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Filed as Borassus aethiopum Mart. [family ARECACEAE]

Macauley, #s.n.
1966-07-03
Specimens
Nigeria
FHI
Borassus aethiopum Mart. [family ARECACEAE] (stored under name); Verified by Ugbogu, O.A, 2007/02

Borassus aethiopum Mart. [family PALMAE]

Flora of West Tropical Africa, Vol 3, Part 1,
Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew (K)
Reference Sources
Widely distributed in tropical Africa.
The tallest of African palms, often 70 ft. high and sometimes as much as 100 ft., with trunk swollen above the middle; in dry savanna.The palm is dioecious, the female conspicuous by ito large orange fruits.

Neotype of Borassus sambiranensis Jum. & H. Perrier [family PALMAE]

Bayton, R.P.; Ranaivojaona, R., #55
28-03-2003
Specimens
Madagascar
K
Borassus sambiranensis Jum. & H. Perrier [family PALMAE] (stored under name); Verified by Bayton, R.P.,
Neotype of Borassus sambiranensis Jum. & H. Perrier [family PALMAE]; Verified by Bayton, R.P.
Borassus aethiopum Mart. [family ARECACEAE]; Verified by Bayton, R.P.,

Filed as Borassus aethiopum Mart. [family ARECACEAE]

Richter, R.; Carlson, T.; Manu, A.; Nma, A.; Nwachiko, #AM101
1996-01-05
Specimens
Nigeria
M
Borassus aethiopum Mart. [family ARECACEAE] (stored under name)

Filed as Borassus aethiopum Mart. [family ARECACEAE]

Richter, R.; Carlson, T.; Manu, A.; Nma, A.; Nwachiko, #AM101
1996-01-05
Specimens
Nigeria
M
Borassus aethiopum Mart. [family ARECACEAE] (stored under name)

Filed as Borassus aethiopum Mart. [family ARECACEAE]

Noamesi, B.K.; Owusu, K., #BKN/KO/124
1997-05-04
Specimens
Ghana
M
Borassus aethiopum Mart. [family ARECACEAE] (stored under name)

Filed as Borassus aethiopum Mart. [family ARECACEAE]

Noamesi, B.K.; Owusu, K., #BKN/KO/124
1997-05-04
Specimens
Ghana
M
Borassus aethiopum Mart. [family ARECACEAE] (stored under name)

Borassus aethiopum Mart. [family PALMAE]

Burkill, H.M. 1985. The useful plants of west tropical Africa, Vol 4
Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew (K)
Reference Sources
None

[family ARECACEAE (PALMAE)]

Flora Somalia, Vol 4, (1995) Author: by M. Thulin [updated by M. Thulin 2008]
Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew (K)
Reference Sources
Some 200 genera and 2700 species, mainly in the moister tropics and subtropics, few in arid regions.
Trees, shrubs or climbers, sometimes armed, bisexual, polygamous, monoecious or dioecious; stems usually prominently ringed with leaf-scars, usually unbranched or dichotomously branched. Leaves usually with sheathing base; petiole sometimes armed with spines (modified leaflets or epidermal emergences); blade pinnate, bipinnate, palmate or costapalmate (with the petiole extending into the leaf-blade as a well-defined central axis); leaflets induplicate or reduplicate, composed of one or more folds. Inflorescences axillary, single or occasionally grouped, often complex with bracteate branches of different orders, the ultimate branches bearing bracts subtending flowers, singly or in pairs, triads or small groups. Flowers usually small, bisexual, unisexual or sterile male, usually 3-merous; tepals sometimes similar, sometimes differentiated in calyx and corolla, free or fused. Stamens 3–many, free or united; anthers basi- or dorsifixed, straight or twisted; staminodes often present in female flowers. Carpels usually 1–3, free, or forming usually 3-celled ovary; ovule solitary in each carpel or cell; stigmas erect or recurved; pistillode often present in male flowers. Fruits usually 1-seeded, more rarely 2–10-seeded, usually with distinct epicarp (outer layer), mesocarp (middle layer) and endocarp (inner layer).