Species
B. dioica
Photos
5 photos
Identity
- Genus
- Begonia
- Name
- B. dioica
- Author
- F. Hamilton, ex D. Don, Prodr. Fl. Nepal
- Publication Date
- 1825
- Place
- Nepal; Sikkim; Arunchal Pradesh (R. Morris, 2005. ca. 400 - 600’) Southern Xizang of China, northern Pakistan, northern India, and Bhutan
- Habitat
- On moss covered tree trunks and branches at lower altitudes or between rocks in more open places at higher altitudes from 1300-2500m
- Country
- India, Nepal
- Region
- Asia
- Section
- Diploclinium
- Plant Type
- Tuberous
- Synonyms and Comments
- Etymology: alluding to the dioecious nature of the species; B. erosa Wallich, Numer. List :129, no. 3688. 1831, pro parte, non Blume. 1827, nomen nudum. —A. de Candolle, Prodr. 15(1):327. 1864 [= amoena Wallich ex A. de Candolle. 1864.] —C.B. Clarke in J.D. Hooker, Fl. Brit. Ind. 2:642. 1879 [= tenella D. Don. 1825.] —H. Hara in H. Ohashi, Fl. E. Himalaya 3:85. 1975.
- Reference
- D. Don, Prodr. Fl. Nepal :223. 1825.; JGSL9/08
- Article References
- DVD from Rekha Morris 2010; Hughes M. et al., Asian Begonia 87, 2018
- Photo References
- DVD from Rekha Morris 2010; Hughes M. et al., Asian Begonia 87, 2018
Plant
- Description
- Usually dioecious, but monoecious forms are not uncommon
- Stem Type
- Creeping stolons
Lineage
Parents
No parentage recorded.
Etymology: alluding to the dioecious nature of the species; B. erosa Wallich, Numer. List :129, no. 3688. 1831, pro parte, non Blume. 1827, nomen nudum. —A. de Candolle, Prodr. 15(1):327. 1864 [= amoena Wallich ex A. de Candolle. 1864.] —C.B. Clarke in J.D. Hooker, Fl. Brit. Ind. 2:642. 1879 [= tenella D. Don. 1825.] —H. Hara in H. Ohashi, Fl. E. Himalaya 3:85. 1975.
Descendants
No recorded descendants.
Culture
- Cultural Requirements
- Cool growing conditions, moist environment
- Endangered Status
- Least Concern; Critically endangered B2ab(v) in China
- Original Botanical Description or Link to
- Tuberous, creeping, stoloniferous, dioecious, deciduous herb, 3–11 cm high. All plant parts glabrous. Tubers 2–3 (1–2 old, one new). Stolon: usually one to three developing from previous year’s tuber, red, slender, 5–60 cm long, 1–2 mm thick, usually unbranched, rarely branched or towards the apex with many fibre-like branches in large individuals, one to many tiny white aerial bulbs on stolon tips, gradually turning red after stolons touch moss or rock surface. Stipule: lanceolate, 3–4 × 1–2 mm, glabrous, caduceus. Leaf: 1 per plant, basal, petiole green to red, 1–22 cm long, 1.5– 5 mm thick, adaxially shallowly grooved along the full length; lamina narrowly deltateovate, basifixed, symmetric, 2.5–17 × 1.5–10 cm, upper surface green, underside green, pink green or red, venation palmate, 8–9, green to red, adaxially impressed, abaxially prominent, tertiary even secondary veins invisible; base shallowly cordate, auricles non-overlapped, margin crenate to dentate or double serrate; apex acuminate. Inflorescence: cymose, usually 1, terminal, 8–22 cm long, rachis pink to red, 6–10 cm long, 1–2 mm thick; peduncle branched up to three times, primary 5–10 cm long, secondary and tertiary 3–5 mm long, with 2–5 female flowers or 3–5 male flowers. Bract: lanceolate 2–8 × 1–2 mm, caduceus. Male flower: pedicel 10–25 mm long; tepals 4; outer tepals ovate-orbicular, 6–15 × 5–10 mm, pink to red, margin entire; inner tepals elliptic, 4–8 × 2–4 mm, white to pale pink; androecium with 15–20 stamens; filaments 1–2 mm long, unequal, fused at base into a short column; anther obovate, 1 mm long, dehiscing via short slits near the tip, not hooded, connective not extended. Female flower: pedicel 12–30 mm long; bracteoles absent; tepals 3 (occasionally 2), persistent, outer two larger, elliptic-ovate, nearly equal, 6–15 × 6–10 mm, pink to red, inner one smaller, lanceolate, 6–7 × 3–5 mm, white to pink; ovary 3–locular, placentae bifid; styles 3, persistent, deeply forked once and spirally 1.5–2 circled. Fruit: pendulous, capsule ellipsoid, 7–10 × 6–8 mm; wings 3, unequal or nearly equal, red or reddish-green, rounded-triangular, 2–6 × 7–12 mm, stalk red, 15–40 mm long, 0.8–1 mm thick.