Cryptostegia

R. Brown

Bot. Reg. 5: plate 435. 1820.

Common names: Rubbervine
Introduced
Etymology: Greek kryptos, hidden, and stegein, to cover, alluding to enclosure of five-scaled crown within corolla tube
Treatment appears in FNA Volume 14.

Lianas or subshrubs; latex white. Stems climbing or with self-supporting branches, unarmed, glabrous or eglandular-pubescent. Leaves persistent, opposite, petiolate; stipular colleters inter­petiolar and intrapetiolar; laminar colleters absent. Inflorescences terminal cymes, pedunculate. Flowers: calycine colleters present; corolla white, pale pink, or purple-pink, infundibuliform, aestivation dextrorse; corolline corona 2-fid or entire; androecium and gynoecium not united into a gynostegium; stamens inserted at base of corolla tube; anthers connivent, adherent to stigma, connectives apiculate, locules 4; pollen in tetrads, not massed into pollinia, but shed onto translators; nectary absent. Fruits follicles, paired, deflexed, green to brown, fusiform, strongly 3-angled, striate or smooth, glabrous or minutely pubescent. Seeds oblong, flattened, not winged, not beaked, comose, not arillate. x = 11.

Distribution

Introduced; Indian Ocean Islands (Madagascar), introduced also in Mexico, West Indies, Bermuda, Central America, South America, Asia, Africa, elsewhere in Indian Ocean Islands, Pacific Islands, Australia.

Discussion

Species 2 (2 in the flora).

Cryptostegia is endemic to Madagascar, but its two species have been introduced pantropically. Hybrids between C. grandiflora and C. madagascariensis have been reported in cultivated landscapes in Florida. There is no evidence that these hybrids have become naturalized.

Selected References

None.

Key

1 Calyx lobes 13–20 mm, margins reflexed; corolline corona 2-fid; translator spathes orbiculate; follicles (8–)10–15.5 cm. Cryptostegia grandiflora
1 Calyx lobes 7–13(–14) mm, margins ± flat; corolline corona entire; translator spathes lanceolate to ovate; follicles 5–10 cm. Cryptostegia madagascariensis
... more about "Cryptostegia"
Casie L. Reed +  and Alexander Krings +
R. Brown +
Rubbervine +
Indian Ocean Islands (Madagascar) +, introduced also in Mexico +, West Indies +, Bermuda +, Central America +, South America +, Asia +, Africa +, elsewhere in Indian Ocean Islands +, Pacific Islands +  and Australia. +
Greek kryptos, hidden, and stegein, to cover, alluding to enclosure of five-scaled crown within corolla tube +
Introduced +
Cryptostegia +
Apocynaceae +