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Species

B. blancii

Photos

5 photos

Identity

Genus
Begonia
Name
B. blancii
Author
M.Hughes & C.-I Peng, Bot. Stud. (Taipei)
Publication Date
2011
Date of Origin
2010
Place
Northern Palawan
Habitat
On bare rocks in shade en route to Bulalakaw Falls, about 25 km east of El Nido, 300-400 m
Country
The Philippines
Region
Asia
Section
Baryandra
Chr 2n
28, 30
Plant Type
Trailing-Scandent
Synonyms and Comments
Etymology: named after Patrick Blanc who first discovered this species
Reference
Bot. Stud. (Taipei) 52(2): 204. 2011
Article References
Hughes M. et al., Asian Begonia 34, 2018
Photo References
Bot. Stud. (Taipei) 52(2): 204 (203-209; fig. 1). 2011; Hughes M. et al., Asian Begonia 34, 2018; Beg 90 p149 Jul/Aug 2023;

Plant

Description
Lithophytic creeping herb with repent succulent stems. Clustered stomata.
Stem Type
Succulent
Plant Hardiness
Drought tolerant

Lineage

1 descendants

Parents

No parentage recorded.

Etymology: named after Patrick Blanc who first discovered this species

Descendants

1 recorded children

As female parent

0

No children recorded with this plant as the female parent.

As male parent

1

Culture

Endangered Status
Least concern
Original Botanical Description or Link to
botanical-studies-2011-vol-52-begonia-blancii-publication-avril-2011.pdf: “Lithophytic creeping herb. Stem succulent, repent, ca. 5-9 mm diameter, with long pale hairs up to 5 mm long, internodes up to 1 cm apart. Stipules triangular, ca. 15 × 12 mm, slightly keeled, with 2 mm long hairs along the keel and scattered on the abaxial surface, tip extended, apex fimbriate, persistent, becoming recurved and papery with age. Leaves appressed to the substrate when growing vertically, more erect when growing on more horizontal substrate; petiole ca. 1-2 cm on young leaves, extending to around 5-7 cm as the leaf ages reducing the overlap in the leaf mosaic; lamina distinctly fleshy, in various colour forms such as green mottled with darker green, solid dark green with slightly paler veins, or uniform blackish green, basifixed, ob-triangular spathulate, asymmetric, base minutely cordate, sinus ca. 1 mm deep, basal lobe on one side extending to ca. 5 mm, 6-11 × 4-8 cm, upper surface glabrous, underside hairy on the veins, margin entire, slightly wavy, with short hairs, apex broad, truncate or with shallow rounded lobes. Inflorescence up to 20 cm long, cymose, with around 10 flowers, terminal flower pairs consisting of one male and one female, male and female flowers open at the same time; primary peduncle up to 15 cm long, ca. 4 mm in diameter, with scattered long pale hairs, secondary and tertiary peduncles 10-30 mm long, with sparser hairs concentrated near to branching points; bracts triangular-lanceolate, ca. 13 × 6 mm at the first dichotomy and becoming smaller higher up, glabrous or with a small number of hairs, fimbriate. Male flower:pedicels ca. 15-20 mm long, glabrous or with a few hairs; tepals 4, outer 2 ovate, pink on the reverse with scattered hairs, otherwise white or very pale pink and glabrous, ca. 18 × 10 mm, inner 2 obovate to spathulate, tips roundedtruncate to slightly retuse, white, glabrous, 15 × 7 mm; androecium pale yellow, asymmetric, with around 50 stamens; filaments free, unequal, 1.75 mm long on the lower stamens reducing to 1 mm on the upper; anthers 1.75 mm long, oval-oblong, dehiscing through slits running almost the full length of the anther, slits lateral at the base tending to unifacial at the tip, connective extended, rounded. Female flower: pedicels ca. 15-20 mm long, glabrous or with 1 or 2 hairs; ovary 15 × 15 mm overall, with 3-5 wings, uppermost wing largest, rounded, 10 × 15 mm, markedly cucullate, two lowest wings 5 × 12, sometimes with 2 more very reduced wings running parallel along the side of the capsule; capsule ca. 10 × 5 mm, 2-locular, placentae bifid; tepals 4, outer 2 ovate, pink on the reverse with a few hairs, otherwise white or very pale pink and glabrous, ca. 18 × 10 mm, inner 2 obovate to spathulate, tips rounded- truncate to slightly retuse, pale pink, glabrous, 15 × 7 mm; styles 3, golden yellow, bifid, 4 mm long, stigmatic surface once spiralled. Fruit the same shape and size as the ovary or very slightly larger, recurved so the largest wing is lowermost, drying pale brown, dehiscing through the attachment of the two uppermost wings which form a splash cup.”