Schoepfia Chinensis
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Schoepfia Chinensis
''Schoepfia'' is a genus of small hemiparasitic trees, flowering plants belonging to the family Schoepfiaceae. The genus has long been placed in the Olacaceae family. Description Plants in this genus are small trees or shrubs which exhibit heterostyly - individuals can have both often cylindrical brachystylous (short styled) flowers and somewhat bell-shaped dolichostylous (longer styled) flowers. In most plants where heterostyly occurs, there is a sexual differentiation between flower types, the brachystylous flowers being functionally male, or one type of flower is cleistogamous or self-fertile. In ''Schoepfia'' species both flowers are bisexual and can form fruit, the reason for two flower forms is mysterious. The flowers are fragrant and small. They arise from a short Peduncle (botany), peduncle which grows from the leaf axils of a stem. The peduncle is subtended by persistent, imbricate perular bracts. The flower is subtended by a three-lobed epicalyx, it is composed of a b ...
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Schoepfia Arenaria
''Schoepfia arenaria'' is an extremely rare species of hemiparasitic flowering plant in the Schoepfiaceae family. It grows as a small, multi-trunked tree. It is endemic to Puerto Rico, where it is found growing along the northern coast. A local Spanish vernacular name recorded for this tree is ''araƱa'' ('spider'). It has no common name in English. Taxonomy ''Schoepfia arenaria'' was first collected near the small town of Santurce in 1899, immediately after the US had conquered Puerto Rico from the Spain and renamed the island Porto Rico. It grew here amongst other shrubs atop the higher sand dunes along the beach -although not stated as such, the derivation of the specific epithet is thus likely derived from the Latin word ''arena'', meaning 'sand'. There were three American plant collectors busy on the same beach that day, Amos Arthur Heller and his wife, Emily Gertrude, sent by the New York Botanical Gardens, and Charles Frederick Millspaugh from the Field Museum of Natural H ...
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