Amischotolype

Amischotolype is a genus of perennial monocotyledonous flowering plants in the Commelinaceae.

It is found in Central Africa and from India through Southeast Asia to New Guinea,[2][3][4] with the great majority or species found in Asia.

[1] The genus is characterised by its rather compact inflorescences which are composed on two or more cincinni that pierce through the base of the leaf sheath, and also by its seeds that are embedded in red arils.

Flowers are actinomorphic, and anthers release their pollen either through a pore at the tip or slits down the sides.

The closely related genus Porandra, which consists of three Asian species, is considered by Robert Faden, a leading authority on the family, to be "doubtfully distinct" from Amischotolype.