Platymiscium Vogel

First published in Linnaea 11: 198 (1837)
This genus is accepted
The native range of this genus is Mexico to S. Tropical America, S. Caribbean.

Descriptions

Klitgaard, B. (2005). Platymiscium (Leguminosae: Dalbergieae): Biogeography Systematics, Morphology, Taxonomy and Uses. Kew Bulletin, 60(3), 321-400. Retrieved from http://www.jstor.org/stable/4111062

Type
Platymiscium floribundum Vogel.
Morphology General Habit
Trees, single-stemmed or branched; branching pattern opposite or 3-verticillate; bark smooth when young, shallowly to deeply fissured when old; slash often exudes sap that oxidises red; wood durable, hard, with red-brown attractive heartwood, or wood light- coloured throughout; internodes of juvenile branchlets hollow or solid, if hollow then often inhabited by ants
Morphology Leaves
Leaves opposite or 3-verticillate, imparipinnate or 1 - 3-foliolate; stipules always interpetiolar, often conspicuous, usually caducous; stipels sometimes present, in shape like "miniature stipules" or hair tufts at the bases of petiolules; juvenile petiolule and pedicel bases often covered in food bodies that are probably harvested by ants; leaflets 1 - 11 leaflets per leaf (only seedlings unifoliolate), opposite or subopposite, distal leaflet often larger than the others; venation brochidodromous, primary vein prominent to flush with or channelled on upper surface, tertiary and quarternary venation reticulate, orthogonal, marginal vein usually complete, rarely looped or incomplete, areoles well-developed, veinlets in areoles usually once to three times branched, rarely simple
Morphology Reproductive morphology Inflorescences
Inflorescences pendent or erect, axillary, sometimes appearing terminal, of simple 20- to 130- flowered racemes (occasionally with secondary branching), 1 - several inflorescences per leaf axil; flower arrangement spiral, in irregular clusters, or rarely in whorls; flower maturation acropetal; inflorescence axis thick and furrowed or slender and smooth, sometimes with prominent pedicel scars; pedicel articulated at calyx base or without articulation, sometimes leaving a knob-shaped projection after flower fall; bract and bracteoles variable in size, caducous to persistent
Morphology Reproductive morphology Flowers
Flowers papilionoid, to 18 mm long, with a short hypanthium, pedicellate or subsessile, usually strongly scented, most probably pollinated by bees; calyx robust or delicate, 5-toothed, adaxial two teeth usually fused higher than abaxial three; corolla yellow or orange; standard often with a basal maroon, purple or red nectar guide; wing petals usually with a clearly defined petal sculpture; keel petals usually adnate 1/2 length along lower margins; androecium monadelphous, occasionally with the vexillary stamen free almost to the base, but never completely so, both types of androecia may occur on same tree; staminal sheath with basal pseudofenestrae, sometimes persistent during early fruit development; anthers monomorphic or alternate anthers dimorphic in size; ovary long-stipitate, 1-ovulate; style confluent with ovary, slightly falcate, tapering into an undifferentiated terminal stigma
Morphology Reproductive morphology Fruits
Fruit a one-seeded samara, usually elliptic or ovate, occasionally reniform; exocarp papery and dull or hard and glossy; seed centrally placed, usually reniform; testa chartaceous
Seedling
Germination phaneroepigeal; first eophylls alternate or opposite, unifoliolate.
Distribution
Platymiscium comprises 19 species throughout Central and South America, from Sonora in Mexico to Beni in Bolivia and Santa Catarina in Brazil.
[KBu]

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

Vernacular
trebol, macawood, macacauba, granadillo, coyote, tarara colorado
Habit
Tall trees
Ecology
Tropical rain forest to seasonally dry forest, woodland (cerrado), wooded grassland and thorn scrub (caatinga); 10 spp. in rain forest and 9 spp. in dry forest
Distribution
Neotropics from Mexico and C America to tropical S America; 4 spp. variable and widespread, and 15 spp. occupying more restricted distributions (with two centres of diversity, one in Mexico [6 spp.] and one in Brazil [5 spp.]). 3 endemic spp. in C America; 7 spp. in Amazonian Guianas, Brazil, Bolivia, Peru, Ecuador, Colombia and Venezuela and 3 spp. in E Brazil to Bolivia
Note
Placed by Polhill (1981d: 233-242) in tribe Dalbergieae related to Pterocarpus. Lavin et al. (2001a) resolved Platymiscium in a polytomy in the Pterocarpus clade (Fig. 40)

The present circumscription of Dalbergieae sens. lat. contains radical changes to Dalbergieae sensu Polhill (1981d: 233–242). In the first instance it takes a traditional view of the tribe by including genera such as Vatairea and Vataireopsis (now in the Vataireoid clade, see Figs. 1& 40) and Andira and Hymenolobium, which in Wojciechowski et al. (2004) are sister to the combined Dalbergioid clade of Lavin et al. (2001a), plus Amorpheae. The bulk of the treatment, however, recognises the cryptic Dalbergioid clade (Lavin et al., 2001a) as comprising tribe Dalbergieae sens. lat., diagnosed by the synapomorphy of aeschynomenoid root nodules. This clade includes all the genera placed in the Dalbergieae sensu Polhill (1981d: 233– 242), the Aeschynomeneae sensu Rudd (1981) and the Adesmieae sensu Polhill (1981g: 355–356), plus subtribe Bryinae of the Desmodieae sensu Ohashi et al. (1981) as well as the genus Diphysa (tribe Robinieae sensu Polhill & Sousa (1981)).The placements of all members of the Dalbergioid clade within the classification presented here and in those of Polhill (1981d: 233–242; 1981g: 355–356), Polhill & Sousa (1981), Ohashi et al. (1981) and Rudd (1981) are listed in Fig. 40.

Dalbergieae sensu Polhill (1981d) contained 19 genera defined by woody habit, supposedly plesiomorphic flowers, pods with a specialised seed chamber and seeds that accumulated alkaloids. Polhill (1981d) noted that there seemed to be two centres within the Dalbergieae: one around Andira with Hymenolobium, Vatairea, Vataireopsis, Dalbergia, and Machaerium, and one around Pterocarpus. He also highlighted evidence from wood anatomy (Baretta-Kuipers, 1981) which showed that Andira, Hymenolobium, Vatairea, and Vataireopsis have coarser wood structures more typical of members of the Sophoreae than the remaining members of the Dalbergieae. The study of fruit and seedling morphology by Lima (1990) further supported these two centres within the Dalbergieae: one including Andira, Hymenolobium, Vatairea, and Vataireopsis, and the second the remaining genera. Most recently several molecular and morphological studies (e.g., Lavin et al., 2001a; Pennington et al., 2001; Wojciechowski et al., 2004) confirm that these four genera do not belong in the Dalbergioid clade. Since there is, however, still much work to be done to resolve the phylogenetic relationships of these four genera, they have been kept in tribe Dalbergieae sens. lat. in this treatment to avoid tentative placements, which might be treated by users as formal.

The tribe Aeschynomeneae sensu Rudd (1981) contained 25 genera characterised by lomentaceous pods, although some members lack loments (e.g., Arachis, Ormocarpopsis, Diphysa spp., Ormocarpum spp., and Pictetia spp.). None of the Aeschynomeneae had previously been considered closely related to the Dalbergieae, but the work of Lavin et al. (2001a) has resolved all the ‘aeschynomenoid genera’ within the Dalbergioid clade.

The taxonomic history of the monogeneric tribe Adesmieae sensu Polhill (1981g) is very different from that of the Dalbergieae. The Adesmieae combines the presumed plesiomorphic trait of free stamen filaments, with presence of lomentaceous pods that are supposedly derived. This combination of features suggested a taxonomically isolated position far removed from the Dalbergieae. The analyses of Lavin et al. (2001a) based on molecular sequence and morphological data, however, support Adesmia (nested together with five genera of Rudd’s Aeschynomeneae) being sister to the Pterocarpus and Dalbergia clades. The neotropical genera Brya and Cranocarpus were placed together in a new subtribe Bryinae of Desmodieae in the classification of Ohashi et al. (1981). The features common to these genera are periporate pollen and glochidiate hairs or glandular trichomes. In the molecular studies of Doyle et al. (1995) and Bailey et al. (1997), Brya and Cranocarpus did not lack the intron for the chloroplast gene rpl2 nor for the open reading frame ORF184, which are characteristic of the other desmodioid genera studied. Bailey et al. (1997), therefore, suggested that Brya and Cranocarpus should be removed from the Desmodieae. Their findings were strongly corroborated by the three gene analyses of Lavin et al. (2001a) which place the two genera in the Pterocarpus clade (Fig. 40).

One further transfer has been made in the Dalbergioid clade since Rudd (1981) and Polhill & Sousa (1981). Lavin (1987) transferred Diphysa from the Robinieae to tribe Aeschynomeneae based on the absence of canavanine in the seeds, a feature consistently present in the Robinieae (Lavin, 1986). Lavin (1987) also listed 14 morphological characters that placed Diphysa with the Aeschynomeneae rather than the Robinieae. In the phylogenetic analyses of Lavin et al. (2001a), Diphysa is resolved in the Dalbergioid clade nested within the ‘transatlantic clade’ (Fig. 40), first identified by Lavin et al. (2000).

Finally, since 1981 four new genera have been published: the Brazilian monotypic Grazielodendron (Lima, 1983b), the possibly extinct Madagascan endemic Peltiera (Labat & Du Puy, 1997), Zygocarpum, the Horn of Africa – Arabian segregate of Ormocarpum (Thulin & Lavin, 2001) and Maraniona from northern Peru (Hughes et al., 2004). Three genera have also been placed in synonymy since 1981: the Caribbean genus Belairia which is a synonym of Pictetia (Beyra-Matos & Lavin, 1999), and the genera Pachecoa and Arthrocarpum which Thulin (1999) synonymised under Chapmannia. In this treatment 49 genera and (1319) –1325–(1331) species are recognised in Dalbergieae sens. lat. (including 4 basally branching dalbergioid genera comprising c. 58 species, and (1261)–1267– (1273) species in the 45 genera of the Dalbergioid clade [Lavin et al., 2001a]).The following informal groupings of genera are based on the work of Lavin et al. (2001a): Adesmia clade: 6 genera; c. 360 species; neotropical except Zornia, which is pantropical. Pterocarpus clade: 22 genera; c. 200 species centred in the Neotropics, Pterocarpus and Stylosanthes are pantropical, Inocarpus Asian, and Chapmannia transatlantic.Dalbergia clade: 17 genera; c. 706 species which are pantropical, but centred in Africa; Weberbauerella, Soemmeringia, Pictetia and Diphysa are neotropical, Machaerium transatlantic, Dalbergia and Aeschynomene are pantropical, and Geissaspis Asian. Isolated genera: 4 genera; 58 species, neotropical except Andira, which has one amphiatlantic species.

[LOWO]

Uses

Use
Used as ornamentals; most species (variously called trebol, macawood, macacauba, granadillo, coyote, tarara colorado ) are highly valued regionally for their hardwood timber, used in house construction and for fine furniture, cabinet making, decorative veneers, joinery and musical instruments
[LOWO]

Sources

  • Herbarium Catalogue Specimens

  • 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