Ceropegia simplex (Schltr.) Bruyns

Bruyns, Peter V., Klak, Cornelia & Hanáček, Pavel, 2018, An account of Ceropegia sect. Chamaesiphon (Apocynaceae) in Moçambique with new records and two new species, Phytotaxa 364 (2), pp. 111-135 : 128-130

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/phytotaxa.364.2.1

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/B44C87D2-FFA0-183B-FF6F-F806FA46DA5D

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Felipe

scientific name

Ceropegia simplex (Schltr.) Bruyns
status

 

Ceropegia simplex (Schltr.) Bruyns View in CoL ( Figs. 17 View FIGURE 17 , 18 View FIGURE 18 )

Described from material collected in February 1898 near Inhambane in southern Moçambique by Rudolf Schlechter, this species was not recorded again until the present exploration showed that it is widespread in Moçambique. It was found in four separate localities ranging over a distance of more than 800 km from close to the border with Tanzania in the north to near Pomene ( Fig. 17 View FIGURE 17 ), not far from where Schlechter originally collected it.

In the north (Bruyns 8626) C. simplex grew on white sand under Pterocarpus angolensis (kiaat) trees with C. albipilosa and other geophytes. North of Lioma (Bruyns 7728) plants were found under trees in shallow soil with other geophytes and C. gracilidens . Near Pomene (Bruyns 9755) C. simplex was seen in pale orange sand under low Brachystegia -trees (only 2–4 m tall) with several succulents including Ceropegia ampliata , C. sandersonii and Cynanchum viminale .

Ceropegia simplex View in CoL has not been collected in neighbouring Zimbabwe (Percy-Lancaster, 1997), nor was it recorded in tropical Africa by Bullock (1963). Schlechter (1905) stated that C. simplex View in CoL differed from all relatives by the erect, unbranched stem and the corona which clearly exceeded the gynostegium. Among his sketches of C. simplex View in CoL , his Fig. 5 E View FIGURE 5 showed the bowl-like corona consisting of apparently ± rectangular outer lobes a little broader than tall, with deep, narrow incisions between them. As one can see from the present Fig. 18 View FIGURE 18 of C. simplex View in CoL , these incisions lie opposite the guide-rails and correspond to the divisions that make the outer lobes bifid in species such as C. circinata View in CoL (see Figs. 8 View FIGURE 8 , 10 View FIGURE 10 ). This structure is similar to that in C. cupulata View in CoL but that species differs by the more branched stem with leaves more densely clustered, the lack of hairs towards the margins of the lobes and their bases and the lack of the incision into each outer coronal lobe, which then forms a ± entire cup.Although C. simplex View in CoL was not included in Bruyns & al. (2015), on account of the similar cupular coronal structure to C. cupulata View in CoL it is also likely to belong to the ‘Kalahari-group’.

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