Melastoma
Sp. Pl. 1: 389. 1753.
Taxon | Illustrator ⠉ | |
---|---|---|
Tetrazygia bicolor Melastoma malabathricum |
Shrubs or trees. Stems erect or procumbent, 4-sided [subterete], often squamose-strigose; bark scaly. Leaves petiolate; blade with 1 or 2 [–4] pairs of lateral primary-veins, marginal pairs often inconspicuous, margins entire, surfaces usually strigose [subvillous to villous, rarely glabrate]. Inflorescences terminal or in distal foliar axils, usually cymes, rarely panicles or flowers solitary; bracts deciduous or persistent, leaflike, ovate, sometimes conspicuous. Flowers pedicellate; hypanthium campanulate to globose-urceolate; calyx deciduous, 5-lobed, lobes triangular to lanceolate or ovate; petals 5 (–8), spreading, symmetric, light to dark-pink, lavender, or purple; stamens 10, unequal, in 2 whorls, dimorphic, episepalous stamens with purple, upcurved anthers and long connectives, epipetalous stamens with yellow, straight anthers and shorter connectives, or stamens isomorphic and connectives slightly prolonged; anthers slightly downcurved, linear-oblong, 2-locular, dehiscent by 1 or 2 apical pores, or by short, longitudinal slits; ovary semi-inferior, adnate to floral-tube, 5-locular; style straight, filiform, equal to petals. Fruits fleshy and irregularly splitting-dehiscent, [capsules and apically dehiscent, or berries and fleshy, indehiscent]. Seeds cochleate.
Distribution
Introduced; Florida, Asia, Pacific Islands, Australia, also in Mexico, elsewhere in Pacific Islands (New Zealand)
Discussion
Species 22 (1 in the flora).
Most species of Melastoma have fleshy, irregularly dehiscent fruits; others have dry capsules [for example, M. pellegrinianum (H. Boissieu) Karsten Meyer].
Selected References
None.