Melastoma

Linnaeus

Sp. Pl. 1: 389. 1753.

Common names: Melastome
Etymology: Greek melas, black, and stoma, opening, alluding to stained mouth, especially of children, when fruits of some species are eaten
Treatment appears in FNA Volume 10.

Shrubs or trees. Stems erect or procumbent, 4-sided [subterete], often squamose-strigose; bark scaly. Leaves petiolate; blade with 1 or 2[–4] pairs of lateral primary veins, marginal pairs often inconspicuous, margins entire, surfaces usually strigose [subvillous to villous, rarely glabrate]. Inflorescences terminal or in distal foliar axils, usually cymes, rarely panicles or flowers solitary; bracts deciduous or persistent, leaflike, ovate, sometimes conspicuous. Flowers pedicellate; hypanthium campanulate to globose-urceolate; calyx deciduous, 5-lobed, lobes triangular to lanceolate or ovate; petals 5(–8), spreading, symmetric, light to dark pink, lavender, or purple; stamens 10, unequal, in 2 whorls, dimorphic, episepalous stamens with purple, upcurved anthers and long connectives, epipetalous stamens with yellow, straight anthers and shorter connectives, or stamens isomorphic and connectives slightly prolonged; anthers slightly downcurved, linear-oblong, 2-locular, dehiscent by 1 or 2 apical pores, or by short, longitudinal slits; ovary semi-inferior, adnate to floral tube, 5-locular; style straight, filiform, equal to petals. Fruits fleshy and irregularly splitting-dehiscent, [capsules and apically dehiscent, or berries and fleshy, indehiscent]. Seeds cochleate.

Distribution

Introduced; Florida, Asia, Pacific Islands, Australia, introduced also in Mexico, elsewhere in Pacific Islands (New Zealand).

Discussion

Species 22 (1 in the flora).

Most species of Melastoma have fleshy, irregularly dehiscent fruits; others have dry capsules [for example, M. pellegrinianum (H. Boissieu) Karsten Meyer].

Selected References

None.

... more about "Melastoma"
Guy L. Nesom +
Linnaeus +
Melastome +
Florida +, Asia +, Pacific Islands +, Australia +, introduced also in Mexico +  and elsewhere in Pacific Islands (New Zealand). +
Greek melas, black, and stoma, opening, alluding to stained mouth, especially of children, when fruits of some species are eaten +
Melastoma +
Melastomataceae +