Prockia costaricensis
Prockia costaricensis is a species of flowering plant in the family Salicaceae, endemic to Costa Rica. The plant was first described by Paul Carpenter Standley in 1937, and has a conservation status of vulnerable under the IUCN Red List.
Description
Prockia costaricensis is a shrub or tree reaching up to in height, characterized by gracile branches that are supported by a thin trunk roughly in diameter. The leaves are shiny, measuring up to long and wide; the shape is usually elliptic or oblong, the apex is rounded or obtuse, the base is acuminate or acute, and the margins are serrate or denticulate. The leaf surface is membranaceous and, while the veins are typically quintuplinerved; the petiole is short, measuring up tp long.The inflorescences occur as racemes, oriented either erectly or horizontally, measuring approximately long; each bears a small number of hermaphroditic flowers, typically green or yellow in color. The stamens are reportedly orange, and the ovary is glabrous. The fruits are ovoid or globose, glabrous or, and measure up to in diameter, beginning green and maturing to red.
Distribution and habitat
The range of Prockia costaricensis is restricted to Costa Rica, spanning the provinces of Alajuela, Guanacaste, and Limón, in the cantons of Bagaces, Cañas, La Cruz, Liberia, Limón, Tilarán, and Upala. Historically, Prockia costaricensis was preserved from beyond its current range in Panama, within the province of Panamá.Prockia costaricensis is a locally rare tropical species recorded from a range of habitats at elevations of up to a reported. Being found in lowland or premontane environments, it occurs in moist tropical forest, riparian forest, and rainforest, as well as catchments, open pastures, swamp-adjacent areas, and along roadsides.