Bocoa Aubl.

First published in Hist. Pl. Guiane, Suppl.: 38 (1775)
This genus is accepted
The native range of this genus is Guianas to Brazil.

Descriptions

Ireland, H. (2007). Taxonomic Changes in the South American Genus Bocoa (Leguminosae-Swartzieae): Reinstatement of the Name Trischidium, and a Synopsis of Both Genera. Kew Bulletin, 62(2), 333-349. Retrieved from http://www.jstor.org/stable/20443359

Type
Type species: B. prouacensis Aublet
Morphology General Habit
Trees to 30 metres in height, DBH to c. 42 cm
Morphology General Indumentum
Branchlets white pubescent to glabrous or glabrescent
Morphology Leaves Stipules
Stipules, if present, up to 3 mm long, deltoid, caducous
Morphology Leaves
Leaves imparipinnate or unifoliolate, the rachis sometimes channelled above, petiolate, 1 - 6-foliolate, the leaflets alternate or opposite, petiolulate, the blades elliptic or ovate
Morphology Reproductive morphology Inflorescences
Inflorescence a raceme, in clusters, ramiflorous, axillary or terminal, 9 - 135 mm long; floral bract 1 - 2.5 mm long, linear or deltoid, persistent or caducous in fruit; bracteoles absent
Morphology Reproductive morphology Flowers
Flowers often fragrant; bud ellipsoid to sub-globose, calyx splitting irregularly to the base into 3 or 4 recurved segments; petal absent; stamens 7 - 65; anthers dorsifixed, oval, 1 - 1.5 mm long, shorter than the filaments, bilocular and dehiscing longitudinally; filaments white, 2 - 10 mm long, free; ovary one or rarely two, narrowly elliptic, glabrous with a stipe up to 5 mm long, the style to c. 2.5 mm long, persistent or caducous in fruit
Morphology Reproductive morphology Fruits
Fruit dehiscent, woody, the body ellipsoid, glabrous, the surface rough or smooth; stipe 1 - 3 mm long
Morphology Reproductive morphology Seeds
Seed ellipsoid, arillate, brown to dark brown when dried.
[KBu]

Legumes of the World. Edited by G. Lewis, B. Schrire, B. MacKinder & M. Lock. Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew. (2005)

Habit
Trees
Ecology
Tropical Amazonian (non-inundated) rain forest (2 spp.), woodland (cerrado) and bushland (1 sp.)
Distribution
S America (1 sp. French Guiana and Surinam, 2 spp. Brazil, one from Para and Amazonas extending to French Guiana and Surinam, the other recorded only from Maranhão)
Note
Based on molecular data Bocoa is closely related to Bobgunnia and Swartzia (Ireland et al., 2000)

The Swartzieae sens. lat., comprising 17 genera and c. 258 species (Fig. 28), is largely Neotropical and distributed from Mexico to Argentina, and the Caribbean, with Bobgunnia, Cordyla, Mildbraediodendron and Baphiopsis restricted to tropical Africa and Madagascar. Cowan (1981a) included 11 genera in the Swartzieae, then later (Polhill, 1994) transferred four genera from the Sophoreae (Amburana, Ateleia, Cyathostegia and Holocalyx). Bobgunnia (Kirkbride & Wiersema, 1997) and Trischidium (Ireland, submitted) were added subsequently.

The flowers of Swartzieae genera are unusual and varied, and do not totally conform to the typical ‘papilionoid’ structure, resulting in much debate over the systematic placement of the tribe. Disparities with the rest of the family, of some but not all Swartzieae taxa, include a closed calyx in bud, non-papilionaceous corollas (often with a single petal, or these lacking altogether due to complete loss of some petal primordia) and polystemony (often numerous stamens resulting from an innovative developmental feature, the ring meristem) (Tucker, 2003). Although now generally accepted to be papilionoid, the tribe has frequently been shifted between the Papilionoideae and the Caesalpinioideae, and is even recognised by some as a fourth subfamily (De Candolle, 1825; Bartling, 1830; Endlicher, 1840; Corner, 1951).

Research based on pollen (Ferguson & Schrire, 1994), macromorphology (Herendeen, 1995), wood anatomy (Gasson, 1996) and DNA sequences (Doyle et al., 1996; Ireland et al., 2000; Pennington et al., 2001) has shown the Swartzieae to be polyphyletic, with many members of the tribe more closely related to genera in the Sophoreae, Dipterygeae and Dalbergieae than they are to each other (Fig. 28). In a phylogenetic analysis of DNA sequence data (Ireland et al., 2000; Pennington et al., 2001), Swartzia emerges in a monophyletic group with Bobgunnia, Bocoa, Trischidium, Cyathostegia and Ateleia. This group of genera, with the addition of Candolleodendron, are likely to constitute a redefined Swartzieae sens. strict., with the remaining swartzioid genera being moved to other tribes (Fig. 28). Wojciechowski et al. (2004) find moderate support for including Swartzieae sens. strict. in a monophyletic clade together with basally branching genera lacking the 50kb inversion in Sophoreae, and Dipterygeae.

 The reclassification of Swartzieae sens. strict., and realignment of the remaining swartzioid genera in other tribes, needs to be corroborated by further evidence. For the present, Swartzieae sens. lat. is retained in a basally branching position within the Papilionoideae following Polhill (1981a).

[Author’s postscript: Mansano et al. (2004a) recently undertook a molecular-morphological analysis of the Lecointea clade of Herendeen (1995) and found strong support for the inclusion of Harleyodendron and Exostyles within this clade, rather than in the Vataireoid clade as reported here]

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[LOWO]

Uses

Use
Used for timber (furniture, musical instruments), medicine, cosmetics and considered to have magical powers
[LOWO]

Sources

  • Kew Bulletin

    • Kew Bulletin
    • http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/3.0
  • Kew Names and Taxonomic Backbone

    • The International Plant Names Index and World Checklist of Vascular Plants 2024. Published on the Internet at http://www.ipni.org and https://powo.science.kew.org/
    • © Copyright 2023 International Plant Names Index and World Checklist of Vascular Plants. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0
  • Legumes of the World Online

    • http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/3.0
  • World Checklist of Vascular plants (WCVP)

    • The International Plant Names Index and World Checklist of Vascular Plants 2024. Published on the Internet at http://www.ipni.org and https://powo.science.kew.org/
    • © Copyright 2023 World Checklist of Vascular Plants. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0