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Flacourtia indica (Burm. f.) Merr.
GOVERNORS PLUM
Life   Plantae   Dicotyledoneae   Flacourtiaceae   Flacourtia


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FamilyScientific name @ source (records)
Diatrypaceae  Diatrype disciformis @ BPI (1)
Elsinoaceae  Sphaceloma flacourtiae @ BPI (1)
Miridae  Gn_orthotylinigp12 sp_003 @ AMNH_PBI (1)

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Following served from American Museum of Natural History, Plant Bug AMNH_PBI00001475 wa%201997%20l17%20h044
   
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Following modified from Flora of North America
   
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FNA Vol. 7 Page 163 , 164 Login | eFloras Home | Help
FNA | Family List | FNA Vol. 7 | Salicaceae | Flacourtia

1. Flacourtia indica (Burman f.) Merrill, Interpr. Herb. Amboin. 377. 1917.

Governor's or Indian or Madagascar plum

Gmelina indica Burman f., Fl. Indica, 132, plate 39, fig. 5. 1768; Flacourtia ramontchi L'Héretier

Trees or shrubs, 3-5(-10) m. Leaves: petiole 1-2 cm; blade red to pink when immature, ovate to orbiculate, 8-12 cm, becoming coriaceous, margins glandular-serrate or -crenate, surfaces glabrous or sparsely to densely pubescent. Peduncles 5-10 mm. Pedicels 5-10 mm. Flowers: bisexual ones sometimes on some branches of otherwise pistillate plants; sepals (persistent) slightly connate, greenish, ovate-orbiculate, 1.5-2.5 mm, apex acute to rounded, surfaces pubescent; filaments pubescent at base; ovary ovoid; styles spreading. Drupes reddish to purple or red-black at maturity, globose or ellipsoid, 1.8-2.5 cm. Seeds ca. 4-10, obovoid, 8-10 mm; testa crustaceous, rugose. 2 n = 22 (India, cult. Cuba), 44 (Africa).

Flowering and fruiting year-round. Roadsides, grassy areas, hammock edges; 0-10 m; introduced; Fla.; s Asia (India); Africa; introduced also in tropical and subtropical regions elsewhere.

Flacourtia indica has been cultivated in southern Florida for a century or more and has become naturalized there in Broward, Collier, Lee, Miami-Dade, and Monroe counties, the fruits being dispersed by birds (W. S. Judd 1997b). Throughout its wide range, it is highly variable in thorniness, pubescence, and leaf shape; various combinations of extremes have been described as separate species, although the morphological variation seems to be continuous and does not correlate with geography (Judd). Trying to recognize those segregate taxa among the plants introduced in North America seems futile.

Updated: 2024-04-25 18:58:40 gmt
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