| Description |
"Pseudostem 1-2 m, dark shiny brown or mottled green and brown
often with a little violet, waxless, sometimes almost completely covered with pale brown
withered sheaths, under-sheath pale green, inner sheath white, 15 cm girth at the
base. Sap watery or slightly creamy. Rhizomes short, the suckers
erect arising up to 10cm. away from the parent pseudostem. Suckering frequent, the
plants mostly forming small clumps. Upper leaf sheath margin (shoulder), appressed,
smooth with a dark brown edge c. 2 mm wide, sometimes narrowly scarious for 1-1.5
mm. Fourth last leaf: petiole 36-48 x
1.4-1.6 cm, mostly dark rather lustrous brown, sometimes flushed with pink, without wax,
the channel c. one third of the depth, (TS ratio 1/2), margins erect distally, completely
enfolded in the lowest one third to one half and edged with a black or scarious margin c.
l mm wide; leaf blade left-handed to c. 1-1.5 cm, sometimes almost symmetrical, rounded to
auriculate at the base, rarely broadly tapering, dull green above, yellowish green below,
often with brown discoloured areas, sometimes with light pink on the midrib above and
below, without wax, PB ratio 3.5-4, the blades being 104-160 x 32-45 cm broadest about the
middle.
Inflorescence
with glabrous, green peduncle. Bunch held semi-erect, very dense, the fruits
two-rowed, in 5-7 'hands', the second 'hand' with 10-13 fruits from very short c. 5 mm
pedicels. Fruits more or less ageotropic disposed almost radially from the axis.
Basal bracts, long, lingulate, c.23 x 9 cm, shiny, glossy purplish-brown outside,
sometimes with a little pink; passing to yellow for 1-2 cm at the base and with green
margins at the tip, inside creamy yellowish with a pinkish purple edge, sub- persistent to
persistent in a withered brown state, trapped between the tightly appressed fruit as they
develop. Basal flowers hermaphrodite with a full compliment of fully
developed stamens, ovary c. 3 cm, compound tepal c. 3.3 cm, cream with yellowish tips; the
free tepal white, strongly keeled and wrinkled; stamens cream; stigma white; style cream.
Young fruits glabrous, green, 40-75 x 16-25 mm; ovules in two rows per loculus
often strongly angled in cross section due to the compression between fruits. Mature
fruit ripening dirty cream in the basal part, dirty creamy-green in the upper part,
(clear pale yellow in cultivation), indehiscent, not strongly aromatic. Seeds
small, 4-5 mm diameter, sub-spherical, only weakly angled, with a distinctly warty
surface, the hilum small c. 1.5 mm, smooth, apical chamber small.
Male peduncle growing diagonally downwards, weak, 5-12 cm. long, glabrous,
often terminating whilst the fruits are still very immature, frequently broken and
appearing to be absent. Male bud conical with a very acute tip, 6-9 x 2.2-4
mm, imbricate for just 1-2 cm at the tip, creamy orange with a dark purple flush and
blackish purple at the bract margins; bracts lifting rather irregularly to the
perpendicular or slightly higher, often several opening together, intensely shiny, orange
brown on the adaxial surface, not reflexing but the margins tending to inroll slightly
with age, persistent or tardily deciduous. Male flowers up to 3 cm, cream,
the tips of the compound tepal yellowish green, strongly reflexed and rolled, to 5 mm long
when unrolled. Free tepal translucent white with a yellow spot at the apex, nearly
as long as the compound tepal, concave and acutely pointed, sometimes with a small
subapical wrinkle."
(Argent
2000). |