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A lot of confusion prevailed regarding the correct name
of the tea plant until the International Botanical Congress in 1935 decided Camellia
sinensis (L) to be the correct name of tea plant. While the
nomenclature of the tea plant was finally settled, the position of the two texa
represented by the China and the Assam plants remained open. Dr. W. Wight in
1962 proposed the specific rank Camellia sinensis (L) for the China
tea plant, Camellia assamica (Masters) for the Assam tea plant and the
sub-specific rank Camellia assamica sub sp. lasiocalyx (Planch. MS)
for the Southern form (Indochina) of tea plant.
Morphological Characters of the three races of tea
Morphological characters of the three races of tea plants
were studied in detail at Tocklai. Dr. W. Wight in 1962 gave a concise
description of the China and the Assam races while proposing their specific
ranks. A year later, Mr. P.K. Barua provided the morphological and anatomical
description of the three races of tea, which were later, elaborated by Dr. H.
P. Bezbaruah in 1971. A summary of the morphological characters of the three
races of tea, using Wight's nomenclature, is given below:
Camellia sinensis L. or the China tea plant is a
big shrub, 1-2 m tall with many virgate stems arising from the
base of the plant near the ground. Leaf hard, thick and leathery; surface matt,
marginal veins indistinct and appear sunken in lamina. Blade elliptic with
obtuse or broadly obtuse apex; base cuneate, margin bluntly serrulate to
sinuate-serrulate with more or less incurved teeth, glabrous above and villose
below when young, becoming sparsely villose as the leaf ages. Ultimately
becoming glabrous. Young leaves garnet-brown through ox-blood to purple in
colour. Petiole short, 3-7 mm long, stout, usually giving the leaf an erect
pose.
Flowers are borne singly or in pairs in the cataphyllary
axils. Pedicel 6-10 mm long, clavate, glabrous with 2-3 sub-opposite scars
little below the middle, marking the position of caduceus bracteoles 2-5 mm
long. Sepals 5-6 ,imbricate, persistent, leathery, o vate
or orbicular, 3-6 mm long, glabrous, green petals 7-8, shallowly cup-shaped,
1.5-2 cm long, broad-oval to sub-orbicular, generally white sometimes with pale
pink pigmentation. Stamen numerous, arranged in two whorls, inner ones shorter
and fewer in number, outer longer and more numerous, 8-13 mm long, united at
the base for a few mm with the corolla lobes. Ovary white, densely hairy, 3
locular, ovules 3-5 in each loculus, placentation axial. Style generally 3,
sometimes up to 55, free for the greater part of their length, occasionally
free up to the base of the ovary. Stigma apical. Capsule 1,2, or 3, coccate,
containing 1 to 3 nearly spherical seeds, 10-15 mm in diameter.
On the basis of leaf sizes Sealy (1958) recognized two
forms of C. sinensis (a) F. macrophylla (Sieb.) Kitamura,
with leaves 4-14 cm long, 2-2.5 cm wide and (b) F. parvifolia (Miq.)
Sealy, with leaves 5-1.6 cm long and 1-1.2 cm wide.
Camellia assamica (Masters) or the Assa m
tea plant is a small tree. 10-15 m tall with a trunk sometimes up to one third
of its height, possesses a robust branch system. In typical plants, leaf
dependent, thin, and glossy with more
or less acuminate apex and distinct marginal veins. Leaf blade usually broadly
elliptic, 8-20 cm long and 3.5-7.5 cm wide, base cuneate, margin obscurely
denticulate to bluntly wide-serrulate, glabrous or persistently hairy on the
midrib below. Flowers single or in pair on the cataphyllary axils, pedicels
with scars of 3 caduceus bracteoles, smooth and green. Sepals 5-6 unequal,
leathery, persistent. Petals 7-8, white, occasionally with pale yellow
pigmentation at the base of petals. Stamen numerous as in C. sinensis.
Camellia assamica sub sp. lasiocalys (Planch.MS)
or the Cambodiensis or Southern form of tea is a s mall
fastigiated tree. 6-10 m tall, with several upright, almost equally developed
branches. Leaf more or less erect, glossy, and yellowish-green when young,
light-green at maturity chan ging
to coppery-yellow or pinkish-red from autumn till the end of the season.
Petiole pinkish-red at the base. Leaf size intermediate between sinensis and
assamica, broadly elliptic, marginal veins not very prominent. Ovary 3-4,
sometimes 5-1ocular, style 3-5, free nearly up to half the length, ad pressed,
straight with apical or linear stigma. On the other floral characters, it
resembles the Assam plant, with the difference that 4 or more bracteoles are
found on the pedicel of flowers.
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