Monotes africanus De Candolle (1868: 624
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/phytotaxa.308.2.1 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03A1879D-634F-FFD4-FF13-F8A1FD0643A5 |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Monotes africanus De Candolle (1868: 624 |
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2. Monotes africanus De Candolle (1868: 624 View in CoL emend, excl. specim. Kirk)
≡ Vatica africana Welw. ex Oliver (1868: 173) View in CoL pro parte excl. var. hypoleuca View in CoL , var. glomerata & var. glabra . ≡ Vatica africana var. denudans Welwitsch (1869: 16 View in CoL ; Tab. V, Fig. 1 View FIGURE 1 ).
Type: — ANGOLA. Huila, Lopolo, 1860, Welwitsch 1035 (BM! [barcode BM001209295, BM001209296], LISU! [barcode LISU234081, LISU234082, LISU234083], P! [barcode 00389101], COI!).
Shrub or small tree up to 8 m high; bark exfoliating in thin strips; branchlets greyish or brownish, glabrous to thinly pubescent. Leaf: petiole thinly pubescent, glabrescent, 5–15(–20) mm long, 1–2 mm in diameter; blade elliptic to oblong or obovate, (3.5–)5–10 × (1.5–) 2–5.5 cm, rounded to slightly cordate at the base, obtuse to emarginate at the apex; lateral nerves in 8–14 pairs (with a tendency to the formation of short subsidiaries), nearly straight but incurved at the apex and vanishing without reaching the margin of the leaf; veins much more prominent than reticulation on lower surface; upper surface finely reticulate, with reticulum generally orange-lepidote, typically bullate in the axils of lateral nerves and midrib (with a corresponding depression on the lower surface), glabrous except sometimes for the midrib and lateral nerves, with numerous punctiform yellow glands; lower surface concolorous, puberulous with very minute curled or coiled hairs mixed with some straight ones on the nerves and reticulation, the interreticular areoles generally glabrous; midrib and lateral nerves slightly depressed above and prominent beneath. Inflorescences axillary, 1.5–3(–5) cm long, ± condensed or lax, few-flowered, fulvous-tomentellous; peduncle 1–3 cm long, slender. Flower: pedicel 3–8 mm long; sepals ca. 2 mm long, densely woolly-rufous-tomentose; petals ca. 8 mm long, densely greyish subsericeous-tomentose; stamens with anthers produced into a large, emarginate or triangular lobe. Fruit subglobose, 10–15 mm in diameter, rounded to conical at the apex, sericeous; wings elliptic to obovate, 2.5–3.5 × 1.2–1.6 cm, yellowish or brownish.
Illustrations: — Figs. 3C View FIGURE 3 , 4C View FIGURE 4 , 8A View FIGURE 8 .
Distribution: —Widespread in Upper Katanga.
Distribution elsewhere: — Angola, Malawi, Mozambique, Tanzania, Zambia.
Habitat and ecology: —Miombo woodlands; transition between Uapaceto-Combretetum katangense and Brachystegia boehmii woodland; Xerobrachystegion ( Schmitz 1971).
Uses: —Poles, tools; foodplant of the edible caterpillar of the cavorting emperor moth, Usta terpsichore ( Saturniidae ) ( Malaisse 1997).
Other representative specimens examined:—D.R. CONGO. Upper Katanga: Parc d’Elisabethville (Lubumbashi), 10 June 1922, Delevoy 929 (BR!); 12 km à l’ouest d’Elisabethville (Lubumbashi), forêt claire à Brachystegia utilis sur terre rougeâtre compacte et profonde, 14 July 1956, Duvigneaud & Timperman 2006 (BRLU!); Entre Mindingi et Menda, 13 km de Menda, forêt claire à Brachystegia floribunda sur terre ocre, 17 July 1956, Duvigneaud & Timperman 2079 (BRLU!); Menda, forêt claire à Brachystegia longifolia sur terre rouge légère, 22 July 1956, Duvigneaud & Timperman 2092 (BRLU!); entre Mukumbi et Swambo, forêt claire sur terre ocre compacte, 1 June 1957, Duvigneaud 3338 (BRLU!); Kasumbalesa, forêt claire de plateau à Brachystegia utilis sur sol brun à proximité des sources de la Luina, 3 December 1959, Duvigneaud 4379M (BRLU!); Sakania, forêt claire sur terre ocre caillouteuse à Brachystegia boehmii et B. spiciformis , 31 jan 1960, Duvigneaud 5361BM (BRLU!); Arboretum de l’Etoile, 5 km NE d’Elisabethville (Lubumbashi), forêt claire, January 1948, Schmitz 1246 (BR!); Welgelegen, alt. 1300 m, lambeau de forêt claire en bordure d’un marais à Rhynchospora candida , 8 February 1962, Symoens 9203 (BRVU!); Keyberg, forêt claire à Marquesia , près de la station expérimentale de l’INEAC, 3 February 1966, Symoens 12158 (BM!).
Discussion: —Glabrescent specimens are superficially similar to M. glaber ; the latter, however, differs in having yellow-green leaves often with an orange-tinged reticulum on the lower surface.
As already pointed out by Verdcourt (1989), the frequently used author combination “(Welw.) A.DC.” for M. africanus is not correct since De Candolle published his name in mid-July of 1868 while Welwitsch’s name Vatica africana was validated by Oliver in October 1868. See further nomenclatural discussion under Monotes hypoleucus .
References: — Bancroft (1937: 136; 1939a: 372); Catarino et al. (2013: 266); De Wildeman (1927a: 168); Duvigneaud (1949: 42; 1961: 415); Engler (1910: 615, Fig. 532); Engler (1921: 522); Figueiredo & Smith (2008: 67); Gilg (1899: 137; 1903: 307; 1908b: 292); Lebrun & Stork (1991: 144); Meerts (2016: 222); Verdcourt (1989: 8); White (1962: 262).
COI |
University of Coimbra Botany Department |
No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.
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Monotes africanus De Candolle (1868: 624
Meerts, Pierre, Rougelot, Quentin & Sosef, Marc 2017 |
Vatica africana
Welwitsch, F. 1869: 16 |