genus of plants From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Ensete is a genus of flowering plants native to tropical regions of Africa and Asia. It is one of the three genera in the banana family, Musaceae, and includes the false banana or enset (E. ventricosum), an economically important foodcrop in Ethiopia.[2]
Ensete | |
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Ensete ventricosum at the Royal Botanic Gardens, Sydney | |
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Genus: | Ensete Bruce |
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The genus Ensete was first described by Paul Fedorowitsch Horaninow (1796-1865) in his Prodromus Monographiae Scitaminarum of 1862 in which he created a single species, Ensete edule. However, the genus did not receive general recognition until 1947 when it was revived by E. E. Cheesman in the first of a series of papers in the Kew Bulletin on the classification of the bananas, with a total of 25 species.[3]
Taxonomically, the genus Ensete has been reduced since Cheesman restore the taxon. Cheesman acknowledged that field study might reveal synonymy and the most recent review of the genus by Simmonds (1960) listed just six.[3] The Plant List Archived 2019-05-23 at the Wayback Machine accepts eight species as valid.
The plants of Ensete are very large herbs without branches that die after producing seeds;[lower-alpha 1] They have only one stem that remains short until flowering.[4]
They have very big leaves; the lower parts of the leaves form a false stem so they look as trees. Their fruits are leathery and dry berries with few big and hard seeds.[3]
It is possible to separate Ensete into its African and Asian species.[5]
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