Eugenia palumbis

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Agatelang
Leaves and fruits, Saipan, CNMI
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Kingdom: Plantae
Clade: Tracheophytes
Clade: Angiosperms
Clade: Eudicots
Clade: Rosids
Order: Myrtales
Family: Myrtaceae
Genus: Eugenia
Species:
E. palumbis
Binomial name
Eugenia palumbis
Merr. (1914)
Synonyms[1]

Jossinia palumbis (Merr.) Diels (1921)

Eugenia palumbis (Chamorro: agate'lang[2][3]) is a shrub with edible fruits in the family Myrtaceae. It is endemic to the Mariana Islands, including Guam and the Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands.[4][5][1]

Eugenia palumbis is a bush or small tree 5 to 15 feet tall.[6][7][8]

Stems and leaves are smooth, except for the younger branchlets and calyces. Branches and twigs are thin and brown.

Leaf petioles are only 3 mm or less. Leaves are somewhat coriaceous and dark green but younger leaves are membranous and reddish or pale green. The underside is punctate with small scattered glands. Leaves are nearly symmetrical, elliptic or ovate-elliptic, 3.5 to 5.5 cm long. The base forms an acute angle, and the apex is obtuse. Leaf margins are slightly recurved. Leaves have about 6 slender and obscure lateral nerves per side, which form subtle loose anastomoses.

Flowers are white. Merrill found the species distinctive because of its "small, axillary, solitary, very shortly pedicelled flowers" not larger than 1 cm in diameter.[2] Pedicelled are stout at about 2 mm diameter. The calyx is papery, glandular, greenish, and funnel-shaped, 3 to 3.5 mm long and 3 mm wide, consisting of 4 oval-shaped lobes.[9] Stamens are indefinite. Filaments are 2 to 3 mm long; anthers 0.7 mm long. Petals are not seen.[2]

Fruits are round, about 6 to 8 mm diameter, orange initially and ripening to bright red.[10][11][12] Fruits are edible and sweet tasting.[8]

Distribution, habitat, and conservation status

The species has been observed on Guam,[13] Rota,[14] Aguiguan,[15] Tinian,[16] Saipan,[17] and Pagan.[18]

Flower of Eugenia palumbis, Dededo, Guam

It is found on limestone cliffs,[10] sloping limestone terraces, sandy flats, and in primary and secondary limestone forests.[6][19] On Pagan it has been observed growing from volcanic rocks.[20] It can be found at least as high as 500 feet above sea level.[21]

As of 2023, the species has not been assessed by the IUCN.[22]

Ecology

Eugenia palumbis can serve as a phorophyte of the threatened orchid Tuberolabium guamense.[23][24]

A review of entomological surveys[25][26][27] found no insects reported to be collected from Eugenia palumbis specifically, although two insect species were reported from unspecified Eugenia species on Guam, including a hymenoptera wasp (Euplectrus leucostomus)[28] and a fruit fly (Dacus (Strumeta) ochrosiae).[29]

Mature fruits of Eugenia palumbis, Dededo, Guam


History

See also

References

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