Cycas edentata de Laub., Blumea 43: 373 1998. (Syn: Cycas circinalis f. maritima J.Schust.; Cycas litoralis K.D.Hill);
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This species is widespread and locally common in much of southeast Asia. Subpopulations are found in Indonesia, Malaysia, Myanmar, Philippines, Thailand and Viet Nam.
. IBG today : Cycas sp. 01 : 5 posts by 3 authors. Attachments (5).
This may be the same species I have posted recently https://groups.google.com/indiantreepix/kykZg, but I am not sure, they all look alike. Leaves are around 4 to 5 ft long and leaflets are about 1 ft. Isn’t it Cycas rumphii? Thank you …, I am not familiar with cycads. To my very little understanding it does fall in C. rumphii complex. FoP equates it with Cycas circinalis sensu Roxb. non L., illustrations can be found at http://www.efloras.org/object_page.aspx?object_id=1200&flora_id=2 and http://www.plantillustrations.org/height=1080 which shows teeth on lamina of megasporophyll. A document of ‘Cycas in India’ can be downloaded from – https://groups.google.com/indiantreepix/fAAiOFfD_Dg Another, ‘The genus Cycas (cycadaceae) in Indonesia’ can be downloaded from http://www.cycad.org/documents/descriptions/Cycas/Cycas-montana.pdf
Both the above files document Cycas rumphii, C. edentata (previously C. rumphii, syn. C. litoralis), C. sphaerica Roxb., in addition to other species. KEYs are given along with illustrations & descriptions of megasporophylls.
After going through those two docs. I think it is not C. zeylanica, where leaflets are widely spaced.
For its narrower falcate leaflets, megasporophyll without lateral spine & longer apical spine (14-40 mm against 10-25 mm) I think it is C. edentata de Laub. I think the pictures of petiolar spine, cataphylls, megasporophylls in this thread look similar to –
The problem is that the above documents inform Cal. Bot. did cultivate C. rumphii. I do not know if Cal. Bot. also has C. edentata de Laub.
I hope i haven’t made any grave mistake.
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