Rare ginger flowers discovered in Khanh Hoa
VietNamNet Bridge
- Scientists have found more Vietnam’s
endemic ginger species at the Hon Ba Nature Reserve in the central province of Khanh Hoa.
The Geostachys
annamensis flowers.
The Geostachys annamensis ginger
species, with the Vietnamese name as Dai sa Trung bo, was described for the
first time in 1921, with samples collected in Da Lat, Lam Dong province by
Henry Nicholas Ridley and Cecil Boden Kloss (1877-1949) during a survey in
the Lang Bian Plateau in 1918.
Then this species was identified by
Ridley, a scientist from the plant British
Museum. This species
was last recorded in 1980. So far, there are 10 samples stored in Hanoi, the British
Museum and Paris. All of the samples were derived from
Lam Dong province.
In 2010, the Institute of Tropical
Biology of Vietnam and the Praha Botanical Garden of the Czech Republic
discovered a single Geostachys tree that fruited in the Hon Ba Nature Reserve
but they could not confirm the name due to the lack of flowers.
Then, their flowers were found in the
most recent trip of scientists at the Institute of Tropical
Biology in late April this year.
A scientist of the Institute of Tropical
Biology – Mr. Truong Ba Vuong - sent samples to
Ms. Jana Skornickova of the Singapore Botanic Gardens for identification. The
test result shows that this species is Geostachys annamensis, which
distributes in altitude of over 1,000 m in cold misty weather.
"It proves that the Geostachys
species has distribution area extended to the province of Khanh Hoa.
It is predicted that in the future, this ginger species can also be found in
Ninh Thuan province. The flowering specimen is stored at the Institute of Tropical Biology," said Vuong.
Na Son
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