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Musa ornata
Musa ornata W. Roxburgh, Hortus Bengalensis, 19 (1814) and Flora Indica I: 666
(1820-1824).
Accepted name |
Musa ornata W. Roxburgh, Hortus Bengalensis, 19 (1814)
and Flora Indica I: 666 (1820-1824). |
Synonyms |
These
"synonyms" are all invalid and based on mistakes rather than formal taxonomic
revision:
1. Musa rosacea N. J. von Jacquin.
2. Musa speciosa M. Tenore
3. Musa carolinae A. Sterler
4. Musa rosea J. G. Baker
5. Musa salaccensis H. Zollinger
6. Musa rosacea Hort. non N. J. von Jacquin.
7. Musa mexicana E. Matuda |
Authorities |
The
accepted name is according to Cheesman 1949.
The "synonyms" are from:
1. Baker 1893, Cheesman 1949, Argent 1984.
2. & 3. Baker 1893.
4. & 5. Cheesman 1949.
6. Griffiths 1994, Huxley 1992.
7. Moore 1957. |
Section |
Rhodochlamys |
Distribution |
Bangladesh,
Burma, India (Andhara Pradesh, (Assam, Mizoram, Anon 2002)). |
Description |
Plant stooling freely ; pseudostems slender, 1-3 metres high, rarely much
more than 10 cm. in diameter at base, upper parts at first pale green, heavily waxy, later
developing black blotches.
Leaf blades rather narrow oblong, up to 2 m. long, 35 cm. wide, truncate at apex,
unequal-sided at base (one side rounded, the other more wedge-shaped), medium green on
both surfaces, very lightly glaucous above, lightly so beneath ; midribs often flushed
with red beneath ; petioles up to 60 cm. long, with definite margins (3 - 5 mm. wide)
which are erect or slightly spreading above, clasping the pseudostem at base, not becoming
scarious.
Inflorescence quite erect ; peduncle 2 - 3 cm. thick, glabrous ; sterile bracts usually 2,
the first a shortened foliage leaf with broadened and coloured petiole, the second a fully
coloured true bract, up to 30 cm. long ; basal flowers female, the number of female "
hands " varying up to about 7, upper flowers male.
Female flowers 3 - 5 per bract, in a single row ; ovary 4 cm. long, green ; compound tepal
3.5 cm. long, deep orange-yellow, its lateral lobes ovate, 5 mm. long, with a minute
dorsal appendage or none ; free tepal 3 cm. long, translucent white, ovate-oblong, with a
rather obtuse yellow acumen ; staminodes one-third to one-half the length of the style ;
style green, about 3 cm. long.
Male bud in advanced blooming top-shaped, acute, the bracts convolute or slightly
imbricate at the tip. Bracts pale pink outside, yellow at the extreme tip, sulcate,
slightly glaucous, the inner surface shining, of the same colour or slightly darker.
Bracts lanceolate, the first about 10 cm. long, 5 cm. wide, those produced in very
advanced blooming, much smaller. Usually only one bract lifted at a time (occasionally
two) ; bracts soon deciduous, not revolute on fading.
Male flowers 3 - 5 per bract in a single row ; compound tepal 3.5 - 4 cm. long, deep
orange in the upper half paling to nearly white at base, its lobes similar to those of the
female flower ; free tepal 3 - 3.5 cm. long, 1 cm. wide, oblong, with an acute acumen ;
stamens at first as long as the free tepal, at length slightly exserted, their filaments
longer than the anthers, the anthers purple.
Fruit bunch compact, the " fingers " strongly inflexed to stand nearly parallel
with the rachis. Individual fruit 6 - 8 cm. long, 1.5 - 2 cm. in diameter, obscurely
4 - 5-angled, rounded at base to a short (5 - 7 mm.) pedicel, narrowed at apex into a
short, broad, truncate acumen, which is rather sharply 4-sided at maturity. Pericarp
about 1 mm. thick, pale somewhat greenish yellow at full ripeness ; pulp white.
Seeds black, warty, irregularly angulate-depressed, 5 mm. across and 3 mm. high.
(Cheesman
1949h).
Cheesman acknowledged that his description "may not in all
details cover the whole species". Sundararaj found Musa ornata
in India proper in 1952 (Araku valley in Andhara Pradesh) and found that Cheesman's
description fitted it very well (Sundararaj & Balasubramanyam 1971). But see
comments below on the true "origin" of M. ornata. |
References |
Anon 2002, Argent 1984, Backer & Bakhuizen 1968, Baker 1893: 219, Cheesman
1949h, Fawcett 1913 : 270 (as M. rosacea),
Graf Exotica (as M. rosacea), Graf Tropica, Griffiths 1994, GRIN, Häkkinen &
Sharrock 2001, Hore et al 1992, Huxley 1992, INIBAP, Mobot Tropicos, Moore 1957 : 183, Sagot 1887 : 330, Simmonds 1962,
Shepherd 1999 : 68, Sundararaj & Balasubramanyam
1971. |
Comments |
This
species is widely distributed in cultivation in the tropics but is frequently misnamed. According
to Cheesman the origin of the confusion was a note appended by Nathaniel Wallich to the
original description of M. ornata in Flora Indica in which he states "this
is probably M. rosacea Jacq." It seems that Wallich, in editing Flora
Indica after Roxburgh's death, made an honest mistake but the mistake was so commonly
repeated that the synonymy of M. ornata and M. rosacea came to be
accepted as fact, for example, by A. B. Graf in his Exotica, and by the author of the Musa
entry in RHS 1956 who gives a nice description of M. ornata under the name M.
rosacea.
Iteration of this mistake in horticultural texts led
gradually to the name M. rosacea being de-graded simply to an alternative name to
M. ornata. In that sense the name used in horticultural circles came to
mean something quite different to von Jacquin's original intention. This de-graded
form of the name is referred to as M. rosacea Hort. non Jacq. in Huxley
1992 and Griffiths 1994.
Cheesman also notes that Musa salaccensis H. Zollinger is sometimes given as
a synonym of Musa ornata W. Roxburgh but it is not; as Cheesman notes the two are
in different sections of Musa. The confusion arose because Zollinger when
naming his species added in brackets "(ornata Roxb.?)" which given the superficial similarity of the two was
a reasonable query at the time according to Cheesman. Miquel in his Flora van
Nederlandisch Indie put it the other way around and thereafter certain later authors added
Musa ornata Roxb. to the synonymy of Musa salaccensis.
Cheesman 1949b comments that M. ornata is a tolerant plant, of moderate
size, and fairly ornamental, and by virtue of those characters has been grown in gardens
in many parts of the tropics. The plant was in Mauritius before 1805 and must have
begun to travel several years before it was botanically described in 1824. As
evidence of its travels Cheesman quotes Bassler 1926 who found Musa ornata "growing on the edge of an Indian banana plantation on "the far upper
edge of the Amazonian plain of eastern Peru", in so remote a locality that he at
first wondered whether he had come upon an indigenous American Musa".
The plant has also become naturalised in parts of Mexico where it has been
mistakenly identified as a distinct species, M. mexicana
Matuda. Seed and seedlings offered commercially under the invalid name of Musa
violacea seem also to be referable to Musa ornata or possibly to a Musa
ornata x
Musa velutina hybrid.
The relative ease with which the section Rhodochlamys species Musa ornata and Musa
velutina cross may be a manifestation of a much deeper relationship. Simmonds
(1962, p. 61) commenting on the Rhodochlamys species M. laterita, M.
ornata, M. sanguinea and M. velutina thought it "not impossible that one or more of the four species
assumed here to be "good" may be of hybrid origin". Shepherd
(1999, p. 68) considers it a "near certainty" that M. ornata is in fact
"a relic of a hybrid swarm between M. flaviflora and M.
velutina!" (Shepherd's emphasis).
An intriguing
possibility is that some of the Musa ornata types encountered today (including
under the invalid name M. violacea) derive from a man-made hybrid between Musa
flaviflora and Musa velutina. This cross was made in Trinidad at the
Imperial College of Tropical Agriculture as part of a pioneering study of Musa
cytogenetics. According to Simmonds 1962, "selections
[of M. flaviflora x M. velutina] were so vigorous
and ornamental that they were distributed to various tropical botanical gardens as being
of potential horticultural interest".
Cultivars.
There
are a number of M. ornata cultivars with different inflorescence colour forms
(photographs at Stokes Tropicals and in Waddick & Stokes). Some of these
are cultivated in Central and South America and exploited as cut flowers.
The origin and precise genetic constitution of these M. ornata cultivars
is not fully known. Some may derive from the M. flaviflora x M. velutina
crosses and other hybrids released by the Imperial
College of Tropical Agriculture from their Musa cytogenetics programme in the
1940's and 50's (Shepherd 1999). Tim
Chapman informs me that a more recent source of the M. ornata cultivars
cultivated for cut flowers in Central America is David Carli's farm in Costa Rica.
Carli is a plant collector and cut flower grower and a number of ornamental hybrids are
said by Tim to have arisen by natural cross pollination in Carli's large collection of
bananas.
The plants identified in the trade as cultivars of Musa ornata are a
mixed bunch. The identity of most is not determined but those that have been
identified are listed below:
'African Red' ------------------------------ not determined
'Bronze' ------------------------------------- Musa laterita
'Costa Rican Stripe' --------------------- not determined
'Lavender Beauty' ----------------------- not determined
'Leyte White' ------------------------------ Musa gracilis (perhaps not the pure sp.)
'Macro' -------------------------------------- not determined (the strongly imbricate bracts of 'Macro' are reminiscent of
'Leyte White'. M. ornata has convolute bracts.)
'Milky Way' ------------------------------- not determined
'Purple' -------------------------------------- not determined
'Red Ruby' --------------------------------- not determined
'Royal Burgundy' ------------------------ not determined
'Royal Pink' -------------------------------- not determined
'Royal Purple' ----------------------------- not determined
'Royal Red' --------------------------------- not determined
'Standard Lavender' -------------------- Musa ornata, the "normal"
species
It
would make an excellent student project for a formal study of such hybrids to be
conducted.
Listed as a Famine Food.
Musa
ornata has been awarded an AGM
by the RHS but it is probably quite difficult to find the true species.
Images:
There
is 1 image of Musa ornata. |
With acknowledgements to Timothy Chapman.
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