Magnolia mexicana
Magnolia mexicana, the Mexican magnolia, is a species of magnolia that is found in parts of Mexico, Guatemala and Honduras. The flower is known in parts of Mexico as yolloxochitl, an Aztec word that loosely translates to heart-shaped flower. The Mexican magnolia, often described as having a strong beautiful scent, has been used throughout the years for its medicinal properties, as it is said to have similar compounds to that of the Digitalis medication.
Etymology
The word yolloxochitl is from the Aztec language Nahuatl and it loosely translates to heart-shaped flower after its rose-like appearance of unopened buds. Even though the plant is called a Mexican magnolia, it has differing names throughout the regions it is located and often describe its beautiful scent or its heart-shaped characteristics.The genus Magnolia ranges throughout the Americas and parts of Asia. Magnolias are one of the oldest groups of flowering plants on the planet, and have fossil records that date back over 100 million years.
Description
This species is a large tree. The leaves of most magnolias are green to dark green in color, covered in wax, and have a smooth edge to the blades. Flowers are monoecious as each flower contains both the male and female reproductive organs of the plant.The tree can reach heights of up to 80 feet as they tower over the forests in the Central American regions of Mexico, Guatemala, and Honduras.
Flowers are generally white. They have no distinguishable sepal and petals and therefore have what is called a tepal, a combination of the two with the petals having a strong texture to handle the beetle pollinators. They have their stamens sprouting from the ovary at the base of the flower that they will lose after pollination to allow for the ovary to develop the seeds. The seeds are than protected by cone-like coverings that further protect the seed from damage.
Range and habitat
Magnolia mexicana is found on the humid Gulf Coastal Plain of southeastern Mexico, on the adjacent gulfward-facing slopes of the Sierra Madre Oriental and Sierra Madre de Oaxaca, and in the coastal Sierra de los Tuxtlas, in the states of Puebla, Veracruz, and Oaxaca. It ranges from 150 to 2000 meters elevation. It also ranges into Guatemala and Honduras.It is generally found in mature humid tropical forests, including lowland rain forests and montane cloud forests.
Habitat destruction has greatly reduced and fragmented species' population. Much of its old-growth forest habitat has been cleared for agriculture, cattle raising, and timber harvesting.