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Isotype of Olea woodiana Knobl. subsp. disjuncta P.S.Green [family OLEACEAE]

Semsei, S.R., #2240
09-1955
Specimens
Tanzania
K
Isotype of Olea woodiana Knobl. subsp. disjuncta P.S.Green [family OLEACEAE] (stored under name); Verified by Green, P.S.,
Olea unrecorded unrecorded [family OLEACEAE]
Olea woodiana Knobl. [family OLEACEAE]; Verified by Kupicha, F.,

Holotype of Olea chimanimani Kupicha [family OLEACEAE]

Goodier; Phipps, #308
28-12-1959
Specimens
Zimbabwe
K
Olea woodiana Knobl. [family OLEACEAE]
Holotype of Olea chimanimani Kupicha [family OLEACEAE] (stored under name)
Olea africana Mill. [family OLEACEAE]
Olea exasperata Jacq. [family OLEACEAE]

Olea woodiana Knobl. [family OLEACEAE]

Gerrard, W.T., #1666
None
Specimens
South Africa
K
Olea woodiana Knobl. [family OLEACEAE] (stored under name)
Olea mackenii Harv. [family OLEACEAE]; Verified by Smith, G.A.,

Type of Olea mackenii Harv. [family OLEACEAE]

Gerrard, W.T., #1666
None
Specimens
South Africa
K
Olea woodiana Knobl. [family OLEACEAE] (stored under name)
Type of Olea mackenii Harv. [family OLEACEAE]

Type? of Olea woodiana Knobl. [family OLEACEAE]

Wood, J.M., #7975
1900-11-15
Specimens
South Africa
PH
Olea woodiana Knobl. [family OLEACEAE] (stored under name)
Type? of Olea woodiana Knobl. [family OLEACEAE]

Olea woodiana Knobl. [family OLEACEAE]

Gerrard, W.T., #380
None
Specimens
South Africa
K
Olea mackenii Harv. [family OLEACEAE]
Olea woodiana Knobl. [family OLEACEAE] (stored under name); Verified by Schellenberg,

Type of Olea woodiana Knobl. [family OLEACEAE]

Wood, John Medley, #S.N.
1885-11-26
Specimens
South Africa
E
Olea verrucosa Link [family OLEACEAE]
Olea woodiana Knobl. [family OLEACEAE] (stored under name)
Type of Olea woodiana Knobl. [family OLEACEAE]

Type of Olea woodiana Knobl. [family OLEACEAE]

Wood, J.M., #3956
None
Specimens
South Africa
K
Type of Olea woodiana Knobl. [family OLEACEAE] (stored under name)
Olea verrucosa Link [family OLEACEAE]

Holotype of Olea woodiana Knobl. subsp. disjuncta P.S.Green [family OLEACEAE]

Semsei, S.R., #2240
09-1955
Specimens
Tanzania
K
Holotype of Olea woodiana Knobl. subsp. disjuncta P.S.Green [family OLEACEAE] (stored under name); Verified by Green, P.S.,
Olea unrecorded unrecorded [family OLEACEAE]

Type of Olea woodiana Knobl. [family OLEACEAE]

Sim, T.R., #2143
None
Specimens
South Africa
NH
Type of Olea woodiana Knobl. [family OLEACEAE] (stored under name)

OLEA verrucosa Link [family OLEACEAE]

Flora Capensis, Vol 4, page 478, (1909) Author: By W. H. HARVEY, with additions by C. H. WRIGHT.
Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew (K)
Reference Sources
a tree; branchlets terete, or sometimes quadrangular towards the apex, greyish, verrucose; leaves linear-lanceolate, obtuse or shortly acuminate, acuminate at the base, quite entire, glabrous above, minutely yellow-lepidote beneath, 3 in. long, 4–6 lin. wide; petioles up to 4 lin. long; panicles axillary, up to about 2 in. long; calyx cupular, obscurely 4-lobed, glabrous; corolla-lobes oblong, obtuse, 2 lin. long, glabrous; fruit subglobose, shortly apiculate, 3 lin. in diam., scarcely fleshy. null

Olea woodiana [family OLEACEAE]

Flora of South Africa, (2003) Author: Dr J.P. Roux
South African National Biodiversity Institute, Compton Herbarium, Cape Town (SAM)
Reference Sources
Found in the high forest, woods and coastal bush in the eastern regions of South Africa. Not recorded elsewhere.
Tree, 4-17 m, rarely 30 m high, with whitish bark, smooth or fluted; ultimate twigs pale grey or whitish, more or less lenticellate, at least some of the upper internodes 4-angled. Leaves lanceolate-elliptic to elliptic, usually broadest about the middle and from there narrowing to an acute base and apex (apex sometimes rounded), 4-8 cm long, 0 • 8-3 • 3 cm broad, flat with just the marginal rim reflexed and often loosely undulate, minutely scaly, giving the appearance of being minutely pitted, especially on lower surface, midrib more or less impressed above, prominent below, lateral veins sometimes faintly obvious, then prominent above, anastomosing in large loops near the margins (loops not forming an almost straight line along the margin); petiole 4-10 mm long. Panicles axillary and quite frequently terminal too, many flowered but not dense and compact; branches slender, subterete, 4-angled or variously flattened and fluted, inter­nodes and peduncles relatively long, pedicels short; bracts up to 4 mm long, sub-deciduous. Calyx small, cupular and shortly 4-lobed, up to 1 mm long. Corolla white; tube 0 • 75 mm long; lobes about 2 • 25 mm long and 1 • 5 mm broad, forming a subglobose bud, eventually reflexed. Stamens with filaments inserted on the tube, free for about lmm, anthers 1 -5 mm long, 1-25 mm broad, more or less medifixed. Ovary subglobose; style very short; stigma 2-lobed conico-globose; ovules pendulous. Drupe drying blackish, semi-ovoid, narrowing to apex and oblique at base, usually about 1 cm long and 5 mm broad in dried specimens, occasionally slightly larger.

Olea africana [family OLEACEAE]

Flora of South Africa, (2003) Author: Dr J.P. Roux
South African National Biodiversity Institute, Compton Herbarium, Cape Town (SAM)
Reference Sources
Found in a variety of habitats, from forest and riverside bush to open grassveld, flats, stony ground, mountain kloofs and rocky ledges. Recorded very generally throughout South Africa and northwards through east tropical Africa to Eritrea. Also found in the Mascarenes. According to some authorities it occurs in India and Arabia but this may be another, though closely related species. (See Ciferri of Pa via, Italy, in" Olearia " 1950).
Trees, often 3-14 m high, sometimes stunted bushy growths; branchlets verrucose. Leaves with a tendency for the sides to curl downwards as well as marginal rim being reflexed, dark green above, paler beneath where it is densely covered, rarely fairly sparsely so, with small silvery, golden or pale green scales, linear-lanceolate or narrowly oblong-elliptic, narrowed at base and apex (apex sometimes bluntly rounded), 1-9-8-5 cm long and 0-7-1-5 cm broad, rarely broader (see Clanwilliam and Barberton specimens), mucronate; midrib impressed above, prominent beneath; lateral veins obscure or faintly obvious, loops forming a more or less continuous line within the margin; petiole usually 3-10 mm long. Panicles axillary, sometimes a short terminal panicle present, varying in size, usually shorter than the subtending leaf, the branches verrucose and scaly; bracts deciduous. Flowers small, white. Calyx cupular, up to 1 mm long, very shortly and obscurely 4-toothed. Corolla with a short tube, about 1 mm long; lobes more or less connivent, eventually sp