Skip Navigation
Sign In
  • Home
  • Search
    • Search Collections
    • Map Search
  • Chicago Botanic Garden
    • Project Information
    • Checklists
    • Create a Checklist
    • Dynamic Key
  • Denver Botanic Gardens
    • Project Information
    • Checklists
    • Create a Checklist
    • Dynamic Key
  • Desert Botanical Garden
    • Project Information
    • Checklists
    • Create a Checklist
    • Dynamic Key
  • NY Botanical Garden
    • Project Information
    • Checklists
    • Create a Checklist
    • Dynamic Key
  • Marie Selby Botanical Gardens
    • Project Information
    • Checklists
    • Create a Checklist
    • Dynamic Key
  • Sitemap

Maranta arundinacea

Maranta arundinacea L.  
Family: Marantaceae
Arrowroot
[Maranta arundinaacea L., moreMaranta arundinacea var. indica (Tussac) Petersen, Maranta ramosissima Wall., Maranta sylvatica Roscoe ex Sm.]
Maranta arundinacea image
  • FNA
  • Resources
Helen Kennedy in Flora of North America (vol. 22)
Plants erect, 0.3--1.3 m. Rhizomes tuberous, thickened. Stem often branched above. Leaves: basal 4--8, cauline 1--8; sheath auriculate, 4.5--31 cm, margins and apex densely pilose to nearly glabrous; petiole often absent in cauline leaves, 3.5--20 cm; pulvinus 0.2--1.8 cm, adaxially tomentose; blade ovate, 3.5--35 ´ 3--11 cm, basal leaves largest, abaxially glabrous to minutely pilose, adaxially sparsely minutely pilose. Inflorescences: bracts 1--2(--3), 2.4--6 cm; common pedicel of flower pair 2.3--5.5 cm. Flowers: sepals 10--17 mm; corolla white, corolla tube curved, 12--14 mm; staminodes white; ovary tan, densely pubescent, rarely glabrous or nearly glabrous. Fruits green or tinged red-brown, 8 ´ 4--5 mm. 2n = 18, 2n = 48.

Flowering summer--winter. Hammocks and moist soil; 0--10 m; introduced; Fla.; native, s Mexico, West Indies, Central America, n South America (w Ecuador).

Maranta arundinacea, cultivated for its starch-storing rhizome, is the mostly widely field-grown species of all the Marantaceae. In the early 1800s, it was commercially cultivated in Georgia and South Carolina (W. J. Titford 1812). This species is often referred to as St. Vincent arrowroot, after St. Vincent Island, West Indies, which is the major site of commercial production of the starch. The name arrowroot derives from its medicinal use as a poultice to remove arrow poison from wounds. The starch has also been used internally against ingested poison (R. Bentley and H. Trimen [1875--]1880, vol. 4, p. 265). Because the starch is so readily digested, it has been fed to infants, invalids, and those allergic to wheat. The cultivar 'Variegata,' with white and green variegated leaves, is often grown as an ornamental.

Maranta arundinacea
Open Interactive Map
Maranta arundinacea image
Ahmad Fuad Morad
Maranta arundinacea image
Ahmad Fuad Morad
Maranta arundinacea image
Maranta arundinacea image
Maranta arundinacea image
Maranta arundinacea image
Maranta arundinacea image
Maranta arundinacea image
Maranta arundinacea image
Maranta arundinacea image
Maranta arundinacea image
Maranta arundinacea image
Maranta arundinacea image
Maranta arundinacea image
Maranta arundinacea image
Maranta arundinacea image
Maranta arundinacea image
Maranta arundinacea image
Maranta arundinacea image
Maranta arundinacea image
Maranta arundinacea image
Maranta arundinacea image
Maranta arundinacea image
Maranta arundinacea image
Maranta arundinacea image
Maranta arundinacea image
Maranta arundinacea image
Maranta arundinacea image
Mel Duvall
Maranta arundinacea image
Maranta arundinacea image
Geovani Palma
Maranta arundinacea image
University of Florida Herbarium
Maranta arundinacea image
Maranta arundinacea image
Maranta arundinacea image
Maranta arundinacea image
Maranta arundinacea image
Maranta arundinacea image
Maranta arundinacea image
Maranta arundinacea image
Maranta arundinacea image
Maranta arundinacea image
Maranta arundinacea image
Maranta arundinacea image
Maranta arundinacea image
Maranta arundinacea image
Maranta arundinacea image
Maranta arundinacea image
Maranta arundinacea image
Maranta arundinacea image
Maranta arundinacea image
Maranta arundinacea image
Maranta arundinacea image
Maranta arundinacea image
Maranta arundinacea image
University of Florida Herbarium
Maranta arundinacea image
Maranta arundinacea image
Maranta arundinacea image
Maranta arundinacea image
Maranta arundinacea image
Maranta arundinacea image
Maranta arundinacea image
Geovani Palma
Maranta arundinacea image
Maranta arundinacea image
Maranta arundinacea image
Maranta arundinacea image
Maranta arundinacea image
Maranta arundinacea image
University of Florida Herbarium
Maranta arundinacea image
Maranta arundinacea image
Maranta arundinacea image
Maranta arundinacea image
Maranta arundinacea image
Maranta arundinacea image
Maranta arundinacea image
Maranta arundinacea image
Maranta arundinacea image
Click to Display
77 Total Media
Institute for Museum and Library Services KU BI Logo Logo for the Biodiversity Knowledge Integration Center

This project was made possible in part by the Institute of Museum and Library Services [MG-70-19-0057-19].

EcoFlora is part of the SEINet Portal Network. Learn more here.

Powered by Symbiota.