Phyllostachys nigella T.H.Wen

Species

Angiosperms > Poales > Poaceae > Phyllostachys

Characteristics

Culms to 7 m, ca. 4 cm in diam.; internodes 18–22 cm, initially very thinly white powdery, glabrous, becoming yellow-green; nodal ridge equaling or slightly more prominent than sheath scar. Culm sheaths brown to gray-green, with dense, variably sized spots forming a cloud on distal portion, thinly white powdery, brown strigose; auricles and oral setae well developed, dark purple; ligule dark purple, arcuate or truncate, ca. 2 mm, apex long ciliate; blade reflexed, abaxially dark purple, adaxially dark green, margins yellow, crinkled. Leaves 2 or 3(–6) per ultimate branch; auricles falcate; oral setae radiate, ca. 1.2 cm; ligule strongly exserted, ciliate; blade 10–15 × 1.3–2 cm. Inflorescence not known. New shoots May.
More
A bamboo. It grows 7 m tall. The culms are 4 cm across. The internodes are 18-22 cm long. They have white powder when young.
Life form perennial
Growth form
Growth support -
Foliage retention
Sexuality hermaphrodite
Pollination anemogamy
Spread -
Mature width (meter) -
Mature height (meter) 6.0
Root system -
Rooting depth (meter) -
Root diameter (meter) -
Flower color -
Blooming months -
Fruit color -
Fruiting months -
Nitrogen fixer -
Photosynthetic pathway -

Environment

It is a temperate plant.
More
Not known
Light -
Soil humidity -
Soil texture -
Soil acidity -
Soil nutriment -
Hardiness (USDA) -

Usage

Uses -
Edible shoots
Therapeutic use -
Human toxicity -
Animal toxicity -

Cultivation

Can be grown by cuttings, divisions or seedlings.
Mode cuttings divisions seedlings
Germination duration (days) -
Germination temperacture (C°) -
Germination luminosity -
Germination treatment -
Minimum temperature (C°) -
Optimum temperature (C°) -
Size -
Vigor -
Productivity -

Distribution

Phyllostachys nigella world distribution map, present in China

Identifiers

LSID urn:lsid:ipni.org:names:900564-1
WFO ID wfo-0000890485
COL ID 77FB2
BDTFX ID -
INPN ID -
Wikipedia (EN)
Wikipedia (FR)

Synonyms

Phyllostachys nigella