East-Indian Begonia is a herb 15-30 cm high, fleshy;
rootstock tuberous. Leaves are basal and on stem; blade 6.5-9.8 x
6.9-9.5 cm, oblique, heart-shaped, densely hairy on both the surfaces,
sawtoothed, fringed with hairs, pointed; leaf-stalks 4.8-11.5 cm;
stipules obvate, tapering, densely hairy, persistent. Flowers are borne
in leaf-axils paired cyme of 4-18 flowers, carried on a
flower-cluster-stalk 3.5-7.2 cm tall. Male flowers have 2 sepals,
obovate, 0.8-0.9 cm, hairy; 2 petals, lanceshaped, 0.7-0.8 x 0.4-0.5
cm; stamens 60, monadelphous; anthers obovoid; filament longer than
the anthers. Female flower have 5 tepals; outer tepals ovate,
velvet-hairy on the ventral surface; inner tepals gradually smaller;
ovary shaggy. Fruit is 3 winged; two wings 0.4-0.5 cm long ; third wing
1.2-1.4 cm long; seeds ellipsoid, brown. East-Indian Begonia is found in
NE India at altitudes of 250-1800 m. Flowering: June-October.
Identification credit: Momang Taram
Photographed in Arunachal Pradesh.
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The flower labeled East-Indian Begonia is ...