Tacca integrifolia explained

Tacca integrifolia, also known as the white batflower or the black lily,[1] is a species of flowering plant in the family Dioscoreaceae. It is native to tropical and subtropical rainforests in hilly regions of South Asia, including Pakistan, Bangladesh, Indochina, the Malay Peninsula, Sumatra, Java and eastern China.[2]

Habitat

It grows in the understorey of humid primary and secondary rainforests.[3] [2] The substrates it grows in are rocky soil and sandy soil underneath leaf litter.[2]

Description

Tacca integrifolia is a herb growing from a thick, cylindrical rhizome as long as 120NaN0 and a diameter of 30NaN0. Its oblong-elliptical or lanceolate leaf blades are borne on long stems, some 50by including the petioles, with tapering bases and slender pointed tips. White batflowers that grow in hilly areas are larger in size than batflowers that grow elsewhere.[4] [5] [1] [2]

Umbels

The flower scape is about 550NaN0 long and is topped with a pair of involucral bracts, broad and erect, white with mauve venation. Among the individual nodding flowers, which are arranged in an umbel, are further long, filiform (thread-like) bracts. The perianth of each flower is tubular and purplish-black, 1to long, with two whorls of three perianth lobes, the outer three narrowly oblong 12- long and the inner three broadly obovate.[4] [1]

The fruits are fleshy berries some 21NaN1 long, and the seeds, which have six longitudinal ridges, have the remains of the perianth lobes still attached.[4]

Ecology

The stamens are attached to the tube of the perianth in a helmet-like manner and, with the flat-topped stigma lobes, may form an insect trap; a sweet musky odour has been detected from these flowers and this may attract flies as pollinators. After pollination, the scape bends over and the developing fruits rest on the ground. The fleshy fruits are a dull colour with soft jelly-like pulp, and it is possible that the seeds are dispersed by rodents and other small mammals as they feed on the fruits.[5]

Use

In the Malay Peninsula, its leaves are dried to make cigarette wrappers.[2]

Notes and References

  1. Book: Hsuan Keng . See Chung Chin . Hugh T. W. Tan . 1994 . The Concise Flora of Singapore . II: Monocotyledons . Singapore . Singapore University Press . 15-16 . 9971-69-207-4 .
  2. Drenth . E. . A revision of the family Taccaceae . 1972 . Blumea . 20 . 2 . 367–406 . Naturalis Institutional Repository .
  3. Web site: Tacca integrifolia . Plants Rescue . 18 March 2017.
  4. Book: Wiart, Christophe . Medicinal Plants of the Asia-Pacific: Drugs for the Future? . 2006. World Scientific . 978-981-4480-33-8 . 688–689.
  5. Book: Klaus Kubitzki. Flowering Plants. Monocotyledons: Lilianae (except Orchidaceae). 2013. Springer Science & Business Media . 978-3-662-03533-7 . 425–427.