences (1 or) 2–8-flowered, dichasia or racemes; floral buds 6–30 mm; calyx lobes 2–8 × 2–10 mm, persistent; petals distinct. > 2
2 Leaf blades obovate or elliptic, 3–9 × 1.2–3.2 cm; petals 3–5 mm diam.; berries 1.4–2.3 cm; California. Syzygium australe
2 Leaf blades narrowly elliptic or lanceolate, 12–24 × 3–5 cm; petals 10–15 mm diam.; berries 3–4 cm; Florida. Syzygium jambos
... more about "Syzygium"
dorsifixed +  and basifixed +
Fred R. Barrie +  and Leslie R. Landrum +
P. Browne ex Gaertner +
attenuate +
brochidodromous +
submembranous +, papery +  and leathery +
obovoid +, clavate +  and turbinate +
circumscissile +
caducous +  and persistent +
planoconvex +
s +, se Asia +, Africa +, Pacific Islands (New Guinea) +  and Australia +
subglobose +  and reniform +
Greek syzgios, joined, alluding to paired leaves and branches +
pedicellate +, sessile +  and 4-merous +
unisexual +  and bisexual +
reddish +, yellow +, purple-black +, purple +  and red +
subglobose +, ellipsoid +  and globose +
aromatic +
dibrachiate +, simple +  and unicellular +
cup-shaped +, cylindric +  and obconic +
axillary +  and terminal +
petiolate +  and simple +
persistent +
basal +, subapical +  and inferior +
subequal +
coherent +  and distinct +
Fruct. Sem. Pl. +
reniform +  and subglobose +
50 +  and 300 +
persistent +
Caryophyllus +  and Jambosa +
Syzygium +
Myrtaceae +