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Paullinia fuscescens

Paullinia fuscescens, with no English name other than moldy bread and cheese used for several species, is a woody vine occurring from Mexico and the Caribbean into northern South America. It belongs to the family Sapindaceae.

Description
Paullinia fuscescens is recognized by these features:{{cite journal • It is a woody vine climbing up to by means of spiraling tendrils which often arise in pairs from atop the inflorescence's peduncle. Smaller branches bear yellow hairs and when wounded produce a milky sap. • Leaves up to 7 cm long (2¾ inch) arise individually along the stem and are divided into nine leaflets arranged in three groups, i.e. they are biternate. The leaflet margins are shallowly and somewhat irregularly toothed, the blade tips are blunt and the bases gradually narrow to their attachment point. • Inflorescences arise singly from leaf axils reaching 15 cm long (~6 inches). • Flowers are mostly dioecious, but mingled with a few flowers of the opposite sex or a few with both male and female parts; they are "polygamodioecious". They have five sepals, four petals which are white or yellowish, and eight stamens. • Fruits are three-angled or three-winged capsules up to 2 cm long producing one to three seeds. When ripe they turn red or orangish. ==Taxonomy==
Taxonomy
Paullinia fuscescens is one of many taxa first scientifically collected by Aimé Bonpland and Alexander von Humboldt on their exploratory American Expedition of 1799-1804, plant collections from which were made available for publication to the German botanist Carl Sigismund Kunth. Kunth's 1821 Latin description of Paullinia fuscescens says that it grew on the banks of the Amazon River. The species name fuscescens is from the Latin fuscescens, meaning "becoming dark", possibly referring to the brownish branchlets and partially dark-haired petioles, which Kunth described in Latin as "fuscescentibus" and "fuscescenti-hirti", respectively. ==Distribution==
Distribution
Paullinia fuscescens occurs in Mexico except for the dry northern parts, the Mexican Plateau and other high elevations; it is also found in the Caribbean, Central America and northern South America including Ecuador. ==Habitat==
Habitat
In the Caribbean, Paullinia fuscescens occurs in disturbed areas and lower elevations. In the Yucatan Peninsula of Mexico, it inhabits low-growing forests sometimes flooded with water, and various kinds of tropical forests experiencing extended dry seasons. ==Ecology==
Ecology
Larvae of the tomato orange banner butterfly Temenis laothöe liberia prefer to feed on Paullinia fuscescens. It is speculated that by feeding on this species, known to be used to stun or paralyze fish by inhibiting their respiration, making them easier to catch, the larva's body accumulates enough toxin to cause it to be avoided by predators.{{cite journal ==Human uses==
Human uses
In construction In Mexico, the tough stems of Paullinia fuscescens are used for binding fences and the frameworks of huts. In traditional medicine In Mexico's Jalisco state, decoctions of stem sections of Paullinia fuscescens are taken orally for kidney problems.{{cite book However, seeds of Paullinia fuscescens are reported to be slow-acting but deadly poisonous, allegedly having been employed as a method of killing criminals.{{cite journal In traditional fishing Crushed stems of Paullinia fuscescens may be placed in water as a narcotic to anesthetize fish, making them easier to catch. ==Gallery==
Gallery
Paullinia fuscescens (2).jpg| Inflorescences Paullinia fuscescens (3).jpg| Flowers Paullinia fuscescens (4).jpg| Leafy, flowering branch dangling from a tree Paullinia fuscescens (5).jpg| Immature fruits Paullinia fuscescens (6).jpg| Mature capsular fruits splitting apart Paullinia fuscescens (7).jpg| Compound biternate leaf ==References==
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