Australian Tropical Rainforest - Online edition (Willd.) DC. subsp. gigantea : Ohashi, H. & Tateishi (1976) Journal of Japanese Botany 51(6): 164 (1976). Common name: Black ; Burny Bean; Bean, Burny; Seabean; Vine, Burney; Burney Vine; Velvet Bean; Bean, Black Stem Vine stem diameters to 10 cm recorded. Bark exudate watery red, quite obvious but not prolific. Blaze marked by red stripes. Vessels large, quite obvious to the naked eye in cross sections of the stem. Stems may have a bumpy and irregular shape. Flowers. © CSIRO Leaves Stipules linear, often small and inconspicuous, up to 2-4 mm long. Dark, orbicular, raised lenticels visible on the twigs. Leaflet blades about 9-15 x 3.5-7.5 cm, lateral leaflets oblique, unequal-sided from the base to the apex, leaflet stalks swollen and transversely wrinkled, about 0.3-2 cm long. Middle leaflet stalk longer than the lateral leaflet stalks. Compound leaf petiole about 4.5-5.5 cm long. Stipels usually visible where the lateral leaflet stalks join the compound leaf petiole. Flowers Flowers borne in umbellate clusters at the end of a long peduncle, peduncle about 12 cm long. Calyx broad, shortly lobed, about 20 x 10 mm. Outer surface of the calyx clothed in short prostrate hairs and much longer, golden, irritant hairs. : standard green, about 30 x 25 mm; wings about 40 x 17 mm; keel about 45 x 20 mm. Stamens 10, the filaments of nine stamens fused to form a tube Leaves and Flowers. © CSIRO about 35 mm long and open along one side. One stamen free. Ovary about 10 mm long, densely clothed in prostrate hairs. Style about 45 mm long. Ovules about 6-8. Fruit Pods about 14-15 x 3.5-5 cm, outer surface clothed in prostrate, brown or golden irritant hairs. Pods almost rectangular in transverse section with shortly winged corners. Calyx remnants persistent at the base. about 3 per fruit, each about 25 x 30 mm. Hilum extending about three quarters of the way around the seed margin. Cotyledons unequal in size and interlocked. Radicle about 1 mm long. Seedlings About 50 cm of stem produced before the first true leaf. Two cataphylls produced before the first Fruit. © CSIRO true leaves. First true leaf blades ovate-lanceolate or lanceolate-elliptic, apex acuminate, base truncate-obtuse to shallowly cordate, clothed in short appressed hairs on both the upper and lower surfaces. Seedling twining. At the tenth leaf stage: middle leaflet symmetrical while the lateral leaflets are very asymmetric. Leaflet blades sparsely clothed in prostrate hairs on both the upper and lower surfaces at least when young. Stipels present. Seed germination time 15 to 18 days. Distribution and Ecology Occurs in WA, NT, CYP, NEQ, CEQ and southwards as far as north-eastern New South Wales. Altitudinal range in northern Australia from near sea level to 750 m. Grows in beach forest, monsoon forest, lowland and upland rain forest. Also occurs in Malesia. Natural History & Notes Scale bar 10mm. © CSIRO This has been used medicinally in India. Cribb (1981). Synonyms Mucuna gigantea (Willd.) DC., Prodromus 2: 405 (1825). Dolichos giganteus Willd., Species Plantarum 3: 1041(1802), Type: Rheede, Hort. Malab. 8: 63 t 36 (1688). RFK Code 2051

10th leaf stage. © CSIRO Copyright © CSIRO 2020, all rights reserved.

Cotyledon and 1st leaf stage, hypogeal germination. © CSIRO

Fruit, dehiscing fruit and seed. © W. T. Cooper

Vine stem bark and vine stem transverse section. © CSIRO

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