Ceropegia plocamoides (Oliv.) Bruyns
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/phytotaxa.364.2.1 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.13703967 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/B44C87D2-FFA1-1839-FF6F-FE93FD0EDB4C |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Ceropegia plocamoides (Oliv.) Bruyns |
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Ceropegia plocamoides (Oliv.) Bruyns View in CoL ( Figs. 14–16 View FIGURE 14 )
Brachystelma mortonii Walker (1981: 66) View in CoL , syn. nov. Brachystelma parviflorum Morton (1979: 499) View in CoL , non B. parviflorum (Wight 1834: 35) Hooker (1883: 65) View in CoL .
Ceropegia plocamoides View in CoL was described from material collected by the explorers John H. Speke and James A. Grant in dry forest of central Tanzania in 1861. Bullock (1963) also recorded it from Zambia and Zimbabwe and Masinde (2007) mentioned its occurrence in D.R. Congo and Malawi but did not cite any corroborating material. Percy-Lancaster (1997) recorded it fairly widely in Zimbabwe.
Ceropegia plocamoides View in CoL was mentioned by Meve & Porembski (1993) as being very similar to ‘ Brachystelma mortonii View in CoL ’ from West Africa. According to them, the ‘short and solid, relatively succulent petals bearing a nose-like, pyramidal projection on their distal half’ of ‘ B. mortonii View in CoL ’ provided the ‘most important distinguishing feature’ between the two species. For C. plocamoides View in CoL they gave the corolla-lobes as 7–15 (20) × (2) 3–5 mm, while in ‘ B. mortonii View in CoL ’ they gave them as 3–9 × 3–5 mm. In C. plocamoides View in CoL the corolla was ‘rotate, not fully expanded, lobes somewhat erect’ which is contradictory, since ‘rotate’ means ‘spreading, almost flat’ (Stearn 1983). Their fig. 1 shows that the corolla of their material of ‘ B. mortonii View in CoL ’ was also ‘not fully expanded’ so that there was no difference here. The specimen cited below and shown in Fig. 14 View FIGURE 14 , from central Moçambique also has short and broad (± 2.5 × 2.0 mm), longitudinally thickened and folded corolla-lobes with a ‘nose-like’ protrusion in the middle and so it corresponds quite closely to ‘ B. mortonii View in CoL ’, supposedly endemic to West Africa, but it could equally well be placed under C. plocamoides View in CoL . Consequently ‘ B. mortonii View in CoL ’ is reduced to synonymy here, making C. plocamoides View in CoL widely, if scantily, distributed from central Moçambique ( Fig. 15) to Tanzania and as far as Ghana, Ivory Coast and Nigeria in West Africa. To show the extent of variation in C. plocamoides View in CoL , we illustrate ( Fig. 16 View FIGURE 16 ) another collection from Malawi (E. Specks 21615) where the corolla was much larger, very dark and rugulose inside and the coronal lobes also much larger and with their tips protruding slightly from between the corolla-lobes.
The single specimen seen in Moçambique was found in low-lying Brachystegia Bentham (in Bentham & Hooker 1865: 582)-forest with sparse undergrowth, together with a species of Aloe , Cynanchum viminale , two species of Kalanchoe and several epiphytic orchids in the trees.
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Ceropegia plocamoides (Oliv.) Bruyns
Bruyns, Peter V., Klak, Cornelia & Hanáček, Pavel 2018 |
Brachystelma mortonii Walker (1981: 66)
Hooker, J. D. 1883: ) |