Malpighia


Malpighia is a genus of flowering plants in the nance family, Malpighiaceae. It contains 108 species of shrubs or small trees, all of which are native to the American tropics, ranging from Texas through Mexico, Central America, and the Caribbean to Venezuela, Colombia, and Ecuador. The generic name honours Marcello Malpighi, a 17th-century Italian physician and botanist. The species grow to tall, with a dense, often thorny crown. The leaves are evergreen, simple, long, with an entire or serrated margin. The flowers are solitary or in umbels of two to several together, each flower diameter, with five white, pink, red, or purple petals. The fruit is a red, orange, or purple drupe, containing two or three hard seeds. M. emarginata, the acerola, is cultivated for its sweet and juicy fruits, which are very rich in vitamin C.

Selected species

108 species are accepted. Selected species include:Malpighia aquifolia L.Malpighia cauliflora Proctor & Vivaldi Malpighia coccigera L. - Singapore holly Malpighia cubensis Kunth - palo bronco de hoja pequeña Malpighia emarginata DC. - Barbados cherry, acerola Malpighia fucata Ker Gawl. Malpighia glabra Malpighia harrisii Small Malpighia mexicana A.Juss.Malpighia obtusifolia Proctor Malpighia polytricha A.Juss.Malpighia proctorii Vivaldi Malpighia setosa Spreng. - bristly stingingbush Malpighia suberosa SmallMalpighia urens L. - cowhage

Formerly placed here

Bunchosia argentea DC. Bunchosia armeniaca DC. Kunth Bunchosia glandulosa DC. Byrsonima altissima DC. Byrsonima crassifolia Kunth Byrsonima densa DC. Byrsonima spicata DC. Heteropterys multiflora Hochr.