3. Macleaya R. Brown in D. Denham and H. Clapperton, Narr. Travels Africa. app. 218. 1826 - Plume-poppy, tree-celandine [for. 1767.
Plume-poppy, tree-celandine [for Alexa 1848, Scottish botanist, entomologist, and Secretary to the Colony of New South Wales]
Robert W. Kiger
Herbs , perennial, caulescent, usually glaucous, from rhizomes; sap yellow. Stems hollow, leafy. Leaves alternate, petiolate; blade 1-2× subpalmately or pinnately lobed. Inflorescences terminal, paniculate, many-flowered; bracts present. Flowers: sepals 2, distinct; petals absent; stamens 25-30 [8-12]; pistil 2-carpellate; ovary substipitate, 1-locular; style short; stigma 2-lobed. Capsules nodding, substipitate, 2-valved, dehiscing from apex. Seeds 4-6 [1], arillate [not arillate]. x = 10.
Species 2 (1 in the flora): North America, Asia (China and Japan).
Native to temperate eastern Asia, Macleaya has sometimes been merged with neotropical Bocconia , which differs in having perennial stems, long-stipitate ovaries, fleshy, single-seeded capsules dehiscing from the base, and much larger seeds. The sap of Macleaya has been used in traditional Chinese medicine as an antiseptic for wounds (C. Grey-Wilson 1993).
SELECTED REFERENCES
Hutchinson, J. 1920. Bocconia and Macleaya. Bull. Misc. Inform. Kew 1920: 275-282.