Cephalostachyum is a genus of Asian and Madagascan bamboo in the grass family.[3][2]
The plants are of small to medium size compared to most other bamboo. Their choice habitats are mountain to lowland forests.[4]
see Bambusa Cathariostachys Dendrocalamus Kinabaluchloa Schizostachyum
Chinese maps show a Cephalostachyum Museum in Beijing. However, this appears to be a mistranslation; the museum is actually dedicated to the diabolo, a kind of yo-yo made of bamboo.[7]
Cephalostachyum is a genus of Asian and Madagascan bamboo in the grass family.
The plants are of small to medium size compared to most other bamboo. Their choice habitats are mountain to lowland forests.
Species Cephalostachyum burmanicum - Myanmar Cephalostachyum capitatum - Myanmar, Assam, Bhutan Cephalostachyum chapelieri - Madagascar Cephalostachyum flavescens - Myanmar, Andaman Islands Cephalostachyum langbianense - Vietnam Cephalostachyum latifolium - Yunnan, Myanmar, Assam, Bhutan, Nepal, Sikkim Cephalostachyum mannii - Yunnan, Assam, Arunachal Pradesh, Bhutan Cephalostachyum mindorense - Philippines Cephalostachyum pallidum - Yunnan, Myanmar, Assam, Tibet Cephalostachyum pergracile - Yunnan, Myanmar, Assam, Laos, Bhutan Cephalostachyum perrieri - Madagascar Cephalostachyum scandens - Yunnan, Myanmar Cephalostachyum viguieri - Madagascar Cephalostachyum virgatum - Yunnan, Myanmar, Laos, Vietnam formerly includedsee Bambusa Cathariostachys Dendrocalamus Kinabaluchloa Schizostachyum
Cephalostachyum chevalieri - Kinabaluchloa wrayi Cephalostachyum chinense - Schizostachyum chinense Cephalostachyum griffithii - Schizostachyum griffithii Cephalostachyum madagascariense - Cathariostachys madagascariensis Cephalostachyum malayense - Dendrocalamus pendulus Cephalostachyum peclardii - Cathariostachys capitata Cephalostachyum pingbianense - Schizostachyum pingbianense Cephalostachyum sanguineum - Schizostachyum sanguineum Cephalostachyum schizostachyoides - Bambusa schizostachyoides MuseumsChinese maps show a Cephalostachyum Museum in Beijing. However, this appears to be a mistranslation; the museum is actually dedicated to the diabolo, a kind of yo-yo made of bamboo.