Ramosmania rodriguesi, commonly known as café marron, is a tree native to the Mauritian island of Rodrigues[1] in the Indian Ocean. The plant has an average size of about 5to[1] and features white five-petal star-shaped flowers. Its French common name French: café marron translates to "brown coffee."
It was thought Ramosmania rodriguesi was extinct until a single surviving tree was spotted by a schoolboy in 1979,[2] who was shown a drawing of the plant by his teacher. The only image of the plant was made in 1877, by a European visitor, passing through Rodrigues. By the 1950s, it was presumed to be extinct. In the 1970s, a specimen was discovered; cuttings were taken to Kew Gardens, and although the plant regularly flowered, it never produced seed until horticulturist Carlos Magdalena discovered how to make the male plant bear female flowers.
Ramosmania rodriguesi was assessed as a Critically Endangered species in 1998.
In 2003, the café marron bore its first fruit with viable seeds. Slow but steady efforts have been made to grow more café marron trees and speed up the pollination process.
In 2010, there were 300 successfully germinated seeds in Rodrigues, spreading hope that the species can eventually exist in the wild once again.[3]
R. rodriguesi is in the same Rubiaceae family as the now extinct R. heterophylla which used to reside on Rodrigues. D.D. Tirvengadum originally thought that R. heterophylla and R. rodriguesi were the same species, until he noted that the shape of the R. rodriguesi leaves were "elliptic obtuse" in comparison to those of R. heterophylla.[4]
Moths pollinate the plant while Rodrigues flying foxes spread the seeds. These pollinators are less endangered than R. rodriguesi, therefore their absence is not expected to be a problem when the species is reintroduced to Rodrigues. R. rodriguesi
Young R. rodriguesi leaves have obtuse, rounded apexes while mature leaves have rounded, almost truncated apexes. The petals' tube is funnel-shaped and leathery with a length of 1 centimeter. The plant's fruit is thin and elongated. Additionally, R. rodriguesi have smooth midribs as opposed to their hairy counterpart, R. heterophylla.
The diploid chromosome count is 2n = 22.[6]
The species' most prevalent threats are predators, poaching, pests, and habitat loss. Giant tortoises are R. rodriguesi
R. rodriguesi can only survive in tropical temperatures of 19-23 °C with 70-80% humidity. The plants do not have a preference for shade or light, though flowering occurs more so when shaded.
Many locals of Rodrigues subscribed to the belief that R. rodriguesi had the potential to remedy venereal diseases and cure hangovers. This is how the plant gained its nickname, French: café marron. Subsequently, many people cut pieces from the plant and inhibited its further cultivation, which turned out to be a considerable factor in the species' endangerment.[7]
Category:Ramosmania rodriguesii