Satish ji
I am not too sure but this may not turn out to be Catalpa bignonioides.
Perhaps Satish ji can recollect and apply this key more accurately:

C. bignonioides
 C. speciosa
Leaves 12-20 cm long, ill smelling when bruised              Leaves 15-30 cm
long, odorless, long acuminate
   abruptly acuminate
Flowers in broadly pyramidal 20-25 cm long panicles       Flowers in few-fld
15 cm long panicles
Flowers white with two yellow stripes and thick               Flowers white,
inconspicuously spotted inside, lobes spreading
   purple-brown spots.
with frilled margin
Pod about 6 mm thick                                                   Pods
12-20 mm thick.

Here are some links for C. speciosa

http://www.missouriplants.com/Whiteopp/Catalpa_speciosa_page.html

http://www.humanflowerproject.com/index.php/weblog/poodle_dog_and_other_biting_flowers/

http://biology.missouristate.edu/Herbarium/Plants%20of%20the%20Interior%20Highlands/Flowers/Catalpa%20speciosa.JPG

And some for C. bignonioides

http://biology.missouristate.edu/Herbarium/Plants%20of%20the%20Interior%20Highlands/Flowers/Catalpa%20bignonioides%20-%201.jpg

http://toptropicals.com/pics/garden/m1/Podarki5/Catalpa_bignonioides805_063OlgaB.jpg

Interestingly C. ovata (Chinese or Eastern Catalpa) and C. bignonioides
(Common catalpa, Indian bean) are two far separated species that show the
phenomenon of Viccariance. For those interested more, here is information
from my book.

*Vicariance*
The phenomenon of disjunction in some genera may often result in two very
closely related species of a genus occupying different geographical regions,
so that under natural conditions they would never meet. Classical example is
provided by two species of Platanus, P. orientalis growing in Mediterranean
region and P. occidentalis of North America. The species are quite distinct
in vegetative and floral morphology and have long been treated as distinct
species without doubts ever being raised. In places, however, when specimens
of these species were grown together, they readily interbred, producing
hybrids, which were not only fertile, but also intermediate between them.
Obviously extended geographical isolation had developed morphological
differences, but no reproductive barriers. Such closely related species
growing in different geographical regions constitute vicariants  or
vicariads, and the phenomenon as vicariism or vicariance. Another
significant example is met in the genus Catalpa, C. ovata growing in China
and Japan, and C. bignonioides growing in North America. Other examples
include Viola cazorlensis of Spain and V. delphinantha of Greece,
Convolvulus lanuginosus of France and Spain and C. calvertii from Crimea and
S. W. Asia. Vicariance may often involve more than two species as in genus
Cedrus, C. atlantica of Atlas mountains of Morocco, C. brevifolia of Cyprus,
C. libani of Lebanon, Syria and Turkey, and C. deodara of the western
Himalayas, all well separated geographical regions.
   Vicariance may evolve in a number of ways. A taxon may migrate to a new
area and evolve into a new taxon there. A formerly widely continuously
distributed taxon may, similarly, become separated into different areas and
there undergo divergent evolution. There may also be parallel evolution of
two taxa from common ancestor in two different areas. Theoretically this may
also result from convergent evolution under similar environmental
conditions, but this false vicariance, which may result from superficial
resemblance, can be easily detected and rejected.
   The phenomenon of disjunction and vicariance has received renewed
interest in the recent years with the utilization of principles and
techniques of  cladistic analysis in the studies of distribution patterns,
resulting in the establishment of field of cladistic biogeography or
vicariance biogeography. Using this method, cladograms of taxa are
constructed, and the names of the taxa at branch ends are substituted by the
areas of their distribution, forming so-called area-cladograms. A pattern
can be repeatedly constructed using different groups of organisms, and
compared for true representation of relative origins of floras (or faunas)
of the areas concerned. The area-cladograms can be represented on a map, and
areas linked with lines called tracks. The procedures have generated lot of
interest with clearer ideas about continental drift and better understanding
of the concept of plate tectonics.



-- 
Dr. Gurcharan Singh
Retired  Associate Professor
SGTB Khalsa College, University of Delhi, Delhi-110007
Res: 932 Anand Kunj, Vikas Puri, New Delhi-110018.
Phone: 011-25518297  Mob: 9810359089
http://people.du.ac.in/~singhg45/




On Fri, Jun 10, 2011 at 3:37 AM, Satish Phadke <[email protected]> wrote:

> A big tree from Bignoniaceae : Observed in Mountainview ; planted on 8th
> Jun 2011
> I think this is Catalpa speciosa.
> Very similar to Chinese Catalpa (Catalpa ovata) posted earlier by Sing Sir
> in Jul 2010 from Kashmir
> Dr Satish Phadke
>

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