Macrocarpaea ypsilocaule

(Macrocarpaea ypsilocaule)

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Description

Macrocarpaea ypsilocaule is a gentian vegetable species described by Jason Randall Grant. Macrocarpaea ypsilocaule was included in the Macrocarpaea genus and the Gentianaceae family. The genus Macrocarpaea, with 105 species and two hybrids of 0.5 m herbs, shrubs, epiphytes and small trees to 10 m tall, is the largest genus of the tribe Helieae of the gentian family (Gentianaceae). Species of Macrocarpaea have diurnal and nocturnal pollinators, visited during the day by hummingbirds, insects and butterflies, and at night by bats, moths and many different kinds of insects. The common name for the genus is 'Moon-gentian'. No species are known in cultivation. Species of this genus have white, cream, yellow to green flowers. Most have a large, open campanulate to funnel-form corolla adapted to nocturnal bat pollination. This genus is one of the few of the gentian family that have species with hairs on their leaves.

Taxonomic tree:

Domain:
Kingdom: Plantae
Phylum: Tracheophyta
Class: Magnoliopsida
Order:Gentianales
Family:Gentianaceae
Genus:Macrocarpaea
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