Outline Draft.
I. Introduction to the Heliconiaceae and related families.
A. Description and distinguishing characteristics.
1. Heliconiaceae (heliconias)
2. Musaceae (bananas)
3. Strelitziaceae (birds-of -paradise)
4. Zingiberaceae (gingers)
II. Identification of Heliconias.
A. Shoot growth habits
1. Musoid
2. Cannoid
3. Zingiberoid
B. Inflorescence characteristics
1. Erect
2. Pendent
C. Flower and bract characteristics
1. Cheek, keel, tip, rachis
2. Petals, sepals, perianth, ovary, fruit
III. Ecology of Heliconias.
A. Habitat preference
1. wet lowlands
2. forest streams
3. middle-elevation rain and cloud forest habitats
B. Role in succession.
1. Secondary growth
2. Light gaps
3. Understory growth
C. Pollination
1. hummingbirds
a. Hermit hummingbird/Heliconia interactions
b. Nonhermit interactions
2. Self- pollination
3. Hybridization
Bibliography.
Berry, F. and W. John Kress. 1991. HELICONIA an Identification Guide. Smithsonian Institution Press, Washington and London. 334pp
Linhardt, Y.B. 1973. Ecological and behavioral determinants of pollen dispersal in hummingbird-pollinated Heliconia. Am.nat. 107:511-23.
McDade, L.A. 1983. Long-tailed hermit hummingbird visits to inflorescence color morphs of Heliconia irrasa (Heliconiaceae). Condor 85: 360-364.
Stiles, F. G. 1975. Ecology, flowering phenology, and hummingbird pollination of some Costa
Rican Heliconia species. Ecology 56:285-301.
Stiles, F.G. 1983. Pages 249-251. In Daniel H. Janzen ed. Costa Rican Natural History. The University of Chicago Press, Chicago and London.
For Further Info on this Topic, Check out this WWW Site: http://netdial.caribe.net/~tciendre.
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