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Tuesday, 27 May 2014

Sling-shot – Tabernaemontana laurifolia


Tabernaemontana laurifolia L.
Sling-shot, Wild Jasmine
Family: APOCYNACEAE
Grand Cayman and Jamaica, in dry, rocky woodlands on limestone
Brunt 1967, Correll & Correll, Howard & Wagenknecht, Proctor
FLORA of the CAYMAN ISLANDS by George R. Proctor p.519, Plate 49
Cayman Islands Red List status: Near Threatened 

Grand Cayman, May 26, 2014
A small tree with white latex

 Grand Cayman, May 23, 2014
BRANCHING: opposite

Grand Cayman, May 26, 2014 
LEAVES: OPPOSITE, waxy, shiny
 CaymANNature Herbarium

Grand Cayman, Dec. 7, 2005 
FLOWERS: greenish-yellow, pinwheel-like, scented

FRUIT: 2 broad, fleshy follicles, with orange arils, in which the seeds are embedded
CaymANNature Flora

Grand Cayman, Dec. 7, 2005 
It grows in dry, rocky woodlands on limestone.
Grand Cayman, March 5, 2009.  
It is a suitable small tree for landscaping, easy maintenance.

Collected by Sir Hans Sloane in Jamaica
Natural History Museum, London
 
Collected by Sir Hans Sloane in Jamaica

Voyages of discovery were an important part of the search for a new order in the natural world. Tony Rice charts Sir Hans Sloane's seventeenth-century expedition to Jamaica, a voyage that produced one of the world's most significant natural history collections. Sloane amassed a hoard of thousands of natural history books, objects and artworks in his quest for a rationalist approach to the study of nature.



Tuesday, 13 May 2014

Heliotropium humifusum

Euploca humifusa
syn. Heliotropium humifusum Kunth  
Matlike Heliotrope
Family: BORAGINACEAE 
Cayman Islands, Cuba and Hispaniola
It was found by Wilfred Kings on the 1938 Oxford University Expedition to the Cayman Islands, on Grand Cayman and Little Cayman, and by George R. Proctor on Cayman Brac (1992).

FLORA of the CAYMAN ISLANDS by George R. Proctor p.563, Plate 53
Heliotropium humifusum Kunth in H.B.K., Nov. Gen. & Sp. 3:85, t. 205. 1818.
Cayman Islands Red List status: Data deficient, suspected to be at risk   

 Matlike Heliotrope at Watler Cemetery, May 11, 2014


A dense, matlike, suffrutescent shrub, diffusely branched, clothed throughout with stiff white strigose hairs mostly with pustulate bases.

LEAVES: densely overlapping, rigid, lance-oblong, acute at the apex and 1-nerved, attached to the stem by a broad base.
FLOWERS: Calyx strigose, 2–3 mm long; corolla white with yellow eye, the tube scarcely exceeding the calyx, the expanded limb 2–3 mm across or more. Stigma capitate on a short style.
FRUIT: subglobose, enclosed by the calyx, the nutlets hispidulous.

Proctor’s FLORA Glossary p.694:
Strigose – bearing appressed, sharp, straight, stiff hairs.
Suffrutescent – a stem which is woody and perennial at the base, but has a upper herbaceous portion that dies back at the end of a growing season. The term is also used to mean ‘slightly shrubby’.

GRAND CAYMAN: Crosby, Hespenheide & Anderson 37 (GH, MICH): Kings GC 59, GC 123; Proctor 15159, 52241; Sauer 4214 (WIS).
LITTLE CAYMAN: Kings LC 48, LC 78; Proctor 28129, 35137.
CAYMAN BRAC: Proctor 35154

Cuba and Hispaniola, usually in gravel-filled pockets of dry, exposed limestone, or in sandy clearings. Cuban plants of this affinity growing on serpentine appear to represent a different species, though usually identified as being the same.

 
Crosby, Hespenheide and Anderson, June 2, 1963 
June 2, 1963 #37.   East of George Town in sand behind beach. Locally common. Flowers white with yellow centers; growing completely recumbent in sand.
M. R. Crosby, H. A. Hespenheide, W. R. Anderson, det C.D. Adams 1963. 
Robert K. Godfrey Herbarium at Florida State University.
 

Cayman Herbarium, Heliotropium humifusum, Watler Cemetery, Jenny Lane June 30, 1992




  June 24, 2012 Watler Cemetery, Prospect Point, Grand Cayman
Cayman Herbarium 
Matlike Heliotropes at the Watler Cemetery, Prospect Point, Grand Cayman,June 24, 2012  
CaymANNature Flora IMAGES 





May 9, 2014 Brenda Quin's plant, Parsons Circle, George Town, Grand Cayman



 May 11, 2014 Watler Cemetery, Prospect Point, Grand Cayman
 About ten years ago, Brenda Quin saw lots Heliotropium humifusum plants growing in a dry area in the vicinity of the Blow Holes, on the landward side of the main road (south coast). She described it as a ground cover with minute, white, star-shaped flowers. She tried growing one in a pot, but it didn’t take. A palm tree grew in the same pot. 

A year ago she transplanted the root-bound palm tree into a larger pot. In early May, 2014, the little ground cover emerged from a seed or root that had been dormant in the soil for about ten years.

May 9, 2014 Brenda Quin's Matlike Heliotrope - Heliotropium humifusum 
that had been dormant for about 10 years
 
Brenda Quin, 86 years old, with her little Matlike Heliotrope that had been dormant for about 10 years,
in pot with palm tree. George Town, Grand Cayman, May 9, 2014
A few tiny plants flowering by the house-shaped grave-markers at the Watler Cemetery, May 11, 2014.
CaymanCultural images

Matlike Heliotrope - Heliotropium humifusum habitat -
Pedro St. James bluff, Grand Cayman,
many little plants in flower, growing on the harsh, ironshore environment, May 28, 2015.
Matlike Heliotrope - Heliotropium humifusum,
Pedro St. James bluff, Grand Cayman, May 31, 2015.

Matlike Heliotrope - Heliotropium humifusum,
plant dries to grey so is well-camouflaged against the ironshore. 
Pedro St. James bluff, Grand Cayman, May 31, 2015.

Ironshore plants - young Silver Thatch (Coccothrinax proctorii), 
Juniper (Rhachicallis america), Seaside Twintip (Stemodia maritima) and
Matlike Heliotrope in the centre. 
The rust-coloured rock is consolidated Terra Rosa that had been swept into cavities in the rock formation.

Islands from the Sea, Geologic Stories of Cayman
by Murray A. Roed, 2006

Lots of little compact Matlike Heliotrope (Heliotropium humifusum)
plants that dry to grey, well-camouflaged against the flattened ironshore. 
Pedro St. James bluff, Grand Cayman, May 31, 2015.

Looking across Old Jones Bay to Pedro St. James bluff,
harsh environment of Heliotropium humifusum, May 31, 2015.

 1938 Oxford University Biological Expedition to the Cayman Islands 
 

Euploca ternata  (Vahl) J.I.M. Melo & Semir

Euploca ternata (Accepted name)   
= Heliotropium ternatum Vahl, Symb. Bot. 3:21. 1794.    (synonym)
Bushy Heliotrope 
FLORA of the CAYMAN ISLANDS by George R. Proctor p.563, Fig.209 
Cayman Islands Red List status: Data deficient   
Bushy Heliotrope - Heliotropium ternatum, High Rock, Grand Cayman 
Ann Stafford, Feb. 3, 2008
A mostly erect, bushy shrub up to 1.5 m tall, densely white-pubescent throughout.
LEAVES rigid, alternate, opposite or in whorls of 3, sharply acute at the apex, the hairs on the upper side with pustulate bases, the margin usually revolute.
FLOWERS few in short terminal spikes; calyx 3–4 mm long, white-strigose; corolla white with yellow eye, the tube 4 mm long, the expanded limb mostly 3–4 mm across.
NUTLETS subglobose, black.
GRAND CAYMAN: Brunt 2007. 2199; Proctor 15195.
West Indies and continental tropical America, in dry sandy or rocky thickets.
Bushy Heliotrope - Heliotropium ternatum, East End, Grand Cayman 
Ann Stafford, Aug. 8, 2010
Coral/limestone ridge bordering the sea, Half Moon Bay, June 13, 1967

Heliotropium ternatum (Dominica)
July 18, 1964 R. L. Wilbur, E. L. Dunn, H. A. Hespenheide, D. R. Wiseman