Plectocomia mulleri Blume, Rumphia 3: 71 (1847)

Primary tabs

https://media.e-taxonomy.eu/palmae/photos/palm_tc_157835_2.jpg

Distribution

Map uses TDWG level 3 distributions (https://github.com/tdwg/wgsrpd)
Borneo present (World Checklist of Arecaceae)B
Malaya present (World Checklist of Arecaceae)B
Widespread on poor soils at altitudes up to 920 m above sea level. Elsewhere throughout Borneo; also in Peninsular Malaysia. (Dransfield, J. 1997: The Rattans of Brunei Darussalam)A

Discussion

  • Plectocomia mulleri is particularly abundant in forest on poor soils, especially where the forest has been disturbed. It is very characteristic of some facies of kerangas. In Borneo it ranges from the lowlands up to c. 1,400 m above sea level. It is very variable, so much so that extremes look remarkably different from each other. The leaflets vary from being concolorous to strongly discolorous, but even those individuals which appear concolorous carry indumentum on the lower surface of the leaves at the shoot tips. Individuals on extreme kerangas soils have small narrow leathery dark green leaflets, densely chalky white beneath. However, flowers and fruit characters link all these populations together as one variable species. (Dransfield, J. 1997: The Rattans of Brunei Darussalam)A

Common Name

  • Uwai Semerangan (Dus.), Wi Tibu (Ib.) (Dransfield, J. 1997: The Rattans of Brunei Darussalam)A

Etymology

  • Salomon Muller, early German collector in S Borneo (Dransfield, J. 1997: The Rattans of Brunei Darussalam)A

Uses

  • See notes under genus. (Dransfield, J. 1997: The Rattans of Brunei Darussalam)A

Description

  • Solitary or clustered moderate to robust rattan climbing to 30 m or more; stem without sheaths 2-10 cm diam., with sheaths 3-15 cm diam. (rarely even more), internodes to c. 30 cm long. Sheaths without knee, bright green armed with rather close full or partial whorls of brown spines to 2 cm, the spines united by their bases to form collars, buff indumentum abundant on newly emerged sheaths. Leaves very variable, 2-7 m including the cirrus (1-3.5 m) and petiole 10-20 cm; leaflets to 35 on each side of the rachis, arranged irregularly in groups of 2-5, fanned within groups, the longest to c. 40 × 3.5 cm, dark green on the upper surface, same colour beneath except in populations in kerangas where usually chalky-white beneath. Inflorescences produced simultaneously from up to 32 nodes in male, usually fewer in the female. Male inflorescence longer than the female, to 1 m with up to 40 pendulous branches to 30 cm; bracts to 2 × 1.5 cm, truncate with short triangular tip, subtending 60-100 flowers. Female inflorescence to c. 40 cm, bearing c. 6 pendulous branches to 50 cm; bracts to 3.5 × 2 cm, truncate with short triangular tip, subtending 2-4 flowers. Mature fruit ± rounded, 2-3 cm diam., tipped by stigmatic remains and covered in c. 65 vertical rows of fimbriate chestnut brown scales. Seed c. 1.5 cm diam. Seedling leaf lanceolate, undivided. (Fig. 82, Pl. 15C, 15D). (Dransfield, J. 1997: The Rattans of Brunei Darussalam)A

Materials Examined

  • TEM: Amo, Bt.Belalong, Dransfield J. 7211.TUT: Rambai, Tasek Merimbun, Bernstein 246. (Dransfield, J. 1997: The Rattans of Brunei Darussalam)A

Bibliography

    A. Dransfield, J. 1997: The Rattans of Brunei Darussalam
    B. World Checklist of Arecaceae