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Alluaudia procera

Madagascar ocotillo
Alluaudia Procera Ifaty Madagascar.jpg
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Plantae
(unranked): Angiosperms
(unranked): Eudicots
(unranked): Core eudicots
Order: Caryophyllales
Family: Didiereaceae
Genus: Alluaudia
Species: A. procera
Binomial name
Alluaudia procera
(Drake) Drake
Synonyms

Didierea procera Drake


Didierea procera Drake

Madagascar ocotillo or Alluaudia procera, is a deciduous succulent plant species of the family Didiereaceae.

It is endemic to south Madagascar.

This plant is a spiny succulent shrub, with thick water-storing stems and leaves that are deciduous in the long dry season. Although strikingly similar in appearance, it is not closely related to the ocotillo, Fouquieria splendens of the Sonoran Deserts in North America.

Young alluaudias form a tangle of stems that last for several years after which a strong central stem develops. The basal stems then die out leaving a tree-like stem that branches higher up on the main trunk.

Like other members of Didiereaceae family, the leaves of Alluaudia, produced from brachyblasts similar to areoles found in cacti, are small, appear single and are accompanied with conical spines. Its flowers are unisexual and radially symmetric.

The Didiereaceae comprise 11 species divided into 4 genera, of which the largest is Alluaudia (six species). Alluaudia has been subdivided into the 2 sections Alluaudia and Androyella. In this way, Alluaudia procera has two sisters, Alluaudia ascendens and Alluaudia montagnacii.

Based on molecular phylogeny conductedAlluaudia, Alluaudiopsis, and Didierea from the family are all supported as monophyletic. Relationships within the genus Alluaudia are relevant to the evolution of polyploidy within the family.

Researchers haven’t figured out where the Didiereaceae family originates from. However, the nearest relative of the Didiereaceae, Calyptrotheca somalensis, is endemic to East Africa, where the island of Madagascar separated from 100 million years ago. Thus, the Didiereaceae family species may have originated from the dispersal to Madagascar of a Calyptrotheca-like East African ancestor.


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Wikipedia

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