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Memecylon pauciflorum

Memecylon pauciflorum is a tree species in the Melastomataceae family. It grows as a tree or shrub in northern Australia and tropical and subtropical Asia. An understorey species typically, it grows in a variety of communities. The possum Petropseudes dahli (rock-haunting possum) uses this species as one of their scent-marking sites. It is a host to a number of funguses. People in Australia and in Thailand use the plant in folk medicine, though no efficacy has been demonstrated.

Memecylon pauciflorum
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Plantae
Clade: Tracheophytes
Clade: Angiosperms
Clade: Eudicots
Clade: Rosids
Order: Myrtales
Family: Melastomataceae
Genus: Memecylon
Species:
M. pauciflorum
Binomial name
Memecylon pauciflorum
Synonyms[1]

Description Edit

This plant grows as a tree or shrub, some 1-10m tall,[2][3] with a trunk that does rarely exceeds 30cm d.b.h.[4] Many-branched, with smooth 4-sided branches. Leaves are around 3-7 by 1-3cm in size, with lateral veins barely visible on upper surface, but making inconspicuous loops or an intramarginal vein quite close to the margin, there are small oil dots visible at low magnification (e.g. with hand lens); stipules are absent, but scars are visible on twigs between petioles that resemble stipule scars; the upper surface of petiole is grooved. Inflorescences are shorter than leaves. Small pink/green flowers,[2] about 2mm long petals; eight stamens; the anthers have a long spur at the base, which has a raised gland on opposite side to filament attachment. Globular, or depressed globular, fruit, some 6-8 by 8-9mm in diameter; persistent calyx at apex. Globular seeds, some 4-5 by 5-6mm in diameter. A seed weighs about 130mg.[5] Green cotyledons that are crumpled and folded many times, more or less semiorbicular in seedling, some 16-20 by 15-30mm; shortly petiolate; stipules on cotyledons usually visible; winged hypocotyl. The glabrous leaves are linear and narrowly elliptic to elliptic at tenth leaf atage; usually visible stipules or stipule-like structures. The germination time of seeds is from 20 to 63 days. In the Kimberley, Western Australia it flowers in January and February or in April.[2] In Zhōngguó/China it flowers in April and May, with fruiting occurring in November.

Characteristics that distinguish it from other Memecylon species in China are: that it is a shrub or small tree (less than 6m tall); the blade of the leaves are some 3.5-8 by 0.6-3.5 cm in size; the blade of the leaf is some 1.4-3.2 times as long as it is broad with a base not decurrent on petiole; the anther is connected abaxially with a circular concave gland; smooth and glossy leaf blade on both surfaces; fruit is not ribbed; cymose inflorescences; and again on both surfaces the leaf blade is glabrous and glossy.[3]

Taxonomy Edit

 
Title page of Blume's Museum botanicum Lugduno-Batavum, sive, Stirpium exoticarum novarum vel minus cognitarum ex vivis aut siccis brevis expositio et descriptio

This species has been identified by molecular phylogenetics using nuclear ribosomal DNA as being in a Malesian/Southeast Asian/Chinese clade with Memecylon caeruleum, Memecylon cantleyi, Memecylon lilacinum, Memecylon plebujum, and Memecylon scutellatum.[6]

This species was first described in 1851 by the Braunschweig-born botanist Carl Ludwig Blume (1796-1862).[7] He spent his working life in now Indonesia, then the Dutch East Indies, where he was at the now Bogor Botanical Gardens, and in the Netherlands, where he was at the then Rijksherbarium, Leiden, now the Nationaal Herbarium Nederland, Leiden. He published a description of the plant in 1850, however the 1851 description in his work Museum botanicum Lugduno-Batavum, sive, Stirpium exoticarum novarum vel minus cognitarum ex vivis aut siccis brevis expositio et descriptio is held to be authoritative.on Botanicus[7]

Distribution Edit

This species is native to an area from northern Australia to tropical and subtropical Asia.[1] Countries and regions in which this taxa grows are: Australia (Queensland, Northern Territory, Western Australia); Malaysia (Peninsular Malaysia); Vietnam; Zhōngguó/China (Hainan, Guangdong);[3] Laos; Myanmar; Bangladesh; India (Andaman Islands). In Queensland, the tree/shrub occurs from southeastern region to the central- and north-east and Cape York Peninsula.[4] In Western Australia it is found in the northern Kimberley.[2]

Habitat, ecology Edit

In Australia M. pauciflorum grows from near sea level to 400m elevation.[4] It is found as an understory tree in monsoon-, drier or more seasonal rain-, open- and littoral-forests and in woodlands. In the Kimberley, Western Australia, it grows on sandy soils, in sandstone gorges.[2] In China it is found in forests and mountain slopes.[3]

A publication of Queensland Herbarium on the broad vegetation groups present in that state of Australia includes a number of communities that include the species.[8] The following table summarises the information.

Broad Vegetation Groups in Queensland that include M. pauciflorum[8]
Broad Vegetation Group subgroup Bioregion Mean annual rainfall Soils Emergents Canopy Layer that includes M. pauciflorum
2 Complex to simple, semi-deciduous mesophyll to notophyll vine forests, sometimes with Araucaria cunninghamii (hoop pine) 2b Semi-deciduous mesophyll to notophyll vine forests usually on granitic ranges Cape York Peninsula 1200-2000mm Yellow kandosols, yellow dermosols Araucaria cunninghamii sometimes present to 30m Canarium australianum, Bombax ceiba var. leiocarpum, Buchanania arborescens, Antiaris toxicaria var. macrophylla, Sterculia quadrifida, Acacia auriculiformis, A. polystachya, Aidia racemosa, Albizia lebbeck, Beilschmiedia obtusifolia, Dysoxylum acutangulum, Maranthes corymbosa, Myristica insipida, Polyscias elegans, Terminalia subacroptera, 20m low tree/shrub layer
2 Complex to simple, semi-deciduous mesophyll to notophyll vine forests, sometimes with A. cunninghamii 2c Semi-deciduous notophyll vine forests to simple evergreen notophyll vine forests, frequently with Welchiodendron longivalve on northern Cape York Peninsula CYP 1600-2000mm Yellow and red kandosols rare W. longivalve, Acacia polystachya, Canarium australianum, Buchanania arborescens, Endiandra glauca, Alstonia actinophylla, A. spectabilis, Blepharocarya involucrigera, Sterculia quadrifida, Planchonella chartacea, Sersalisia sericea, Flindersia ifflaiana, Syzygium forte, Beilschmiedia obtusifolia, Podocarpus grayae, Bombax ceiba var. leiocarpum, Cryptocarya cunninghamii, Halfordia kendack, 17m mid-dense shrub/ low tree layer
3 Notophyll vine forests/ thickets (sometimes with sclerophyll and/or Araucarian emergents) on coastal dunes and sand masses 3a Evergreen to semi-deciduous, notophyll to microphyll vine forests/ thickets on beach ridges and coastal dunes, occasionally A. cunninghamii microphyll vine forests on dunes CYP, Gulf Plains, Wet Tropics, Central Queensland Coast >1200mm Aeric podosols, semiaquic podosols or bleached-orthic tenosols A. cunninghamii, occasionally, 25m Terminalia muelleri, Manilkara kauki, Mimusops elengi, Pleiogynium timoriense, Gyrocarpus americanus, Sterculia quadrifida, Buchanania arborescens, Acacia polystachya, Celtis paniculata, Acacia crassicarpa, Syzygium forte, Drypetes deplanchei, Canarium australianum, Pandanus tectorius, Cupaniopsis anacardioides, 10m sparse shrub/low tree layer
5 Notophyll to microphyll vine forests, frequently with Araucaria spp. or Agathis spp. (kauri pines) 5b Notophyll to microphyll vine forests, frequently with A. cunninghamii, on ranges of central coastal bioregions Central Queensland Coast, Wet Tropics 1200-2000mm Red ferrosols, red and brown Dermosols A. cunninghamii, sometimes, >18m Argyrodendron polyandrum, Falcataria toona, Dendrocnide photiniphylla, Cryptocarya hypospodia, C. bidwillii, C. triplinervis, Diospyros hebecarpa, Pleiogynium timoriense, Macropteranthes fitzalanii, Terminalia porphyrocarpa, Flindersia schottiana, Drypetes deplanchei, Euroschinus falcatus, Cleistanthus dallachyanus and Olea paniculata sparse low tree/ shrub layer
5 Notophyll to microphyll vine forests, frequently with Araucaria spp. or Agathis spp. (kauri pines) 5c Simple to complex notophyll vine forests, often with Agathis spp. on ranges and uplands of the Wet Tropics bioregion Wet Tropics, Einasleigh Uplands 1600-3000mm Red and brown dermosols, red ferrosols Agathis robusta, frequent, 35m Argyrodendron polyandrum, Falcataria toona, Aleurites moluccanus, Cryptocarya triplinervis, Ficus benjamina, Flindersia schottiana var. pubescens, Linociera ramiflora, Pleiogynium timoriense, Polyalthia nitidissima mid-dense subcanopy and low tree layer
7 Semi-evergreen to deciduous microphyll vine thickets 7b Deciduous microphyll vine thickets on ranges and heavy clay alluvia in northern bioregions (CYP alluvial clays) CYP, Wet Tropics 1200-2000mm Yellow and brown dermosols, brown or grey vertosols, dermosolic oxyaquic hydrosols Lagerstroemia engleriana, Bombax ceiba var. leiocarpum, Eucalyptus microtheca, up to 25m Lagerstroemia engleriana, Strychnos lucida, Diospyros hebecarpa, Croton arnhemicus, Larsenaikia ochreata, Memecylon pauciflorum, 5-10m(-18m) canopy layer
7 Semi-evergreen to deciduous microphyll vine thickets 7b Deciduous microphyll vine thickets on ranges and heavy clay alluvia in northern bioregions (CYP rocky slopes and ranges) CYP, Wet Tropics 1200-2000mm Orthic or bleached-leptic tenosols, brown dermosols, yellow kandosols Gyrocarpus americanus. Bombax ceiba var. leiocarpum, frequent, 12-5m Cochlospermum gillivraei, Canarium australianum, Croton arnhemicus, Terminalia muelleri, Acacia polystachya, Gyrocarpus americanus, Bombax ceiba var. leiocarpum, 5-12m sparse to mid-dense shrub layer
 
Petropseudes dahli (rock-haunting possum)

The possum Petropseudes dahli (rock-haunting possum), uses this tree as a deposit for scent.[9] Ten tree species, rocks and termite mounds were used for scent-marking. The scent is emitted by caudal glands on individuals rumps, cloacal secretions are possibly also involved. The secretion is orange-coloured, molasses-like in texture and has a sweet, musky odour, that humans can smell up to 50m away.

In the Kilim Karst Geoforest Park area (Langkawi, Malaysia), the plant grows in association with mangrove forests, it is moderately abundant.[10]

It is a host to the following taxa: the pathogenic fungi Botryosphaeria purandharensis and Mycosphaerella multiloculata, and other fungi Acrocordiella occulta, Lecideopsella gelatinosa and Meliolina memecyli.[5]

Vernacular names Edit

Uses Edit

In the traditional medicine of the Kuuku I’yu (Northern Kaanju) or Kaanichi Pama, the people of the inland highlands of central Cape York Peninsula, northeast Australia, the plant is used to treat skin infections and inflammations.[12]Enzyme inhibitory activity, antiglycation activity and antioxidant activity of the species leaf extract was assessed and found not to be significant.

The Karen people of northern and western Thailand use the species in their ethnomedicine. A decoction of the leaves is drunk as treatment for muscle pain.[13]

References Edit

  1. ^ a b "Memecylon pauciflorum Blume". Plants of the World Online. Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew. Retrieved 5 May 2021.
  2. ^ a b c d e "Memecylon pauciflorum Blume". FloraBase: the Western Australian Flora. Western Australian Herbarium. Retrieved 5 May 2021.
  3. ^ a b c d e Chen, Jie; Renner, Susanne S. "8. Memecylon pauciflorum Blume, Mus. Bot. 1: 356. 1851". Flora of China. eFloras.org. Retrieved 5 May 2021.
  4. ^ a b c F.A.Zich; B.P.M.Hyland; T.Whiffen; R.A.Kerrigan (2020). "Memecylon pauciflorum". Australian Tropical Rainforest Plants Edition 8 (RFK8). Centre for Australian National Biodiversity Research (CANBR), Australian Government. Retrieved 1 July 2021.
  5. ^ a b "Memecylon pauciflorum Bl". Encyclopedia of Life. eol.org. Retrieved 5 May 2021.
  6. ^ Stone, Robert Douglas (2014). "The species-rich, paleotropical genus Memecylon (Melastomataceae): Molecular phylogenetics and revised infrageneric classification of the African species". Taxon. 63 (3, June): 539–561. doi:10.12705/633.10. Retrieved 2 February 2021.
  7. ^ a b "Memecylon pauciflorum Blume, Mus. Bot. 1(23): 356 (1851)". International Plant Name Index (IPNI). Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew. Retrieved 8 May 2021.
  8. ^ a b Neldner, V.J.; with four others (2019). The Vegetation of Queensland: Descriptions of Broad Vegetation Groups: Version 4.0 (PDF). Queensland Herbarium, Department of Science, Information Technology and Innovation.
  9. ^ Runcie, Myfanwy Jane (2002). Behaviour and Ecology of Tropical Rock-possums: the Rock-haunting Possum, Petropseudes dahli and the Scaly-tailed Possum, Wyulda squamicaudata: Ph.D. thesis. Darwin: School of Biological and Environmental Sciences Northern Territory University. Retrieved 10 May 2021.
  10. ^ Nabila, G. Fatheen; Faridah-Hanum, I.; Kudus, Kamziah Abd; Nazre, M. (2012). "Assessment of Floristic Composition of Kilim Geoforest Park, Langkawi, Malaysia". Journal of Agricultural Science. 4 (3): 23–34. Retrieved 8 May 2021.
  11. ^ Lokkers, Con (2000). Survey of coastal vegetation in Council reserves at Horseshoe Bay: Earthworks Report 00c01a to Townsville City Council October 2000 (PDF). Townsville, Queensland: Earthworks Environmental Services Pty Ltd. p. 13. Retrieved 10 May 2021.
  12. ^ Deo, Permal; with seven others (2016). "In vitro inhibitory activities of selected Australian medicinal plant extracts against protein glycation, angiotensin converting enzyme (ACE) and digestive enzymes linked to type II diabetes". BMC Complementary and Alternative Medicine. 16x (435): 435. doi:10.1186/s12906-016-1421-5. PMC 5095981. PMID 27809834.
  13. ^ Kantasrila, Rapeeporn; with five others (2020). "Medicinal Plants for Treating Musculoskeletal Disorders among Karen in Thailand". Plants. 9 (811): 27pp. doi:10.3390/plants9070811. PMC 7412036. PMID 32605228. Retrieved 10 May 2021.

memecylon, pauciflorum, tree, species, melastomataceae, family, grows, tree, shrub, northern, australia, tropical, subtropical, asia, understorey, species, typically, grows, variety, communities, possum, petropseudes, dahli, rock, haunting, possum, uses, this,. Memecylon pauciflorum is a tree species in the Melastomataceae family It grows as a tree or shrub in northern Australia and tropical and subtropical Asia An understorey species typically it grows in a variety of communities The possum Petropseudes dahli rock haunting possum uses this species as one of their scent marking sites It is a host to a number of funguses People in Australia and in Thailand use the plant in folk medicine though no efficacy has been demonstrated Memecylon pauciflorumScientific classificationKingdom PlantaeClade TracheophytesClade AngiospermsClade EudicotsClade RosidsOrder MyrtalesFamily MelastomataceaeGenus MemecylonSpecies M pauciflorumBinomial nameMemecylon pauciflorumBlumeSynonyms 1 Memecylon australe F Muell ex Triana Memecylon capitellatum Span Memecylon pulchellum Ridl Memecylon umbellatum Benth Contents 1 Description 2 Taxonomy 3 Distribution 4 Habitat ecology 5 Vernacular names 6 Uses 7 ReferencesDescription EditThis plant grows as a tree or shrub some 1 10m tall 2 3 with a trunk that does rarely exceeds 30cm d b h 4 Many branched with smooth 4 sided branches Leaves are around 3 7 by 1 3cm in size with lateral veins barely visible on upper surface but making inconspicuous loops or an intramarginal vein quite close to the margin there are small oil dots visible at low magnification e g with hand lens stipules are absent but scars are visible on twigs between petioles that resemble stipule scars the upper surface of petiole is grooved Inflorescences are shorter than leaves Small pink green flowers 2 about 2mm long petals eight stamens the anthers have a long spur at the base which has a raised gland on opposite side to filament attachment Globular or depressed globular fruit some 6 8 by 8 9mm in diameter persistent calyx at apex Globular seeds some 4 5 by 5 6mm in diameter A seed weighs about 130mg 5 Green cotyledons that are crumpled and folded many times more or less semiorbicular in seedling some 16 20 by 15 30mm shortly petiolate stipules on cotyledons usually visible winged hypocotyl The glabrous leaves are linear and narrowly elliptic to elliptic at tenth leaf atage usually visible stipules or stipule like structures The germination time of seeds is from 20 to 63 days In the Kimberley Western Australia it flowers in January and February or in April 2 In Zhōngguo China it flowers in April and May with fruiting occurring in November Characteristics that distinguish it from other Memecylon species in China are that it is a shrub or small tree less than 6m tall the blade of the leaves are some 3 5 8 by 0 6 3 5 cm in size the blade of the leaf is some 1 4 3 2 times as long as it is broad with a base not decurrent on petiole the anther is connected abaxially with a circular concave gland smooth and glossy leaf blade on both surfaces fruit is not ribbed cymose inflorescences and again on both surfaces the leaf blade is glabrous and glossy 3 Taxonomy Edit nbsp Title page of Blume s Museum botanicum Lugduno Batavum sive Stirpium exoticarum novarum vel minus cognitarum ex vivis aut siccis brevis expositio et descriptioThis species has been identified by molecular phylogenetics using nuclear ribosomal DNA as being in a Malesian Southeast Asian Chinese clade with Memecylon caeruleum Memecylon cantleyi Memecylon lilacinum Memecylon plebujum and Memecylon scutellatum 6 This species was first described in 1851 by the Braunschweig born botanist Carl Ludwig Blume 1796 1862 7 He spent his working life in now Indonesia then the Dutch East Indies where he was at the now Bogor Botanical Gardens and in the Netherlands where he was at the then Rijksherbarium Leiden now the Nationaal Herbarium Nederland Leiden He published a description of the plant in 1850 however the 1851 description in his work Museum botanicum Lugduno Batavum sive Stirpium exoticarum novarum vel minus cognitarum ex vivis aut siccis brevis expositio et descriptio is held to be authoritative on Botanicus 7 Distribution EditThis species is native to an area from northern Australia to tropical and subtropical Asia 1 Countries and regions in which this taxa grows are Australia Queensland Northern Territory Western Australia Malaysia Peninsular Malaysia Vietnam Zhōngguo China Hainan Guangdong 3 Laos Myanmar Bangladesh India Andaman Islands In Queensland the tree shrub occurs from southeastern region to the central and north east and Cape York Peninsula 4 In Western Australia it is found in the northern Kimberley 2 Habitat ecology EditIn Australia M pauciflorum grows from near sea level to 400m elevation 4 It is found as an understory tree in monsoon drier or more seasonal rain open and littoral forests and in woodlands In the Kimberley Western Australia it grows on sandy soils in sandstone gorges 2 In China it is found in forests and mountain slopes 3 A publication of Queensland Herbarium on the broad vegetation groups present in that state of Australia includes a number of communities that include the species 8 The following table summarises the information Broad Vegetation Groups in Queensland that include M pauciflorum 8 Broad Vegetation Group subgroup Bioregion Mean annual rainfall Soils Emergents Canopy Layer that includes M pauciflorum2 Complex to simple semi deciduous mesophyll to notophyll vine forests sometimes with Araucaria cunninghamii hoop pine 2b Semi deciduous mesophyll to notophyll vine forests usually on granitic ranges Cape York Peninsula 1200 2000mm Yellow kandosols yellow dermosols Araucaria cunninghamii sometimes present to 30m Canarium australianum Bombax ceiba var leiocarpum Buchanania arborescens Antiaris toxicaria var macrophylla Sterculia quadrifida Acacia auriculiformis A polystachya Aidia racemosa Albizia lebbeck Beilschmiedia obtusifolia Dysoxylum acutangulum Maranthes corymbosa Myristica insipida Polyscias elegans Terminalia subacroptera 20m low tree shrub layer2 Complex to simple semi deciduous mesophyll to notophyll vine forests sometimes with A cunninghamii 2c Semi deciduous notophyll vine forests to simple evergreen notophyll vine forests frequently with Welchiodendron longivalve on northern Cape York Peninsula CYP 1600 2000mm Yellow and red kandosols rare W longivalve Acacia polystachya Canarium australianum Buchanania arborescens Endiandra glauca Alstonia actinophylla A spectabilis Blepharocarya involucrigera Sterculia quadrifida Planchonella chartacea Sersalisia sericea Flindersia ifflaiana Syzygium forte Beilschmiedia obtusifolia Podocarpus grayae Bombax ceiba var leiocarpum Cryptocarya cunninghamii Halfordia kendack 17m mid dense shrub low tree layer3 Notophyll vine forests thickets sometimes with sclerophyll and or Araucarian emergents on coastal dunes and sand masses 3a Evergreen to semi deciduous notophyll to microphyll vine forests thickets on beach ridges and coastal dunes occasionally A cunninghamii microphyll vine forests on dunes CYP Gulf Plains Wet Tropics Central Queensland Coast gt 1200mm Aeric podosols semiaquic podosols or bleached orthic tenosols A cunninghamii occasionally 25m Terminalia muelleri Manilkara kauki Mimusops elengi Pleiogynium timoriense Gyrocarpus americanus Sterculia quadrifida Buchanania arborescens Acacia polystachya Celtis paniculata Acacia crassicarpa Syzygium forte Drypetes deplanchei Canarium australianum Pandanus tectorius Cupaniopsis anacardioides 10m sparse shrub low tree layer5 Notophyll to microphyll vine forests frequently with Araucaria spp or Agathis spp kauri pines 5b Notophyll to microphyll vine forests frequently with A cunninghamii on ranges of central coastal bioregions Central Queensland Coast Wet Tropics 1200 2000mm Red ferrosols red and brown Dermosols A cunninghamii sometimes gt 18m Argyrodendron polyandrum Falcataria toona Dendrocnide photiniphylla Cryptocarya hypospodia C bidwillii C triplinervis Diospyros hebecarpa Pleiogynium timoriense Macropteranthes fitzalanii Terminalia porphyrocarpa Flindersia schottiana Drypetes deplanchei Euroschinus falcatus Cleistanthus dallachyanus and Olea paniculata sparse low tree shrub layer5 Notophyll to microphyll vine forests frequently with Araucaria spp or Agathis spp kauri pines 5c Simple to complex notophyll vine forests often with Agathis spp on ranges and uplands of the Wet Tropics bioregion Wet Tropics Einasleigh Uplands 1600 3000mm Red and brown dermosols red ferrosols Agathis robusta frequent 35m Argyrodendron polyandrum Falcataria toona Aleurites moluccanus Cryptocarya triplinervis Ficus benjamina Flindersia schottiana var pubescens Linociera ramiflora Pleiogynium timoriense Polyalthia nitidissima mid dense subcanopy and low tree layer7 Semi evergreen to deciduous microphyll vine thickets 7b Deciduous microphyll vine thickets on ranges and heavy clay alluvia in northern bioregions CYP alluvial clays CYP Wet Tropics 1200 2000mm Yellow and brown dermosols brown or grey vertosols dermosolic oxyaquic hydrosols Lagerstroemia engleriana Bombax ceiba var leiocarpum Eucalyptus microtheca up to 25m Lagerstroemia engleriana Strychnos lucida Diospyros hebecarpa Croton arnhemicus Larsenaikia ochreata Memecylon pauciflorum 5 10m 18m canopy layer7 Semi evergreen to deciduous microphyll vine thickets 7b Deciduous microphyll vine thickets on ranges and heavy clay alluvia in northern bioregions CYP rocky slopes and ranges CYP Wet Tropics 1200 2000mm Orthic or bleached leptic tenosols brown dermosols yellow kandosols Gyrocarpus americanus Bombax ceiba var leiocarpum frequent 12 5m Cochlospermum gillivraei Canarium australianum Croton arnhemicus Terminalia muelleri Acacia polystachya Gyrocarpus americanus Bombax ceiba var leiocarpum 5 12m sparse to mid dense shrub layer nbsp Petropseudes dahli rock haunting possum The possum Petropseudes dahli rock haunting possum uses this tree as a deposit for scent 9 Ten tree species rocks and termite mounds were used for scent marking The scent is emitted by caudal glands on individuals rumps cloacal secretions are possibly also involved The secretion is orange coloured molasses like in texture and has a sweet musky odour that humans can smell up to 50m away In the Kilim Karst Geoforest Park area Langkawi Malaysia the plant grows in association with mangrove forests it is moderately abundant 10 It is a host to the following taxa the pathogenic fungi Botryosphaeria purandharensis and Mycosphaerella multiloculata and other fungi Acrocordiella occulta Lecideopsella gelatinosa and Meliolina memecyli 5 Vernacular names Editcherry Australian English 11 少花谷木 shao hua gu mu Standard Chinese 3 Uses EditIn the traditional medicine of the Kuuku I yu Northern Kaanju or Kaanichi Pama the people of the inland highlands of central Cape York Peninsula northeast Australia the plant is used to treat skin infections and inflammations 12 Enzyme inhibitory activity antiglycation activity and antioxidant activity of the species leaf extract was assessed and found not to be significant The Karen people of northern and western Thailand use the species in their ethnomedicine A decoction of the leaves is drunk as treatment for muscle pain 13 References Edit a b Memecylon pauciflorum Blume Plants of the World Online Royal Botanic Gardens Kew Retrieved 5 May 2021 a b c d e Memecylon pauciflorum Blume FloraBase the Western Australian Flora Western Australian Herbarium Retrieved 5 May 2021 a b c d e Chen Jie Renner Susanne S 8 Memecylon pauciflorum Blume Mus Bot 1 356 1851 Flora of China eFloras org Retrieved 5 May 2021 a b c F A Zich B P M Hyland T Whiffen R A Kerrigan 2020 Memecylon pauciflorum Australian Tropical Rainforest Plants Edition 8 RFK8 Centre for Australian National Biodiversity Research CANBR Australian Government Retrieved 1 July 2021 a b Memecylon pauciflorum Bl Encyclopedia of Life eol org Retrieved 5 May 2021 Stone Robert Douglas 2014 The species rich paleotropical genus Memecylon Melastomataceae Molecular phylogenetics and revised infrageneric classification of the African species Taxon 63 3 June 539 561 doi 10 12705 633 10 Retrieved 2 February 2021 a b Memecylon pauciflorum Blume Mus Bot 1 23 356 1851 International Plant Name Index IPNI Royal Botanic Gardens Kew Retrieved 8 May 2021 a b Neldner V J with four others 2019 The Vegetation of Queensland Descriptions of Broad Vegetation Groups Version 4 0 PDF Queensland Herbarium Department of Science Information Technology and Innovation Runcie Myfanwy Jane 2002 Behaviour and Ecology of Tropical Rock possums the Rock haunting Possum Petropseudes dahli and the Scaly tailed Possum Wyulda squamicaudata Ph D thesis Darwin School of Biological and Environmental Sciences Northern Territory University Retrieved 10 May 2021 Nabila G Fatheen Faridah Hanum I Kudus Kamziah Abd Nazre M 2012 Assessment of Floristic Composition of Kilim Geoforest Park Langkawi Malaysia Journal of Agricultural Science 4 3 23 34 Retrieved 8 May 2021 Lokkers Con 2000 Survey of coastal vegetation in Council reserves at Horseshoe Bay Earthworks Report 00c01a to Townsville City Council October 2000 PDF Townsville Queensland Earthworks Environmental Services Pty Ltd p 13 Retrieved 10 May 2021 Deo Permal with seven others 2016 In vitro inhibitory activities of selected Australian medicinal plant extracts against protein glycation angiotensin converting enzyme ACE and digestive enzymes linked to type II diabetes BMC Complementary and Alternative Medicine 16x 435 435 doi 10 1186 s12906 016 1421 5 PMC 5095981 PMID 27809834 Kantasrila Rapeeporn with five others 2020 Medicinal Plants for Treating Musculoskeletal Disorders among Karen in Thailand Plants 9 811 27pp doi 10 3390 plants9070811 PMC 7412036 PMID 32605228 Retrieved 10 May 2021 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Memecylon pauciflorum amp oldid 1171251914, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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