Manihot |
|||||||||||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
cassava, manioc, yuca |
|||||||||||||||||||||
Habit | Herbs, subshrubs, shrubs, or trees, perennial, unarmed, usually monoecious, rarely dioecious; hairs unbranched or absent; latex white. | ||||||||||||||||||||
Leaves | persistent or deciduous, alternate, simple [palmately compound]; stipules present, deciduous; petiole present [rudimentary], glands absent; stipels present at apex; blade usually palmately lobed, rarely unlobed, lobes undivided or secondarily lobed, margins entire, repand, or serrate, laminar glands absent; venation palmate (pinnate in lobes). |
||||||||||||||||||||
Inflorescences | bisexual (pistillate flowers proximal, staminate distal), terminal or axillary, racemes or panicles; glands subtending each bract 0. |
||||||||||||||||||||
Pedicels | present, pistillate often elongating in fruit. |
||||||||||||||||||||
Staminate flowers | sepals 5, petaloid, 7–20 mm, valvate, connate 1/2 length; petals 0; nectary intrastaminal, cushion-shaped, lobed; stamens (6–8)–10, in 2 whorls, distinct; pistillode absent. |
||||||||||||||||||||
Pistillate flowers | sepals 5, petaloid, distinct; petals 0; nectary annular, lobed or unlobed; pistil 3-carpellate; styles 3, connate basally, unbranched, flabellate, prominently papillate. |
||||||||||||||||||||
Fruits | capsules. |
||||||||||||||||||||
Seeds | globose to oblong; caruncle present. |
||||||||||||||||||||
x | = 9. |
||||||||||||||||||||
Manihot |
|||||||||||||||||||||
Distribution |
Mexico; Central America; South America; s United States |
||||||||||||||||||||
Discussion | Species ca. 100 (6 in the flora). Manihot is one of the most economically important members of Euphorbiaceae, primarily because of the starchy food-bearing roots of M. esculenta, now cultivated throughout the tropics. Also, M. glaziovii Müller Arg., from northeastern Brazil, was once an important source of Ceará rubber. Manihot appears to be most closely related to Cnidoscolus, a conclusion supported by morphological (G. L. Webster 1994) and DNA sequence data (K. Wurdack et al. 2005). Four species of sect. Parvibracteatae, as defined by D. J. Rogers and S. G. Appan (1973), barely extend across the borders of Arizona and Texas from Mexico. In addition, two species are naturalized in the southeastern United States. Leaf blade lobe characters (length, outline) are best developed in the median and immediately adjacent lobes; lateral lobes are progressively smaller and tend to have simpler outlines with distance from the median lobe. (Discussion copyrighted by Flora of North America; reprinted with permission.) |
||||||||||||||||||||
Key |
|
||||||||||||||||||||
Source | FNA vol. 12, p. 192. | ||||||||||||||||||||
Parent taxa | |||||||||||||||||||||
Subordinate taxa | |||||||||||||||||||||
Name authority | Miller: Gard. Dict. Abr. ed. 4, vol. 2. (1754) | ||||||||||||||||||||
Web links |