Lardizabala

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(Redirected from Lardizabala biternata)

Lardizabala
Botanical illustration, 1853
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Kingdom: Plantae
Clade: Tracheophytes
Clade: Angiosperms
Clade: Eudicots
Order: Ranunculales
Family: Lardizabalaceae
Genus: Lardizabala
Ruiz & Pav.
Species:
L. biternata
Binomial name
Lardizabala biternata
Ruiz & Pav.
Flowers of Lardizabala biternata

Lardizabala is a monotypic genus of flowering plants. The sole species is Lardizabala biternata Ruiz & Pav, known as Coguil, Cogüilera, Coiye, Coille, Voqui cógüil, or Voqui coille, in Chile, and known as Lardizabala or Zabala fruit in English. This species is an evergreen liana, native to temperate forests of central and southern Chile. It is grown for its edible fruits (called coguil or cógüil in Mapuche language) and ornamental flowers.

The genus is dedicated to Miguel de Lardizábal y Uribe [es], a Spanish statesman from the 18th century.

The seeds present in the large edible fruits of this species are hypothesised to have been dispersed by extinct Pleistocene meagafauna. Nowadays, foxes of the genus Lycalopex are thought to play the main seed dispersal role in its natural habitat.[1]

References

  1. ^ Muñoz‐Concha, Diego; Mundaca, Enrique; Alarcón, Diego; Machuca, Juan; Crisol‐Martínez, Eduardo; Loayza, Andrea (2022). "Could foxes be surrogate seed dispersers of a megafaunal fruit vine in southern South America?". Ecosphere. 13 (7). doi:10.1002/ecs2.4186. ISSN 2150-8925.

External links