19.10.2014 Views

The Cucurbitaceae of India: Accepted names, synonyms ...

The Cucurbitaceae of India: Accepted names, synonyms ...

The Cucurbitaceae of India: Accepted names, synonyms ...

SHOW MORE
SHOW LESS

You also want an ePaper? Increase the reach of your titles

YUMPU automatically turns print PDFs into web optimized ePapers that Google loves.

PhytoKeys 20: 53–118 (2013)<br />

doi: 10.3897/phytokeys.20.3948<br />

www.phytokeys.com<br />

<strong>The</strong> <strong>Cucurbitaceae</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>India</strong> 53<br />

Checklist<br />

A peer-reviewed open-access journal<br />

Launched to accelerate biodiversity research<br />

<strong>The</strong> <strong>Cucurbitaceae</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>India</strong>: <strong>Accepted</strong> <strong>names</strong>,<br />

<strong>synonyms</strong>, geographic distribution, and<br />

information on images and DNA sequences<br />

Susanne S. Renner 1 , Arun K. Pandey 2<br />

1 Systematic Botany and Mycology, University <strong>of</strong> Munich, Menzingerstr. 67, 80638 Munich, Germany<br />

2 Department <strong>of</strong> Botany, University <strong>of</strong> Delhi, Delhi-110007, <strong>India</strong><br />

Corresponding author: S. S. Renner (renner@lmu.de), A. K. Pandey (arunpandey79@gmail.com)<br />

Academic editor: H. Schaefer | Received 3 September 2012 | <strong>Accepted</strong> 28 December 2012 | Published 11 March 2013<br />

Citation: Renner SS, Pandey AK (2013) <strong>The</strong> <strong>Cucurbitaceae</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>India</strong>: <strong>Accepted</strong> <strong>names</strong>, <strong>synonyms</strong>, geographic distribution,<br />

and information on images and DNA sequences. PhytoKeys 20: 53–118. doi: 10.3897/phytokeys.20.3948<br />

Abstract<br />

<strong>The</strong> most recent critical checklists <strong>of</strong> the <strong>Cucurbitaceae</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>India</strong> are 30 years old. Since then, botanical<br />

exploration, online availability <strong>of</strong> specimen images and taxonomic literature, and molecular-phylogenetic<br />

studies have led to modified taxon boundaries and geographic ranges. We present a checklist <strong>of</strong> the <strong>Cucurbitaceae</strong><br />

<strong>of</strong> <strong>India</strong> that treats 400 relevant <strong>names</strong> and provides information on the collecting locations<br />

and herbaria for all types. We accept 94 species (10 <strong>of</strong> them endemic) in 31 genera. For accepted species,<br />

we provide their geographic distribution inside and outside <strong>India</strong>, links to online images <strong>of</strong> herbarium or<br />

living specimens, and information on publicly available DNA sequences to highlight gaps in the current<br />

understanding <strong>of</strong> <strong>India</strong>n cucurbit diversity. Of the 94 species, 79% have DNA sequences in GenBank,<br />

albeit rarely from <strong>India</strong>n material. <strong>The</strong> most species-rich genera are Trichosanthes with 22 species, Cucumis<br />

with 11 (all but two wild), Momordica with 8, and Zehneria with 5. From an evolutionary point <strong>of</strong> view,<br />

<strong>India</strong> is <strong>of</strong> special interest because it harbors a wide range <strong>of</strong> lineages, many <strong>of</strong> them relatively old and<br />

phylogenetically isolated. Phytogeographically, the north eastern and peninsular regions are richest in species,<br />

while the Jammu Kashmir and Himachal regions have few <strong>Cucurbitaceae</strong>. Our checklist probably<br />

underestimates the true diversity <strong>of</strong> <strong>India</strong>n <strong>Cucurbitaceae</strong>, but should help focus efforts towards the least<br />

known species and regions.<br />

Keywords<br />

Conservation, revised generic boundaries, Cucumis wild species, <strong>India</strong>’s phytogeographic regions, <strong>Cucurbitaceae</strong><br />

tribal classification, Trichosanthes<br />

Copyright S. S. Renner, A. K. Pandey. This is an open access article distributed under the terms <strong>of</strong> the Creative Commons Attribution License 3.0<br />

(CC-BY), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.


54<br />

Susanne S. Renner & Arun K. Pandey / PhytoKeys 20: 53–118 (2013)<br />

Introduction<br />

Jeffrey’s (1980) and Chakravarty’s (1982) checklists <strong>of</strong> the <strong>Cucurbitaceae</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>India</strong> are<br />

now more than three decades old. Over this time, knowledge <strong>of</strong> the family’s representatives<br />

on the <strong>India</strong>n continent has grown considerably through botanical exploration,<br />

the additions <strong>of</strong> Naithani (1990), new treatments for Thailand (De Wilde and Duyfjes,<br />

2008a) and China (Lu et al., 2011), and revisionary work on genera, such as Trichosanthes<br />

(De Boer and Thulin, 2012) and Coccinia (Holstein, in press). Added to this,<br />

the online availability <strong>of</strong> taxonomic literature and specimen images, and molecularphylogenetic<br />

studies clarifying natural clade boundaries (e.g., Kocyan et al., 2007;<br />

Schaefer et al., 2009; Sebastian et al., 2011; De Boer et al., 2012), have led to many<br />

taxonomic and nomenclatural changes. Updating the two checklists <strong>of</strong> <strong>India</strong>n <strong>Cucurbitaceae</strong><br />

was therefore timely, especially since the <strong>Cucurbitaceae</strong> include several <strong>of</strong><br />

the World’s most important vegetables, such as melon (Cucumis melo), cucumber (C.<br />

sativus), watermelon (Citrullus lanatus), pumpkin and squash (Cucurbita spp.), and<br />

bitter gourd (Momordica charantia). Having a current list that is linked with molecular<br />

data and images may help focus phylogenetic and floristic research on undercollected<br />

species, and potentially strengthen conservation efforts.<br />

Here we present a checklist <strong>of</strong> the <strong>Cucurbitaceae</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>India</strong> that treats just over<br />

400 relevant taxon <strong>names</strong>. For each accepted species, we provide (i) type information<br />

including collecting location and herbaria, (ii) <strong>synonyms</strong> and their types, (iii)<br />

information on geographic range inside and outside <strong>India</strong>, (iv) links to online images<br />

<strong>of</strong> herbarium or living specimens, and (v) brief information on whether or not DNA<br />

sequences are available in GenBank at the National Center for Biological Information<br />

(http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov), with citation <strong>of</strong> relevant studies. DNA sequences today<br />

are essential; they help in the quick identification <strong>of</strong> sterile material via characteristic<br />

sequence motifs or “barcoding” (an Asia-focussed example is Li et al., 2011) and<br />

are required for evolutionary and biogeographic studies (e.g., Sebastian et al., 2011,<br />

De Boer et al., 2012). Even DNA sequences not coming from <strong>India</strong>n material can<br />

help place the <strong>India</strong>n species in context and to recognize if <strong>India</strong>n material differs from<br />

African or Chinese material going by the same name.<br />

Materials and methods<br />

Names that have been applied to <strong>India</strong>n <strong>Cucurbitaceae</strong> were taken from Jeffrey (1980,<br />

1981), Chakravarty (1982), and an unpublished compilation provided by Peter Raven<br />

(the Missouri Botanical Garden, St. Louis) and Kanchi Gandhi (Harvard University<br />

Herbaria, Boston). We also checked floras <strong>of</strong> neighboring or near-by countries, especially<br />

Naithani (1990), the Flora <strong>of</strong> China treatment (Lu et al., 2011), and numerous<br />

publications by De Wilde and Duyfjes (cited in our reference list). Information on<br />

the types (collector and location) <strong>of</strong> the 400 <strong>names</strong> was obtained from protologues,<br />

most <strong>of</strong> them available online. For nomenclatural types from <strong>India</strong>, we updated the


<strong>The</strong> <strong>Cucurbitaceae</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>India</strong> 55<br />

state in which the respective specimen was collected to agree with modern administrative<br />

units. Taxonomic or nomenclatural <strong>synonyms</strong> were obtained by checking relevant<br />

post-1980 treatments (cited under the respective genus or species).<br />

Distributions within <strong>India</strong> (by state) and outside <strong>India</strong> (by country or continent)<br />

were taken mostly from Chakravarty (1946, 1959, 1982), up-dated from floristic treatments,<br />

such as Lu et al. (2011) and the work <strong>of</strong> De Wilde and Duyfjes (e.g., 2004a, b,<br />

2006a, b, c, 2007a, b, 2008a, 2010, and as cited below). <strong>The</strong> links to images lead to type<br />

specimen images from various herbaria or the eflora<strong>of</strong>india website (https://sites.google.<br />

com/site/eflora<strong>of</strong>india/). This website has been created for documenting the flora <strong>of</strong> <strong>India</strong><br />

and currently has a database <strong>of</strong> 7500 species and over one million pictures at its e-group<br />

links. For each accepted species or relevant <strong>synonyms</strong> we checked GenBank (http://www.<br />

ncbi.nlm.nih.gov) for sequences and the published studies they are related to.<br />

Results and discussion<br />

Comparison with the two 1980s checklists and main causes <strong>of</strong> name changes<br />

Applying recent taxonomic changes resulted in the acceptance <strong>of</strong> 94 species. This is almost<br />

unchanged from the species number listed in previous checklists (Jeffrey, 1980: 90 species;<br />

Chakravarty, 1982: 100 species). A species no longer included is Zehneria wallichii<br />

from central Myanmar. Newly added species include Trichosanthes khasiana and T. quinquangulata.<br />

Compared to 1980, generic concepts have changed considerably, with many<br />

species <strong>names</strong> having been moved, especially in the genera Cucumis and Zehneria, and<br />

formerly monotypic genera having been merged (Schaefer and Renner, 2011b). Genera<br />

no longer accepted are Biswarea (=Herpetospermum), Cucumella (= Cucumis), Dicoelospermum<br />

(= Cucumis), Edgaria (=Herpetospermum), Gymnopetalum (=Trichosanthes), Mukia<br />

(= Cucumis), Neoluffa (= Siraitia), Praecitrullus (= Benincasa), and Sechium (= Sicyos). All<br />

these changes are based on molecular-phylogenetic results, cited under the respective species.<br />

Melothria in its modern circumscription is confined to the New World and does not<br />

occur in <strong>India</strong>. Its two <strong>India</strong>n species have been moved to Cucumis and Solena.<br />

Compared to other tropical regions <strong>of</strong> the size <strong>of</strong> <strong>India</strong>, for example, Brazil, the addition<br />

<strong>of</strong> new species records over the past 30 years has lagged behind. We suspect that<br />

many species new for <strong>India</strong> are awaiting discovery in the field and in yet unidentified<br />

herbarium material. Since <strong>India</strong>n herbaria are reluctant to send out loans, their material<br />

probably is understudied.<br />

Natives, endemics, cultivated species, and status <strong>of</strong> DNA sequencing<br />

Of the species <strong>of</strong> <strong>Cucurbitaceae</strong> in <strong>India</strong>, at least nine are introduced cultivated vegetables<br />

from Central and South America or Africa (Citrullus lanatus, Cyclanthera pedata,<br />

Kedrostis foetidissima, Sicyos edulis, and five species <strong>of</strong> Cucurbita). Of the native species,


56<br />

Susanne S. Renner & Arun K. Pandey / PhytoKeys 20: 53–118 (2013)<br />

ten are endemic: Cucumis indicus (Kerala, Maharashtra), C. ritchiei (Karnataka, Kerala,<br />

Maharashtra, Punjab, Tamil Nadu), C. setosus (Gujarat, Karnataka, Madhya Pradesh,<br />

Maharashtra, Rajasthan), C. silentvalleyi (Kerala), Momordica sahyadrica (Kerala), Solena<br />

amplexicaulis (Tamil Nadu, Karnataka, Kerala), Trichosanthes anaimalaiensis (Andaman<br />

and Nicobar Islands, Andhra Pradesh, Arunachal Pradesh, Karnataka, Kerala,<br />

Maharashtra, Tamil Nadu, Tripura), Trichosanthes khasiana, Zehneria hookeriana (Tamil<br />

Nadu), and Z. maysorensis (Kerala). Clearly, Kerala is the state with the highest<br />

number <strong>of</strong> endemics, followed by Tamil Nadu. <strong>The</strong> most species-rich <strong>Cucurbitaceae</strong><br />

genera in <strong>India</strong> are Trichosanthes with 22 species, Cucumis with 11 (all but two wild),<br />

Momordica 8, and Zehneria with 5.<br />

While 86 native species, including just ten endemics, may not be large numbers,<br />

<strong>India</strong> harbors an exceptional range <strong>of</strong> tribes as seen in Fig. 1, which shows the placement<br />

<strong>of</strong> the native <strong>India</strong>n genera on a <strong>Cucurbitaceae</strong> family tree with the family’s<br />

current tribal classification (Schaefer and Renner, 2011b). Many <strong>of</strong> the <strong>India</strong>n species,<br />

such as Actinostemma, Gynostemma, Hemsleya, Ind<strong>of</strong>evillea, Momordica and Siraitia belong<br />

to old and phylogenetically isolated lineages. This is known because 79% <strong>of</strong> the<br />

<strong>Cucurbitaceae</strong> species occurring in <strong>India</strong> have been sequenced for one or more genetic<br />

markers. Cucumber and melon, which originate in <strong>India</strong>, both have had their genomes<br />

completely sequenced (Huang et al., 2009; García-Mas et al., 2012), and many have<br />

been included in family-wide phylogenetic analyses (Kocyan et al., 2007; Schaefer et<br />

al., 2009; Schaefer and Renner, 2011b). <strong>The</strong> currently 20 species without any DNA<br />

sequences in GenBank may be found by searching our checklist for “no published<br />

sequences available.”<br />

Floristic distribution within <strong>India</strong> and disjunctions between Africa and <strong>India</strong><br />

<strong>The</strong> highest number <strong>of</strong> species is known from the northeast and peninsular <strong>India</strong> (Kerala,<br />

Karnataka, Tamil Nadu, Andhra Pradesh), the lowest from the Jammu Kashmir and<br />

Himachal regions <strong>of</strong> Western Himalaya. Especially interesting from a phytogeographic<br />

standpoint are species ranging from Africa to <strong>India</strong>, such as Coccinia grandis, Blastania<br />

cerasiformis, Corallocarpus conocarpus, C. epigaeus, C. schimperi, Cucumis prophetarum,<br />

Dactyliandra welwitschii, Luffa echinata, Momordica cymbalaria, and Zehneria thwaitesii.<br />

<strong>The</strong> genera Diplocyclos and Kedrostis also both have species in East Africa and <strong>India</strong>,<br />

but apparently not individual species spanning both continents. <strong>The</strong>se disjunctions<br />

would be interesting to study with molecular methods, which might allow inferring<br />

arrival times in <strong>India</strong>.<br />

Conclusion<br />

One <strong>of</strong> the great technical advances <strong>of</strong> recent years that are positively affecting taxonomy<br />

is the easy exchange <strong>of</strong> photos. Even simple snap shots <strong>of</strong> living plants (and cer-


<strong>The</strong> <strong>Cucurbitaceae</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>India</strong> 57<br />

Figure 1. Tribal classification <strong>of</strong> the <strong>Cucurbitaceae</strong> with native <strong>India</strong>n genera highlighted in red, cultivated<br />

ones in blue. Modified from Schaefer and Renner (2011a, b).<br />

tainly type images) greatly facilitate deciding the identity <strong>of</strong> a particular plant, and we<br />

hope that our links to the eflora<strong>of</strong>india (https://sites.google.com/site/eflora<strong>of</strong>india/)<br />

will pro<strong>of</strong> useful. <strong>The</strong> greatest caveat concerning our checklist is that the geographic


58<br />

Susanne S. Renner & Arun K. Pandey / PhytoKeys 20: 53–118 (2013)<br />

Table 1. Genera and species <strong>of</strong> <strong>Cucurbitaceae</strong> in <strong>India</strong> (94 total)<br />

Genera<br />

Number <strong>of</strong> species<br />

Actinostemma 1<br />

Benincasa 2<br />

Blastania 2<br />

Bryonia 2<br />

Citrullus 2<br />

Coccinia 1<br />

Corallocarpus 3<br />

Cucumis 11<br />

Cucurbita<br />

5 (all cultivated)<br />

Cyclanthera 1<br />

Dactyliandra 1<br />

Diplocyclos 1<br />

Gomphogyne 1<br />

Gynostemma 1<br />

Hemsleya 1<br />

Herpetospermum 3<br />

Hodgsonia 1<br />

Ind<strong>of</strong>evillea 1<br />

Kedrostis 2<br />

Lagenaria 1<br />

Luffa 4<br />

Momordica 8<br />

Neoalsomitra 1<br />

Schizopepon 3<br />

Sicyos 1<br />

Siraitia 1<br />

Solena 3<br />

Thladiantha 2<br />

Trichosanthes 22<br />

Zanonia 1<br />

Zehneria 5<br />

range information inside <strong>India</strong> is not directly based on specimens, but is more or less<br />

copied from Chakravarty (1982) and thus surely incomplete. It is to be hoped that<br />

the digization <strong>of</strong> <strong>India</strong>n material in the future will help achieve a deeper study <strong>of</strong> the<br />

<strong>Cucurbitaceae</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>India</strong>.


<strong>The</strong> <strong>Cucurbitaceae</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>India</strong> 59<br />

Checklist<br />

1. Actinostemma tenerum Griff., J. Asiat. Soc. Bengal 23(7): 643–644. 1854.<br />

Syntypes: <strong>India</strong>, Meghalaya, Khasia Hills, Griffith 2523 (K, W); <strong>India</strong>, Sadiya, upper<br />

Assam, also on Khasia Hills, T.E. Cantor s.n. (K).<br />

Distribution in <strong>India</strong>: Arunachal Pradesh, Assam, Bihar, Meghalaya, Mizoram, Uttar<br />

Pradesh, West Bengal.<br />

Distribution outside <strong>India</strong>: Bangladesh, Vietnam, Laos, Cambodia, Russia, China,<br />

Taiwan, Korea, and Japan (Schaefer and Renner, 2011a).<br />

Images: Griffith syntype: http://herbarium.univie.ac.at/database/detail.php?ID=63181<br />

http://apps.kew.org/herbcat/getImage.do?imageBarcode=K000742924<br />

GenBank: Sequences from Kocyan et al. (2007), e.g., DQ491007, DQ469135.<br />

Comments: Actinostemma comprises two other species, both in China. Based on genetic<br />

data, this is an isolated ancient lineage (Schaefer and Renner, 2011a, b; see also<br />

our Fig. 1). Ali Khan (2002) discusses the species’ occurrence in Uttar Pradesh.<br />

2. Benincasa fistulosa (Stocks) H.Schaef. & S.S.Renner, Taxon 60: 133. 2011.<br />

Citrullus fistulosus Stocks, Hooker’s J. Bot. Kew Gard. Misc. 3: 74, t. 3. 1851.<br />

Citrullus vulgaris Schrad. ex Eckl. & Zeyh. var. fistulosus (Stocks) J.L.Stewart, Punjab<br />

Pl. 96. 1869.<br />

Praecitrullus fistulosus (Stocks) Pangalo, Bot. Zhurn. S.S.S.R. 29: 203. 1944.<br />

Colocynthis citrullus (L.) Kuntze var. fistulosus (Stocks) Chakrav., Rec. Bot. Surv. <strong>India</strong><br />

17(1): 116. 1959.<br />

Citrullus lanatus (Thunb.) Matsum. & Nakai var. fistulosus (J.L.Steward) Babu, Herb.<br />

Fl. Dehra Dun 194. 1977, invalid name because Babu erred in the basionym he<br />

cited.<br />

Citrullus lanatus (Thunb.) Matsum. & Nakai var. fistulosus (Stocks) Chakrav., Fasc. Fl.<br />

<strong>India</strong> 11: 23. 1982, nom. illeg. isonym.<br />

Type: Pakistan [<strong>India</strong>], Kurrachee, Sinde, 1 Sep. 1850, Stocks s.n. (K).<br />

Distribution in <strong>India</strong>: Punjab, Rajasthan, Uttar Pradesh.<br />

Distribution outside <strong>India</strong>: Introduced (?) in tropical Africa.<br />

GenBank: Sequences from Dane and Lang (2004) and Kocyan et al. (2007), e.g.,<br />

DQ536719, DQ648185, AY522525.<br />

Comments: Cultivated in <strong>India</strong> and Pakistan as a vegetable. <strong>The</strong> origin <strong>of</strong> Benincasa<br />

fistulosa is unclear, and the species is currently only known in cultivation.


60<br />

Susanne S. Renner & Arun K. Pandey / PhytoKeys 20: 53–118 (2013)<br />

3. Benincasa hispida (Thunb.) Cogn. in A. & C. DC., Monog. Phan. 3: 513. 1881.<br />

Cucurbita hispida Thunb., Nov. Acta Regiae Soc. Sci. Upsal. 4: 38. 1783.<br />

Benincasa pruriens (Parkinson) W.J.de Wilde & Duyfjes forma hispida (Thunb.) W.J.de<br />

Wilde & Duyfjes, Sandakania 17: 47. 2008.<br />

Type: Japan, Thunberg 22775 (UPS, IDC micr<strong>of</strong>iche). Benincasa cerifera Savi, Bibliot.<br />

Ital. (Milan) 9: 158-165, f. a-g. 1818.<br />

Type: China, cult. in the Pisa botanical garden (herbarium?).<br />

Distribution in <strong>India</strong>: Cultivated in tropical and subtropical regions <strong>of</strong> <strong>India</strong>.<br />

Distribution outside <strong>India</strong>: Pakistan. <strong>India</strong>, Pakistan, Malayasia, Eastern Australia,<br />

Polynesia, China & Japan. Wild origin unclear.<br />

Images: http://plants.usda.gov/java/pr<strong>of</strong>ile?symbol=BEHI3<br />

Eflora<strong>of</strong>india at https://sites.google.com/site/eflora<strong>of</strong>india/species/a---l/cl/cucurbitaceae/benincasa/benincasa-hispida<br />

GenBank: Sequences from Kocyan et al. (2007), e.g., DQ282075, DQ282074.<br />

Comments: Benincasa comprises only the two species that occur in <strong>India</strong> (Schaefer and<br />

Renner, 2011a; see our Fig. 1 for the phylogenetic position <strong>of</strong> the tribe Benincaseae).<br />

Nicolson and Fosberg (2003) have argued that the name Benincasa hispida<br />

(Thunb.) Cogn. does not need to be replaced by Cucurbita pruriens Parkinson (J.<br />

Voy. South Seas 44 (1773), while De Wilde and Duyfjes (2008b) maintain that<br />

the oldest available name for this species is C. pruriens, hence Benincasa pruriens<br />

(Parkinson) W.J. de Wilde & Duyfjes.<br />

4. Blastania cerasiformis (Stocks) A.Meeuse, Bothalia 8: 12. 1962.<br />

Ctenolepis cerasiformis (Stocks) Hook.f., Fl. Trop. Afr. 2: 558. 1871.<br />

Bryonia fimbristipula Fenzl ex Stocks, Hooker’s J. Bot. Kew Gard. Misc. 4: 149. 1852,<br />

nom. inval. pro syn. <strong>of</strong> Zehneria cerasiformis Stocks<br />

Blastania fimbristipula Kotschy & Peyr., Pl. Tinn. 15. t. 7. 1867.<br />

Melothria fimbristipula (Kotschy & Peyr.) G. Roberty, Bull. I.F.A.N., Ser. 16:795.<br />

1954.<br />

Zehneria cerasiformis Stocks, Hooker’s J. Bot. Kew Gard. Misc. 4: 149. 1852.<br />

Syntype: Africa, Sudan, Blue Nile Province, Jebal Arashkol Kotschy 205 (CAL 2 sheets,<br />

photos available from SSR, K); Pakistan, Stocks 29 (K).<br />

Distribution in <strong>India</strong>: Wild on wastelands in Gujarat.<br />

Distribution outside <strong>India</strong>: Old World tropics from Mauritania & Senegal east to Pakistan<br />

and in E. Africa south to Transvaal.<br />

Image: http://www.zimbabweflora.co.zw/speciesdata/species.php?species_id=157060<br />

GenBank: Sequences from Kocyan et al. (2007), e.g., DQ535797, DQ536803.<br />

Comment: <strong>The</strong> genus name Blastania Kotschy et Peyritsch was published in July 1867<br />

(the full publication is online at the Biodiversity Heritage Library) and has priority<br />

over Ctenolepis J. D. Hooker in Bentham et J. D. Hooker, Gen. 1: 832. Sep 1867.


<strong>The</strong> <strong>Cucurbitaceae</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>India</strong> 61<br />

Jeffrey (1980) and Chakravarty (1982) both list B. cerasiformis (under Ctenolepis)<br />

in their checklists, but we have not seen <strong>India</strong>n specimens.<br />

5. Blastania garcinii (Burm.f.) Cogn. in A. & C. DC., Monogr. Phan. 3: 629. 1881.<br />

Ctenolepis garcinii (Burm.f.) Benth. & Hook.f., Gen. Pl. 1(3): 832. 1867.<br />

Bryonia garcinii (Burm.f.) Willd., Sp. Pl. 4(1): 623. 1805 (as garcini).<br />

Sicyos garcinii Burm. f., Fl. Ind. 211 (err. typ. 311). 1768.<br />

Type: <strong>India</strong>, Tamil Nadu, Chennai (formerly Madras), Tuticorin, Garcin s.n. (G) fide<br />

Jeffrey, 1980.<br />

Distribution in <strong>India</strong>: Andhra Pradesh, Delhi, Gujarat, Haryana, Karnataka, Kerala, Madhya<br />

Pradesh, Maharashtra, Odisha, Punjab, Rajasthan, Tamil Nadu, Uttar Pradesh.<br />

Distribution outside <strong>India</strong>: Sri Lanka.<br />

Image: Nothing reliable found.<br />

GenBank: No published sequences available.<br />

Comments: Blastania includes B. cerasiformis from <strong>India</strong> and west to tropical Africa, B.<br />

garcinii from <strong>India</strong> and Sri Lanka, and a third species in Madagascar.<br />

6. Bryonia aspera Steven ex Ledeb., Fl. Ross. 2:140. 1843.<br />

Lectotype: Northern Caucasus, Narzan, Bieberstein (LE), designated by Jeffrey (1969).<br />

Distribution in <strong>India</strong>: NW <strong>India</strong>: Jammu (Upper Chenab Valley), Himachal Pradesh<br />

(Chamba, Lahul-spiti).<br />

Distribution outside <strong>India</strong>: Turkey, Iran, Georgia, Armenia, Azerbaijan, Turkmenistan,<br />

Norther Afghanistan, Pakistan.<br />

Image: Nothing reliable found.<br />

GenBank: Sequences from Volz and Renner (2009), e.g., EU683747, EU683740.<br />

Comment: This was treated as B. dioica Jacq. by Chakravarty (1982), but that species<br />

does not occur as far east as <strong>India</strong>, ranging instead from Spain south to<br />

Algeria and Morocco, Sardinia, Corsica, and the Greek Peninsula and east to<br />

mid-Poland; a distribution map with all species <strong>of</strong> Bryonia is provided by Volz<br />

and Renner (2009).<br />

7. Bryonia monoica Aitch. & Hemsl., Trans. Linn. Soc. London, Bot. 3(1): 65. 1888.<br />

Type: Afghanistan, Badghis, Aitchison 339 (CAL photo available from SSR, K).<br />

Distribution in <strong>India</strong>: Probably near the Pakistani border.<br />

Distribution outside <strong>India</strong>: Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan, Kirgizstan, Turkmenistan, Afghanistan,<br />

Iran, Pakistan.<br />

Image: Nothing reliable found.<br />

GenBank: Sequences from Volz and Renner (2009), e.g., EU096421, EU096419.


62<br />

Susanne S. Renner & Arun K. Pandey / PhytoKeys 20: 53–118 (2013)<br />

Comment: Chakravarty (1982) treated this under the name B. multiflora Boiss. &<br />

Heldr., but that species occurs instead in Turkey, Iran, Iraq and Syria (Jeffrey,<br />

1969; Volz and Renner, 2009).<br />

8. Citrullus colocynthis (L.) Schrad., Linnaea 12: 414. 1838. Cucumis colocynthis L.,<br />

Sp. Pl. 2: 1011. 1753.<br />

Colocynthis vulgaris Schrad., Ind. Sem. 1:fig. 99. 1950.<br />

Type: Not designated.<br />

Distribution in <strong>India</strong>: Andhra Pradesh, Assam, Bihar, Jahrkhand, Delhi, Goa, Gujarat, Karnataka,<br />

Kerala, Maharashtra, Odisha, Punjab, Rajasthan, Tamil Nadu, Uttar Pradesh.<br />

Distribution outside <strong>India</strong>: Afghanistan, Myanmar, Pakistan, Sri Lanka, west to the<br />

Sahara (Lybia) and Sahel region.<br />

Images: See eflora<strong>of</strong> <strong>India</strong> at https://sites.google.com/site/eflora<strong>of</strong>india/species/a---l/cl/<br />

cucurbitaceae/citrullus/citrullus-colocynthis<br />

GenBank: Sequences from Kocyan et al. (2007), e.g., DQ536649, DQ535791.<br />

Comments: Citrullus colocynthis, or colocynth, is a perennial growing wild on sandy<br />

soils in deserts areas in Western and Central <strong>India</strong>. Many authors have treated<br />

Herb. Linn. No. 1152.1 (LINN) as the type. However, this collection lacks the relevant<br />

Species Plantarum number and was a post-1753 addition to the herbarium; it<br />

is not original material for the name (Jarvis, 2007).<br />

9. Citrullus lanatus (Thunb.) Matsum. & Nakai, Cat. Sem. & Spor. Hort. Bot. Univ.<br />

Imp. Tokyo 1916: 30. 1920 (“1916”).<br />

Momordica lanata Thunb., Prodr. Pl. Cap. 13. 1794.<br />

Type: South Africa, Cape Province, Thunberg s.n. (UPS).<br />

Cucurbita citrullus L., Sp. Pl. 2: 1010. 1753.<br />

Type: “Habitat in Apulia, Calabria, Sicilia”; lectotype not designated.<br />

Citrullus vulgaris Schrad. ex Eckl. & Zeyh., Enum. Pl. Afric. Austral. 2: 279. 1836.<br />

Type: Not known fide De Wilde and Duyfjes (2010).<br />

Distribution in <strong>India</strong>: Andaman & Nicobar Islands, Assam, Bihar, Jahrkhand, Delhi,<br />

Gujarat, Karnataka, Madhya Pradesh, Maharashtra, Punjab, Rajasthan, Tamil<br />

Nadu, Tripura, Uttar Pradesh, Uttarakhand, West Bengal.<br />

Distribution outside <strong>India</strong>: Nepal, Pakistan; native to tropical Africa.<br />

Images: <strong>The</strong> Thunberg holotype can be seen here: http://130.238.83.220/botanik/<br />

browserecord.php?-action=browse&-recid=371376<br />

http://www.flowers<strong>of</strong>india.net/catalog/slides/Watermelon.html<br />

See also eflora<strong>of</strong>india at https://sites.google.com/site/eflora<strong>of</strong>india/species/a---l/cl/cucurbitaceae/citrullus/citrullus-lanatus


<strong>The</strong> <strong>Cucurbitaceae</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>India</strong> 63<br />

GenBank: Several hundred sequences.<br />

Comments: <strong>The</strong> watermelon was probably domesticated in northern Africa (Wasylikowa<br />

and van der Veen, 2004). <strong>The</strong> extent <strong>of</strong> its native range is unclear.<br />

10. Coccinia grandis (L.) Voigt, Hort. Suburb. Calcutt. 59. 1845.<br />

Bryonia grandis L., Mant. Pl. 126. 1767.<br />

Type: <strong>India</strong>, without location, Herb. Linn. No. 1153.2 (LINN).<br />

Bryonia alceifolia [sphalm. alceaefolia] Willd. in Rottler, Neue Schriften d. Ges. Naturf.<br />

Freunde Berlin 4: 223. 1803.<br />

Type: <strong>India</strong>, Tamil Nadu, Tiruchinapally [Tiruchirappalli], Nov. 1793, Rottler s.n. (K).<br />

Coccinia indica Wight & Arn., Prodr. Fl. Ind. Orient. 1: 347. 1834, nom. superfl. &<br />

illeg. for Bryonia grandis L.<br />

Coccinia wightiana M.Roem., Syn. Pepon.: 93. 1846.<br />

Syntypes: <strong>India</strong>, Chennai, Wallich Cat. 6711a [D.Klein, B.Heyne or J.P.Rottler] in<br />

Herb. Madras s.n. (Paralectotype: E00174668); Nepalry, Wallich Cat. 6711b and<br />

6711e, R.Wight 1124 (Paralectotype: E00174667); Negapatam, R.Wight 1124<br />

(Lectotype, designated by Holstein, 2012: E00174666); R.Wight 1124 (Paralectotype:<br />

NY, digital image).<br />

Coccinia cordifolia (L.) Cogn. var. wightiana (M.Roem.) Cogn. in A. & C. DC., Monogr.<br />

Phan. 3: 531. 1881.<br />

Coccinia grandis (L.) Voigt var. wightiana (M.Roem.) Greb. in R. Mansfeld & J.<br />

Schultze-Motel, Verz. Landwirtsch. u. Gaertn. Kulturpfl. 2: 929. 1986.<br />

Cephalandra indica Naudin var. palmata C.B. Clarke, Fl. Brit. <strong>India</strong> 2: 621. 1879,<br />

nom. & stat. nov.<br />

Distribution in <strong>India</strong>: Distributed in plains <strong>of</strong> <strong>India</strong>, ascending c. 300 m in Peninsular<br />

<strong>India</strong>; Andaman & Nicobar Islands, Andhra Pradesh, Assam, Bihar, Jharkhand,<br />

Goa, Gujarat, Himachal Pradesh, Karnataka, Kerala, Lakshadweep, Madhya<br />

Pradesh, Chhattisgarh, Maharashtra, Manipur, Odisha, Rajasthan, Tamil Nadu,<br />

Tripura, Uttar Pradesh, Uttarakhand, West Bengal.<br />

Distribution outside <strong>India</strong>: Africa, China, Japan, Malesia, Myanmar, Pakistan, Sri<br />

Lanka.<br />

Images: http://www.flowers<strong>of</strong>india.net/catalog/slides/Ivy%20Gourd.html<br />

http://apps.kew.org/herbcat/getImage.do?imageBarcode=K000742794<br />

Eflora<strong>of</strong>india at https://sites.google.com/site/eflora<strong>of</strong>india/species/a---l/cl/cucurbitaceae/coccinia/coccinia-grandis<br />

GenBank: Sequences from Holstein and Renner (2011), e.g., HQ608245, HQ608458.<br />

Comments: <strong>The</strong> genus Coccinia has 35 species, all but C. grandis in Africa south <strong>of</strong><br />

the Sahara (Holstein, in press). In <strong>India</strong>, C. grandis has been used in traditional<br />

medicine for hundreds <strong>of</strong> years (Nadkarni and Nadkarni, 1976; Ramachandran<br />

and Subramaniam, 1983).


64<br />

Susanne S. Renner & Arun K. Pandey / PhytoKeys 20: 53–118 (2013)<br />

11. Corallocarpus conocarpus (Dalzell & A.Gibson) Hook.f. ex C.B. Clarke, Fl. Brit.<br />

<strong>India</strong> 2: 628. 1879 (as conocarpa).<br />

Aechmandra conocarpa Dalzell & A.Gibson, Bombay Fl. 100. 1861.<br />

Type: <strong>India</strong>, Maharashtra, Bombay, Gujrat near Malpor and Gundar, Dalzell 39 (K).<br />

Distribution in <strong>India</strong>: Gujarat, Karnataka, Maharashtra, Rajasthan, Tamil Nadu.<br />

Distribution outside <strong>India</strong>: Pakistan (fide the Flora <strong>of</strong> Pakistan, http://www.tropicos.<br />

org/Name/50326465?projectid=32, the species occurs also in Central Africa)<br />

Image: http://apps.kew.org/herbcat/detailsQuery.do?imageId=375483&pageCode=3<br />

&presentPage=3&queryId=4&sessionId=CE49DA6B1178914C12C060C6D31<br />

9E224&barcode=K000592620<br />

GenBank: No published sequences available.<br />

Comments: Corallocarpus has two species in Madagascar, eight in Africa (Schaefer and<br />

Renner, 2011a), and three that supposedly range from <strong>India</strong> to tropical East Africa.<br />

Chakravarty (1982) accepted four species for <strong>India</strong>, C. conocarpus, C. epigaeus,<br />

C. gracilipes, and C. palmatus, while Jeffrey (1980) considered the latter two <strong>names</strong><br />

<strong>synonyms</strong> <strong>of</strong> C. epigaeus as do we, but also accepted C. schimperi for <strong>India</strong>.<br />

12. Corallocarpus epigaeus (Rottler) Benth. & Hook.f. ex C.B. Clarke, Fl. Brit. <strong>India</strong><br />

2: 628. 1879 (as epigaea).<br />

Bryonia epigaea Rottler, Neue Schriften d. Ges. Naturf. Freunde Berlin 4: 212. 1803.<br />

Aechmandra epigaea (Rottler) Arn., J. Bot. 3: 274. 1841.<br />

Rhynchocarpa epigaea (Rottler) Naudin, Ann. Sci. Nat., Bot. sér. 4, 16: 178. 1862. Syntypes:<br />

Peninsular <strong>India</strong>, Klein 395 & 771 (B-W), Rottler 3531 (HBG), Rottler (K).<br />

Rhynchocarpa epigaea var. gracilipes Naudin, Ann. Sci. Nat., Bot. sér. 4, 16: 179. 1862.<br />

Corallocarpus gracilipes (Naudin) Cogn. in A. & C. DC., Monogr. Phan. 3: 656. 1881.<br />

Type: <strong>India</strong>, J. Lepine (P).<br />

Corallocarpus palmatus Cogn. in A. & C. DC., Monogr. Phan. 3: 648. 1881.<br />

Type: <strong>India</strong>, Gujarat [Gujerat] near Malpor and Gundar, Dalzell s.n. (K).<br />

Further <strong>synonyms</strong> are listed in Jeffrey (1967).<br />

Distribution in <strong>India</strong>: Andhra Pradesh, Assam, Bihar, Gujarat, Karnataka, Kerala,<br />

Madhya Pradesh, Maharashtra, Punjab, Rajasthan, Tamil Nadu, Uttar Pradesh,<br />

West Bengal.<br />

Distribution outside <strong>India</strong>: Baluchistan, Pakistan, Sri Lanka; tropical East Africa, Sudan.<br />

Image: http://www.arkive.org/corallocarpus/corallocarpus-epigaeus/image-G117835.html<br />

Eflora<strong>of</strong>india at https://sites.google.com/site/eflora<strong>of</strong>india/species/a---l/cl/cucurbitaceae/corallocarpus/corallocarpus-epigaeus


<strong>The</strong> <strong>Cucurbitaceae</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>India</strong> 65<br />

GenBank: AM981182 from an unpublished paper.<br />

Comments: <strong>The</strong> species is used as an anthelmintic (Chopra et al., 1956).<br />

13. Corallocarpus schimperi (Naudin) Hook.f., Fl. Trop. Afr. 2: 567. 1871.<br />

Rhynchocarpa schimperi Naudin, Ann. Sc. Nat., sér. 4, 16: 180. 1862.<br />

Type: Ethiopia, Sera-Walqua, Schimper 413 (P).<br />

Corallocarpus velutinus (Dalzell & A.Gibson) Hook.f. ex C.B. Clarke, Fl. Brit. <strong>India</strong><br />

2(6): 628. 1879.<br />

Aechmandra velutina Dalzell & A.Gibson, Bombay Fl. 200. 1861.<br />

Type: W. Pakistan, Dalzell 41 (K).<br />

Corallocarpus courbonii (Naudin) Cogn. A. & C. in DC. Monogr. Phan. 3: 655. 1881.<br />

Type: A plant cultivated in Paris from seeds sent from Ethiopia, A. Courbon 334<br />

(P P00346198, http://plants.jstor.org/search?plantName=Rhynchocarpa%20<br />

courbonii).<br />

Distribution in <strong>India</strong>: Unclear.<br />

Distribution outside <strong>India</strong>: Pakistan and tropical East Africa and Arabia<br />

Image: See Flora <strong>of</strong> Pakistan: http://www.tropicos.org/Name/9201617?projectid=32<br />

GenBank: No published sequences available.<br />

Comments: <strong>The</strong> supposed three species <strong>of</strong> Corallocarpus in <strong>India</strong> are in urgent need <strong>of</strong><br />

taxonomic study.<br />

14. Cucumis hystrix Chakrav., J. Bombay Nat. Hist. Soc. 50(4): 896. pl. 6. 1952.<br />

Type: <strong>India</strong>, Meghalaya [earlier in Assam], Garo Hills, Tura Mountain, alt. 3000 ft;<br />

November 1929; N.E. Parry 859 (K).<br />

Cucumis muriculatus Chakrav., J. Bombay Nat. Hist. Soc. 50(4): 896. 1952.<br />

Type: Myanmar, Ruby Mines District, Oct. 1912, J. H. Lace 6325 (E), here synonymized<br />

by Kirkbride (1993).<br />

Distribution in <strong>India</strong>: Arunachal Pradesh, Assam, Meghalaya, Mizoram.<br />

Distribution outside <strong>India</strong>: Myanmar, N and W Thailand, SW China.<br />

Image: http://apps.kew.org/herbcat/getImage.do?imageBarcode=K000742801<br />

http://ts-den.aluka.org/fsi/img/size1/alukaplant/e/phase_01/e0000/e00301190.jpg<br />

GenBank: Sequences from Renner et al. (2007), Sebastian et al. (2010), and many<br />

others, e.g., HM597016, HM597017.<br />

Comments: Based on molecular data, Cucumis has about 25 species in Asia and Australia.<br />

Cucumis hystrix is the closest wild relative <strong>of</strong> the cucumber, Cucumis sativus<br />

(Sebastian et al., 2010).


66<br />

Susanne S. Renner & Arun K. Pandey / PhytoKeys 20: 53–118 (2013)<br />

15. Cucumis indicus Ghebretinsae & Thulin, Novon 17(2): 177. 2007.<br />

Melothria ritchiei Chakrav., J. Bombay Nat. Hist. Soc. 50(4): 898, fig. A–K. 1952.<br />

Cucumella ritchiei (Chakrav.) C. Jeffrey, Kew Bull. 19: 215. 1965, non Cucumis ritchiei<br />

(C.B. Clarke) Ghebretinsae & Thulin.<br />

Type: <strong>India</strong>, Maharasthra, Bombay Presidency, Savantvadi State, Ram Ghat, D. Ritchie<br />

67 (BM, E; http://plants.jstor.org/specimen/e00187895).<br />

Distribution in <strong>India</strong>: Kerala, Maharashtra (Naithani, 1990). Endemic.<br />

Image: http://ts-den.aluka.org/fsi/img/size2/alukaplant/e/phase_01/e0005/e00187895.jpg<br />

GenBank: Sequences from Sebastian et al. (2010), e.g., HM597078, HM596966.<br />

Comments: Molecular phylogenetic data show that the former genus Dicaelospermum,<br />

with the species D. ritchiei C.B. Clarke (1879), is nested inside Cucumis. <strong>The</strong> resulting<br />

nomenclatural transfer meant that the epithet “ritchiei” is occupied within<br />

the genus. A replacement name therefore became necessary with the transfer <strong>of</strong><br />

Melothria ritchiei to Cucumis.<br />

16. Cucumis javanicus (Miq.) Ghebretinsae & Thulin, Novon 17(2). 177. 2007.<br />

Karivia javanica Miq., Fl. Ned. Ind. 1: 661. 1855.<br />

Mukia javanica (Miq.) C. Jeffrey in Hooker’s Icon. Pl. 37: 3, pl. 3661. 1969.<br />

Melothria javanica (Miq.) Panigrahi & Misra, J. Econ. Tax. Bot. 5: 416. 1984.<br />

Type: Java, T. Horsfield s.n. (BM, K, U).<br />

Melothria assamica Chakrav., J. Bombay Nat. Hist. Soc. 50(4): 897.1952.<br />

Type: <strong>India</strong>, Assam, Cachar, R. L. Keenan s. n. (K).<br />

Melothria assamica Chakrav. var. scabra Chakrav., J. Bombay. Nat. Hist. Soc. 50(4):<br />

898. 1952.<br />

Melothria javanica (Miq.) Panigrahi & Misra var. scabra (Chakrav.) Naithani, Flowering<br />

Plants <strong>of</strong> <strong>India</strong>, Nepal & Bhutan 179. 1990.<br />

Type: <strong>India</strong>, Assam, Goalpara, Chirang Duar, Dec. 1890, King’s collector s.n. (CAL, 2<br />

sheets, photos available from SSR).<br />

Distribution in <strong>India</strong>: Assam.<br />

Distribution outside <strong>India</strong>: Java, China, and Thailand.<br />

GenBank: Sequences from Renner et al. (2007) and Sebastian et al. (2010), e.g.,<br />

HM597079, EF174484.<br />

Comment: De Wilde and Duyfjes (2006a) synonymized Melothria assamica under<br />

Cucumis javanicus, which they treated as Mukia javanica, a genus that based on<br />

molecular data, however, is deeply nested inside Cucumis.


<strong>The</strong> <strong>Cucurbitaceae</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>India</strong> 67<br />

17. Cucumis leiospermus (Wight & Arn.) Ghebretinsae & Thulin, Novon 17(2): 177.<br />

2007.<br />

Bryonia leiosperma Wight & Arn., Prodr. Fl. Ind. Orient. 1: 345. 1834.<br />

Mukia leiosperma (Wight & Arn.) Arn., Madras J. Lit. Sci. 12: 50. 1840.<br />

Melothria leiosperma (Wight & Arn.) Cogn. in A. & C. DC., Monogr. Phan. 3: 622. 1881.<br />

Syntypes: <strong>India</strong>, Tamil Nadu, Dindygul Hills, Wallich Cat. no. 6708 (K); Chennai, Palni<br />

Hills, R. Wight 1112 (BR, K). <strong>The</strong> Wallich specimen was chosen as lectotype by<br />

Jeffrey (1969).<br />

Distribution in <strong>India</strong>: Andhra Pradesh, Assam, Karnataka, Madhya Pradesh, Maharashtra,<br />

Manipur, Rajasthan, Sikkim, Tamil Nadu.<br />

Distribution outside <strong>India</strong>: Sri Lanka.<br />

Photos by A. Pandey: http://farm8.staticflickr.com/7273/7859393808_2314892118_m.jpg<br />

http://farm9.staticflickr.com/8307/7859413918_cff80f25db_m.jpg<br />

GenBank: Sequences from Sebastian et al. (2010), e.g., HM597080, HM596911.<br />

Comments: An understudied relative <strong>of</strong> the cucumber and melon.<br />

18. Cucumis maderaspatanus L., Sp. Pl. 2: 1012. 1753.<br />

Mukia maderaspatana (L.) M.Roem., Fam. Nat. Syn. Monogr. 2: 47. 1846<br />

Melothria maderaspatana (L.) Cogn. in A. & C. DC., Monogr. Phan. 3: 623. 1881.<br />

Type: <strong>India</strong>, “Cucumis Maderaspatensis fructu minimo” in Plukenet, Phytographia t.<br />

170. f. 2. 1692. Typotype Herb. Sloane 95: 201 (BM-SL), designated by Meeuse,<br />

Bothalia 8: 14. 1962.<br />

Bryonia cordifolia L., Sp. Pl. 2: 1012. 1753.<br />

Coccinia cordifolia (L.) Cogn. in A. & C. DC., Monogr. Phan. 3: 623. 1881.<br />

Type: “Habitat in Zeylonia,” Lectotype: Herb. Hermann 2: 22, No. 354 (BM-<br />

000621582), designated by Jeffrey (1967).<br />

Bryonia scabrella L.f., Suppl. Pl. 424. 1782 (“1781”).<br />

Mukia scabrella (L.f.) Arn., J. Bot. 3: 276. 1841.<br />

Type: Northwest <strong>India</strong>, Royle s.n. (K, CAL photo available from SSR).<br />

Distribution in <strong>India</strong>: Andhra Pradesh, Arunachal Pradesh, Bihar, Delhi, Gujarat,<br />

Himachal Pradesh, Karnataka, Madhya Pradesh, Maharashtra, Mizoram, Rajasthan,<br />

Tamil Nadu, Tripura.<br />

Distribution outside <strong>India</strong>: Bhutan, China, Myanmar, Nepal, Pakistan, Sri Lanka.<br />

Images: Eflora<strong>of</strong>india at https://sites.google.com/site/eflora<strong>of</strong>india/species/a---l/cl/cucurbitaceae/mukia/cucumis-maderaspatanus<br />

http://www.flowers<strong>of</strong>india.net/catalog/slides/Madras%20Pea%20Pumpkin.html<br />

Flora <strong>of</strong> Pakistan: http://www.tropicos.org/Name/9200868?projectid=32<br />

GenBank: Many sequences from Kocyan et al. (2007), Sebastian et al. (2010), and<br />

other studies.


68<br />

Susanne S. Renner & Arun K. Pandey / PhytoKeys 20: 53–118 (2013)<br />

19. Cucumis melo L., Sp. Pl. 2: 1011. 1753.<br />

Lectotype: Herb. Linn. No. 1152.8 (LINN), designated by Meeuse, Bothalia 8: 61. 1962.<br />

Bryonia callosa Rottler, Neue Schriften der Ges. Naturf. Freunde Berlin 4: 210. 1803.<br />

Cucumis callosus (Rottler) Cogn. in Engl. Pflanzenr. IV. 275, 2: 129. 1924.<br />

Type: <strong>India</strong>, Tamil Nadu, Deccan, Rottler s.n. (K?). Note: Rottler was a missionary<br />

in the Danish Settlement at Tranquebar (150 miles south <strong>of</strong> Madras) in the years<br />

after 1768.<br />

Cucumis pubescens Willd., Sp. Pl., ed. 4(1): 614. 1805.<br />

Type: Plant cultivated at Berlin; C.L. Willdenow s.n. (B-W, IDC micr<strong>of</strong>iche 7440, specimen<br />

number 18048).<br />

Cucumis momordica Roxb. Fl. ind. 3: 720. 1832.<br />

Type: <strong>India</strong>, W. Roxburgh s.n. (K?).<br />

Cucumis trigonus Roxb., Fl. Ind. 3: 722. 1832.<br />

Lectotype: <strong>India</strong>, W. Roxburgh s.n. (K), designated by Kirkbride, Biosyst. Monogr.<br />

Cucumis 115. 1993.<br />

Cucumis melo var. pubescens (Willd.) Kurz, J. Asiat. Soc. Bengal, Pt. 2, Nat. Hist. 46(2):<br />

103. 1877.<br />

Cucumis melo var. culta Kurz., J. Asiat. Soc. Bengal, Pt. 2, Nat. Hist. 46(2): 102. 1877.<br />

Cucumis melo var. agrestis Naudin, Ann. Sci. Nat., Bot. sér. 4,11: 73. 1859.<br />

Lectotype: <strong>India</strong>, Union Territory, Puducherry [Pondicherry]: seeds sent by Jules<br />

Lépeire (plants cultiv. at Musée d’Histoire Naturelle, Paris); 1859; Naudin s.n. (P),<br />

designated by J.H. Kirkbride in Biosyst. Monogr. Gen. Cucumis 81. 1993.<br />

Cucumis melo ssp. agrestis (Naudin) Pangalo in Zhukovsky, La Turquie agricole 534. 1933.<br />

Cucumis melo forma agrestis (Naudin) W.J.de Wilde & Duyfjes, Sandakania 17: 55. 2008.<br />

Distribution in <strong>India</strong>: Andhra Pradesh, Assam, Karnataka, Kerala, Madhya Pradesh,<br />

Maharashtra, Manipur, Rajasthan, Tamil Nadu, Tripura, Uttar Pradesh.<br />

Distribution outside <strong>India</strong>: Widely cultivated.<br />

Images: See eflora<strong>of</strong>india http://www.flowers<strong>of</strong>india.net/catalog/slides/Wild%20Melon.html<br />

Type: http://apps.kew.org/herbcat/getImage.do?imageBarcode=K000634447<br />

http://apps.kew.org/herbcat/getImage.do?imageBarcode=K000794987<br />

http://apps.kew.org/herbcat/getImage.do?imageBarcode=K000742804<br />

GenBank: Numerous sequences from the three plant organellar genomes.<br />

Comments: Sequences representing C. callosus, C. pubescens, and C. trigonus all cluster<br />

with C. melo (Sebastian et al., 2010) and likely present wild progenitors <strong>of</strong> domesticated<br />

C. melo. Jeffrey (1980) preferred to list C. trigonus as a separate species, and<br />

Chakravarty (1982) mentions two further varieties, Cucumis melo var. momordica<br />

Duthie & Fullar and var. utilissima Duthie & Fullar. Without specimens, these<br />

varieties cannot be assessed.


<strong>The</strong> <strong>Cucurbitaceae</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>India</strong> 69<br />

20. Cucumis prophetarum L., Cent. I. Pl. 33. 1755.<br />

Type: Arabia, D. Hasselquist. Lectotype: Herb. Linn. No. 1152.4 (LINN), designated<br />

by Jeffrey (1962).<br />

Distribution in <strong>India</strong>: Andhra Pradesh, Goa, Gujarat, Karnataka, Kerala, Madhya<br />

Pradesh, Maharashtra, Punjab, Rajasthan, Tamil Nadu.<br />

Distribution outside <strong>India</strong>: Pakistan to North Africa.<br />

Images: See eflora<strong>of</strong>india at https://sites.google.com/site/eflora<strong>of</strong>india/species/a---l/cl/<br />

cucurbitaceae/cucumis/cucumis-prophetarum<br />

Flora <strong>of</strong> Pakistan http://www.tropicos.org/Name/9200833?projectid=32<br />

GenBank: Sequences from Renner et al. (2007) and Sebastian et al. (2010), e.g.,<br />

DQ785879, DQ785837.<br />

21. Cucumis ritchiei (C.B. Clarke) Ghebretinsae & Thulin, Novon 17(2): 178. 2007.<br />

Dicoelospermum ritchiei C.B. Clarke, Fl. Brit. <strong>India</strong> 2: 630. 1879.<br />

Mukia ritchiei (C.B. Clarke) W.J.de Wilde & Duyfjes, Thai Forest Bull., Bot. 34: 45.<br />

2006.<br />

Type: <strong>India</strong>, Karnataka, Bombay Presidency, Belgaum, D. Ritchie 316 (K).<br />

Distribution in <strong>India</strong>: Karnataka, Kerala, Maharashtra, Punjab, Tamil Nadu. Endemic.<br />

Photos taken at Fort Panhala in Kolhapur District: http://farm9.staticflickr.<br />

com/8305/7859345614_e613f0019d_m.jpg<br />

http://farm9.staticflickr.com/8284/7859384216_f591b5418d_m.jpg<br />

GenBank: Sequences from Kocyan et al. (2007) and Sebastian et al. (2010), e.g.,<br />

DQ536546, HM597095.<br />

Comments: Molecular phylogenetic data show that the former genus Dicaelospermum<br />

is embedded among the Asian species <strong>of</strong> Cucumis.<br />

22. Cucumis sativus L., Sp. Pl. 2: 1012. 1753.<br />

Lectotype: Herb. Burser 17: 97 (UPS), designated by ten Pas et al., Taxon 34: 290. f.<br />

1–3. 1985.<br />

Cucumis sativus var. sikkimensis Hook.f., Bot. Mag. 102: t. 6206. 1876.<br />

Type: Commonly cultivated in the Eastern Himalaya Mountains, 1848; Hooker s.n.<br />

Cucumis hardwickii Royle, Ill. Bot. Himal. Mts. 220. t. 47. 1835.<br />

Type: Northwestern <strong>India</strong>, J.F. Royle s.n. (LIV).<br />

Cucumis sativus L. forma hardwickii (Royle) W.J.de Wilde & Duyfjes, Sandakania 17:<br />

58. 2008.<br />

Distribution in <strong>India</strong>: All evidence points to northern <strong>India</strong> (Ganges region) as the<br />

place where wild cucumbers were first cultivated and where wild populations still


70<br />

Susanne S. Renner & Arun K. Pandey / PhytoKeys 20: 53–118 (2013)<br />

occur (Sebastian et al., 2010). Wild cucumbers can be distinguished from cultivated<br />

(feral) forms by their extremely bitter fruits.<br />

Distribution outside <strong>India</strong>: Bhutan, China, Myanmar, Nepal, Thailand.<br />

Image: http://www.flowers<strong>of</strong>india.net/catalog/slides/Cucumber.html<br />

GenBank: <strong>The</strong> genomes <strong>of</strong> three domesticated lines <strong>of</strong> cucumber have been sequenced,<br />

the American pickling cucumber, a Polish line, and a Chinese line (Huang et al.,<br />

2009).<br />

Comments: <strong>The</strong> wild progenitors <strong>of</strong> domesticated cucumber still occur in <strong>India</strong> (Sebastian<br />

et al., 2010).<br />

23. Cucumis setosus Cogn. in A. & C. DC., Monogr. Phan. 3: 491. 1881.<br />

Type: <strong>India</strong>, Karnataka, Western Ghats, Belgaum, Ritchie 321 (E, K).<br />

Distribution in <strong>India</strong>: Gujarat, Karnataka, Madhya Pradesh, Maharashtra, Rajasthan.<br />

Endemic.<br />

Photos by Suresh Jagtap, taken near Purandhar fort:<br />

http://farm9.staticflickr.com/8443/7859357598_fd99ecd49b_m.jpg<br />

http://farm9.staticflickr.com/8304/7859369892_28668e0fd2_m.jpg<br />

GenBank: Sequences from Sebastian et al. (2010), e.g., HM597106, HM596985.<br />

Comments: A distinct species.<br />

24. Cucumis silentvalleyi (Manilal, T. Sabu & P. J. Mathew) Ghebretinsae & Thulin,<br />

Novon 17: 178. 2007.<br />

Cucumella silentvalleyi Manilal, T. Sabu & P. J. Mathew, Acta Bot. Indica 13: 283.<br />

1985. (as silentvalleyii)<br />

Type: <strong>India</strong>, Kerala, Palghat Distr., Silent Valley, Poochapara, alt. 1370 m, 20 Oct.<br />

1982, T. Sabu SV10662 (K, MH not seen).<br />

Distribution in <strong>India</strong>: Kerala. Endemic.<br />

Image: Photos taken near the type locality by Natalia Filipowicz, available from SSR.<br />

GenBank: Sequences from Sebastian et al. (2010), e.g., HM597038, HM596931.<br />

Comments: This species is one <strong>of</strong> c. 25 Asian and Australian species <strong>of</strong> Cucumis (Sebastian<br />

et al., 2010).<br />

25. Cucurbita argyrosperma C.Huber, Cat. Graines 8. 1867.<br />

Type: A cultivated plant.<br />

Cucurbita mixta Pangalo, Bull. Applied Bot., Leningrad 1929-30, 23(3): 264. 1930.<br />

Type: Mexico, Guatemala.


<strong>The</strong> <strong>Cucurbitaceae</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>India</strong> 71<br />

Distribution in <strong>India</strong>: Cultivated?<br />

Distribution outside <strong>India</strong>: Native to Mesoamerica, widely cultivated.<br />

Image: Many images can be found online <strong>of</strong> plants grown outside <strong>India</strong>.<br />

GenBank: Many sequences from Sanjur et al. (2002) and further studies.<br />

Comment: Jeffrey (1980) included this species (as C. mixta) in his checklist <strong>of</strong> <strong>India</strong>n<br />

<strong>Cucurbitaceae</strong>, but it is unclear to what extent it is cultivated in <strong>India</strong> today.<br />

26. Cucurbita ficifolia Bouché, Verh. Vereins Beford. Gartenbaues Königl. Preuss.<br />

Staaten 12: 205. 1837.<br />

Type: So far unknown.<br />

Distribution in <strong>India</strong>: Meghalaya (Naithani, 1990). Cultivated.<br />

Distribution outside <strong>India</strong>: Native to Mesoamerica or northern South America, widely<br />

cultivated.<br />

Image: See eflora<strong>of</strong>india at https://sites.google.com/site/eflora<strong>of</strong>india/species/a---l/cl/<br />

cucurbitaceae/cucurbita/cucurbita-filicifolia<br />

GenBank: Sequences from Sanjur et al. (2002) and Kocyan et al. (2007), e.g.,<br />

HQ438599, DQ536665.<br />

Comments: Cucurbita has about 15 wild species in tropical and subtropical America<br />

(M. Nee, New York Botanical Garden, pers. comm., Feb. 2010) and five domesticated<br />

ones cultivated worldwide (C. argyrosperma, C. ficifolia, C. maxima, C.<br />

moschata, and C. pepo).<br />

27. Cucurbita maxima Duchesne, Essai Hist. Nat. Courges 7, 12. 1786.<br />

Type: From a cultivated plant (not found); neotype: Melo-pepo fructa albo Tournefort<br />

Inst. 1: 106. T. 34 1700.<br />

Cucurbita maxima var. badagarensis Mudaliar, J. Bombay Nat. Hist. Soc. 49: 242.<br />

1950.<br />

Type: <strong>India</strong>, Malbar District, cultivated, collector unknown, Madras Herbarium No.<br />

93177 and 93178 (MH).<br />

Distribution in <strong>India</strong>: Andhra Pradesh, Arunachal Pradesh, Assam, Bihar, Goa, Gujarat,<br />

Himachal Pradesh, Karnataka, Kerala (Naithani, 1990), Madhya Pradesh,<br />

Maharashtra, Rajasthan, Tamil Nadu, Tripura, Uttar Pradesh, Uttarakhand.<br />

Distribution outside <strong>India</strong>: Native to Central America.<br />

Image: eflora<strong>of</strong>india at https://sites.google.com/site/eflora<strong>of</strong>india/species/a---l/cl/cucurbitaceae/cucurbita/cucurbita-maxima<br />

GenBank: Numerous sequences from the three plant organellar genomes.<br />

Comments: Winter squash is cultivated throughout <strong>India</strong>.


72<br />

Susanne S. Renner & Arun K. Pandey / PhytoKeys 20: 53–118 (2013)<br />

28. Cucurbita moschata (Duchesne ex Lam.) Duchesne, Essai Hist. Nat. Courges 7.<br />

1786.<br />

Cucurbita pepo var. moschata Duchesne ex Lam., Encycl. 2: 152. 1786.<br />

Type: “M. Duchesne presume que cette gourge est la meme que le cucurbita major rotunda,<br />

flore luteo, folia aspero de G.B. Pin 312 qui est le Cucurbita <strong>India</strong> rotunda<br />

de Dalechampe (Lugd. 616).”<br />

Distribution in <strong>India</strong>: Arunachal Pradesh, Assam, Bihar, Delhi, Goa, Himachal<br />

Pradesh, Kerala, Madhya Pradesh, Maharashtra, Manipur, Mizoram, Rajasthan,<br />

Sikkim, Tamil Nadu, Tripura, Uttar Pradesh.<br />

Distribution outside <strong>India</strong>: Native to Central or South America.<br />

Image: See eflora<strong>of</strong>india at https://sites.google.com/site/eflora<strong>of</strong>india/species/a---l/cl/<br />

cucurbitaceae/cucurbita/cucurbita-moschata<br />

GenBank: Numerous sequences from the three plant organellar genomes.<br />

29. Cucurbita pepo L., Sp. Pl. 2: 1010. 1753.<br />

Lectotype: Herb. Linn. No. 1151.4 (LINN), designated by Keraudren-Aymonin in<br />

Aubréville & Leroy (ed.), Fl. Cambodge Laos Viêt-Nam 15: 105. 1975.<br />

Distribution in <strong>India</strong>: Arunachal Pradesh, Assam, Bihar, Delhi, Goa, Himachal<br />

Pradesh, Karnataka, Kerala, Madhya Pradesh, Maharashtra, Manipur, Mizoram,<br />

Punjab, Tamil Nadu, Tripura, Uttar Pradesh. Cultivated.<br />

Distribution outside <strong>India</strong>: Native to Central or South America.<br />

Image: http://www.flowers<strong>of</strong>india.net/catalog/slides/Pumpkin.html<br />

GenBank: Numerous sequences from the three plant organellar genomes.<br />

Comments: See Barrie (Taxon 55: 795-796. 2006) for a history <strong>of</strong> this name.<br />

Chakravarty (1982) also mentions the varietis var. melopepo Alef. and var. ovigera<br />

Alef.; we are unsure about their validity.<br />

30. Cyclanthera pedata (L.) Schrad., Index Seminum, Gottingen 1831: 2. 1831;<br />

emend in Linnaea 8(Litt.): 22–27. 1833.<br />

Momordica pedata L., Sp. Pl. 2: 1009. 1753.<br />

Lectotype: Peru, “Momordica fructu striato, Laevi, vulgo Caigua” in Feuillée, J. Obs.,<br />

2: 754. t. 41. 1714, designated by Jeffrey in Kew Bull. 34: 796. 1980.<br />

Distribution in <strong>India</strong>: Cultivated in northern <strong>India</strong>.<br />

Distribution outside <strong>India</strong>: Native to South America; cultivated also in Bhuthan.<br />

Images: See eflora<strong>of</strong>india at https://sites.google.com/site/eflora<strong>of</strong>india/species/a---l/cl/<br />

cucurbitaceae/cyclanthera/cyclanthera-pedata<br />

GenBank: Sequences from Decker-Walters et al. (2004), e.g., AY396221, AJ748597.


<strong>The</strong> <strong>Cucurbitaceae</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>India</strong> 73<br />

Comments: Cyclanthera has c. 40 species in the Southwestern USA, Mexico, Central and<br />

South America, one species on the Galapagos archipelago (Schaefer and Renner, 2011a).<br />

31. Dactyliandra welwitschii Hook.f., Fl. Trop. Afr. 2: 557. 1871.<br />

Ctenolepis welwitschii (Hook.f.) Jafri, Fl. Karachi 327 (1966)<br />

Type: Lower Guinea, sandy thickets in Luanda, Welwitsch 832 (BM).<br />

Distribution in <strong>India</strong>: Gujarat, Haryana, Rajasthan (fide Chakravarty, 1982).<br />

Distribution outside <strong>India</strong>: Southwest Africa (Namibia, Angola); coastal West Pakistan<br />

(Karachi; Khatoon, 2006).<br />

Image: Nothing reliable found online.<br />

GenBank: Sequences from Kocyan et al. (2007) and Schaefer and Renner (2011b),<br />

e.g., HQ201973, DQ535750.<br />

Comments: <strong>The</strong> genus Dactyliandra has two African species <strong>of</strong> which one, D. welwitschii,<br />

also occurs in <strong>India</strong> and Pakistan (Bhandari and Singh, 1964; Khatoon,<br />

2006), apparently as a natural introduction since the species has no known uses<br />

and is not cultivated.<br />

32. Diplocyclos palmatus (L.) C. Jeffrey, Kew Bull. 15(3): 325. 1962.<br />

Bryonia palmata L., Sp. Pl. 2: 1012. 1753, excl. syn.<br />

Coccinia palmata M.Roem. Synopsis peponiferarum 93. 1846.<br />

Lectotype: Sri Lanka, Herb. Hermann 2: 58, No. 353 (BM-000621700), designated<br />

by Jeffrey (1962).<br />

Diplocyclos palmatus var. walkeri (Chakrav.) Babu, Herb. Fl. Dehra Dun 198. 1977.<br />

Bryonopsis laciniosa (L.) Naudin var. walkeri Chakrav., Bot. Surv. <strong>India</strong> 17(1): 183 (1959).<br />

Type: Sri Lanka, Walker s.n. (E).<br />

Distribution in <strong>India</strong>: Andhra Pradesh, Arunachal Pradesh, Bihar, Jharkhand, Goa,<br />

Gujarat, Himachal Pradesh, Jammu & Kashmir, Karnataka, Kerala, Madhya<br />

Pradesh, Chhattisgarh, Maharashtra, Manipur, Rajasthan (Naithani, 1990), Tamil<br />

Nadu, Tripura, Uttar Pradesh.<br />

Distribution outside <strong>India</strong>: Bhutan, China, Nepal, Pakistan, Thailand, South Japan, Sri<br />

Lanka, Philippines, Indonesia, Peninsular Malaysia, Papua New Guinea, NE Australia.<br />

Images: See eflora<strong>of</strong>india at https://sites.google.com/site/eflora<strong>of</strong>india/species/a---l/cl/<br />

cucurbitaceae/diplocyclos/diplocyclos-palmatus<br />

Flora <strong>of</strong> Pakistan: http://www.tropicos.org/Name/9201644?projectid=32<br />

GenBank: Sequences from Kocyan et al. (2007) and Holstein and Renner (2011), e.g.,<br />

DQ536671, DQ536769.<br />

Comments: <strong>The</strong> other three species <strong>of</strong> Diplocyclos occur in tropical Africa. <strong>The</strong> name<br />

Bryonopsis laciniosa (L.) Naudin refers to a species that does not occur in <strong>India</strong> (see<br />

Misapplied <strong>names</strong> and species erroneously or doubtfully recorded from <strong>India</strong>).


74<br />

Susanne S. Renner & Arun K. Pandey / PhytoKeys 20: 53–118 (2013)<br />

33. Gomphogyne cissiformis Griff., Account Bot. Coll. Cantor 26, pl. 4: 1–7. 1845.<br />

emend, J. Asiat. Soc. Bengal 23(7): 645. 1854.<br />

Type: Himalaya Range, Edgeworth 88 (neotype K), designated by Keraudren-Aymonin<br />

(1975)<br />

Gomphogyne cissiformis var. villosa Cogn in A. & C. DC., Monogr. Phan. 3: 925. 1881.<br />

Gomphogyne cissiformis forma villosa (Cogn.) Mizush., J. Jap. Bot. 41: 259. 1966.<br />

Type: <strong>India</strong>, Sikkim, Hooker s.n., 2 Oct. 1843 (K).<br />

Distribution in <strong>India</strong>: Arunachal Pradesh, Himachal Pradesh, Mizoram, Sikkim, Uttar<br />

Pradesh, West Bengal.<br />

Distribution outside <strong>India</strong>: Nepal, Bhutan, China (Yunnan).<br />

Image: Nothing reliable found online.<br />

GenBank: Sequences from Schaefer et al. (2009), e.g., EU436354.<br />

Comments: <strong>The</strong> genus Gomphogyne has at least two species, G. cissiformis Griff. and G. nepalensis<br />

W.J.de Wilde & Duyfjes (De Wilde et al., 2007). A third species, G. cirromitrata<br />

W.J.de Wilde & Duyfjes, based on molecular data, belongs in Hemsleya (as H. cirromitrata<br />

(W.J.de Wilde & Duyfjes) H. Schaef. & S.S. Renner; Schaefer and Renner, 2011b).<br />

34. Gynostemma pentaphyllum (Thunb.) Makino, Bot. Mag. (Tokyo) 16: 179. 1902.<br />

Vitis pentaphylla Thunb., Syst. Veg., ed. 14: 244. 1784.<br />

Type: Japan, Thunberg 5858 (UPS).<br />

Gynostemma pedatum Blume, Bijdr. Fl. Ned. Ind. 1: 23. 1825 (as pedata).<br />

Lectotype: Java, Tjanjor & Krawang, Blume 1429 (L, barcode L0588327), designated<br />

by De Wilde and Duyfjes, Blumea 52(2): 271. 2007.<br />

Gynostemma simplicifolium Blume, Bijdr. Fl. Ned. Ind. 1: 24. 1825 (as simplicifolia).<br />

Gynostemma pentaphyllum forma simplicifolium (Blume) W.J.de Wilde & Duyfjes,<br />

Blumea 52(2): 271. 2007.<br />

Lectotype: Java, Mt Krawang, Blume 1493 (L, barcode L0588361), designated by De<br />

Wilde and Duyfjes, Blumea 52(2): 271. 2007.<br />

Gynostemma laxum (Wall.) Cogn. in A. & C. DC., Monogr. Phan. 3: 914. 1881 (as laxa).<br />

Zanonia laxa Wall., Pl. Asiat. Rar. 2: 29. 1831.<br />

Type: Bangladesh [<strong>India</strong>], Silhet; Wallich Cat. 3727 A-B (K, K-W, BM).<br />

(Further <strong>synonyms</strong> are listed in De Wilde and Duyfjes, 2007.)<br />

Distribution in <strong>India</strong>: Cultivated in Arunachal Pradesh, Assam, Himachal Pradesh,<br />

Manipur, Meghalaya, Mizoram, Nagaland, Sikkim, Tamil Nadu, Tripura, Uttar<br />

Pradesh, West Bengal.<br />

Distribution outside <strong>India</strong>: Bangladesh, Bhutan, China, Myanmar, Sri Lanka.<br />

Image: Many images <strong>of</strong> this frequently cultivated species are found online.<br />

GenBank: Sequences from Zhang et al. (2006), Chen et al. (2010) and other studies.<br />

Comments: <strong>The</strong> species is used to make herbal teas. Its natural range is currently unclear.<br />

<strong>The</strong> genus Gynostemma has some ten species, all in Asia (Schaefer and Renner, 2011a).


<strong>The</strong> <strong>Cucurbitaceae</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>India</strong> 75<br />

35. Hemsleya macrocarpa (Cogn.) C. Y. Wu ex C. Jeffrey, Kew Bull. 36: 739. 1982.<br />

Gomphogyne macrocarpa Cogn. in Engl. Pflanzenr. IV. 275, 1 (Heft 66): 40. 1916.<br />

Holotype: <strong>India</strong>, Manipur, Laimatak, alt. 1300 m, November 1907, A. Meebold 6522<br />

(Wroclaw University, Poland: BRSL, not seen).<br />

Distribution in <strong>India</strong>: Assam, Arunachal Pradesh, Manipur, Nagaland (Naithani, 1990).<br />

Distribution outside <strong>India</strong>: China (Yunnan).<br />

Image: Nothing reliable found online.<br />

GenBank: Sequences from Li et al. (2010) and Li et al. (2011), e.g., JF976573,<br />

JN044854.<br />

Comments: Hemsleya is thought to comprise 30 species mostly in China, a few in Indochina<br />

and East Malesia (Schaefer and Renner, 2011a). Further <strong>synonyms</strong> <strong>of</strong> H.<br />

macrocarpa are listed in Lu et al. (2011).<br />

36. Herpetospermum darjeelingense (C.B. Clarke) H.Schaef. & S.S.Renner, Taxon<br />

60(1): 134. 2011.<br />

Edgaria darjeelingensis C.B. Clarke, J. Linn. Soc. 15: 114. 1876.<br />

Type: <strong>India</strong>, West Bengal, Darjeeling, 1 Oct 1875, C.B. Clarke 26857 (CAL photo<br />

available from SSR, K).<br />

Edgaria darjeelingensis var. clarkeana S. N. Biswas, J. Econ. Taxon. Bot. 18(1): 173, f.<br />

A-1-6. 1994 (as clarkiana).<br />

Type: <strong>India</strong>, West Bengal, Darjeeling, alt. 2100 m, 9 Sep. 1875, Griffith s.n. (K).<br />

Distribution in <strong>India</strong>: Arunachal Pradesh, Sikkim, West Bengal.<br />

Distribution outside <strong>India</strong>: Bhutan, Nepal, China (Xizang).<br />

Image: See above, photo <strong>of</strong> type collection.<br />

GenBank: Sequences from Kocyan et al. (2007), e.g., DQ536550.<br />

Comments: <strong>The</strong> genus Herpetospermum has three species in <strong>India</strong>, Myanmar, Nepal,<br />

Tibet, and China (Yunnan). In the herbarium, H. darjeelingense can be confused<br />

with H. pedunculosum, from which it is distinguished by its narrow and glabrous<br />

calyx-tube with filiform lobes (Chakravarty, 1982).<br />

37. Herpetospermum pedunculosum (Ser.) Baill. Hist. Pl. 8:445. 1885.<br />

Bryonia pedunculosa Ser., Prodr. 3: 306. 1828.<br />

Isotypes: Nepal, Wallich s.n. (G-DC, K), Wallich 6761 (K-W).<br />

Distribution in <strong>India</strong>: Arunachal Pradesh, Assam, Himachal Pradesh, Manipur,<br />

Meghalaya, Nagaland, Sikkim, Uttar Pradesh, West Bengal.<br />

Distribution outside <strong>India</strong>: Bhutan, Nepal, China.


76<br />

Susanne S. Renner & Arun K. Pandey / PhytoKeys 20: 53–118 (2013)<br />

Images: eflora<strong>of</strong>india at https://sites.google.com/site/eflora<strong>of</strong>india/species/a---l/cl/cucurbitaceae/herpetospermum/herpetospermum-pedunculosum<br />

http://www.flowers<strong>of</strong>india.net/catalog/slides/Beej%20Karela.html<br />

GenBank: Sequences from Schaefer and Renner (2011) and Li et al. (2011), e.g.,<br />

JN044888, JF941910.<br />

Comments: <strong>The</strong> Flora <strong>of</strong> British <strong>India</strong> (Clarke, 1879) lists the name Herpetospermum<br />

caudigerum Wall. ex C.B. Clarke, but that is an illegitimate name for Bryonia pedunculosa<br />

Ser.<br />

38. Herpetospermum tonglense (C.B. Clarke) H. Schaef. & S.S. Renner, Taxon 60(2):<br />

615 (2011c).<br />

Warea tonglensis C.B. Clarke in J. Linn. Soc., Bot. 15: 129. 1876.<br />

Biswarea tonglensis (C.B. Clarke) Cogn. in A. & C. DC., Monogr. Phan. 3: 403. 1881.<br />

Type: <strong>India</strong>, West Bengal, Darjeeling, Rungbee, C.B. Clarke 12183A (K).<br />

Distribution in <strong>India</strong>: Assam, Manipur, Sikkim, West Bengal, Eastern Himalyan ranges<br />

Distribution outside <strong>India</strong>: China, Nepal, Myanmar.<br />

Image: Nothing reliable found online.<br />

GenBank: Sequences from Kocyan et al. (2007), e.g., JQ933236, DQ536637.<br />

Comments: Based on plastid and nuclear gene topologies, this species is the sister species<br />

to H. pedunculosum, and Schaefer and Renner (2011a, b) therefore merged the<br />

monotypic genus Biswarea with Herpetospermum.<br />

39. Hodgsonia heteroclita (Roxb.) Hook.f. & Thomson, Proc. Linn. Soc. London 2:<br />

257. 1854 (“1855”).<br />

Trichosanthes heteroclita Roxb., Fl. Ind. 3: 705-707. 1832.<br />

Type: Bangladesh [<strong>India</strong>, Bengal] W. Roxburgh s.n. (K) “Native <strong>of</strong> the eastern parts <strong>of</strong><br />

Bengal. From Silhet Mr. Robert Keith Dick, the Judge <strong>of</strong> that district, sent plants<br />

to the botanic garden in 1805.”<br />

Distribution in <strong>India</strong>: Arunchal Pradesh, Assam, Meghalaya, Sikkim, Tripura, West<br />

Bengal.<br />

Distribution outside <strong>India</strong>: Bangladesh, Bhutan, Cambodia, Laos, Myanmar, Thailand,<br />

Vietnam.<br />

Image: See eflora<strong>of</strong>india at https://sites.google.com/site/eflora<strong>of</strong>india/species/a---l/cl/<br />

cucurbitaceae/hodgsonia/hodgsonia-macrocarpa<br />

GenBank: Sequences from Schaefer and Renner (2011b) and De Boer et al. (2012),<br />

e.g., HE661403, HQ201981.<br />

Comment: Jeffrey (1980) considered H. heteroclita a synonym <strong>of</strong> H. macrocarpa<br />

(Blume) Cogn. (see under misapplied <strong>names</strong> and species erroneously or doubtfully<br />

recorded from <strong>India</strong>), while De Wilde and Duyfjes (2001) recognize<br />

two species.


<strong>The</strong> <strong>Cucurbitaceae</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>India</strong> 77<br />

40. Ind<strong>of</strong>evillea khasiana Chatterjee, Kew Bull. 2(2): 121. f.1-7. 1948 (“1947”).<br />

Type: <strong>India</strong>, Meghalaya [Assam], Khasia Hills, 1886, G.Mann s.n. (CAL, 2 sheets,<br />

photos available from SSR).<br />

Distribution in <strong>India</strong>: Arunachal Pradesh, Assam, Meghalaya.<br />

Distribution outside <strong>India</strong>: Bhutan, Tibet.<br />

Image: See eflora<strong>of</strong>india at https://sites.google.com/site/eflora<strong>of</strong>india/species/a---l/cl/<br />

cucurbitaceae/ind<strong>of</strong>evillea-khasiana/ind<strong>of</strong>evillea-khasiana<br />

GenBank: Sequences from Schaefer and Renner (2011b), e.g., DQ501256, HQ201983.<br />

Comments: Based on molecular data, I. khasiana represents an isolated ancient lineage<br />

<strong>of</strong> <strong>Cucurbitaceae</strong> (Schaefer and Renner, 2011a; our Fig. 1).<br />

41. Kedrostis courtallensis (Arn.) C. Jeffrey, Kew Bull. 15: 353. 1962.<br />

Bryonopsis courtallensis Arn., J. Bot. 3: 274. 1841.<br />

Type: Sri Lanka, Wight 1147 (K).<br />

Cerasiocarpum zeylanicum (Thwaites) C.B. Clarke, Fl. Brit. <strong>India</strong> 2: 629. 1879.<br />

Aechmandra zeylanica Thwaites, Enum. Pl. Zeyl. 2: 125. 1859.<br />

Type: Sri Lanka, Thwaites 3002 (CAL, 2 sheets, photos available from SSR), 3500<br />

(CAL, 2 sheets, K).<br />

Cerasiocarpum bennettii (Miq.) Cogn. in A. & C. DC., Monogr. Phan. 3: 729. 1881.<br />

Kedrostis bennettii (Miq.) W.J.de Wilde & Duyfjes, Reinwardtia 12(2): 130. 2004.<br />

Bryonopsis bennettii Miq., Fl. Ned. Ind. 1: 657. 1855.<br />

Type: Java, in Banjoemas door, T. Horsfield s.n. (K, U).<br />

Distribution in <strong>India</strong>: Andhra Pradesh, Karnataka, Kerala, Maharashtra, Tamil Nadu.<br />

Distribution outside <strong>India</strong>: Myanmar, Sri Lanka.<br />

Image: Nothing reliable found online.<br />

GenBank: No published sequences available.<br />

Comments: <strong>The</strong> genus Kedrostis comprises about 20 species in tropical and subtropical<br />

Africa and Arabia, six species in Madagascar, and perhaps four in <strong>India</strong>, Sri Lanka,<br />

and West Malesia (De Wilde and Duyfjes, 2004a; Schaefer and Renner, 2011a).<br />

42. Kedrostis foetidissima (Jacq.) Cogn. in A. & C. DC., Monogr. Phan. 3: 634. 1881.<br />

Trichosanthes foetidissima Jacq., Collectanea 2: 841. 1788.<br />

Type: West Africa, plant cultivated in Vienna and depicted in Jacq. , Collectanea 4.<br />

1790, pl. 624.<br />

Bryonia rostrata Rottler, Neue Schriften der Ges. Naturf. Freunde Berlin 4: 212. 1803.<br />

Aechmandra rostrata (Rottler) Arn., J. Bot. 3: 274. 1841.<br />

Rynchocarpa rostrata (Rottler) Naudin, Ann. Sci. Nat., Bot. sér. 4,16: 177. 1862.<br />

Kedrostis rostrata (Rottler) Cogn. in A. & C. DC., Monogr. Phan. 3: 636. 1881.<br />

Type: <strong>India</strong>, Tamil Nadu, Nandaradah, Rottler 766 (B-W, K).


78<br />

Susanne S. Renner & Arun K. Pandey / PhytoKeys 20: 53–118 (2013)<br />

Distribution in <strong>India</strong>: Andhra Pradesh, Gujarat, Karnataka, Madhya Pradesh, Maharashtra,<br />

Tamil Nadu. Cultivated.<br />

Distribution outside <strong>India</strong>: A West African species cultivated in <strong>India</strong>, Bangladesh,<br />

Myanmar, Pakistan, Sri Lanka.<br />

Image: For a detailed description and links to images see http://plants.jstor.org/flora/<br />

ftea001850<br />

GenBank: Sequences from a plant from Benin (Africa): AM981179, AM981180.<br />

Comments: Fruits and leaves are used as a vegetable, and the roots (and fruits) also<br />

medicinally.<br />

43. Lagenaria siceraria (Molina) Standl., Publ. Field Mus. Nat. Hist. Chicago, Bot.<br />

Ser. 3: 435. 1930.<br />

Cucurbita siceraria Molina, Sag. Stor. Nat. Chili 133. 1782.<br />

Type: Chile, Molina s.n. (lost), lectotype: LINN-1151.1<br />

Cucurbita lagenaria L., Sp. Pl. 2: 1010. 1753.<br />

Type: America, Herb. Linn. No. 1151.1 (LINN), designated by Jeffrey (1967).<br />

Distribution in <strong>India</strong>: Cultivated throughout <strong>India</strong>.<br />

Distribution outside <strong>India</strong>: Native <strong>of</strong> tropical Africa.<br />

Image: See eflora<strong>of</strong>india at https://sites.google.com/site/eflora<strong>of</strong>india/species/a---l/<br />

cl/cucurbitaceae/lagenaria/lagenaria-siceraria and http://www.flowers<strong>of</strong>india.net/<br />

catalog/slides/Bottle%20Gourd.html<br />

GenBank: Hundreds <strong>of</strong> sequences from the three plant organellar genomes.<br />

Comments: <strong>The</strong> bottle gourd is a native <strong>of</strong> tropical Africa and is cultivated throughout<br />

the tropics (further information and references see Schaefer and Renner, 2011a).<br />

44. Luffa acutangula (L.) Roxb. Hort. Beng. 70. 1814.<br />

Cucumis acutangulus L., Sp. Pl. 2: 1011. 1753.<br />

Type: “Habitat in Tataria, China.” Type not designated.<br />

Luffa amara Roxb., Fl. Ind. 3: 715. 1832.<br />

Luffa acutangula var. amara (Roxb.) C.B. Clarke, Fl. Brit. <strong>India</strong> 2: 615. 1879.<br />

Luffa acutangula forma amara (Roxb.) W.J.de Wilde & Duyfjes, Sandakania 17: 68.<br />

2008.<br />

Lectotype: <strong>India</strong>, Ic. Roxb. 460 (K) designated by Jeffrey (1980).<br />

Luffa hermaphrodita Singh & Bhandari, Baileya 11(4): 136, Fig. 13. 1964.<br />

Type: <strong>India</strong>, Rajasthan, cultivated at Botanical Gardens, Jaswant College, Jodhpur<br />

from seeds collected at Agra by D. Singh, 20 Aug. 1962, Bhandari 1527A (CAL<br />

photo available from SSR).<br />

Cucurbita umbellata Willd., Sp. Pl., ed. 4(1): 608. 1805.<br />

Luffa umbellata (Willd.) M.Roem., Fam. Nat. Syn. Monogr. 2: 63. 1846.


<strong>The</strong> <strong>Cucurbitaceae</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>India</strong> 79<br />

Syntypes: East <strong>India</strong>, Klein 769 (B-W 18033) and Klein s.n. (K) fide Jeffrey (1992).<br />

Luffa kleinii Wight & Arn., Prodr. Fl. Ind. Orient. 1: 344. 1834.<br />

Type: <strong>India</strong>, Kreala, Travancore, Mirittupadu, Klein s.n. (K?).<br />

Distribution in <strong>India</strong>: Native and cultivated throughout <strong>India</strong>.<br />

Distribution outside <strong>India</strong>: Cultivated worldwide.<br />

Image: See eflora<strong>of</strong>india at https://sites.google.com/site/eflora<strong>of</strong>india/species/a---l/cl/<br />

cucurbitaceae/luffa/luffa-acutangula<br />

http://www.flickr.com/photos/83425416@N02/7649353846/in/photostream<br />

GenBank: Sequences from Kocyan et al. (2007), e.g., HE661305, HE661476.<br />

Comments: <strong>The</strong> genus Luffa has eight species, three in the Neotropics, one in Australia,<br />

and four in Africa and Asia. <strong>The</strong> <strong>India</strong>n species are discussed in Pandey et al.<br />

(2006). Jeffrey (1980) and later authors treated Herb. Linn. No. 1152/7 (LINN)<br />

as the (lecto)type. However, this collection lacks the relevant Species Plantarum<br />

number and was a post-1753 addition to the herbarium (Jarvis, 2007).<br />

45. Luffa cylindrica (L.) M.Roem., Fam. Nat. Syn. Monogr. 2: 63. 1846.<br />

Momordica cylindrica L., Sp. Pl. 2: 1009. 1753.<br />

Type: Sri Lanka and China. Lectotype: Herb. Linn. No. 1150.9 (LINN), designated<br />

by Wunderlin in Ann. Missouri Bot. Gard. 65: 329. 1978.<br />

Luffa aegyptiaca Mill., Gard. Dict., ed. 8. Luffa no. 1. 1768.<br />

Type: Presumably a cultivated plant (Jeffrey, 1962). Lectotype: Pepo indicus reticulatus<br />

eminibus nigris Herm., Hort. Acad. Lugd.-Bat. Cat.: 482 (1687), designated by<br />

Jeffrey (1992).<br />

Luffa sylvestris Miq., Fl. Ned. Ind. 1: 666. 1855.<br />

Luffa cylindrica (L.) M.Roem. var. minor Chakrav., nom. nud. (CAL photo available<br />

from SSR).<br />

Luffa aegyptiaca forma sylvestris (Miq.) W.J.de Wilde & Duyfjes, Sandakania 17: 70. 2008.<br />

Type: “Petola silvestris” in Rumph., Herb. Amboin. 5, p. 409, t. 150. 1746.<br />

Distribution in <strong>India</strong>: Native and cultivated throughout <strong>India</strong>.<br />

Distribution outside <strong>India</strong>: From <strong>India</strong> to Egypt and Sudan; cultivated widely.<br />

Image: http://www.flowers<strong>of</strong>india.net/catalog/slides/Sponge%20Gourd.html<br />

GenBank: Sequences from Sebastian et al. (2012) and numerous other sequences from<br />

unvouchered material, some under L. cylindrica, others under L. aegyptiaca.<br />

Comments: <strong>The</strong>re has been considerable discussion on whether the correct name for<br />

this species is L. cylindrica or L. aegyptiaca. <strong>The</strong> former view was held by Jeffrey<br />

(1980), while the latter was adopted by Schubert (Taxon, 24: 174, 1975) and<br />

Heiser and Schilling (Biotropica 20(3): 185-191, 1988). Nicolson and colleagues<br />

(1988) discuss the issue and prefer L. aegyptiaca.


80<br />

Susanne S. Renner & Arun K. Pandey / PhytoKeys 20: 53–118 (2013)<br />

46. Luffa echinata Roxb., Fl. Ind. 3: 716. 1832.<br />

Lectotype: <strong>India</strong>, Coromandel, Ic. Roxb. 1694 (K), designated by Jeffrey (1980).<br />

Luffa echinata var. longistyla C.B. Clarke, Fl. Brit. <strong>India</strong> 2: 615. 1879.<br />

Type: <strong>India</strong>, M.P. Edgeworth 3018 (K).<br />

Distribution in <strong>India</strong>: Assam, Bihar, Gujarat, Himachal Pradesh, Madhya Pradesh,<br />

Maharashtra, Tamil Nadu, Uttar Pradesh, Uttarakhand, West Bengal.<br />

Distribution outside <strong>India</strong>: Wild from Egypt to Niger and maybe further to the West<br />

(H. Schaefer, pers. comm., Dec. 2012).<br />

Images: eflora<strong>of</strong>india at https://sites.google.com/site/eflora<strong>of</strong>india/species/a---l/cl/cucurbitaceae/luffa/luffa-echinata<br />

http://www.flickr.com/photos/83425416@N02/7648878220/in/photostream/<br />

http://www.flickr.com/photos/83425416@N02/7649327834/in/photostream<br />

http://www.flickr.com/photos/83425416@N02/7649413904/in/photostream<br />

GenBank: Sequences from Decker-Walters et al. (2004) and Schaefer et al. (2009),<br />

e.g., HE661478, EU436357.<br />

47. Luffa graveolens Roxb., Fl. Ind. 3: 716. 1832.<br />

Type: Jharkhand (earlier a part <strong>of</strong> Bihar State) “A native <strong>of</strong> the Rajmahl hills, from<br />

thence the seeds were brought to the botanical garden, where the plants blossom<br />

during the rainy season, and the seed ripens about three mounts afterwards.” Lectotype:<br />

Ic. Roxb. 1693 (K), designated by Jeffrey (1980).<br />

Distribution in <strong>India</strong>: Bihar, Maharashtra, Sikkim, Uttar Pradesh.<br />

Distribution outside <strong>India</strong>: Nepal.<br />

Image: Photos available upon request from A. Pandey or SSR.<br />

GenBank: Sequences from Decker-Walters et al. (2004) and Schaefer et al. (2009),<br />

e.g., HE661308, EU436358.<br />

Comments: <strong>The</strong> application <strong>of</strong> this name to Australian material was erroneous (Telford et<br />

al., 2011). <strong>The</strong> flowers <strong>of</strong> L. graveolens are yellow, while those <strong>of</strong> L. echinata are white.<br />

48. Momordica balsamina L., Sp. Pl. 2: 1009. 1753.<br />

Type: “Habitat in <strong>India</strong>,” plant cultivated at Hartekamp, <strong>The</strong> Netherlands. Lectotype:<br />

Herb. Linn. No. 1150.1 (LINN), designated by Meeuse in Bothalia 8: 49. 1962.<br />

Distribution in <strong>India</strong>: Cultivated in Gujarat, Haryana, Rajasthan?<br />

Distribution outside <strong>India</strong>: Native in the dry savannas <strong>of</strong> Southernmost Africa and<br />

the northern margin <strong>of</strong> the tropical belt (H. Schaefer, pers. comm., Dec. 2012).<br />

Naturalized in parts <strong>of</strong> tropical Asia, the Americas and most <strong>of</strong> the Pacific islands.<br />

Image: Flora <strong>of</strong> Pakistan: http://www.mobot.org/mobot/PakistanImages/154-<strong>Cucurbitaceae</strong>/Momordica_balsamina.jpg


<strong>The</strong> <strong>Cucurbitaceae</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>India</strong> 81<br />

GenBank: Sequences from Schaefer and Renner (2010), e.g., HM367595, GQ163349.<br />

Comments: Momordica has about 60 species in tropical and subtropical Africa, Arabia,<br />

(sub) tropical Asia, Malesia and Northeastern Australia (Schaefer and Renner,<br />

2010, 2011a).<br />

49. Momordica charantia L., Sp. Pl. 2: 1009. 1753.<br />

Type: “Habitat in <strong>India</strong>.” Lectotype: Herb. Clifford: 451, Momordica 2 (BM-<br />

000647445), designated by Jeffrey (1967).<br />

Momordica charantia L. var. muricata (Willd.) Chakrav., Fasc. Fl. <strong>India</strong> 11: 92. 1982.<br />

Momordica muricata Willd., Sp. Pl., ed. 4(1): 602. 1805.<br />

Type: “Habitat in <strong>India</strong> Orientali,” Plate 10 in Rheede Hort. Mal. Ind. 8. 1688.<br />

Distribution in <strong>India</strong>: Large fruited forms cultivated all over <strong>India</strong> as vegetable; small<br />

wild forms occur in forest pockets in the Western and Eastern Ghats, Chhattisgarh<br />

(Bastar), Jharkhand and all over Central and South <strong>India</strong> (Joseph and<br />

Antony, 2010).<br />

Distribution outside <strong>India</strong>: Native in tropical and subtropical Africa, naturalized in<br />

parts <strong>of</strong> tropical Asia.<br />

Image: eflora<strong>of</strong>india at https://sites.google.com/site/eflora<strong>of</strong>india/species/a---l/cl/cucurbitaceae/momordica/momordica-charantia<br />

http://www.flowers<strong>of</strong>india.net/catalog/slides/Bitter%20Gourd.html<br />

GenBank: Sequences from Schaefer and Renner (2010) and Liao et al. (2012), e.g.,<br />

DQ501269, HE585488.<br />

50. Momordica cochinchinensis (Lour.) Spreng., Syst. Veg., ed. 16, 3: 14. 1826.<br />

Muricia cochinchinensis Lour., Fl. Cochinch. 2: 596. 1790.<br />

Type: Vietnam, Loureiro s.n. (BM, http://plants.jstor.org/specimen/bm000944651).<br />

Momordica macrophylla Gage, Rec. Bot. Surv. <strong>India</strong> 3: 61. 1908.<br />

Type: Myanmar (Burma), Mergui, April 1911, A. Meebold s.n. (CAL?).<br />

Distribution in <strong>India</strong>: Andaman & Nicobar Islands, Arunachal Pradesh, Assam, Bihar,<br />

Karnataka, Manipur, Nagaland, Rajasthan, Tamil Nadu, Tripura, Uttar Pradesh,<br />

West Bengal.<br />

Distribution outside <strong>India</strong>: Native from <strong>India</strong> in the West to New Guinea/Australia in<br />

the Southeast.<br />

Image: eflora<strong>of</strong>india at https://sites.google.com/site/eflora<strong>of</strong>india/species/a---l/cl/cucurbitaceae/momordica/momordica-cochinchinensis<br />

and<br />

http://www.flowers<strong>of</strong>india.net/catalog/slides/Chinese%20Cucumber.html<br />

GenBank: Sequences from Schaefer and Renner (2010), e.g., GQ163379, GQ163256.<br />

Comments: Jeffrey (1980; 2001) and De Wilde and Duyfjes (2002) have synonymized<br />

M. macrophylla under M. cochinchinensis.


82<br />

Susanne S. Renner & Arun K. Pandey / PhytoKeys 20: 53–118 (2013)<br />

51. Momordica cymbalaria Fenzl ex Naudin, Ann. Sci. Nat., Bot., Sér. 4, 12: 134. 1859.<br />

Type: Africa, Sudan, Kord<strong>of</strong>an, Mt. Arasch Cool (Arashkol), 9 Oct. 1839, Kotschy 147<br />

(CAL, 2 sheets, photos available from SSR).<br />

Momordica tuberosa (Roxb.) Cogn. in A. & C. DC., Monogr. Phan. 3: 454. 1881,<br />

nom. illeg., non Dennst. 1818.<br />

Luffa tuberosa Roxb., Fl. Ind. 3: 717. 1832.<br />

Lectotype: <strong>India</strong>, Ic. Roxb. 461 (K), designated by Jeffrey (1980).<br />

Distribution in <strong>India</strong>: Andhra Pradesh, Karnataka, Madhya Pradesh, Maharashtra, and<br />

Tamil Nadu (fide Parvathi and Kumar, 2002).<br />

Distribution outside <strong>India</strong>: North and East Africa.<br />

Image: See http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Momordica_cymbalaria#cite_note-dist-1.<br />

GenBank: An ITS sequence from an <strong>India</strong>n specimen, Karuppusamy 28631 from<br />

Andhra Pradesh (Ali et al., 2009; GQ183046), is available and is identical to sequences<br />

from Africa (Schaefer and Renner, 2010).<br />

Comments: We disagree with John and Antony (2010) that Jeffrey’s (1980) synonymization<br />

<strong>of</strong> Luffa tuberosa with the African Momordica cymbalaria is erroneous. Likely introduced<br />

to Asia as a vegetable and medicinal plant (Lokesha and Vasudeva, 2001).<br />

52. Momordica denudata (Thwaites) C.B. Clarke, Fl. Brit. <strong>India</strong> 2: 618. 1879.<br />

Momordica dioica Roxb. ex Willd. var. denudata Thwaites, Enum. Pl. Zeyl. 2: 126. 1859.<br />

Type: Sri Lanka, Thwaites 1615 (K, CAL photo available from SSR, PDA).<br />

Distribution in <strong>India</strong>: Gujarat, Maharashtra, Karnataka, Kerala (Chakravarty, 1982).<br />

Distribution outside <strong>India</strong>: Sri Lanka.<br />

Image: Several <strong>of</strong> the type specimens can be found online.<br />

GenBank: Schaefer and Renner (2010) generated sequences from Thwaites 28 (K), collected<br />

in Sri Lanka, e.g., GQ163385, GQ163262.<br />

Comments: Joseph and Antony (2010) doubt that Chakravarty (1982) is correct in<br />

considering M. denudata distinct from M. dioica, while De Wilde and Duyfjes<br />

(2002) also consider M. denudata as distinct.<br />

53. Momordica dioica Roxb. ex Willd., Sp. Pl., ed. 4(1): 605. 1805.<br />

Type: East <strong>India</strong>; Klein 768 (B-Willdenow 18027).<br />

Distribution in <strong>India</strong>: Joseph and Antony (2010) consider M. dioica sensu stricto restricted<br />

to the Deccan plateau and Central <strong>India</strong>.<br />

Distribution outside <strong>India</strong>: Bangladesh, China, Myanmar, Nepal, Pakistan.<br />

Image: eflora<strong>of</strong>inda at https://sites.google.com/site/eflora<strong>of</strong>india/species/a---l/cl/cucurbitaceae/momordica/momordica-dioica<br />

also Flora <strong>of</strong> Pakistan.<br />

GenBank: Sequences from Schaefer and Renner (2010), e.g., GQ163389, GQ163387.


<strong>The</strong> <strong>Cucurbitaceae</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>India</strong> 83<br />

54. Momordica sahyadrica Kattuk. & V.T. Antony, Nordic J. Bot. 24(5): 541, Fig.<br />

1. 2007.<br />

Type: <strong>India</strong>, Kerala, Thrissur District: NH-47, Thrissur-Palakkad road at Erumbupalam,<br />

outskirts <strong>of</strong> Peechi-Vazhani wildlife sanctuary, December 23, 2003, Joseph<br />

John Kattukunnel 4822 (CAL labeled as holotype, photo available from SSR).<br />

Distribution in <strong>India</strong>: Kerala. Endemic.<br />

Image: <strong>The</strong> species is illustrated in the original publication.<br />

GenBank: No published sequences available.<br />

Comments: Based on morphology, this appears to be a hybrid (H. Schafer, pers. comm.<br />

2009). Kattuk. is the standard form <strong>of</strong> the author Joseph John Kattukunnel, who<br />

has revised <strong>India</strong>n Momordica (Joseph and Antony, 2010). <strong>The</strong> holotype bears the<br />

collection number 4833, not 133 as given in the protologue.<br />

55. Momordica subangulata Blume, Bijdr. Fl. Ned. Ind. 15: 928. 1826.<br />

Type: Java, Mt. Salak, Blume 769 (L).<br />

Momordica subangulata subsp. renigera (Wall. ex G. Don) W.J.de Wilde, Bot. Zhurn.<br />

(Moscow & Leningrad) 87(3): 147. 2002.<br />

Momordica renigera Wall. ex G. Don, Gen. Hist. 3: 36. 1834.<br />

Type: Myanmar, Pome hills, Wallich Cat. 6743 (K?).<br />

Distribution in <strong>India</strong>: Karnataka, Kerala, Maharashtra, Meghalaya, Sikkim,<br />

Arunachal Pradesh, Assam, Manipur, Meghalaya, Mezoram, Nagaland, Sikkim,<br />

Tripura, West Bengal.<br />

Distribution outside <strong>India</strong>: China, Bangladesh, Indonesia (Java, Sumatra), Laos, Peninsular<br />

Malaysia, Myanmar, Thailand, Vietnam.<br />

Image: Nothing reliable found online.<br />

GenBank: Sequences from Schaefer and Renner (2010), e.g., GQ163451, GQ163332.<br />

Comments: Molecular data are needed to confirm that the name Momordica renigera<br />

described from Myanmar really applies to material from Java and <strong>India</strong>.<br />

56. Neoalsomitra clavigera (Wall.) Hutch., Ann. Bot. (Oxford), ser. 2,6: 101. 1942.<br />

Zanonia clavigera Wall., Pl. Asiat. Rar. 2: 28. t. 133. 1831.<br />

Alsomitra clavigera (Wall.) M.Roem., Fam. Nat. Syn. Monogr. 2: 118. 1846, nom. nud.<br />

Type: Bangladesh, Sylhet, Wallich Cat. 3725A (K).<br />

Neoalsomitra clavigera (Wall.) Hutch. var. hookeri (C.B. Clarke) Chakrav., Rec. Bot.<br />

Surv. <strong>India</strong> 17(1): 197. 1959.<br />

Type: Bangladesh, Sylhet, Freire De Silva 203 (K-W, BM).<br />

Gynostemma integrifoliolum Cogn. in A. & C. DC., Monogr. Phan. 3: 916. 1881. [as<br />

integrifoliola]


84<br />

Susanne S. Renner & Arun K. Pandey / PhytoKeys 20: 53–118 (2013)<br />

Alsomitra integrifoliola (Cogn.) Hayata, J. College Science, Imperial Univ. Tokyo 30(1):<br />

121. 1911.<br />

Neoalsomitra integrifoliola (Cogn.) Hutch., Ann. Bot. 6: 99. 1942<br />

Syntypes: <strong>The</strong> Philippines, Luzon, Cuming 767 (G-DC), Calanony, Cuming 517 (G-<br />

BOISS).<br />

Alsomitra pubigera Prain, J. As. Soc. Bengal, Pt. 2, Nat. Hist. 67: 292. 1898<br />

Type: Myanmar, Mt. Kachin, King’s collector (herbarium?).<br />

Distribution in <strong>India</strong>: Arunachal Pradesh, Assam, Haryana, Himachal Pradesh, Jammu<br />

& Kashmir, Manipur, Meghalaya, Sikkim, Punjab, Uttar Pradesh, West Bengal.<br />

Distribution outside <strong>India</strong>: Bangladesh, Bhutan, Myanmar, S China (especially Yunnan<br />

and Hainan), Vietnam, Laos, Cambodia, N Sumatra, the Philippines, east<br />

to NE Australia (Queensland) and the Pacific (Solomon Island and east to Fiji);<br />

absent from the tropical everwet rain forests <strong>of</strong> Java and Borneo.<br />

Image: Many photos <strong>of</strong> this large-fruited and large-seeded species can be found online.<br />

GenBank: Sequences from Kocyan et al. (2007), e.g., DQ536573, DQ535830.<br />

Comments: Neoalsomitra has 11 further species in Malesia, S China, New Guinea,<br />

Australia, and Fiji (De Wilde and Duyfjes, 2003; Schaefer and Renner, 2011a). Its<br />

phylogenetic position can be seen in Fig. 1.<br />

57. Schizopepon bicirrhosus (C.B. Clarke) C. Jeffrey, Kew Bull. 34(4): 802. 1980.<br />

Melothria bicirrhosa C.B. Clarke, Fl. Brit. <strong>India</strong> 2: 627. 1879.<br />

Type: Myanmar (Burma), Griffith 2522 (K).<br />

Schizopepon wardii Chakrav., J. Bombay Nat. Hist. Soc. 50(4): 900, pl. 6. 1952.<br />

Type: Assam, Delei Valley, alt. 11000 ft, Rhododendron-Conifer Forest, open Gullies<br />

facing north; August 23, 1928, F. Kingdon Ward 8667 (K).<br />

Distribution in <strong>India</strong>: Northeast <strong>India</strong> (Meghalaya, Manipur).<br />

Distribution outside <strong>India</strong>: China (S. Xizang), Myanmar.<br />

Image: Nothing reliable found online.<br />

GenBank: No published sequences available.<br />

Comments: <strong>The</strong> synonymization <strong>of</strong> S. wardii here follows Jeffrey (1980) and Lu et al.<br />

(2011). Chakravarty (1982) instead accepted S. wardii and wrote that it had “affinity<br />

towards S. macranthus Handel-Mazzetti, but differs in the following characters:<br />

(i) leaves not lobed (ii) pedicels longer and (iii) connective produced beyond the<br />

loculi.” Besides its four species listed here, Schizopepon has another five species in<br />

Russia, China, and Japan (Schaefer and Renner, 2011a; Lu et al., 2011).<br />

58. Schizopepon longipes Gagnep., Bull. Mus. Natl. Hist. Nat. 24(5): 378. 1918.<br />

Type: China, Sechuan, near Ta-tsien-lou, Mussot s.n. (P).<br />

Distribution in <strong>India</strong>: Northeast <strong>India</strong>.


<strong>The</strong> <strong>Cucurbitaceae</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>India</strong> 85<br />

Distribution outside <strong>India</strong>: China (S. Xizang), Myanmar.<br />

Image: Nothing reliable found online.<br />

GenBank: No published sequences available.<br />

Comment: <strong>The</strong> Flora <strong>of</strong> Bhutan (2(1): 260. 1991) records this species from Bhutan and<br />

Darjeeling in West Bengal. Jeffrey (1980, 1982) changed his mind about <strong>India</strong>n<br />

material that he first identified as S. dioicus Cogn., but later as S. longipes.<br />

59. Schizopepon macranthus Handel-Mazzetti, Symb. Sin. 7(4): 1064. 1936.<br />

Type: China, Sichuan, Muli, Lijiacun, 2850-3000 m, 23 July 1915<br />

Handel-Mazzetti 7153 (B, destroyed?).<br />

Distribution in <strong>India</strong>: Possibly Northeast <strong>India</strong>.<br />

Distribution outside <strong>India</strong>: China (W Sichuan and NW Yunnan).<br />

Image: Nothing reliable found online.<br />

GenBank: No published sequences available.<br />

Comment: Jeffrey (1980) does not mention this species, while Chakravarty (1982)<br />

discusses its similarity to S. wardii, here considered a synonym <strong>of</strong> S. bicirrhosus.<br />

<strong>The</strong> Flora <strong>of</strong> China (Lu et al., 2011), recognizes it as a distinct species.<br />

60. Sicyos edulis Jacq., Enum. Syst. Pl. 32. 1760.<br />

Sechium edule (Jacq.) Sw., Fl. Ind. Occid. 2(2): 1150. 1800.<br />

Type: “In insulis Caribaeis vicinaque Americes continente detexit novas.”<br />

Sechium americanum Poir., Encycl. (Lamarck) 7: 50. 1806.<br />

Type: “Cette planté croît naturellement à la Jamaique, où on la cultive aussi à cause de<br />

ses fruits que l’on mange, & qui s’imploient dans les ragouts.”<br />

Distribution in <strong>India</strong>: Cultivated throughout <strong>India</strong>.<br />

Distribution outside <strong>India</strong>: Native to Mexico, cultivated throughout the tropics.<br />

Image: http://www.flowers<strong>of</strong>india.net/catalog/slides/Chaco.html<br />

GenBank: Sebastian et al. (2012) and numerous other sequences.<br />

Comments: Molecular data show that Sechium is embedded within the genus Sicyos<br />

(Sebastian et al., 2012).<br />

61. Siraitia sikkimensis (Chakrav.) C. Jeffrey, Kew Bull. 36(4): 737. 1982.<br />

Neoluffa sikkimensis Chakrav., J. Bombay Nat. Hist. Soc. 50(4): 895, pl. 3. 1952.<br />

Type: <strong>India</strong>, Sikkim Himalaya, near Sittong, alt. 1500 ft, 12 May 1876, G. King s.n.<br />

(CAL, 3 sheets, photos available from SSR)<br />

Distribution in <strong>India</strong>: Sikkim, West Bengal.<br />

Distribution outside <strong>India</strong>: China (S Yunnan).<br />

Image: Nothing reliable found online.


86<br />

Susanne S. Renner & Arun K. Pandey / PhytoKeys 20: 53–118 (2013)<br />

GenBank: No published sequences available.<br />

Comments: <strong>The</strong> genus Siraitia has five species, four in <strong>India</strong>, Indonesia, Peninsular<br />

Malaysia, Thailand, South and Southwest China, and one Southern Tanzania and<br />

Southeast Nigeria (Schaefer and Renner, 2011a, b). <strong>The</strong> cucurbitane-type triterpene<br />

glycoside constituents <strong>of</strong> S. grosvenorii are the source <strong>of</strong> plant-derived sweeteners.<br />

62. Solena amplexicaulis (Lam.) Gandhi in Saldanha & Nicolson, Fl. Hassan Distr.<br />

179. 1976.<br />

Bryonia amplexicaulis Lam., Encycl. 1: 496. 1785.<br />

Karivia amplexicaulis (Lam.) Arn., J. Bot. 3: 275. 1841.<br />

Melothria amplexicaulis (Lam.) Cogn. in A. & C. DC., Monogr. Phan. 3: 621. 1881.<br />

Type: S <strong>India</strong>, Sonnerat s.n. (P-LAM).<br />

Distribution in <strong>India</strong>: Tamil Nadu, Karnataka, Kerala. Endemic.<br />

Images: eflora<strong>of</strong>india at https://sites.google.com/site/eflora<strong>of</strong>india/species/a---l/cl/cucurbitaceae/solena/solena-amplexicaulis<br />

GenBank: Sequences from Chen et al. (2010), e.g., GQ436395, GQ435029.<br />

Comments: Following De Wilde and Duyfjes (2004c), Solena comprises three or four<br />

species while in the past, only one species, S. amplexicaulis, was recognized, which<br />

supposedly ranged from NE Afghanistan through <strong>India</strong> and Sri Lanka. Based on<br />

several vegetative and reproductive differences, De Wilde and Duyfjes instead recognize<br />

S. amplexicaulus from South <strong>India</strong>, S. umbellata from South <strong>India</strong> and Sri<br />

Lanka, and S. heterophylla with two subspecies, one from NE Afghanistan eastward,<br />

the other in N <strong>India</strong> and east to China. <strong>The</strong> Flora <strong>of</strong> China (Lu et al., 2011)<br />

follows this treatment.<br />

63. Solena heterophylla Lour., Fl. Cochinch. 2: 514. 1790.<br />

subsp. heterophylla<br />

Melothria heterophylla (Lour.) Cogn. in A. & C. DC., Monogr. Phan. 3: 618. 1881.<br />

Type: Vietnam, Loureiro s.n. (BM http://plants.jstor.org/specimen/bm000944657).<br />

Bryonia rheedei Blume, Bijdr. Fl. Ned. Ind. 15: 925. 1826<br />

Karivia rheedei (Blume) M.Roem., Fam. Nat. Syn. Monogr. 2: 45. 1846<br />

Type: Java, Blume s.n. (L, Barcode: L0127474).<br />

Bryonia sagittata Blume, Bijdr. Fl. Ned. Ind. 15: 925. 1826.<br />

Type: Java, Blume s.n. (L, Barcode: L0127475).<br />

Melothria ovata Cogn. in Engl. Pflanzenr. IV. 275, 1 (Heft 66): 114. 1916.<br />

Type: <strong>India</strong>, Sikkim, near Labdah, 650 m a.s.l., Aug. 1884, collector unknown (G-BOISS).<br />

Distribution in <strong>India</strong>: Widely distributed all over <strong>India</strong> (Chakravarty, 1982).<br />

Distribution outside <strong>India</strong>: NE Afghanistan, Indonesia (Java), Peninsular Malaysia,<br />

Myanmar, Nepal, Thailand, Vietnam (Lu et al., 2011).<br />

GenBank: Sequences from Kocyan et al. (2007), e.g., DQ536737, DQ536870.


<strong>The</strong> <strong>Cucurbitaceae</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>India</strong> 87<br />

Comments: See under S. amplexicaulis.<br />

subsp. napaulensis (Ser.) W.J.de Wilde & Duyfjes, Blumea 49(1): 75. 2004.<br />

Bryonia napaulensis Ser., Prodr. 3: 307. 1828.<br />

Zehneria umbellata (Klein ex Willd.) Thwaites var. napaulensis (Ser.) C.B. Clarke, Fl.<br />

Brit. <strong>India</strong> 2: 625. 1879.<br />

Type: Nepal, Wallich s.n. (G).<br />

Distribution in <strong>India</strong>: Western Himalaya (Garhwal, Kumaon hills, Uttarakhand).<br />

Distribution outside <strong>India</strong>: China (Yunnan), Myanmar, Nepal (Lu et al., 2011).<br />

GenBank: No published sequences available.<br />

Comments: See under S. amplexicaulis.<br />

64. Solena umbellata (Willd.) W.J. de Wilde & Duyfjes, Blumea 49(1): 77. 2004.<br />

Bryonia umbellata Willd., Sp. Pl., ed. 4(1): 618. 1805.<br />

Momordica umbellata (Willd.) Roxb., Hort. Bengal. 79. 1832.<br />

Karivia umbellata (Willd.) Arn., J. Bot. 3: 275. 1841.<br />

Zehneria umbellata (Willd.) Thwaites, Enum. Pl. Zeyl. 2: 125. 1859.<br />

Type: South <strong>India</strong>, J. G. Klein 765 (lecto B-W), designated by De Wilde and Duyfjes (2004).<br />

Melothria angulata Chakrav., J. Bombay Nat. Hist. Soc. 50(4): 899. 1952.<br />

Zehneria angulata (Chakrav.) J. L. Ellis, Bull. Bot. Surv. <strong>India</strong> 9(1-4): 8. 1968 (“1967”).<br />

Solena angulata (Chakrav.) Babu, Herb. Fl. Dehra Dun 203. 1977.<br />

Type: South <strong>India</strong>, Gomata, alt. 5500 ft, Malcolmpeth 81 (CAL photo available from SSR).<br />

Distribution in <strong>India</strong>: Goa, Karnataka, Kerala, Tamil Nadu.<br />

Distribution outside <strong>India</strong>: Sri Lanka.<br />

Image: Nothing reliable found online.<br />

GenBank: No published sequences available.<br />

Comments: <strong>The</strong> genus Melothria is restricted to tropical Central and South America,<br />

where it has about 12 species (Schaefer and Renner, 2011a). Based on molecular data,<br />

the Asian species formerly assigned to Melothria belong in Cucumis, Solena, and other<br />

genera. For the number <strong>of</strong> species <strong>of</strong> Solena see comment under S. amplexicaulis.<br />

65. Thladiantha hookeri C.B. Clarke, Fl. Brit. <strong>India</strong> 2(6): 631. 1879.<br />

Syntypes: <strong>India</strong>, Meghalaya [Assam], Griffith s.n. (K). Khasia Hills, alt. 4000–6000<br />

ft; J.D. Hooker & Thomson s.n. (CAL photo available from SSR, K). Myrung and<br />

Nunklow, J.D. Hooker & Thomson s.n. (K).<br />

Thladiantha hookeri C.B. Clarke var. palmatifolia Chakrav., Notes Roy. Bot. Gard.<br />

Edinburgh 20(48): 122. 1948.<br />

Type: <strong>India</strong>, Manipur [Assam], Kala Naga Hills, Watt 7306 (E).<br />

Hemsleya trifoliolata Cogn., Repert. Spec. Nov. Regni Veg. 6(15/20): 304. 1909.<br />

Thladiantha hookeri forma trifoliolata (Cogn.) Chakrav., Notes Roy. Bot. Gard.


88<br />

Susanne S. Renner & Arun K. Pandey / PhytoKeys 20: 53–118 (2013)<br />

Edinburgh 20: 122. 1948 = Thladiantha hookeri var. irregularis Chakrav., Fasc. Fl.<br />

<strong>India</strong> 11: 104. 1982, nom. nov.<br />

Type: China, Yunnan, A. Henry 12295D (Z).<br />

Thladiantha pentadactyla Cogn. in Engl. Pflanzenr. IV. 275, 1 (Heft 66): 52. 1916.<br />

Type: China, Yunnan, alt. 1700 m, A. Henry 12295D (B), same type as previous name.<br />

Thladiantha heptadactyla Cogn. in Engl. Pflanzenr. IV. 275, 1 (Heft 66): 52. 1916.<br />

Type: China, Yunnan, Lou Kong, alt. 2800m, May 1886, Delavay s.n. (P).<br />

Distribution in <strong>India</strong>: Assam, Manipur, Meghalaya, Nagaland.<br />

Distribution outside <strong>India</strong>: China (Yunnan), Bhutan, Laos, Myanmar, Thailand,<br />

Vietnam.<br />

Image: http://apps.kew.org/herbcat/getImage.do?imageBarcode=K000036903<br />

GenBank: Sequences from Kocyan et al. (2007) and Li et al. (2011), e.g., JF978932,<br />

DQ536601.<br />

Comments: Thladiantha has c. 30 species in China, Taiwan, Tibet, <strong>India</strong>, Korea, Japan,<br />

Thailand, Vietnam, Indonesia, Philippines, and New Guinea.<br />

66. Thladiantha cordifolia (Blume) Cogn. in A. & C. DC., Monogr. Phan. 3: 424.<br />

1881. Luffa cordifolia Blume, Bijdr. Fl. Ned. Ind. 15: 929. 1826.<br />

Type: Java, Blume 1464, fruit (lectotype L, barcode L0001624, designated by De Wilde<br />

& Duyfjes (2006); isotype L; CAL has two sheets without collection numbers).<br />

Thladiantha calcarata (Wall.) C.B. Clarke, J. Linn. Soc., Bot. 15: 126. 1876, nom. nud.<br />

Momordica calcarata Colebr. ex Wall., Cat. No. 6740. 1832, nom. nud.<br />

Thladiantha calcarata (Wall.) C.B. Clarke [nom. nud.] var. subglabra Cogn. in A. &<br />

C. DC., Monogr. Phan. 3: 424. 1881. (Listed as “Thladiantha cordifolia (Blume)<br />

Cogn. var. subglabra Cogn.” by Chakravarty, 1982.)<br />

Type: <strong>India</strong>, Meghalaya, Khasia, 1300 m, J.D. Hooker & T. Thomson 1 (CAL 2 sheets,<br />

photos available from SSR, K).<br />

Distribution in <strong>India</strong>: Andhra Pradesh, Arunachal Pradesh, Assam, Manipur, Meghalaya,<br />

Nagaland, Sikkim, Tamil Nadu, Tripura, West Bengal.<br />

Distribution outside <strong>India</strong>: Nepal, China (Guangdong, Guangxi, Sichuan, Yunnan), Indonesia<br />

(Java, Sumatra), Laos, Peninsular Malaysia, Myanmar, Thailand, Vietnam.<br />

Image: eflora<strong>of</strong>india at https://sites.google.com/site/eflora<strong>of</strong>india/species/a---l/cl/cucurbitaceae/thladiantha/thladiantha-cordifolia<br />

GenBank: Sequences from Schaefer and Renner (2010) and Li et al. (2011), e.g.,<br />

JF978906, GQ163340.<br />

Comments: Further synonmys are given in Lu et al. (2011).<br />

67. Trichosanthes anaimalaiensis Bedd., Madras J. Lit. Sci. 3,1: 47. 1864.<br />

Type: <strong>India</strong>, Tamil Nadu, Anaimalai Mts., Beddome 3234 (BM http://plants.jstor.org/<br />

specimen/bm000885793)


<strong>The</strong> <strong>Cucurbitaceae</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>India</strong> 89<br />

Trichosanthes bracteata (Lam.) Voigt var. tomentosa (C.B. Clarke) Chakrav., Rec. Bot.<br />

Surv. <strong>India</strong> 17(1): 47. 1959, nom. illeg., because its type, Abdul Khalil s.n. (CAL<br />

photo available from SSR) from Myanmar, Southern Shan State, Indine, is a syntype<br />

<strong>of</strong> T. burmensis Kundu (see under T. rubriflos).<br />

Trichosanthes palmata L. var. tomentosa Heyne ex C.B. Clarke, Fl. Brit. <strong>India</strong> 2(6): 607.<br />

1879.<br />

Syntypes: <strong>India</strong>, Deccan Peninsular Mountains; Wight no. 1134 (HBG online at JS-<br />

TOR), 1136 partly, G. Thomson s.n.; Sri Lanka, alt. 2600 ft, Gardner s.n. (K).<br />

Distribution in <strong>India</strong>: Andaman & Nicobar Islands (Naithani, 1990), Andhra Pradesh,<br />

Arunachal Pradesh, Karnataka, Kerala, Maharashtra, Tamil Nadu, Tripura. Endemic.<br />

Image: Nothing reliable found online.<br />

GenBank: No published sequences available.<br />

68. Trichosanthes bracteata (Lam.) Voigt, Hort. Suburb. Calcutt. 58. 1845.<br />

Modecca bracteata Lam., Encycl. 4: 210. 1797.<br />

Type: <strong>India</strong>, Sonnerat s.n. (P-LAM).<br />

Distribution in <strong>India</strong>: Peninsular <strong>India</strong>, Khasia Hills, Dehra Doon, Bengal.<br />

Distribution outside <strong>India</strong>: China (Guizhou), Nepal (? see comments).<br />

Image: Nothing reliable found online.<br />

GenBank: Sequences from De Boer et al. (2012) from <strong>India</strong>n material, e.g., HE661317,<br />

HE661484.<br />

Comments: Jeffrey (1980) and Lu et al. (2011) treat T. bracteata as a synonym <strong>of</strong><br />

T. tricuspidata, which ranges from China (Guizhou), Peninsular Malaysia, Nepal,<br />

Thailand, to Vietnam, while Chakravarty (1982) recognized T. bracteata with two<br />

varieties, var. bracteata from throughout <strong>India</strong>, Myanmar, China, and Australia,<br />

and var. tomentosa (an illegitimate name here treated under T. anaimalaiensis) on<br />

the Andaman and Nicobar islands, and in Arunachal Pradesh, Karnataka, Kerala,<br />

Maharashtra, Tamil Nadu, Tripura, as well as Myanmar and Java. Another species<br />

concept is that <strong>of</strong> De Wilde and Duyfjes (2008a, 2010).<br />

69. Trichosanthes cordata Roxb. Fl. Ind. 3: 703 1832.<br />

Type: Bangladesh, mouth <strong>of</strong> the river Meghna, Wallich Cat. No. 6686A (K, CAL).<br />

Trichosanthes macrosiphon Kurz, J. Asiat. Soc. Bengal, Pt. 2, Nat. Hist. 41: 308. 1872.<br />

Type: Myanmar, Tenasserim, W.S. Kurz (CAL, no image seen).<br />

Distribution in <strong>India</strong>: Andhra Pradesh, Arunachal Pradesh, Assam, Bihar, Chhattisgarh,<br />

Jharkhand, Madhya Pradesh, Manipur, Meghalaya, Mizoram, Nagaland, Rajasthan,<br />

Sikkim, Tamil Nadu, Tripura, Uttar Pradesh, Uttarakhand, West Bengal<br />

Distribution outside <strong>India</strong>: Bangladesh, Bhutan, China, Myanmar, Nepal.


90<br />

Susanne S. Renner & Arun K. Pandey / PhytoKeys 20: 53–118 (2013)<br />

Image: Nothing reliable found online.<br />

GenBank: No published sequences available.<br />

Comments: C.B. Clarke (1879: 608) synomized T. macrosiphon under T. cordata Roxb.<br />

because the protologue does not contain anything uniquely distinctive compared<br />

to the protologue <strong>of</strong> T. cordata. <strong>The</strong> personal herbarium <strong>of</strong> Wilhelm Sulpiz Kurz is<br />

at CAL, but that we have not received the requested type image.<br />

70. Trichosanthes costata Bl., Bijdr. Fl. Ned. Ind. 15: 933. 1826.<br />

Type: Java, Blume s.n. (L, barcode L0589632), designated by De Wilde and Duyfjes (2006).<br />

Gymnopetalum chinense (Lour.) Merr., Philipp. J. Sci. 15: 256. 1919.<br />

Euonymus chinensis Lour., Fl. Cochinch. 1: 156. 1790 (as Evonymus).<br />

Type: Untraced. Neotype: South China, Levine 1705 (holotype A, designated by De<br />

Wilde and Duyfjes, 2008b).<br />

Tripodanthera cochinchinensis (Lour.) M.Roem., Fam. Nat. Syn. Monogr. 2: 48. 1846.<br />

Gymnopetalum cochinchinense (Lour.) Kurz, J. Asiat. Soc. Bengal, Pt. 2, Nat. Hist. 40:<br />

57. 1871.<br />

Bryonia cochinchinensis Lour., Fl. Cochinch. 2: 595. 1790.<br />

Type: Vietnam, Loureiro 595 (BM, http://plants.jstor.org/specimen/viewer/bm000944642).<br />

Momordica tubiflora Roxb., Fl. Ind. 3: 711. 1832.<br />

Scotanthus tubiflorus (Roxb.) Naudin, Ann. Sci. Nat., Bot. sér. 4, 16: 172, f. 3. 1862,<br />

nom. superfl.<br />

Type: <strong>India</strong>, Wallich Cat. 6749 (K).<br />

Gymnopetalum quinquelobum Miq., Fl. Ned. Ind. 1: 681. 1855.<br />

Type: Java, Soerakarta, T. Horsfield s.n. (BM image seen)<br />

Gymnopetalum heterophyllum Kurz, J. Bot. 13: 326. 1875.<br />

Type: Kamorta Island (part <strong>of</strong> the Nicobar Islands); Wallich Cat. 6711 (K).<br />

Distribution in <strong>India</strong>: Andaman & Nicobar Islands, Andhra Pradesh, Arunachal Pradesh,<br />

Assam, Bihar, Manipur, Meghalaya, Sikkim, Tripura, Uttar Pradesh, West Bengal.<br />

Distribution outside <strong>India</strong>: China, Java, Myanmar, Sri Lanka, Vietnam.<br />

Images: Photos available upon request from A. Pandey or SSR.<br />

GenBank: Schaefer et al. (2008), most sequences under the name Gymnopetalum chinense,<br />

e.g., HE661294, HQ201978.<br />

Comments: Based on molecular data, Gymnopetalum chinense belongs in the genus<br />

Trichosanthes (De Boer et al., 2012; contra De Wilde and Duyfjes, 2006c). In<br />

Trichosanthes, however, the epithet chinense is already occupied by Trichosanthes<br />

chinensis Ser. (1828). <strong>The</strong> second name in line <strong>of</strong> priority would be G. cochinchinensis,<br />

based on the basionym Bryonia cochinchinensis. However, the combination<br />

T. cochinchinensis (Lour.) M.Roem. (based on T. cucumerina Lour.) blocks that<br />

transfer, too. <strong>The</strong> third available name is T. costata Blume, and this name must be<br />

used for Gymnopetalum chinense if the species is placed in Trichosanthes (De Boer<br />

and Thulin, 2012).


<strong>The</strong> <strong>Cucurbitaceae</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>India</strong> 91<br />

71. Trichosanthes cucumerina L., Sp. Pl. 2: 1008. 1753.<br />

Lectotype: <strong>India</strong>, Kerala, “Padavalam” in Rheede, Hort. Malab. 8: 29. t. 15. 1688,<br />

designated by Keraudren-Aymonin in Aubréville & Leroy (ed.), Fl. Cambodge<br />

Laos Viêt-Nam 15: 91. 1975.<br />

Trichosanthes anguina L., Sp. Pl. 2: 1008. 1753.<br />

Lectotype: China, “Anguina Sinensis, flore albo, elegantissimo, capillamentis tenuissimis<br />

ornato, fructu longo intorto, sub initium ex albo, & viridi variegato, per<br />

maturitatem prorsus rubro” in Micheli, Nov. Pl. Gen. 12. t. 9. 1729, designated<br />

by Jeffrey in Jarvis & al. (ed.), Regnum Veg. 127: 95. 1993.<br />

Cucumis anguinus L., Sp. Pl., ed. 10. 2: 1279. 1759.<br />

Type: “Habitat [in <strong>India</strong>.], Sp. Pl., ed. 2, 2: 1438. 1763.” Lectotype: “Petola Anguina”<br />

in Rumphius, Herb. Amboin. 5: 407. t. 148, 1747, designated by Merrill in Interpret.<br />

Rumph. Herb. Amb. 494. 1917.<br />

Trichosanthes pachyrrhachis Kundu, J. Bot. 77: 9. 1939.<br />

Syntypes: Northwest <strong>India</strong>, 1844, M.P. Edgeworth 63 (K), Mangalor, 1847, R.F. Hohenacker<br />

(herbarium?), synonymized here by Chakravarty (1959) and Jeffrey (1980).<br />

Trichosanthes brevibracteata Kundu, J. Bot. 77: 10. 1939.<br />

Paratypes (Art. 9.4): <strong>India</strong>, Karnal, Punjab, 1885-1888, J.R. Drummond 25031 (herbarium?),<br />

Ahmedabad, July 1920, L.J. Sedgwick (herbarium?), NW <strong>India</strong>, Thomson<br />

s.n. (herbarium?); synonymized here by Chakravarty (1959) and Jeffrey (1980).<br />

Trichosanthes brevibracteata Kundu var. sublobata Kundu, J. Bot. 77: 11. 1939.<br />

Type: <strong>India</strong>, Nagpur-Wardha, C.P., Sep. 2012, Haines (K).<br />

Trichosanthes brevibracteata Kundu var. longirostrata Kundu, J. Bot. 77: 11. 1939.<br />

Type: Myanmar, 15 Aug. 1908, J. H. Lace 6335 (K).<br />

Distribution in <strong>India</strong>: Native and cultivated throughout <strong>India</strong>.<br />

Distribution outside <strong>India</strong>: Sri Lanka and tropical China through Malesia into W, N,<br />

and NE Australia.<br />

Image: http://www.flowers<strong>of</strong>india.net/catalog/slides/Snake%20Gourd.html<br />

http://apps.kew.org/herbcat/getImage.do?imageBarcode=K000742697<br />

http://apps.kew.org/herbcat/getImage.do?imageBarcode=K000742699<br />

GenBank: Sequences from Schaefer and Renner (2011b) and De Boer et al. (2012),<br />

e.g., HE661410, HE661486.<br />

Comments: Widely cultivated for its edible fruits (Duyfjes and Pruesapan, 2004). In<br />

1959, Chakravarty synonymized T. pachyrrhachis Kundu and<br />

T. brevibracteata Kundu under T. cucumerina, but his 1982 checklist omitted both<br />

<strong>names</strong>.<br />

72. Trichosanthes cucumeroides (Ser.) Maxim., Franch. & Sav. Enum. Pl. Jap. 1: 172.<br />

1873.<br />

Bryonia cucumeroides Ser., Prodr. 3: 308. 1828.


92<br />

Susanne S. Renner & Arun K. Pandey / PhytoKeys 20: 53–118 (2013)<br />

Trichosanthes ovigera subsp. cucumeroides (Ser.) C. Jeffrey, Mansfeld’s Encycl. 3: 1528.<br />

(6: 2825). 2001.<br />

Type: “Patria ignotus, Seringe manuscript” perhaps a Wallich specimen (herbarium?).<br />

Trichosanthes dicaelosperma C.B. Clarke, Fl. Brit. <strong>India</strong> 2: 609. 1879.<br />

Trichosanthes cucumeroides var. dicaelosperma (C.B. Clarke) S. K. Chen, Bull. Bot. Res.,<br />

Harbin 5(2): 118. 1985.<br />

Syntypes: <strong>India</strong>, Sikkim, J.D. Hooker s.n. (K), Khasia Mts., Hooker & Thomson (CAL<br />

photos available from SSR, K).<br />

Distribution inside <strong>India</strong>: Meghalaya, Sikkim, Uttar Pradesh, West Bengal.<br />

Distribution outside <strong>India</strong>: Guangxi, SE Xizang.<br />

Image: Many images <strong>of</strong> this much-cultivated species can be found online.<br />

GenBank: Several sequences, e.g., HQ829602, HQ829602.<br />

Comment: Jeffrey (in Lu et al., 2011) prefers to treat T. cucumeroides as a synonym <strong>of</strong> T.<br />

pilosa Lour. (Fl. Cochinch. 2: 588. 1790). In his 1980 checklist, he does not list T.<br />

cucumeroides and treats T. dicaelosperma as a synonym <strong>of</strong> T. ovigera. Lu et al. (2011)<br />

instead recognize T. cucumeroides, with T. dicaelosperma as one <strong>of</strong> its varieties.<br />

73. Trichosanthes dioica Roxb., Fl. Ind. 3: 701. 1832.<br />

Type: <strong>India</strong>, West Bengal, “It is much cultivated by the natives about Calcutta, during<br />

the rains.” Ic. Roxb. Lectotype?<br />

Trichosanthes dioica Roxb. var. sagittifolia Chakrav., Rec. Bot. Surv. <strong>India</strong> 17(1): 55.<br />

1959.<br />

Type: Northwest <strong>India</strong>, without precise locality, cult. (Stewart 1228) (E).<br />

Distribution in <strong>India</strong>: Arunachal Pradesh, Assam, Bihar, Delhi, Himachal Pradesh,<br />

Jammu & Kashmir, Meghalaya, Punjab, Rajasthan, Uttar Pradesh, West Bengal<br />

Distribution outside <strong>India</strong>: Bangladesh, Myanmar, Nepal, Pakistan, Sri Lanka.<br />

Image: eflora<strong>of</strong>india at https://sites.google.com/site/eflora<strong>of</strong>india/species/a---l/cl/cucurbitaceae/trichosanthes/trichosanthes-dioica<br />

GenBank: Sequences from Ali, Pandey, and Lee (2009) and De Boer et al. (2012), e.g.,<br />

GQ240881, HE661322.<br />

Comments: <strong>The</strong> female gametophytes were studied by Pandey et al. (1997, 2003) and<br />

pollen germination behavior by Kumari et al. (2009). <strong>The</strong> synonyimization <strong>of</strong> var.<br />

sagittifolia follows Jeffrey (1980).<br />

74. Trichosanthes dunniana H. Lév., Repert. Spec. Nov. Regni Veg.10: 148. 1911.<br />

Type: China, Guizhou, Esquirol 726, (E, K).<br />

Trichosanthes majuscula (C.B. Clarke) Kundu, J. Bot. 77: 12. 1939.<br />

Trichosanthes multiloba Miq. var. majuscula C.B. Clarke, Fl. Brit. <strong>India</strong> 2(6): 608. 1879.


<strong>The</strong> <strong>Cucurbitaceae</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>India</strong> 93<br />

Trichosanthes wallichiana (Ser.) Wight var. majuscula (C.B. Clarke) Cogn. in A. & C.<br />

DC., Monog. Phan. 3: 369. 1881.<br />

Type: <strong>India</strong>, Meghalaya, Khasia Hills, alt. 4000 ft., J.D. Hooker & Thomson s.n. (Herb.<br />

Ind. Or. Trichosanthes sp. 7) (K).<br />

Trichosanthes prazeri Kundu, J. Bombay Nat. Hist. Soc. 43(2): 378. 1942.<br />

Type: Upper Myanmar, May 1888, Khoni, J.C. Prazer s.n. (CAL, 3 sheets, photos<br />

available from SSR).<br />

Distribution in <strong>India</strong>: Minimally Meghalaya.<br />

Distribution outside <strong>India</strong>: China, Myanmar, Thailand.<br />

Image: Some <strong>of</strong> the type specimens can be found online.<br />

GenBank: Several sequences.e.g., HQ829503, HQ829605.<br />

Comments: <strong>The</strong> acceptance <strong>of</strong> T. dunniana for <strong>India</strong> and the synonymization <strong>of</strong> T.<br />

majuscula follow Jeffrey (1982). Chakravarty (1959) recognized Trichosanthes majuscula,<br />

saying that the species required further examination. <strong>The</strong> leaves are larger<br />

than in T. wallichiana proper; otherwise it closely agrees with that species.<br />

75. Trichosanthes kerrii Craib, Bull. Misc. Inform. Kew. 1914: 7. 1914.<br />

Type: North Thailand, Kerr 2454 (BM, K).<br />

Trichosanthes tomentosa Chakrav., J. Bombay Nat. Hist. Soc. 50(4): 894, f. 45. 1952.<br />

Type: <strong>India</strong>, Nagaland, Kohima and Naga Hill, alt. 4500 ft; 22 May 1895; Watt 11640<br />

(CAL, 3 sheets, photos available from SSR).<br />

Distribution in <strong>India</strong>: Nagaland, Mongsemdi Naga hills (Chakravarty, 1982).<br />

Distribution outside <strong>India</strong>: China (SW Yunnan), Laos, N Thailand, N Vietnam.<br />

Image: See type images.<br />

GenBank: Sequences from Schaefer et al. (2008) and De Boer et al. (2012), e.g.,<br />

HE661333, HE661498.<br />

Comments: Jeffrey (1982), Duyfjes and Pruesapan (2004), and Lu et al. (2011) all list<br />

T. tomentosa as a synonym <strong>of</strong> T. kerrii.<br />

76. Trichosanthes khasiana Kundu, J. Bot. 77: 11. 1939.<br />

Type: <strong>India</strong>, Meghalaya, Khasia Hills, Hooker & Thomson (K, http://apps.kew.org/<br />

herbcat/getImage.do?imageBarcode=K000102020)<br />

Distribution in <strong>India</strong>: Meghalaya.<br />

Distribution outside <strong>India</strong>: Endemic.<br />

Image: Nothing found online other than the type image.<br />

GenBank: No published sequences available.<br />

Comments: Jeffrey (1982) and De Boer and Thulin (2012) recognize this species as distinct.


94<br />

Susanne S. Renner & Arun K. Pandey / PhytoKeys 20: 53–118 (2013)<br />

77. Trichosanthes lepiniana (Naudin) Cogn. in A. & C. DC., Monogr. Phan. 3:<br />

377. 1881.<br />

Involucraria lepiniana Naudin in Huber, Cat. 11. 1868.<br />

Syntypes?: <strong>India</strong>, Union Territory, Pondichery, J. Lepine s.n. (P http://plants.jstor.org/<br />

specimen/bm000900967); Sikkim, J.D. Hooker & Thomson 14 (K, P).<br />

Distribution in <strong>India</strong>: Union Territory.<br />

Distribution outside <strong>India</strong>: Unclear, see comments.<br />

Image: Nothing found online other than the type image.<br />

GenBank: Sequences from De Boer et al. (2012) from Nepalese and Chinese material,<br />

e.g., HE661507, HE661341.<br />

Comments: Jeffrey (1980) initially considered T. lepiniana a synonym <strong>of</strong> T. tricuspidata,<br />

but he later (1982) recognized it as a separate species, as did Chakravarty (1982).<br />

78. Trichosanthes lobata Roxb., Fl. Ind. 3: 703. 1832.<br />

Type: <strong>India</strong>, “This plant grows in hedges, and among bushes.” Roxburgh 992 (K)<br />

Trichosanthes perrottetiana Cogn. in A. & C. DC., Monogr. Phan. 3: 362. 1881.<br />

Type: <strong>India</strong>, Union Territory, Pondichery, Perrottet 256 (G-BOISS, W).<br />

Distribution in <strong>India</strong>: Andhra Pradesh, Karnataka, Kerala, Puducherry, Tamil Nadu,<br />

Uttar Pradesh, West Bengal.<br />

Distribution outside <strong>India</strong>: China.<br />

Image: Nothing found online.<br />

GenBank: No published sequences available.<br />

Comments: Chakravarty (1982) recognizes both T. lobata and T. perrottetiana, while<br />

Jeffrey (1980) synonoymizes T. perrottetiana (and also T. villosula) under T. lobata.<br />

We have followed Lu et al. (2011) in maintaining T. villosula separate.<br />

79. Trichosanthes nervifolia L., Sp. Pl. 2: 1008. 1753.<br />

Lectotype: <strong>India</strong>, Kerala, Tota-piri, in Rheede, Hort. Malab. 8: 33, t. 17. 1688, designated<br />

by Majumdar & Bakshi in Taxon 28: 354. 1979.<br />

Trichosanthes cuspidata Lam., Encycl. 1: 190. 1783.<br />

Type: <strong>India</strong>, Rheede, Hort. Malab. 8; 31, t. 16.<br />

Distribution in <strong>India</strong>: Andhra Pradesh, Arunachal Pradesh, Assam, Bihar, Goa, Karnataka,<br />

Kerala, Madhya Pradesh, Manipur, Meghalaya, Mizoram, Nagaland, Rajasthan,<br />

Sikkim, Tamil Nadu, Tripura, Uttar Pradesh, West Bengal.<br />

Distribution outside <strong>India</strong>: Sri Lanka.<br />

Image: Nothing found online.


<strong>The</strong> <strong>Cucurbitaceae</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>India</strong> 95<br />

GenBank: Sequences from De Boer et al. (2012) from Sri Lankan material, e.g.,<br />

HE661514, HE661350.<br />

80. Trichosanthes ovigera Blume, Bijdr. Fl. Ned. Ind. 15: 934. 1826.<br />

Type: Java, Gunung Salak, Blume s.n. (L barcodes L0130442, L0130439 , P).<br />

Trichosanthes ovigera Blume var. sikkimensis Kundu, J. Bombay. Nat. Hist. Soc. 43(3):<br />

383. 1942.<br />

Type: <strong>India</strong>, Selim, Sikkim, 1000 feet, Oct. 1884, C.B. Clarke (CAL). Other cited<br />

sheets: <strong>India</strong>, Rungtung, Sikkim Dec. 1876, A.B. (King’s Collector) (CAL); Sikkim,<br />

5000 feet, 23 Sep. 1875, G. King (CAL?); Runjeet, Darjeeling, Sep. 1884, C.B.<br />

Clarke (CAL); Kobo, Abor Expedition, Assam. Dec. 1911, J.H. Burkill 37420 (K).<br />

Trichosanthes horsfieldii Miq., Fl. Ned. Ind. 1: 677. 1855.<br />

Type: Java, Priangan, T. Horsfield 15 (BM, K, U).<br />

Trichosanthes himalensis C.B. Clarke, Fl. Brit. <strong>India</strong> 2(6): 608. 1879.<br />

Type: <strong>India</strong>, Sikkim, alt. 2000-5000 ft, from Yoksun to the plains; J.D. Hooker, C.B.<br />

Clarke s.n. (K).<br />

Trichosanthes himalensis var. glabrior C.B. Clarke, Fl. Brit. <strong>India</strong> 2(6): 608. 1879.<br />

Type: <strong>India</strong>, Meghalaya, Khasia, alt. 4000 ft, Trichosanthes sp. 9 in J.D. Hooker & T.<br />

Thomson s.n. (K).<br />

Trichosanthes himalensis var. indivisa Chakrav., Rec. Bot. Surv. <strong>India</strong> 17(1): 51. 1959, nom.<br />

illeg. Sikkim, 3500 feet, 11 Dec. 1877, G. King (CAL, photo available from SSR)<br />

Trichosanthes himalensis var. sikkimensis (Kundu) Thoth., Bull. Bot. Surv. <strong>India</strong> 2(1&2):<br />

169. 1960.<br />

Distribution in <strong>India</strong>: Andaman & Nicobar Islands, Arunachal Pradesh, Assam,<br />

Meghalaya, Sikkim, Tripura, Uttar Pradesh, West Bengal.<br />

Distribution outside <strong>India</strong>: Australia, Bangladesh, China, Japan, Java, Myanmar, Nepal.<br />

Image: A few <strong>of</strong> the type specimens can be found online.<br />

GenBank: Sequences from Kocyan et al. (2007) and Schaefer et al. (2008) from Japanese<br />

and Australian material, e.g., DQ536604, DQ536875.<br />

Comments: <strong>The</strong> list <strong>of</strong> <strong>synonyms</strong> <strong>of</strong> T. ovigera follows Jeffrey (1980) except for T.<br />

dicaelosperma, which he also synonymizes here, while we have followed Lu et al.<br />

(2011) who consider T. dicaelosperma one <strong>of</strong> the varieties <strong>of</strong> T. cucumeroides. Lu et<br />

al. (2011) and De Wilde and Duyfjes (2008a, b) both consider T. ovigera a synonym<br />

<strong>of</strong> T. pilosa. Morphological and molecular work is needed to clarify species<br />

boundaries in Trichosanthes.<br />

81. Trichosanthes rubriflos Thorel ex Cayla, Bull. Mus. Natl. Hist. Nat. 14: 170. 1908.<br />

Trichosanthes pubera Blume subsp. rubriflos (Thorel ex Cayla) Duyfjes & Pruesapan,<br />

Thai Forest Bull., Bot. 32: 94. 2004.<br />

Lectotype: Cambodia, Stung-streng, Thorel 2126 (K, P), designated by Keraudren (1975).


96<br />

Susanne S. Renner & Arun K. Pandey / PhytoKeys 20: 53–118 (2013)<br />

Trichosanthes burmensis Kundu, J. Bombay Nat. Hist. Soc. 43(2): 381. 1942.<br />

Syntypes: Upper Myanmar, Southern Shan State, Indine, 1893, Abdul Khalil s.n. (CAL,<br />

3 sheets, photos available from SSR), Pegu, W.S. Kurz 1062 (CAL, no image seen).<br />

Distribution in <strong>India</strong>: Unknown.<br />

Distribution outside <strong>India</strong>: China, Myanmar, Cambodia, Thailand.<br />

GenBank: Sequences from De Boer et al. (2012) based on material from Thailand,<br />

mostly under T. pubera subsp. rubriflos, e.g., HE661533, HE661451.<br />

Comments: In his 1980 checklist <strong>of</strong> the <strong>India</strong>n <strong>Cucurbitaceae</strong>, Jeffrey recognized T. rubriflos<br />

with two doubful <strong>synonyms</strong>, T. prazeri Kundu and T. burmensis Kundu, but in 1982,<br />

he moved T. prazeri into the synonymy <strong>of</strong> T. dunniana. Chakravarty (1959, 1982) also<br />

listed T. rubriflos for <strong>India</strong>, but kept T. majuscula and T. prazeri separate, and considered<br />

T. burmensis a synonym <strong>of</strong> T. bracteata, which is in error. Duyfjes and Pruesapan (2004)<br />

considered T. rubriflos a subspecies <strong>of</strong> T. pubera Blume, described from Java. According<br />

to the Trichosanthes expert Hugo De Boer (pers. comm. 24 Oct. 2012), the holotype <strong>of</strong><br />

T. burmensis, Abdul Khalil s.n., resembles material <strong>of</strong> T. rubriflos from Thailand, and the<br />

label notes that the flowers are red. Another form <strong>of</strong> Trichosanthes described by Kundu,<br />

T. burmensis var. alba Kundu is a synonym <strong>of</strong> T. tricuspidata (see below).<br />

82. Trichosanthes quinquangulata A. Gray, U.S. Expl. Exped., Phan. 1: 645. 1854.<br />

Type: Philippines, Mangsee, Wilkes s. n. 1842/2 (US).<br />

Distribution in <strong>India</strong>: Andaman Islands (voucher: L. Rasingam 17583, PBL).<br />

Distribution outside <strong>India</strong>: South China, Myanmar, Thailand, Vietnam, Cambodia,<br />

Laos, Peninsular Malaysia, Singapore, Indonesia (Sumatra, Borneo, Java, Moluccas,<br />

New Guinea (West Papua and Papua New Guinea, Philippines.<br />

Image: Nothing reliable found online.<br />

GenBank: Sequences from De Boer et al. (2012), e.g., HE661535, HE661375.<br />

Comment: <strong>The</strong> occurrence <strong>of</strong> this species on the Andaman Islands is a discovery <strong>of</strong><br />

Rasingam (2012).<br />

83. Trichosanthes scabra Lour., Fl. Cochinch. 2: 589. 1790.<br />

Gymnopetalum scabrum (Lour.) W.J.de Wilde & Duyfjes, Reinwardtia 12: 268. 2008.<br />

Type: Vietnam, Annam, Poilane 11322 (neotype P; isoneotype L), designated by De<br />

Wilde and Duyfjes (2008b).<br />

Cucumis integrifolius Roxb., Fl. Ind. 3: 724. 1832.<br />

Gymnopetalum integrifolium (Roxb.) Kurz, J. Asiat. Soc. Bengal, Pt. 2, Nat. Hist. 40:<br />

58. 1871.<br />

Trichosanthes integrifolia (Roxb.) Kurz, J. Asiat. Soc. Bengal, Pt. 2, Nat. Hist. 46: 99. 1877.<br />

Type: Myanmar (Burma), Wallich Cat. 6730 (K-W).


<strong>The</strong> <strong>Cucurbitaceae</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>India</strong> 97<br />

Gymnopetalum integrifolium (Roxb.) Kurz var. pectinatum W.J.de Wilde & Duyfjes,<br />

Blumea 51: 287. 2006.<br />

Gymnopetalum scabrum (Lour.) W.J.de Wilde & Duyfjes var. pectinatum (W.J. de Wilde<br />

& Duyfjes) W.J.de Wilde & Duyfjes, Reinwardtia 12: 268. 2008.<br />

Trichosanthes scabra Lour. var. pectinata (W.J.de Wilde & Duyfjes) H.J.De Boer, Phytokeys<br />

12: 30. 2012.<br />

Type: Java, Indonesia, W.J. de Wilde and Duyfjes 21692 (L).<br />

Gymnopetalum penicaudii Gagnep. (1918) Bull. Mus. Natl. Hist. Nat. 24: 374.<br />

Gymnopetalum scabrum (Lour.) W.J.de Wilde & Duyfjes var. penicaudii (Gagnep.)<br />

W.J.de Wilde & Duyfjes, Reinwardtia 12: 268. 2008.<br />

Trichosanthes scabra Lour. var. penicaudii (Gagnep.) H.J.De Boer, Phytokeys 12: 30. 2012.<br />

Type: China, Hainan Pénicaud 43 (lectotype P).<br />

Distribution in <strong>India</strong>: <strong>The</strong> range <strong>of</strong> this species is unclear.<br />

Distribution outside <strong>India</strong>: China, Cambodia, Indonesia, Laos, Peninsular Malaysia,<br />

Myanmar, Philippines, Sri Lanka, Thailand, Vietnam (fide Lu et al., 2011).<br />

Image: Some <strong>of</strong> the type specimens can be found online.<br />

GenBank: Sequences from Kocyan et al. (2007) and De Boer et al. (2012) from<br />

Chinese and Thai material, all under Gymnopetalum scabrum, e.g., HE661469.,<br />

HE661297.<br />

Comments: <strong>The</strong> synonymizations for the most part follow Lu et al. (2011), except for<br />

the recently published varieties whose status needs further evaluation.<br />

84. Trichosanthes tricuspidata Lour., Fl. Cochinch. 2: 589. 1790.<br />

Type: Vietnam, Loureiro s.n. (not at BM fide John Hunnex, 23 Aug 2012; herbarium ?).<br />

Trichosanthes tricuspidata Lour. var. strigosa Mitra & Bandyop., J. Bombay. Nat. Hist.<br />

Soc. 96(2): 374. 1998.<br />

Type: <strong>India</strong>, West Bengal, Coochbehar (Jamalda), 22 Aug. 1995, S. Bandyopadhyay<br />

2904 (not seen).<br />

Trichosanthes palmata Roxb., Fl. Ind. 3: 704. 1832, non L., 1753, nom. illeg.<br />

Trichosanthes burmensis Kundu var. alba Kundu, J. Bombay. Nat. Hist. Soc. 43(3):<br />

382. 1942. Type: Upper Myanmar, Maymyo, July 1888, Badul Khan (King’s Collector)<br />

130 (CAL).<br />

Distribution in <strong>India</strong>: West Bengal?<br />

Distribution outside <strong>India</strong>: Myanmar, Thailand, Vietnam.<br />

Image: http://www.flowers<strong>of</strong>india.net/catalog/slides/Indrayan.html<br />

GenBank: Sequences from De Boer et al. (2012) from two Thai specimens that appear<br />

to represent different species: HE661459, HE661544.<br />

Comments: Duyfjes and Pruesapan (2004) doubt the occurrence <strong>of</strong> T. tricuspidata in<br />

<strong>India</strong>. According to them, the species only occurs in Myanmar, Thailand and Vietnam,<br />

West Malaysia, and east to the Moluccas. Fide Hugo De Boer (pers. comm.


98<br />

Susanne S. Renner & Arun K. Pandey / PhytoKeys 20: 53–118 (2013)<br />

24 Oct. 2012), the type <strong>of</strong> T. burmensis var. alba Kundu resembles material <strong>of</strong> T.<br />

tricuspidata subsp. tricuspidata from Thailand. <strong>The</strong> collection label states that the<br />

flowers were white, which also matches T. tricuspidata.<br />

85. Trichosanthes truncata C.B. Clarke, Fl. Brit. <strong>India</strong> 2(6): 608. 1879.<br />

Syntypes: <strong>India</strong>, Meghalaya, alt. 1000 ft, J.D. Hooker s.n. Khasia Hills, alt. 4000 ft,<br />

(Cherra Coal-pit), J.D. Hooker & Thomson s.n., 1188 (CAL photo available from<br />

SSR, K), Darjeeling, 10 March 1871, C.B. Clarke 13973B (CAL photo available<br />

from SSR, K).<br />

Trichosanthes ovata Cogn. in A. & C. DC., Monogr. Phan. 3: 365. 1881.<br />

Type: <strong>India</strong>, Sikkim, Thomson s.n. (L, LE).<br />

Distribution in <strong>India</strong>: Andhra Pradesh, Arunachal Pradesh, Assam, Meghalaya, Sikkim,<br />

West Bengal.<br />

Distribution outside <strong>India</strong>: Bangladesh, Bhutan, China, Thailand, Vietnam.<br />

Image: Nothing reliable found online.<br />

GenBank: Sequences from De Boer et al. (2012), e.g., HE661547, HE661461.<br />

Comments: Further synonymous <strong>names</strong> listed by Lu et al. (2011).<br />

Comments: <strong>The</strong> synonymization <strong>of</strong> T. ovata follows Jeffrey (1980, 1982).<br />

86. Trichosanthes tubiflora (Wight & Arn.) H.J.De Boer, Phytokeys 12: 29. 2012.<br />

Bryonia tubiflora Wight & Arn., Prodr. Fl. Ind. Orient. 1: 347. 1834.<br />

Gymnopetalum tubiflorum (Wight & Arn.) Cogn. in A. & C. DC., Monogr. Phan. 3:<br />

388. 1881.<br />

Type: Sri Lanka, Trincomalee, 1 Feb. 1796, Rottler s.n. ex Herb. Klein in Herb. Wight<br />

Cat. 1118 (K, E).<br />

Gymnopetalum wightii Arn., Madras J. Lit. Sci. 12: 52. 1840 and J. Bot. 3: 278. 1841.<br />

Type: Sri Lanka, Wight 1146 (K).<br />

Distribution in <strong>India</strong>: Kerala.<br />

Distribution outside <strong>India</strong>: Sri Lanka.<br />

Image: A photo <strong>of</strong> the flowers is included in De Boer et al. (2010).<br />

GenBank: No published sequences available.<br />

Comments: Based on molecular data, this is close to T. dioica, not the other species<br />

formerly placed in the genus Gymnopetalum.<br />

87. Trichosanthes villosula Cogn. in A. & C. DC., Monogr. Phan. 3: 362. 1881.<br />

Type: <strong>India</strong>, Tamilnadu, near Mt. Nilgiri, Hohenacker 1507 (G-BOISS, P, K).<br />

Trichosanthes villosula Cogn. var. nilgirrensis Kundu, J. Bombay Nat. Hist. Soc. 43(3):<br />

375. 1942.


<strong>The</strong> <strong>Cucurbitaceae</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>India</strong> 99<br />

Type: <strong>India</strong>, Kerala, Coonoor, Nilgiris, alt. 6000 ft., Nov. 1884, J.S. Gamble 15733<br />

(CAL photo available from SSR).<br />

Distribution in <strong>India</strong>: Andhra Pradesh, Assam, Karnataka, Kerala, Nagaland, Tamil<br />

Nadu, West Bengal.<br />

Distribution outside <strong>India</strong>: Banagladesh, China.<br />

Image: Nothing reliable found online.<br />

GenBank: No published sequences available.<br />

Comments: Jeffrey (1980) placed T. villosula under T. lobata; we here follow the more<br />

recent treatment by Lu et al. (2011) in maintaining T. villosula as separate.<br />

88. Trichosanthes wallichiana (Ser.) Wight, Madras J. Lit. Sci. 12: 52. 1840.<br />

Involucraria wallichiana Ser., Mém. Soc. Phys. Genéve 3(1): 25, 31. t. 5. 1825.<br />

Type: Nepal, Wallich s.n. (G-DC).<br />

Trichosanthes palmata L. var. scotanthus C.B. Clarke, Fl. Brit. <strong>India</strong> 2(6): 607. 1879,<br />

nom. nud.<br />

Trichosanthes bracteata (Lam.) Voigt var. scotanthus (C.B. Clarke) Handel-Mazzetti,<br />

Symb. Sin. 7(4): 1065. 1936.<br />

Type: Eastern <strong>India</strong>, Sonnerat s.n. (P).<br />

Distribution in <strong>India</strong>: Arunachal Pradesh, Assam, Bihar, Himachal Pradesh, Manipur,<br />

Meghalaya, Nagaland, Sikkim, Tripura, West Bengal<br />

Distribution outside <strong>India</strong>: Nepal, China (Guangdong, Guangxi, Guizhou, Xizang,<br />

Yunnan).<br />

Image: Nothing reliable found online.<br />

GenBank: No published sequences available.<br />

Comments: Chakravarty (1982) writes that T. wallichiana is “very closely allied to T.<br />

bracteata (Lam.) Voigt from which it can be separated by the membranous leaves<br />

with black-dotted glands at the base.”<br />

89. Zanonia indica L., Sp. Pl., ed. 2. 2: 1457. 1763.<br />

Type: <strong>India</strong>, Kerala, Malabaria. Lectotype: “Penar-valli mas” in Rheede, Hort. Malab.<br />

8: 39. t. 49, 1688, designated by Keraudren-Aymonin in Aubréville & Leroy (ed.),<br />

Fl. Cambodge Laos Viêt-Nam 15: 18. 1975.<br />

Zanonia indica L. var. pubescens Cogn. in A. & C. DC., Monogr. Phan. 3: 927. 1881.<br />

Syntypes: <strong>India</strong>, Himalaya and East Bengal, Griffith 2521 (K, P). Java, Blume s.n.<br />

(Herb. Lung. Bat., P). Borneo, Korthals s.n. (Herb. Lung. Bat.), Bangarmassing, J.<br />

Motley 804 et 920 (K).<br />

Distribution in <strong>India</strong>: Andaman and Nicobar Islands, Assam, Goa, Karnataka, Kerala,<br />

Maharashtra, Meghalaya, Sikkim, Tamil Nadu, West Bengal.


100<br />

Susanne S. Renner & Arun K. Pandey / PhytoKeys 20: 53–118 (2013)<br />

Distribution outside <strong>India</strong>: Sri Lanka, S China, Indochina, through Malesia east to<br />

New Guinea.<br />

Image: See De Wilde and Duyfjes (2007a).<br />

GenBank: Sequences from Schaefer et al. (2009), e.g., EU436396, EU436345.<br />

Comments: De Wilde and Duyfjes (2007a) discuss the species’ unusual morphology.<br />

90. Zehneria bodinieri (H. Lév.) W.J.de Wilde & Duyfjes, Thai Forest Bull., Bot. 32:<br />

17. 2004.<br />

Melothria bodinieri H. Lév., Fl. Kouy-Tchéou 112. 1914.<br />

Pilogyne bodinieri (H. Lév.) W.J.de Wilde & Duyfjes, Reinwardtia 12(5): 410. 2009.<br />

Lectotype designated by De Wilde & Duyfjes (2004b): China, Guangzhou, Kouyan,<br />

Bodinier 1957 (E, P).<br />

Melothria perpusilla (Blume) Cogn. var. subtruncata Cogn. in A. & C. DC., Monog.<br />

Phan. 3: 608. 1881.<br />

Syntypes: <strong>India</strong>, Wight 1151 (CAL image available from SSR; K, LE, W), Sri Lanka,<br />

Thwaites 1613 (BR, CAL image available from SSR, G, K, LE, P).<br />

Distribution in <strong>India</strong>: Karnataka, Kerala, Tamil Nadu, also North <strong>India</strong>.<br />

Distribution outside <strong>India</strong>: China, Myanmar, Sri Lanka, Sumatra, Malaysia, Sabah<br />

also Thailand, Vietnam, Cambodia, Laos, Vietnam, Peninsular Malaysia, Philippines<br />

(Palawan)<br />

Image: Nothing reliable found online.<br />

GenBank: Sequences from Kocyan et al. (2007) and Schaefer and Renner (2011b),<br />

e.g., DQ536614, HQ202008.<br />

Comments: <strong>The</strong> synonymization <strong>of</strong> Melothria perpusilla (Blume) Cogn. var. subtruncata<br />

Cogn. follows Wilde and Duyfjes (2006). Jeffrey (1980), on the other hand,<br />

considers this name a synonym <strong>of</strong> Zehneria maysorensis.<br />

91. Zehneria hookeriana (Wight & Arn.) Arn., J. Bot. 275. 1841.<br />

Bryonia hookeriana Wight & Arn., Prodr. Fl. Ind. Orient. 1: 345. 1834.<br />

Type: South <strong>India</strong>, Wight Cat. no. 1117 (K).<br />

Distribution in <strong>India</strong>: South <strong>India</strong>, Tamil Nadu. Endemic.<br />

Image: http://apps.kew.org/herbcat/getImage.do?imageBarcode=K000036887<br />

GenBank: No published sequences available.<br />

Comments: Endemic to <strong>India</strong> fide De Wilde and Duyfjes (2006).<br />

92. Zehneria japonica (Thunb.) H.Y. Liu, Bull. Natl. Mus. Nat. Sci. (Taichung) 1:<br />

40. 1989.<br />

Bryonia japonica Thunb., Syst. Veg., ed. 14, 870. 1784.


<strong>The</strong> <strong>Cucurbitaceae</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>India</strong> 101<br />

Melothria japonica (Thunb.) Cogn. in A. & C. DC., Monogr. Phan. 3: 599. 1881.<br />

Neoachmandra japonica (Thunb.) W.J. de Wilde & Duyfjes, Blumea 51(1): 22. 2006.<br />

Type: Japan, Nagasaki, Thunberg (UPS-THUNB 22826).<br />

Neoachmandra indica (Lour.) W.J. de Wilde & Duyfjes, Blumea 51(1): 21. 2006.<br />

Zehneria indica (Lour.) Keraudren-Aymonin in Aubréville & Leroy (ed.), Fl. Cambodge<br />

Laos Viêt-Nam 15: 52. 1975.<br />

Aechmandra indica (Lour.) Arn., Hook. Journ. Bot. 3: 274. 1841<br />

Melothria indica Lour., Fl. Cochinch. 1: 35. 1790.<br />

Type: Vietnam, Tourane, Loureiro s.n. (not found in BM fide J. Hunnex, 6 Sep. 2012,<br />

contra de Wilde and Duyfjes, Thai. Bull. 2004), neotype Squires 14 (BM), designated<br />

by Jeffrey (1980).<br />

Bryonia leucocarpa Blume, Bijdr. Fl. Ned. Ind. 15: 924. 1826.<br />

Melothria leucocarpa (Blume) Cogn. in A. & C. DC., Monogr. Phan. 3: 601. 1881.<br />

Neoachmandra leucocarpa (Blume) W.J.de Wilde & Duyfjes, Blumea 51(1): 23. 2006<br />

Lectotype: Java, Blume s.n. (L, barcode L0130099).<br />

Melothria leucocarpa (Blume) Cogn. var. triloba (C.B. Clarke) Chakrav., Chakrav., Rec.<br />

Bot. Surv. <strong>India</strong> 17(1): 154. 1959.<br />

Lectotype: <strong>India</strong>, Wallich Cat. No. 6707 (K-W).<br />

Melothria odorata C.B. Clarke, Fl. Brit. <strong>India</strong> 2(6): 626. 1879.<br />

Neoachmandra odorata (C.B. Clarke) W.J.de Wilde & Duyfjes, Blumea 51(1): 27. 2006.<br />

Syntypes: <strong>India</strong>, Hamilton in Wallich Cat. 6706A,B,C (herbarium), as Bryonia odorata<br />

Buch.-Ham. Northwest Himalaya; Royle s.n. (herbarium), “Throughout the plain<br />

<strong>of</strong> East Bengal, common, and ascending the hills to 700ft alt.”<br />

Melothria odorata C.B. Clarke var. triloba C.B. Clarke, Fl. Brit. <strong>India</strong> 2(6): 626. 1879.<br />

Melothria zehnerioides Haines, J. Proc. Asiat. Soc. Bengal 15: 315. 1920.<br />

Type: N <strong>India</strong>, Haines 4510 (herbarium?).<br />

Distribution in <strong>India</strong>: Arunachal Pradesh, Assam, Bihar, Himachal Pradesh, Meghalaya,<br />

Nagaland, Punjab, Sikkim, Uttar Pradesh, Uttarakhand, West Bengal.<br />

Distribution outside <strong>India</strong>: Thailand, China, Japan; Indonesia (Java, Sumatra).<br />

Image: Nothing reliable found online.<br />

GenBank: Sequences from Kocyan et al. (2007), as Neoachmandra japonica, e.g.,<br />

DQ536753, DQ648192.<br />

Comments: De Wilde and Duyfjes (2006b) have a very different concept <strong>of</strong> Zehneria japonica<br />

than does Jeffrey (most recently in Lu et al., 2011, Flora <strong>of</strong> China). <strong>The</strong>y consider<br />

Neoachmandra indica, Neoachmandra leucocarpa, and Neoachmandra odorata<br />

separate species. <strong>The</strong>y also provide a key and color photos <strong>of</strong> many Zehneria species.<br />

Molecular-phylogenetic work is needed to resolve the status <strong>of</strong> these various entities.<br />

93. Zehneria maysorensis (Wight & Arn.) Arn., J. Bot. 3: 275. 1841.<br />

Pilogyne maysorensis (Wight & Arn.) W.J.de Wilde & Duyfjes, Reinwardtia 12(5): 410.<br />

2009.


102<br />

Susanne S. Renner & Arun K. Pandey / PhytoKeys 20: 53–118 (2013)<br />

Bryonia maysorensis Wight & Arn., Prodr. Fl. Ind. Orient. 1: 345. 1834.<br />

Lectotype: South <strong>India</strong>, Wight 1116 (K, P), designated by de Wilde and Duyfjes (2006b).<br />

Zehneria maysorensis (Wight & Arn.) Arn. var. umbellata (Chakrav.) Kumari, Fl. Tamil<br />

Nadu Ind., Ser. 1: 175. 1983.<br />

Melothria mucronata (Blume) Cogn. var. umbellata Chakrav., Rec. Bot. Surv. <strong>India</strong><br />

17(1): 150. 1959.<br />

Syntypes: Peninsular <strong>India</strong>, Lower Pulneys, 1600 m, Sep., Rodriguez 1955 (CAL 2<br />

sheets, photos available from SSR), Wight (CAL, photo available from SSR).<br />

Zehneria maysorensis (Wight & Arn.) Arn. var. oblonga V.P.Prasad & M.Prasad J. Econ.<br />

Taxon. Bot. 17(2): 471. 1993.<br />

Type: <strong>India</strong>, Kerala State, Idukki District, Lower camp to Kumily area, 26 Dec. 1974,<br />

K. Vivekananthan 45710 (MH).<br />

Distribution in <strong>India</strong>: Andhra Pradesh, Karnataka, Kerala, Maharashtra, Meghalaya,<br />

Tamil Nadu. Endemic.<br />

Image: http://apps.kew.org/herbcat/getImage.do?imageBarcode=K000742778<br />

GenBank: No published sequences available.<br />

Comment: De Wilde and Duyfjes (2004b) suggest that Zehneria mucronata (Blume)<br />

Miq., which is based on a Blume collection from Java (L) and widespread in Southeast<br />

Asia and Malesia, may be the same as Z. maysorensis, in which case it would<br />

be the older name.<br />

94. Zehneria thwaitesii (Schweinf.) C. Jeffrey, Kew Bull. 15: 371. 1962.<br />

Cucumella thwaitesii (Schweinf.) M.R. Almeida, Fl. Maharashtra 2: 314. 1998.<br />

Melothria thwaitesii Schweinf., Reliq. Kotschy. 44, t. 29. 1868.<br />

Lectotype: Sri Lanka, Thwaites CP 2581 (K, BM, P, W) designated by de Wilde and<br />

Duyfjes (2004b).<br />

Melothria zeylanica C.B. Clarke in Hook. f., Fl. Brit. Ind. 2: 626 (1879), nom. inval.<br />

Bryonia deltoidea Arn., Pugill.: 19 (1836), nom illeg., non Schumach., 1827 = Melothria<br />

deltoidea (Arn.) Thwaites, Enum.: 124 (1859) nom. illegit., non (Schumach.)<br />

Benth. 1849. = Neoachmandra deltoidea (Arn.) W.J.de Wilde & Duyfjes, Blumea<br />

51(1): 18 (79). 2006. Material: Sri Lanka, Walker 273 (K).<br />

Distribution in <strong>India</strong>: Kerala.<br />

Distribution outside <strong>India</strong>: Africa, Madagascar, Sri Lanka (Wilde and Duyfjes, 2006).<br />

Image: Nothing reliable found.<br />

GenBank: Unpublished sequences from Asian material <strong>of</strong> Neoachmandra deltoidea<br />

(EF065485) and African material <strong>of</strong> Zehneria thwaitesii (AM981145).<br />

Comment: C.B. Clarke (1879) applied the invalid name Melothria zeylanica to this species.<br />

De Wilde and Duyfjes (2006) treat Zehneria thwaitesii under Neoachmandra<br />

deltoidea. Molecular data are needed to clarify the genus boundaries <strong>of</strong> Zehneria.


<strong>The</strong> <strong>Cucurbitaceae</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>India</strong> 103<br />

Misapplied <strong>names</strong> and species erroneously or doubtfully recorded from <strong>India</strong>:<br />

Bryonia dioica Jacq.<br />

Comment: <strong>The</strong> distribution range given for B. dioica by Chakravarty (1982) “Afganistan,<br />

Iran, Iraq, Tropical Africa, Syria, Palestine” is based on an exceedingly broad<br />

concept <strong>of</strong> this species. A narrower circumscription (Jeffrey, 1969) is supported by<br />

nuclear and plastid molecular data (Volz and Renner, 2009). Bryonia dioica then<br />

occurs from Spain throughout Eurasia south to Algeria and Morocco, Sardinia,<br />

Corsica, and the Greek Peninsula and east to mid-Poland; a distribution map is<br />

shown in Volz and Renner (2009).<br />

Bryonia multiflora Boiss. & Heldr.<br />

Comment: Listed by Chakravarty (1982) based on misidentification <strong>of</strong> B. monoica (see<br />

under that species).<br />

Cayaponia laciniosa (L.) C. Jeffrey, Kew Bull. 15(3): 346. 1962.<br />

Bryonopsis laciniosa (L.) Naudin, Ann. Sci. Nat., Bot. sér. 5: 6. 1866.<br />

Bryonia laciniosa L., Sp. Pl. 2: 1013. 1753. Type: “Habitat in Zeylona.” (Country<br />

assignment in error). Lectotype: Cultivated in the Netherlands, Hartekamp in<br />

1736–1737, Herb. Clifford: 452, Bryonia 1 (BM-000647451), designated by Jeffrey<br />

(1962).<br />

Comment from M. Nee, New York Botanical Garden, pers. comm. to S. Renner in<br />

2010: In 1962, Jeffrey thought that C. laciniosa was the correct name for C. racemosa<br />

(Mill.) Cogn. By 1971, however, he decided that C. laciniosa was a local<br />

Jamaican endemic. <strong>The</strong> fullest description would be from Hort. Cliff. 452 based<br />

on living plants that Linnaeus saw; Linnaeus erroneously equated syntypes <strong>of</strong> this<br />

plant with literature <strong>of</strong> a different genus and species from Asia.<br />

Citrullus ecirrhosus Cogn., Verh. Bot. Vereins Prov. Brandenburg 30:151. 1888.<br />

Colocynthis ecirrhosus (Cogn.) Chakrav., Science & Culture 15: 32. 1949.<br />

This species is from Africa and not a synonym <strong>of</strong> Benincasa fistulosa.<br />

Hemsleya graciliflora (Harms) Cogn. in Engl. Pflanzenr. IV. 275, 1 (Heft 66): 24, f.<br />

7A–H. 1916.<br />

Alsomitra graciliflora Harms, Bot. Jahrb. Syst. 29(5): 602. 1901.<br />

Syntypes: China, W Wenchuan, Niangtzuling, BvR 3134, 3136, Hubei, Henry 4452,<br />

Sichuan, Wenchuan, Niangziling; von Rosthorn 3134, 3136 (B, destroyed in WWII)<br />

Comment: <strong>Accepted</strong> for <strong>India</strong> by Chakravarty (1982), while Jeffrey (1980) states<br />

that records for <strong>India</strong> are based on misidentifications <strong>of</strong> Gomphogyne macrocarpa<br />

(Hemsleya macrocarpa).


104<br />

Susanne S. Renner & Arun K. Pandey / PhytoKeys 20: 53–118 (2013)<br />

Hodgsonia macrocarpa (Blume) Cogn. in A. & C. DC., Monogr. Phan. 3: 349. 1881.<br />

Trichosanthes macrocarpa Blume, Bijdr. Fl. Ned. Ind. 15: 935. 1826.<br />

Type: Java, Mt. Salak, Blume s.n. (L).<br />

Trichosanthes listeri Chakrav., J. Bombay Nat. Hist. Soc. 50(4): 895, pl. 2. 1952.<br />

Type: Bangladesh [Bengal], Chittagong Hill Tracts, Burkul, March 4, 1876, Lister 349<br />

as to the flowers (CAL photo available from SSR). As Jeffrey (1982) noted, the<br />

type is a mixed collection, the flowers coming from Hodgsonia macrocarpa (now H.<br />

heteroclita), the shoot from Thladiantha cordifolia. Jeffrey designated the flowers as<br />

the lectotype.<br />

Comment: Hodgsonia has two species, H. macrocarpa in Java, and H. heteroclita in<br />

Northeast <strong>India</strong>, Bhutan, South China, Myanmar, Laos, Cambodia, Vietnam,<br />

Thailand, and Peninsular Malaysia. Jeffrey’s (1980) and Chakravarty’s (1982) listing<br />

<strong>of</strong> this name for <strong>India</strong> is based on a broader species concept, in which H. heteroclita<br />

was part <strong>of</strong> H. macrocarpa (De Wilde and Duyfjes, 2001).<br />

Trichosanthes thwaitesii Cogn. in A. & C. DC., Monogr. Phan. 3: 387. 1881, nom. illegit.<br />

Zanonia heterosperma Wall., Pl. Asiat. Rar. 2: 29. 1831.<br />

Gomphogyne heterosperma (Wall.) Kurz, J. Asiat. Soc. Bengal 46: 105. 1877.<br />

Alsomitra heterosperma (Wall.) M.Roem., Syn. Monogr. 2: 118. 1846.<br />

Hemsleya heterosperma (Wall.) C. Jeffrey, Kew Bull. 36: 739. 1982.<br />

Type: Myanmar (Burma), Ava, Mt. Taong Daong, Wallich 1038 (K-W 3728).<br />

Comment: Listed by Jeffrey (1982) as occurring in <strong>India</strong>, but according to De Wilde<br />

et al. (2007), the species is restricted to East Myanmar and Thailand.<br />

Zehneria perpusilla (Blume) Bole & M.R. Almeida, J. Bombay Nat. Hist. Soc. 79(2):<br />

315. 1983.<br />

Melothria perpusilla (Blume) Cogn. in A. & C. DC., Monogr. Phan. 3: 607. 1881.<br />

Cucurbita perpusilla Blume, Cat. Gew. Buitenzorg (Blume) 105. 1823.<br />

Lectotype: Java, Blume s.n. (L, barcode L0048312).<br />

Comment: According to De Wilde and Duyfjes (2006), this Javanese species does not<br />

occur in <strong>India</strong>.<br />

Zehneria wallichii (C.B. Clarke) C. Jeffrey, Kew Bull. 34(4): 802. 1980.<br />

Neoachmandra wallichii (C.B. Clarke) W. J.de Wilde & Duyfjes, Blumea 51(1): 32. 2006.<br />

Melothria wallichii C.B. Clarke, Fl. Brit. <strong>India</strong> 2: 626. 1879.<br />

Type: Myanmar, Pyay (formerly Prome), Wallich 6706D (K-W).<br />

This species, included in Jeffrey’s (1980) <strong>India</strong>n checklist, was collected in the center<br />

<strong>of</strong> Myanmar and appears not to occur in <strong>India</strong>. Chakravarty (1982) does not mention<br />

the name.


<strong>The</strong> <strong>Cucurbitaceae</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>India</strong> 105<br />

Acknowledgements<br />

We are grateful to Hanno Schaefer and Willem de Wilde for their reviews; Kanchi<br />

Ghandi, Hugo De Boer, and Hanno Schaefer for help with literature and discussions;<br />

Norbert Holstein for help with the figure; and Paramjit Singh, Director <strong>of</strong> the Botanical<br />

Survey <strong>of</strong> <strong>India</strong>, as wells as P. Venu, Scientist-in-Charge <strong>of</strong> the Central National<br />

Herbarium, for their help with images <strong>of</strong> CAL material. <strong>The</strong> <strong>India</strong>n and German National<br />

Science Academies supported this work under their Bilateral Exchange Programme<br />

(DFG/INSA RE 603/15-1). Grant support from DST, New Delhi to AKP<br />

(#SR/SO/PS/116/2010) is thankfully acknowledged.<br />

References<br />

Ali Khan A (2002) Actinostemma tenerum Griff., <strong>Cucurbitaceae</strong>, a new phytogeographic record<br />

from Aligarh, Uttar Pradesh. J. Bombay Nat. Hist. Soc. 99. (2): 365–366.<br />

Ali MA, Pandey AK, Lee J (2009) Taxonomic relationships among the genera <strong>of</strong> subfamily<br />

Cucurbitoideae (family <strong>Cucurbitaceae</strong>) from <strong>India</strong> inferred from ITS sequences <strong>of</strong> nuclear<br />

ribosomal DNA. Phytomorphology 59(3&4): 127–140.<br />

Bhandari MM, Singh D (1964) Dactyliandra (Hook.f.) Hook. F.: A cucurbitaceous genus new<br />

to the <strong>India</strong>n flora. Kew Bulletin 19(1): 133–138. doi: 10.2307/4108301<br />

Chakravarty HL (1946) Studies in <strong>India</strong>n <strong>Cucurbitaceae</strong> with special remarks on distribution<br />

and uses <strong>of</strong> economic species. <strong>India</strong>n Journal <strong>of</strong> Agricultural Science 16: 47–50.<br />

Chakravarty HL (1959) Monograph <strong>of</strong> <strong>India</strong>n <strong>Cucurbitaceae</strong> (taxonomy and distribution).<br />

Records <strong>of</strong> the Botanical Survey <strong>of</strong> <strong>India</strong> 17: 1–234.<br />

Chakravarty HL (1982) <strong>Cucurbitaceae</strong> in SK Jain (ed.) Fascicles <strong>of</strong> Flora <strong>of</strong> <strong>India</strong>, 11, Botanical<br />

Survey <strong>of</strong> <strong>India</strong>, Calcutta.<br />

Chopra RN, Nayar SC, Chopra IC (1956) Glossary <strong>of</strong> <strong>India</strong>n Medicinal Plants. Council <strong>of</strong><br />

scientific and industrial research, New Delhi, <strong>India</strong>.<br />

Clarke CB (1879) <strong>Cucurbitaceae</strong>. In J. D. Hooker, Flora <strong>of</strong> British <strong>India</strong> 2: 604–635.<br />

Dane F, Lang P (2004) Sequence variation at cpDNA regions <strong>of</strong> watermelon and related wild<br />

species: implications for the evolution <strong>of</strong> Citrullus haplotypes. American Journal <strong>of</strong> Botany<br />

91(11): 1922–1929. doi: 10.3732/ajb.91.11.1922<br />

De Boer HJ, Thulin M (2012) Synopsis <strong>of</strong> Trichosanthes (<strong>Cucurbitaceae</strong>) based on recent molecular<br />

phylogenetic data. PhytoKeys 12: 23–33. doi: 10.3897/phytokeys.12.2952<br />

De Boer HJ, Schaefer H, Thulin M, Renner SS (2012) Evolution and loss <strong>of</strong> long-fringed<br />

petals: A case study using a dated phylogeny <strong>of</strong> the snake gourds, Trichosanthes (<strong>Cucurbitaceae</strong>).<br />

BMC Evolutionary Biology 12: 108. doi: 10.1186/1471-2148-12-108<br />

Decker-Walters DS, Sang-Min Chung I, Staub JE (2004) Plastid sequence evolution: A new<br />

pattern <strong>of</strong> nucleotide substitutions in the <strong>Cucurbitaceae</strong>. Journal <strong>of</strong> Molecular Evolution<br />

58: 606–614. doi: 10.1007/s00239-004-2585-z<br />

De Wilde WJJO, Duyfjes BEE (2001) Taxonomy <strong>of</strong> Hodgsonia (<strong>Cucurbitaceae</strong>), with a note on<br />

the ovules and seeds. Blumea 46: 169–179.


106<br />

Susanne S. Renner & Arun K. Pandey / PhytoKeys 20: 53–118 (2013)<br />

De Wilde WJJO, Duyfjes BEE (2002) Synopsis <strong>of</strong> Momordica (<strong>Cucurbitaceae</strong>) in SE Asia and<br />

Malesia, Bot. Zhurna 87, 3: 142.<br />

De Wilde WJJO, Duyfjes BEE (2003) Revision <strong>of</strong> Neoalsomitra (<strong>Cucurbitaceae</strong>). Blumea 48:<br />

99–121.<br />

De Wilde WJJO, Duyfjes BEE (2004a) Kedrostis Medik. (<strong>Cucurbitaceae</strong>) in Asia. Reinwardtia<br />

12: 129–133.<br />

De Wilde WJJO, Duyfjes BEE (2004b) Zehneria (<strong>Cucurbitaceae</strong>) in Thailand, with a note on<br />

the <strong>India</strong>n Zehneria maysorensis. Thai Forest Bulletin, Botany 32: 15–31.<br />

De Wilde WJJO, Duyfjes BEE (2004c) Review <strong>of</strong> the genus Solena (Cucubritaceae). Blumea<br />

49: 69–81. doi: 10.3767/000651904X486197<br />

De Wilde WJJO, Duyfjes BEE (2006a) Mukia Arn. (<strong>Cucurbitaceae</strong>) in Asia, in particular in<br />

Thailand. Thai Forest Bulletin, Botany 34: 38–52.<br />

De Wilde WJJO, Duyfjes BEE (2006b) Redefinition <strong>of</strong> Zehneria and four new related genera<br />

(<strong>Cucurbitaceae</strong>), with an enumeration <strong>of</strong> the Australasian and Pacific species. Blumea 51:<br />

1–88. doi: 10.3767/000651906X622346<br />

De Wilde WJJO, Duyfjes BEE (2006c) Review <strong>of</strong> the genus Gymnopetalum (<strong>Cucurbitaceae</strong>)<br />

Blumea 51: 281–296. doi: 10.3767/000651906X622229<br />

De Wilde WJJO, Duyfjes BEE (2007a) Diversity in Zanonia indica (<strong>Cucurbitaceae</strong>). Blumea<br />

52: 281–290. doi: 10.3767/000651907X609016<br />

De Wilde WJJO, Duyfjes BEE (2007b) <strong>The</strong> wild species <strong>of</strong> Cucumis L. (<strong>Cucurbitaceae</strong>) in<br />

South-East Asia. Adansonia, sér. 3, 29: 239–248.<br />

De Wilde WJJO, Duyfjes BEE (2008a) <strong>Cucurbitaceae</strong>. Flora <strong>of</strong> Thailand 9, 4: 135 pp., 12<br />

plates. Niran Hetrakul, Prachachon Co. Ltd., Thailand.<br />

De Wilde WJJO, Duyfjes BEE (2010) <strong>Cucurbitaceae</strong> in Flora Malesiana, vol. 19. Leiden: Nationaal<br />

Herbarium Nederland.<br />

De Wilde WJJO, Duyfjes BEE (2008b) Miscellaneous South East Asian Cucurbit news. Reinwardtia<br />

12: 267–274.<br />

De Wilde WJJO, Duyfjes BEE, van der Ham RWJM (2007) Revision <strong>of</strong> the genus Gomphogyne<br />

(<strong>Cucurbitaceae</strong>). Thai Forest Bulletin, Botany 35: 45–68.<br />

Duyfjes BEE, Pruesapan K (2004) <strong>The</strong> genus Trichosanthes L. (<strong>Cucurbitaceae</strong>) in Thailand.<br />

Thai Forest Bulletin, Botany 32: 76–109.<br />

Garcia-Mas J and 34 coauthors (2012) <strong>The</strong> genome <strong>of</strong> melon (Cucumis melo L.). Proceedings<br />

<strong>of</strong> the National Academy <strong>of</strong> Science, USA 1009(29): 11872–11877.<br />

Holstein N (in press) Monograph <strong>of</strong> Coccinia (<strong>Cucurbitaceae</strong>). PhytoKeys<br />

Holstein N, Renner SS (2011) A dated phylogeny and collection records reveal repeated biome<br />

shifts in the African genus Coccinia (<strong>Cucurbitaceae</strong>). BMC Evolutionary Biology 11: 28.<br />

doi: 10.1186/1471-2148-11-28<br />

Huang S and 87 coauthors (2009) <strong>The</strong> genome <strong>of</strong> the cucumber, Cucumis sativus L. Nature<br />

Genetics 41: 1275–1281. doi: 10.1038/ng.475<br />

Jarvis C (2007) Order out <strong>of</strong> Chaos: Linnaean Plant Names and their Types. London: Linnean<br />

Society <strong>of</strong> London and the Natural History Museum, UK. Pp. 1016.<br />

Jeffrey C (1962) Notes on <strong>Cucurbitaceae</strong>, including a proposed new classification <strong>of</strong> the family.<br />

Kew Bulletin 15(3): 337–371. doi: 10.2307/4115586


<strong>The</strong> <strong>Cucurbitaceae</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>India</strong> 107<br />

Jeffrey C (1967) <strong>Cucurbitaceae</strong>. In: Milne-Redhead E, Polhill RM (Eds), Flora <strong>of</strong> Tropical East<br />

Africa.<br />

Jeffrey C (1969) A review <strong>of</strong> the genus Bryonia (<strong>Cucurbitaceae</strong>). Kew Bulletin 23: 441–461.<br />

doi: 10.2307/4117182<br />

Jeffrey C (1971) Further notes on <strong>Cucurbitaceae</strong>: II. <strong>The</strong> tribe Cucurbiteae. Kew Bulletin 25:<br />

191–236. doi: 10.2307/4103207<br />

Jeffrey C (1980) Further notes on <strong>Cucurbitaceae</strong>: V. <strong>The</strong> <strong>Cucurbitaceae</strong> <strong>of</strong> the <strong>India</strong>n subcontinent.<br />

Kew Bulletin 34: 789–809. doi: 10.2307/4119071<br />

Jeffrey C (1981) Further notes on <strong>Cucurbitaceae</strong>: VI. <strong>Cucurbitaceae</strong> <strong>of</strong> the <strong>India</strong>n subcontinent:<br />

corrigenda and addenda. Kew Bulletin 36: 737–740. doi: 10.2307/4117916<br />

Joseph JK, Antony VT (2010) A taxonomic revision <strong>of</strong> the genus Momordica L. (<strong>Cucurbitaceae</strong>)<br />

in <strong>India</strong>. <strong>India</strong>n Journal <strong>of</strong> Plant Genetic Resources 23(2): 172–184.<br />

Khatoon S (2006) Dactyliandra (Hook.f.) Hook.f. (<strong>Cucurbitaceae</strong>) - a new generic record from<br />

Pakistan. International Journal <strong>of</strong> Biology and Biotechnology 3: 819–820.<br />

Kattukunnel JJ. see Joseph John<br />

Kocyan A, Zhang LB, Schaefer H, Renner SS (2007) A multi-locus chloroplast phylogeny for<br />

the <strong>Cucurbitaceae</strong> and its implications for character evolution and classification. Molecular<br />

Phylogenetics and Evolution 44: 553–577. doi: 10.1016/j.ympev.2006.12.022<br />

Kumari A, Komal R, Rajesh R, Pandey AK (2009) In Vitro pollen germination, pollen tube<br />

growth and pollen viability in Trichosanthes dioica Roxb. (<strong>Cucurbitaceae</strong>). <strong>The</strong> International<br />

Journal <strong>of</strong> Plant Reproductive Biology 1(2): 147–151.<br />

Li DZ, Gao LM, Li HT, Wang H, Ge XJ, Liu JQ, Chen ZD, Zhou SL, Chen SL, Yang JB, Fu<br />

CX, Zeng CX, Yan HF, Zhu YJ, Sun YS, Chen SY, Zhao L, Wang K, Yang T, Duan GW<br />

(2011) Comparative analysis <strong>of</strong> a large dataset indicates that internal transcribed spacer<br />

(ITS) should be incorporated into the core barcode for seed plants. Proceedings <strong>of</strong> the National<br />

Academy <strong>of</strong> Science, USA 108 (49): 19641–19646. doi: 10.1073/pnas.1104551108<br />

Li HT, Yang JB, Li DZ, Moller M, Shah A (2010) A molecular phylogenetic study <strong>of</strong> Hemsleya<br />

(<strong>Cucurbitaceae</strong>) based on ITS, rpl16, trnH-psbA, and trnL DNA sequences. Plant Systematics<br />

and Evolution 285(1–2): 23–32. doi: 10.1007/s00606-009-0252-y<br />

Liao PC, Tsai CC, Chou CH, Chiang YC (2012) Introgression between cultivars and wild<br />

populations <strong>of</strong> Momordica charantia L. (<strong>Cucurbitaceae</strong>) in Taiwan. International Journal<br />

<strong>of</strong> Molecular Science 13(5): 6469–6491. doi: 10.3390/ijms13056469<br />

Lokesha R, Vasudeva R (2001) Differential influence <strong>of</strong> pollen and stylar genotypes on lifespan<br />

<strong>of</strong> pistillate flowers in a monoecious herb, Momordica tuberosa (Cogn.) Roxb. (<strong>Cucurbitaceae</strong>).<br />

Current Science 81: 1628–1633.<br />

Lu A, Huang L, Chen SK, Jeffrey C (2011) <strong>Cucurbitaceae</strong>. In: Wu ZY, Raven PH, Hong DY<br />

(Eds) Flora <strong>of</strong> China. Vol. 19. Missouri Botanical Garden Press, St. Louis.<br />

Nadkarni KM, Nadkarni AK (1976) Dr. K.M. Nadkarni’s <strong>India</strong>n materia medica with Ayurvedic,<br />

Unani-tibbi, Siddha, allopathic, homeopathic, naturopathic & home remedies, appendices<br />

& indexes 1. Popular Prakasham, Mumbai, LXXII, 1319 pp.<br />

Naithani HB (1990) Flowering plants <strong>of</strong> <strong>India</strong>, Nepal & Bhutan (not recorded in Sir J.D.<br />

Hooker’s Flora <strong>of</strong> British <strong>India</strong>). 711 pp. Dehra Dun (Surya Publications).


108<br />

Susanne S. Renner & Arun K. Pandey / PhytoKeys 20: 53–118 (2013)<br />

Nicolson DH, Fosberg FR (2003) <strong>The</strong> Forsters and the botany <strong>of</strong> the Second Cook Expedition<br />

International Association for Plant Taxonomy. 760 pages.<br />

Nicolson DH, Suresh CR, Manilal KS (1988) An interpretation <strong>of</strong> Van Rheede’s Hortus malabaricus.<br />

Regnum Vegetabile 119.<br />

Pandey AK, Anupama J, Pujari MM (1997) Floral biology <strong>of</strong> Trichosanthes dioica Roxb. (<strong>Cucurbitaceae</strong>).<br />

In: Khan IA (Ed) Frontiers in Plant Science, pp. 937–945. <strong>The</strong> Book Syndicate,<br />

Hyderabad, <strong>India</strong>.<br />

Pandey AK, Jha A, Komal R (2003) Development <strong>of</strong> female gametophyte and seed in Trichosanthes<br />

dioica Roxb. (<strong>Cucurbitaceae</strong>). In: Pandey AK, Dhakal MR (Eds) Advances in Plant<br />

Reproductive Biology. Vol. II, pp. 141–150. Narendra Publishing House, Delhi, <strong>India</strong>.<br />

Pandey AK, Varma SK, Ali MA (2006) <strong>The</strong> genus Luffa in <strong>India</strong>: Diversity and conservation.<br />

In: Trivedi PC (Ed), Global Biodiversity: Status and Conservation, pp. 260–270. Pointer<br />

Publishers, Jaipur, <strong>India</strong>.<br />

Parvathi S, Kumar VJF (2002) Studies on chemical composition and utilization <strong>of</strong> the wild<br />

edible vegetable athalakkai (Momordica tuberosa). Plant Foods for Human Nutrition 57<br />

(3/4): 215–222. doi: 10.1023/A:1021884406024<br />

Ramachandran K, Subramaniam B (1983) Scarlet gourd, Coccinia grandis, little-known tropical<br />

drug plant. Economic Botany 37: 380–383. DOI: 10.1007/BF02904197<br />

Rasingam L (2012) Trichosanthes quinquangulata (<strong>Cucurbitaceae</strong>) - a new record for <strong>India</strong> from<br />

Andaman Islands. Rheedea 22(1): 9–10.<br />

Renner SS, Schaefer H, Kocyan A (2007) Phylogenetics <strong>of</strong> Cucumis (<strong>Cucurbitaceae</strong>): Cucumber<br />

(C. sativus) belongs in an Asian/Australian clade far from melon (C. melo). BMC Evolutionary<br />

Biology 2007, 7: 58. doi: 10.1186/1471-2148-7-58<br />

Sanjur OI, Piperno DR, Andres TC, Wessel-Beaver L (2002) Phylogenetic relationships among<br />

domesticated and wild species <strong>of</strong> Cucurbita (<strong>Cucurbitaceae</strong>) inferred from a mitochondrial<br />

gene: Implications for crop plant evolution and areas <strong>of</strong> origin. Proceedings <strong>of</strong> the National<br />

Academy <strong>of</strong> Science, USA 99: 535–540. doi: 10.1073/pnas.012577299<br />

Schaefer H, Renner SS (2010) A three-genome phylogeny <strong>of</strong> Momordica (<strong>Cucurbitaceae</strong>) suggests<br />

seven returns from dioecy to monoecy and recent long-distance dispersal to Asia. Molecular<br />

Phylogenetics and Evolution 54(2): 553–560. doi: 10.1016/j.ympev.2009.08.006<br />

Schaefer H, Renner SS (2011a) <strong>Cucurbitaceae</strong>. In: Kubitzki K (Ed), Families and Genera <strong>of</strong><br />

Flowering Plants. Vol. 10, pp. 112–174. Springer Verlag, Berlin, Germany.<br />

Schaefer H, Renner SS (2011b) Phylogenetic relationships in the order Cucurbitales and a new<br />

classification <strong>of</strong> the gourd family (<strong>Cucurbitaceae</strong>). Taxon 60(1): 122–138.<br />

Schaefer H, Heibl C, Renner SS (2009) Gourds afloat: A dated phylogeny reveals an Asian origin<br />

<strong>of</strong> the gourd family (<strong>Cucurbitaceae</strong>) and numerous oversea dispersal events. Proceedings<br />

<strong>of</strong> the Royal Society B, 276: 843–851. doi: 10.1098/rspb.2008.1447<br />

Schaefer H, Kocyan A, Renner SS (2008) Linnaeosicyos (<strong>Cucurbitaceae</strong>): a new genus for Trichosanthes<br />

amara, the Caribbean sister species <strong>of</strong> all Sicyoeae. Systematic Botany 33(2):<br />

349–355. doi: 10.1600/036364408784571707<br />

Sebastian PM, Schaefer H, Telford IRH, Renner SS (2010) Cucumber and melon have their<br />

wild progenitors in <strong>India</strong>, and the sister species <strong>of</strong> Cucumis melo is from Australia. Proceed-


<strong>The</strong> <strong>Cucurbitaceae</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>India</strong> 109<br />

ings <strong>of</strong> the National Academy <strong>of</strong> Science, USA 107(32): 14269–14273. doi: 10.1073/<br />

pnas.1005338107<br />

Telford IRH, Schaefer H, Greuter W, Renner SS (2011) A new Australian species <strong>of</strong> Luffa<br />

(<strong>Cucurbitaceae</strong>) and typification <strong>of</strong> two Australian Cucumis <strong>names</strong>, all based on specimens<br />

collected by Ferdinand Mueller in 1856. PhytoKeys 5: 21–29. doi: 10.3897/phytokeys.5.1395<br />

Volz SM, Renner SS (2009) Phylogeography <strong>of</strong> the ancient Eurasian medicinal plant genus<br />

Bryonia (<strong>Cucurbitaceae</strong>) inferred from nuclear and chloroplast sequences. Taxon 58(2):<br />

550–560.<br />

Wasylikowa K, van der Veen M (2004) An archaeobotanical contribution to the history <strong>of</strong> watermelon,<br />

Citrullus lanatus (Thunb.) Matsum. & Nakai (syn. C. vulgaris Schrad.). Vegetation<br />

History and Archaeobotany 13: 213–217. doi: 10.1007/s00334-004-0039-6<br />

Appendix<br />

Names treated in this checklist<br />

<strong>Accepted</strong> <strong>names</strong> for species occurring in <strong>India</strong> are set in bold, species only mentioned<br />

in comments are shown in non-bold, and synonymized <strong>names</strong> in italics.<br />

Actinostemma tenerum Griff.<br />

Aechmandra conocarpa Dalzell & A.Gibson<br />

Aechmandra epigaea (Rottler) Arn.<br />

Aechmandra indica (Lour.) Arn.<br />

Aechmandra rostrata (Rottler) Arn.<br />

Aechmandra velutina Dalzell & A.Gibson<br />

Aechmandra zeylanica Thwaites<br />

Alsomitra clavigera (Wall.) M.Roem., nom. nud.<br />

Alsomitra graciliflora Harms<br />

Alsomitra heterosperma (Wall.) M.Roem.<br />

Alsomitra integrifoliola (Cogniaux) Hayata<br />

Alsomitra pubigera Prain<br />

Benincasa cerifera Savi<br />

Benincasa fistulosa (Stocks) H. Schaef. & S.S. Renner<br />

Benincasa hispida (Thunb.) Cogn.<br />

Benincasa pruriens (Parkinson) W.J.de Wilde & Duyfjes L. forma hispida (Thunb.)<br />

W.J.deWilde & Duyfjes<br />

Biswarea tonglensis (C.B. Clarke) Cogn.<br />

Blastania cerasiformis (Stocks) A. Meeuse<br />

Blastania fimbristipula Kotschy & Peyr.<br />

Blastania garcinii (Burm.f.) Cogn.<br />

Bryonia alceifolia Willd.


110<br />

Susanne S. Renner & Arun K. Pandey / PhytoKeys 20: 53–118 (2013)<br />

Bryonia amplexicaulis Lam.<br />

Bryonia aspera Steven ex Ledeb.<br />

Bryonia callosa Rottler<br />

Bryonia cochinchinensis Lour.<br />

Bryonia cordifolia L.<br />

Bryonia cucumeroides Ser.<br />

Bryonia deltoidea Arn., nom. illeg.<br />

Bryonia dioica Jacq.<br />

Bryonia epigaea Rottler<br />

Bryonia fimbristipula Fenzl ex Stocks, nom. inval.<br />

Bryonia garcinii (Burm.f.) Willd.<br />

Bryonia grandis L.<br />

Bryonia hookeriana Wight & Arn.<br />

Bryonia japonica Thunb.<br />

Bryonia laciniosa L.<br />

Bryonia leiosperma Wight & Arn.<br />

Bryonia leucocarpa Blume<br />

Bryonia maysorensis Wight & Arn.<br />

Bryonia monoica Aitch. & Hemsl.<br />

Bryonia multiflora Boiss. & Heldr.<br />

Bryonia napaulensis Ser.<br />

Bryonia palmata L.<br />

Bryonia pedunculosa Ser.<br />

Bryonia rheedei Blume<br />

Bryonia rostrata Willd.<br />

Bryonia sagittata Blume<br />

Bryonia scabrella L.f.<br />

Bryonia tubiflora Wight & Arn.<br />

Bryonia umbellata Willd.<br />

Bryonopsis bennettii Miq.<br />

Bryonopsis courtallensis Arn.<br />

Bryonopsis laciniosa (L.) Naudin<br />

Bryonopsis laciniosa (L.) Naudin var. walkeri Chakrav.<br />

Cayaponia laciniosa (L.) C. Jeffrey<br />

Cephalandra indica Naudin var. palmata C.B. Clarke, nom. superfl.<br />

Cerasiocarpum bennettii (Miq.) Cogn.<br />

Cerasiocarpum zeylanicum (Thwaites) C.B. Clarke<br />

Citrullus colocynthis (L.) Schrad.<br />

Citrullus fistulosus Stocks<br />

Citrullus vulgaris Schrad. ex Eckl. & Zeyh. var. fistulosus (Stocks) J. L. Stewart<br />

Citrullus lanatus (Thunb.) Matsum. & Nakai<br />

Citrullus lanatus (Thunb.) Matsum. & Nakai var. fistulosus (Steward) Babu, nom. inval.<br />

Citrullus lanatus (Thunb.) Matsum. & Nakai var. fistulosus (Stocks) Chakrav., nom. illeg.


<strong>The</strong> <strong>Cucurbitaceae</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>India</strong> 111<br />

Citrullus vulgaris Schrad. ex Eckl. & Zeyh.<br />

Coccinia cordifolia (L.) Cogn.<br />

Coccinia cordifolia (L.) Cogn. var. wightiana (M.Roem.) Cogn.<br />

Coccinia grandis (L.) Voigt<br />

Coccinia grandis (L.) Voigt var. wightiana (M.Roem.) Greb.<br />

Coccinia indica Wight & Arn., nom. superfl., nom. illeg.<br />

Coccinia palmata M.Roem.<br />

Coccinia wightiana M.Roem.<br />

Colocynthis citrullus (L.) Kuntze var. fistulosus (Stocks) Chakrav.<br />

Colocynthis ecirrhosus (Cogn.) Chakrav.<br />

Colocynthis vulgaris Schrad.<br />

Corallocarpus conocarpus (Dalzell & A.Gibson) Hook.f. ex C.B. Clarke<br />

Corallocarpus courbonii (Naudin) Cogn.<br />

Corallocarpus epigaeus (Rottler) Benth. & Hook.f. ex C.B. Clarke<br />

Corallocarpus gracilipes (Naudin) Cogn.<br />

Corallocarpus palmatus Cogn.<br />

Corallocarpus schimperi (Naudin) Hook.f.<br />

Corallocarpus velutinus (Dalzell & A.Gibson) Hook.f. ex C.B. Clarke<br />

Ctenolepis cerasiformis (Stocks) Hook.f.,<br />

Ctenolepis garcinii (Burm.f.) Benth. & Hook.f.<br />

Ctenolepis welwitschii (Hook.f.) Jafri<br />

Cucumella ritchiei (Chakrav.) C. Jeffrey<br />

Cucumella silentvalleyi Manilal, T. Sabu & P. J. Mathew<br />

Cucumella thwaitesii (Schweinf.) M.R. Almeida<br />

Cucumis acutangulus L.<br />

Cucumis anguinus L.<br />

Cucumis callosus (Rottler) Cogn.<br />

Cucumis colocynthis L.<br />

Cucumis hardwickii Royle<br />

Cucumis hystrix Chakrav.<br />

Cucumis indicus Ghebretinsae & Thulin<br />

Cucumis integrifolius Roxb.<br />

Cucumis javanicus (Miq.) Ghebretinsae & Thulin<br />

Cucumis leiospermus (Wight & Arn.) Ghebretinsae & Thulin<br />

Cucumis maderaspatanus L.<br />

Cucumis melo L.<br />

Cucumis melo L. forma agrestis (Naudin) W.J.de Wilde & Duyfjes<br />

Cucumis melo L. subsp. agrestis (Naudin) Pangalo<br />

Cucumis melo L. var. agrestis Naudin<br />

Cucumis melo L. var. culta Kurz<br />

Cucumis melo L. var. momordica Duthie & Fullar<br />

Cucumis melo L. var. pubescens (Willd.) Kurz<br />

Cucumis melo L. var. utilissima Duthie & Fullar


112<br />

Susanne S. Renner & Arun K. Pandey / PhytoKeys 20: 53–118 (2013)<br />

Cucumis momordica Roxb.<br />

Cucumis muriculatus Chakrav.<br />

Cucumis prophetarum L.<br />

Cucumis pubescens Willd.<br />

Cucumis ritchiei (C.B. Clarke) Ghebretinsae & Thulin<br />

Cucumis sativus L.<br />

Cucumis sativus L. forma hardwickii (Royle) W.J.de Wilde & Duyfjes<br />

Cucumis sativus L. var. sikkimensis Hook.f.<br />

Cucumis setosus Cogn.<br />

Cucumis silentvalleyi (Manilal, T. Sabu & P.J. Mathew) Ghebretinsae & Thulin<br />

Cucumis trigonus Roxb.<br />

Cucurbita argyrosperma C.Huber<br />

Cucurbita citrullus L.<br />

Cucurbita ficifolia Bouché<br />

Cucurbita hispida Thunb.<br />

Cucurbita lagenaria L.<br />

Cucurbita maxima Duchesne<br />

Cucurbita maxima Duchesne var. badagarensis Mudaliar<br />

Cucurbita mixta Pangalo<br />

Cucurbita moschata (Duchesne ex Lam.) Duchesne<br />

Cucurbita pepo L.<br />

Cucurbita pepo L. var. melopepo Alef.<br />

Cucurbita pepo L. var. moschata Duchesne ex Lam.<br />

Cucurbita pepo L. var. ovigera Alef.<br />

Cucurbita perpusilla Blume<br />

Cucurbita siceraria Molina<br />

Cucurbita umbellata Willd.<br />

Cyclanthera pedata (L.) Schrad.<br />

Dactyliandra welwitschii Hook.f.<br />

Dicaelospermum ritchiei C.B. Clarke<br />

Diplocyclos palmatus (L.) C. Jeffrey<br />

Diplocyclos palmatus (L.) C. Jeffrey var. walkeri (Chakrav.) Babu<br />

Edgaria darjeelingensis C.B. Clarke<br />

Edgaria darjeelingensis C.B. Clarke var. clarkeana S. N. Biswas<br />

Euonymus chinensis Lour.<br />

Gomphogyne cirromitrata W.J.de Wilde & Duyfjes<br />

Gomphogyne cissiformis Griff.<br />

Gomphogyne cissiformis Griff. forma villosa (Cogn.) Mizush.<br />

Gomphogyne cissiformis Griff. var. villosa Cogn.<br />

Gomphogyne heterosperma (Wall.) Kurz<br />

Gomphogyne macrocarpa Cogn.<br />

Gomphogyne nepalensis W.J.de Wilde & Duyfjes<br />

Gymnopetalum chinense (Lour.) Merr.


<strong>The</strong> <strong>Cucurbitaceae</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>India</strong> 113<br />

Gymnopetalum cochinchinense (Lour.) Kurz<br />

Gymnopetalum heterophyllum Kurz<br />

Gymnopetalum integrifolium (Roxb.) Kurz<br />

Gymnopetalum integrifolium (Roxb.) Kurz var. pectinatum W.J.de Wilde & Duyfjes<br />

Gymnopetalum penicaudii Gagnep.<br />

Gymnopetalum quinquelobum Miq.<br />

Gymnopetalum scabrum (Lour.) W.J.de Wilde & Duyfjes<br />

Gymnopetalum scabrum (Lour.) W.J.de Wilde & Duyfjes var. pectinatum (W.J. de Wilde<br />

& Duyfjes) W.J.de Wilde & Duyfjes<br />

Gymnopetalum scabrum (Lour.) W.J.de Wilde & Duyfjes var. penicaudii (Gagnep.)<br />

W.J.de Wilde & Duyfjes<br />

Gymnopetalum tubiflorum (Wight & Arn.) Cogn.<br />

Gymnopetalum wightii Arn.<br />

Gynostemma integrifoliolum Cogn.<br />

Gynostemma laxum (Wall.) Cogn.<br />

Gynostemma pedatum Blume<br />

Gynostemma pentaphyllum (Thunb.) Makino<br />

Gynostemma pentaphyllum (Thunb.) Makino forma simplicifolium (Blume) W.J.de<br />

Wilde & Duyfjes<br />

Gynostemma simplicifolium Blume<br />

Hemsleya cirromitrata (W.J.de Wilde & Duyfjes) H. Schaef. & S.S.Renner<br />

Hemsleya graciliflora (Harms) Cogn.<br />

Hemsleya heterosperma (Wall.) C. Jeffrey<br />

Hemsleya macrocarpa (Cogn.) C. Y. Wu ex C. Jeffrey<br />

Hemsleya trifoliolata Cogn.<br />

Herpetospermum caudigerum Wall. ex C.B. Clarke, nom. illeg.<br />

Herpetospermum darjeelingense (C.B. Clarke) H.Schaef. & S.S.Renner<br />

Herpetospermum pedunculosum (Ser.) Baill.<br />

Herpetospermum tonglense (C.B. Clarke) H. Schaef. & S.S. Renner<br />

Hodgsonia heteroclita (Roxb.) Hook.f. & Thomson<br />

Hodgsonia macrocarpa (Blume) Cogn.<br />

Ind<strong>of</strong>evillea khasiana Chatterjee<br />

Involucraria lepiniana Naudin<br />

Involucraria wallichiana Ser.<br />

Karivia amplexicaulis (Lam.) Arn.<br />

Karivia javanica Miq.<br />

Karivia rheedei (Blume) M.Roem.<br />

Karivia umbellata (Willd.) Arn.<br />

Kedrostis bennettii (Miq.) W.J.de Wilde & Duyfjes<br />

Kedrostis courtallensis (Arn.) C. Jeffrey<br />

Kedrostis foetidissima (Jacq.) Cogn.<br />

Kedrostis rostrata (Willd.) Cogn.<br />

Lagenaria siceraria (Molina) Standl.


114<br />

Susanne S. Renner & Arun K. Pandey / PhytoKeys 20: 53–118 (2013)<br />

Luffa acutangula (L.) Roxb.<br />

Luffa acutangula (L.) Roxb. var. amara (Roxb.) C.B. Clarke<br />

Luffa acutangula (L.) Roxb. forma amara (Roxb.) W.J.de Wilde & Duyfjes<br />

Luffa aegyptiaca Mill.<br />

Luffa aegyptiaca Mill. forma sylvestris (Miq.) W.J.de Wilde & Duyfjes<br />

Luffa amara Roxb.<br />

Luffa cordifolia Blume<br />

Luffa cylindrica (L.) M.Roem.<br />

Luffa cylindrica (L.) M.Roem. var. minor Chakrav., nom. nud.<br />

Luffa echinata Roxb.<br />

Luffa echinata Roxb. var. longistyla C.B. Clarke<br />

Luffa graveolens Roxb.<br />

Luffa hermaphrodita Singh & Bhandari<br />

Luffa kleinii Wight & Arn.<br />

Luffa sylvestris Miq.<br />

Luffa tuberosa Roxb.<br />

Luffa umbellata (Willd.) M.Roem.<br />

Melothria amplexicaulis (Lam.) Cogn.<br />

Melothria angulata Chakrav.<br />

Melothria assamica Chakrav.<br />

Melothria assamica Chakrav. var. scabra Chakrav.<br />

Melothria bicirrhosa C.B. Clarke<br />

Melothria bodinieri H. Lév.<br />

Melothria deltoidea (Arn.) Thwaites, nom. illeg.<br />

Melothria fimbristipula (Kotschy & Peyr.) G. Roberty<br />

Melothria heterophylla (Lour.) Cogn.<br />

Melothria indica Lour.<br />

Melothria japonica (Thunb.) Cogn.<br />

Melothria javanica (Miq.) Panigrahi & Misra<br />

Melothria javanica (Miq.) Panigrahi & Misra var. scabra (Chakrav.) Naithani<br />

Melothria leiosperma (Wight & Arn.) Cogn.<br />

Melothria leucocarpa (Blume) Cogn.<br />

Melothria leucocarpa (Blume) Cogn. var. triloba (C.B. Clarke) Chakrav.<br />

Melothria maderaspatana (L.) Cogn.<br />

Melothria mucronata (Blume) Cogn. var. umbellata Chakrav.<br />

Melothria odorata C.B. Clarke<br />

Melothria odorata C.B. Clarke var. triloba C.B. Clarke<br />

Melothria ovata Cogn.<br />

Melothria perpusilla (Blume) Cogn.<br />

Melothria perpusilla (Blume) Cogn. var. subtruncata Cogn.<br />

Melothria ritchiei Chakrav.<br />

Melothria thwaitesii Schweinf.<br />

Melothria wallichii C.B. Clarke


<strong>The</strong> <strong>Cucurbitaceae</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>India</strong> 115<br />

Melothria zehnerioides Haines<br />

Melothria zeylanica Koen. ex Wight & Arn., nom. inval.<br />

Modecca bracteata Lam.<br />

Momordica balsamina L.<br />

Momordica calcarata Colebr. ex Wall., nom. nud.<br />

Momordica charantia L.<br />

Momordica charantia L. var. muricata (Willd.) Chakrav.<br />

Momordica cochinchinensis (Lour.) Spreng.<br />

Momordica cylindrica L.<br />

Momordica cymbalaria Fenzl ex Naudin<br />

Momordica denudata (Thwaites) C.B. Clarke<br />

Momordica dioica Roxb. ex Willd.<br />

Momordica dioica Roxb. ex Willd. var. denudata Thwaites<br />

Momordica lanata Thunb.<br />

Momordica macrophylla Gage<br />

Momordica muricata Willd.<br />

Momordica pedata L.<br />

Momordica renigera Wall. ex G. Don<br />

Momordica sahyadrica Kattuk. & V.T.Antony<br />

Momordica subangulata Blume<br />

Momordica subangulata Blume subsp. renigera (Wall. ex G. Don) W.J.de Wilde<br />

Momordica tuberosa (Roxb.) Cogn.<br />

Momordica tubiflora Roxb.<br />

Momordica umbellata (Willd.) Roxb.<br />

Mukia javanica (Miq.) C. Jeffrey<br />

Mukia leiosperma (Wight & Arn.) Arn.<br />

Mukia maderaspatana (L.) M.Roem.<br />

Mukia ritchiei (C.B. Clarke) W.J.de Wilde & Duyfjes<br />

Mukia scabrella (L.f.) Arn.<br />

Muricia cochinchinensis Lour.<br />

Neoachmandra deltoidea (Arn.) W.J.de Wilde & Duyfjes<br />

Neoachmandra indica (Lour.) W.J.de Wilde & Duyfjes<br />

Neoachmandra japonica (Thunb.) W.J.de Wilde & Duyfjes<br />

Neoachmandra leucocarpa (Blume) W.J.de Wilde & Duyfjes<br />

Neoachmandra odorata (C.B. Clarke) W.J.de Wilde & Duyfjes<br />

Neoachmandra wallichii (C.B. Clarke) W.J.de Wilde & Duyfjes<br />

Neoalsomitra clavigera (Wall.) Hutch.<br />

Neoalsomitra clavigera (Wall.) Hutch. var. hookeri (C.B. Clarke) Chakrav.<br />

Neoalsomitra integrifoliola (Cogniaux) Hutchinson<br />

Neoluffa sikkimensis Chakrav.<br />

Pilogyne bodinieri (H. Lév.) W.J.de Wilde & Duyfjes<br />

Pilogyne maysorensis (Wight & Arn.) W.J.de Wilde & Duyfjes<br />

Praecitrullus fistulosus (Stocks) Pangalo


116<br />

Susanne S. Renner & Arun K. Pandey / PhytoKeys 20: 53–118 (2013)<br />

Rhynchocarpa epigaea (Rottler) Naudin<br />

Rhynchocarpa epigaea (Rottler) Naudin var. gracilipes Naudin<br />

Rhynchocarpa schimperi Naudin<br />

Rynchocarpa rostrata (Rottler) Naudin<br />

Schizopepon bicirrhosus (C.B. Clarke) C. Jeffrey<br />

Schizopepon longipes Gagnep.<br />

Schizopepon macranthus Handel-Mazzetti<br />

Schizopepon wardii Chakrav.<br />

Scotanthus tubiflorus (Roxb.) Naudin<br />

Sechium americanum Poir.<br />

Sechium edule (Jacq.) Sw.<br />

Siraitia sikkimensis (Chakrav.) C. Jeffrey<br />

Sicyos edulis Jacq.<br />

Sicyos garcinii Burm.f.<br />

Solena amplexicaulis (Lam.) Gandhi<br />

Solena angulata (Chakrav.) Babu<br />

Solena heterophylla Lour. subsp. heterophylla<br />

Solena heterophylla Lour. subsp. napaulensis (Ser.) W.J.de Wilde &Duyfjes<br />

Solena umbellata (Willd.) W.J. de Wilde & Duyfjes<br />

Thladiantha calcarata C.B. Clarke var. subglabra Cogn.<br />

Thladiantha calcarata C.B. Clarke, nom. nud.<br />

Thladiantha cordifolia (Blume) Cogn.<br />

Thladiantha heptadactyla Cogn.<br />

Thladiantha hookeri C.B. Clarke<br />

Thladiantha hookeri C.B. Clarke var. irregularis Chakrav.<br />

Thladiantha hookeri C.B. Clarke var. palmatifolia Chakrav.<br />

Thladiantha hookeri C.B. Clarke forma trifoliolata (Cogn.) Chakrav.<br />

Thladiantha pentadactyla Cogn.<br />

Trichosanthes anguina L.<br />

Trichosanthes anaimalaiensis Bedd.<br />

Trichosanthes bracteata (Lam.) Voigt<br />

Trichosanthes bracteata (Lam.) Voigt var. scotanthus (C.B. Clarke) Handel-Mazzetti<br />

Trichosanthes bracteata (Lam.) Voigt var. tomentosa (C.B. Clarke) Chakrav., nom. illeg.<br />

Trichosanthes brevibracteata Kundu<br />

Trichosanthes brevibracteata Kundu var. longirostrata Kundu<br />

Trichosanthes brevibracteata Kundu var. sublobata Kundu<br />

Trichosanthes burmensis Kundu<br />

Trichosanthes burmensis Kundu var. alba Kundu<br />

Trichosanthes chinensis Ser.<br />

Trichosanthes cordata Roxb.<br />

Trichosanthes costata Bl.<br />

Trichosanthes cucumerina L.<br />

Trichosanthes cucumeroides (Ser.) Maxim.


<strong>The</strong> <strong>Cucurbitaceae</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>India</strong> 117<br />

Trichosanthes cucumeroides (Ser.) Maxim. var. dicaelosperma (C.B. Clarke) S. K. Chen<br />

Trichosanthes cuspidata Lam.<br />

Trichosanthes dicaelosperma C.B. Clarke<br />

Trichosanthes dioica Roxb.<br />

Trichosanthes dioica Roxb. var. sagittifolia Chakrav.<br />

Trichosanthes dunniana H. Lév.<br />

Trichosanthes foetidissima Jacq.<br />

Trichosanthes heteroclita Roxb.<br />

Trichosanthes himalensis C.B. Clarke<br />

Trichosanthes himalensis C.B. Clarke var. glabrior C.B. Clarke<br />

Trichosanthes himalensis C.B. Clarke var. himalensis<br />

Trichosanthes himalensis C.B. Clarke var. indivisa Chakrav., nom. illeg.<br />

Trichosanthes himalensis C.B. Clarke var. sikkimensis (Kundu) Thoth.<br />

Trichosanthes horsfieldii Miq.<br />

Trichosanthes integrifolia (Roxb.) Kurz<br />

Trichosanthes kerrii Craib<br />

Trichosanthes khasiana Kundu<br />

Trichosanthes lepiniana (Naudin) Cogn.<br />

Trichosanthes listeri Chakrav.<br />

Trichosanthes lobata Roxb.<br />

Trichosanthes macrocarpa Blume<br />

Trichosanthes macrosiphon Kurz<br />

Trichosanthes majuscula (C.B. Clarke) Kundu<br />

Trichosanthes multiloba Miq. var. majuscula C.B. Clarke<br />

Trichosanthes nervifolia L.<br />

Trichosanthes ovata Cogn.<br />

Trichosanthes ovigera Blume<br />

Trichosanthes ovigera Blume var. sikkimensis Kundu<br />

Trichosanthes ovigera Blume subsp. cucumeroides (Ser.) C. Jeffrey<br />

Trichosanthes pachyrrhachis Kundu<br />

Trichosanthes palmata L. var. scotanthus C.B. Clarke, nom. nud.<br />

Trichosanthes palmata L. var. tomentosa Heyne ex C.B. Clarke<br />

Trichosanthes palmata Roxb., nom. illeg.<br />

Trichosanthes perrottetiana Cogn.<br />

Trichosanthes pilosa Lour.<br />

Trichosanthes prazeri Kundu<br />

Trichosanthes pubera Blume subsp. rubriflos (Thorel ex Cayla) Duyfjes & Pruesapan<br />

Trichosanthes quinquangulata A. Gray<br />

Trichosanthes rubriflos Thorel ex Cayla<br />

Trichosanthes scabra Lour.<br />

Trichosanthes scabra Lour. var. pectinata (W.J.de Wilde & Duyfjes) H.J.De Boer<br />

Trichosanthes scabra Lour. var. penicaudii (Gagnep.) H.J.De Boer<br />

Trichosanthes thwaitesii Cogn.


118<br />

Susanne S. Renner & Arun K. Pandey / PhytoKeys 20: 53–118 (2013)<br />

Trichosanthes tomentosa Chakrav.<br />

Trichosanthes tricuspidata Lour.<br />

Trichosanthes tricuspidata Lour. var. strigosa Mitra & Bandyop.<br />

Trichosanthes truncata C.B. Clarke<br />

Trichosanthes tubiflora (Wight & Arn.) H.J.De Boer<br />

Trichosanthes villosula Cogn.<br />

Trichosanthes villosula Cogn. var. nilgirrensis Kundu<br />

Trichosanthes wallichiana (Ser.) Wight<br />

Trichosanthes wallichiana (Ser.) Wight var. majuscula (C.B. Clarke) Cogn.<br />

Tripodanthera cochinchinensis (Lour.) M.Roem.<br />

Vitis pentaphylla Thunb.<br />

Warea tonglensis C.B. Clarke<br />

Zanonia clavigera Wall.<br />

Zanonia heterosperma Wall.<br />

Zanonia indica L.<br />

Zanonia indica L. var. pubescens Cogn.<br />

Zanonia laxa Wall.<br />

Zehneria angulata (Chakrav.) J. L. Ellis<br />

Zehneria bodinieri (H. Lév.) W.J.de Wilde & Duyfjes<br />

Zehneria cerasiformis Stocks<br />

Zehneria hookeriana (Wight & Arn.) Arn.<br />

Zehneria indica (Lour.) Keraudren-Aymonin<br />

Zehneria japonica (Thunb.) H.Y. Liu<br />

Zehneria maysorensis (Wight & Arn.) Arn.<br />

Zehneria maysorensis (Wight & Arn.) Arn. var. oblonga V.P.Prasad & M.Prasad<br />

Zehneria maysorensis (Wight & Arn.) Arn. var. umbellata (Chakrav.) Kumari<br />

Zehneria mucronata (Blume) Miq.<br />

Zehneria perpusilla (Blume) Bole & M.R. Almeida<br />

Zehneria thwaitesii (Schweinf.) C. Jeffrey<br />

Zehneria umbellata (Klein ex Willd.) Thwaites<br />

Zehneria umbellata (Klein ex Willd.) Thwaites var. napaulensis (Ser.) C.B. Clarke<br />

Zehneria wallichii (C.B. Clarke) C. Jeffrey

Hooray! Your file is uploaded and ready to be published.

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!