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Magnoliopsida
Casearia Jacq.
EOL Text
Large tree (in ours). Leaves distichous, with translucent glandular dots and streaks. Flowers in axillary fascicles, borne on a minute cushion. Sepals 5. Petals 0. Stamens 7-10. Staminodes alternating with stamens, clavate, united below with the stamens. Stigma capitate. Capsule coriaceous, 3-angled, 2-4-valved. Seeds enveloped in a soft aril.
License | http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/ |
Rights holder/Author | Mark Hyde, Bart Wursten, Petra Ballings, Flora of Zimbabwe |
Source | http://www.zimbabweflora.co.zw/speciesdata/genus.php?genus_id=983 |
Fruiting tree holds key role in forest: Caesaria tree
The Caesaria tree helps maintain diversity and prevent extinctions in its forest ecosystem because it produces fruit to sustain several animal species through times of scarcity.
"In the tropics, keystone plants are often those that provide fruit for important seed-dispersing animals. The relationship between fruiting trees and fruit-eating animals is called a mutualism because both parties benefit. Animals need the nourishment in the nutrient-packed pulp and seeds, and the plant needs to have its seeds carried to new sites, perhaps gaps in vegetation where seedlings stand a better chance of surviving…This service is valuable enough that 50 to 90 percent of the canopy trees and almost all shrubs and smaller trees in the tropical forests of Central and South America bear fruits that are fleshy, brightly colored, or otherwise attract animals. The brilliant red-coated fruits of the tree Casearia corymbosa provide an example of this type of keystone mutualism. During a critical period each December when fruit is otherwise scarce in the forest, these fruits sustain twenty-two species of birds, including cotingas, toucans, parrots, and robin-sized tityras. If Casearia trees were to disappear from the La Selva biological preserve in eastern Costa Rica, Henry Howe of the University of Iowa predicts the loss would lead to the disappearance not only of masked tityras--the only birds that reliably spread the Casearia's seeds far and wide--but also of toucans. The toucans need Casearia to sustain them through December's scarcity, but by January they move on to other preferred fruits, ranging widely and scattering the seeds of a number of plants, including nutmegs. Thus the loss of Casearia, especially from a patch of forest isolated amid a landscape of agricultural fields and grasslands, could precipitate a slow-moving wave of extinctions among an array of forest species." (Baskin 1997:48)
Learn more about this functional adaptation.
- Baskin, Y. 1997. The Work of Nature: How The Diversity Of Life Sustains Us. Island Press.
- Howe HF. 1977. Bird activity and seed dispersal of a tropical wet forest tree. Ecology. 58: 539-550.
License | http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/ |
Rights holder/Author | (c) 2008-2009 The Biomimicry Institute |
Source | http://www.asknature.org/strategy/4825d47b2259b33332642f8addd6ec17 |
Barcode of Life Data Systems (BOLD) Stats
Specimen Records:170
Specimens with Sequences:149
Specimens with Barcodes:140
Species:36
Species With Barcodes:31
Public Records:66
Public Species:20
Public BINs:0
Barcode of Life Data Systems (BOLDS) Stats
Public Records: 0
Specimens with Barcodes: 2
Species With Barcodes: 1
Barcode of Life Data Systems (BOLDS) Stats
Public Records: 0
Specimens with Barcodes: 2
Species With Barcodes: 1
Casearia is a plant genus in the family Salicaceae. The genus was included in the Flacourtiaceae under the Cronquist system of angiosperm classification, and earlier in the Samydaceae. Recent research[citation needed] indicates that the latter group might be reinstated as a valid family.
They are sometimes employed as honey plants, notably C. decandra and C. sylvestris. The latter species is occasionally used as food by the caterpillars of the Two-barred Flasher (Astraptes fulgerator). Several species are becoming rare due to deforestation. Some appear close to extinction, and C. quinduensis of Colombia and C. tinifolia from Mauritius seem to be extinct since some time in the 20th century and about 1976, respectively.
Selected species
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References
- ^ "Genus Casearia". Taxonomy. UniProt. http://www.uniprot.org/taxonomy/112816. Retrieved 2010-11-18.
- ^ "Genus: Casearia Jacq.". Germplasm Resources Information Network. United States Department of Agriculture. 2006-03-31. http://www.ars-grin.gov/cgi-bin/npgs/html/genus.pl?2141. Retrieved 2010-11-18.
- ^ a b "GRIN Species Records of Casearia". Germplasm Resources Information Network. United States Department of Agriculture. http://www.ars-grin.gov/cgi-bin/npgs/html/splist.pl?2141. Retrieved 2010-11-18.
License | http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/ |
Rights holder/Author | Wikipedia |
Source | http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Casearia&oldid=541080882 |
Stem: Bark used to treat ground itch in NW Guyana.