Showing posts with label Author: Sirirugsa. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Author: Sirirugsa. Show all posts

Monday, December 12, 2011

[Botany • 2003] Southern Yunnan Limestone Flora • Biogeography and Floristic affinity of the Limestone Flora in southern Yunnan, China


Figure 1. Locations of the research area in Xishuangbanna, southern Yunnan, China, and compared regional floras (see Table 6). —1. Our research area. —2. Longgan, SW China. —3. Daqinshan Mountains, SW China. —4. Gulinqing, SW China. —5. Huapin, China. —6. Dongyang Mountains, China. —7. Cucphuong, N Vietnam. —8. Chiengdao, N Thailand. —9. The Malay Peninsula limestone. —10. Taiping, Malay Peninsula.


ABSTRACT
The forests on limestone in southern Yunnan, in tropical southwest China, were inventoried, and their floristic composition and biogeographical affinities are discussed. These limestone forests were characterized by phanerophytes making up ca. 78% of the total species and those with mesophyllous leaves comprising 75%. Ecological species groups based on their habitat preferences were discerned from field observations: the species exclusive to the limestone habitats make up 10% and the preferents make up ca. 12% of the total limestone flora. From these limestone forests, 1394 vascular plant species belonging to 640 genera and 153 families were recorded. Based on their distributions, 12 biogeographic elements at the generic level and nine at the specific level were recognized. About 90% of the seed plant genera (over 90% of the species) were tropical; furthermore, 35% of the seed plant genera (65% of the species) have tropical Asian affinities. In a comparison with other regional floras from southern China and tropical Asia, the limestone flora of southern Yunnan revealed closer affinity to tropical floras than to temperate elements of eastern Asian floras. This limestone flora is thus tropical and part of the tropical Asian flora at its northern margin.

Key words: biogeography, China, limestone forest, southern Yunnan.

Zhu, H., H. Wang, B. Li, P. Sirirugsa. 2003. Biogeography and floristic affinity of the limestone flora in southern Yunnan, China. Annals of the Missouri Botanical Garden. 90: 444-465.:

Saturday, June 25, 2011

[Botany • 2005] พรรณไม้สกุลขมิ้น รายงานใหม่ 2 ชนิด | New records of Curcuma L. (Zingiberaceae) in Thailand



New records of Curcuma L. (Zingiberaceae) in Thailand

CHARUN MAKNOI*, PUANGPEN SIRIRUGSA* & KAI LARSEN**

Abstract: Curcuma flaviflora S.Q. Tong and C. rubrobracteata Skornickova, M. Sabu & M. Prasanthkumar are newly recorded from northern and western Thailand respectively.

INTRODUCTION
K. Larsen published a preliminary checklist of Zingiberaceae in Thailand in 1996. Since then, a few species of Curcuma have been described from neighbouring countries (Mood & Larsen, 2001; Sirirugsa & Newman, 2000 and Skornickova et al., 2003). Whilerevising this genus for the Flora of Thailand, the authors found C. flaviflora S.Q. Tong and C. rubrobracteata Skornickova, M. Sabu & M. Prasanthkumar, as new records for Thailand.


ขมิ้นดอกเหลือง* 
Curcuma flaviflora S.Q. Tong
Thailand.— NORTHERN: Chiang Mai, Mae Hong Son.
Ecology.— Found in open areas in pine forests, 1,200 m above sea level or higher. Flowers in May–July.
Distribution.— South China (Yunnan).
Notes.— This species is found only at high altitude from 1,200 m and up. The unique character is the pure yellow flower. The original description mentions red streaks on labellum but this is rarely found in Thai plants. Similar species found in northernThailand are C. bicolor J. Mood & K. Larsen, C. ecomata Craib, C. glans K. Larsen & J.Mood and C. singularis Gagnep. which have large, blunt and forward pointed anther spurs. These species also share many common characters such as rounded to cordate leaf-base, terminal inflorescence, without coma bracts and staminodes free from dorsal corolla-lobe


• ขมิ้นดอกแดง 
Curcuma rubrobracteata Skornickova, M. Sabu & M. Prasanthkumar

Thailand.— NORTHERN: Chiang Mai, Lampang, Mae Hong Son, Phitsanulok, Tak; SOUTHWESTERN: Kanchanaburi.
Ecology.— Found in deciduous and evergreen forests, from 220–700 m above sealevel. Flowers in May–August.
Distribution.— India and Myanmar.
Notes.— This species has been collected many times since 1922. The distinguishing characters are the orange red bracts with light yellow or white base and compact terminal inflorescence which appears laterally. This species belongs to subgenus Curcuma (Eucurcuma K. Schum.).

Maknoi, C, P Sirirugsa and K Larsen. 2005, New records of Curcuma L. (Zingiberaceae) in Thailand. Thai Forest Bull. (BOT), vol. 33, pp. 71-74: http://web3.dnp.go.th/botany/PDF/TFB/TFB33/TFB33_9Curcuma.pdf