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Compilation
Clematis wightiana

17 Images see all

Type of Clematis wightiana Wallich [family RANUNCULACEAE]
Syntype of Clematis wightiana Wall. ex Wight & Arn. [family RANUNCULACEAE]
Clematis vitifolia Wall. [family RANUNCULACEAE]
Syntype of Clematis longipes Engl. [family RANUNCULACEAE]
Syntype of Clematis wightiana Wall. ex Wight & Arn. [family RANUNCULACEAE]
Syntype of Clematis wightiana Wall. ex Wight & Arn. [family RANUNCULACEAE]
Syntype of Clematis wightiana Wall. ex Wight & Arn. [family RANUNCULACEAE]
Clematis hirsuta Guill. & Perr. [family RANUNCULACEAE]
Clematis wightiana Wall. [family RANUNCULACEAE]
Filed as Clematis wightiana Wall. ex Wight & Arn. [family RANUNCULACEAE]
Syntype of Clematis wightiana Wall. ex Wight & Arn. [family RANUNCULACEAE]
Lectotype of Clematis wightiana Wall. ex Wight & Arn. [family RANUNCULACEAE]
Type of Clematis wightiana Wall. var. pilosissima Engl. [family RANUNCULACEAE]
Syntype of Clematis wightiana Wall. ex Wight var. gallaensis Engl. [family RANUNCULACEAE]
Clematis wightiana Wall. [family RANUNCULACEAE]
Isosyntype of Clematis wightiana Wall. ex Wight var. gallaensis Engl. [family RANUNCULACEAE]
Filed as Clematis wightiana Wall. [family RANUNCULACEAE]
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Name

Identification
Clematis wightiana Wall. ex Wight & Arn. [family RANUNCULACEAE ] (stored under name); Verified by Panigrahi, C., 1974
Related name
  • Clematis dolichopoda
  • Clematis wightiana
  • Clematis longipes
  • Clematis simensis
  • Clematis hirsuta
  • Clematis inciso-dentata
  • Clematis grewiaeflora
  • Clematis vitifolia
  • Clematis orientalis

Flora

Entry for Clematis brachiata Thunb. [family RANUNCULACEAE]
Herbarium
Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew (K)
Collection
Flora Zambesiaca
Resource Type
Reference Sources
Entry From
FZ, Vol 1, Part 1, page 89, (1960) Author: A. W. Exell and E. Milne-Redhead
Names
Clematis hirsuta [family RANUNCULACEAE], sensu Milne-Redh. in Mem. N.Y. Bot. Gard. 8, 3: 211 (1953).
Clematis orientalis [family RANUNCULACEAE], sensu Merxm. in Proc. & Trans. Rhod. Sci.Ass.43: 12 (1951).
Clematis inciso-dentata [family RANUNCULACEAE], sensu Garcia, loc. cit. — Martineau, Rhod. Wild Fl.: 28 (1954).
Clematis brachiata var. burkei Burtt Davy [family RANUNCULACEAE], F.P.F.T. 1: 111 (1926). Type from S. Africa (Orange Free State).
Clematis petersiana Klotzsch [family RANUNCULACEAE], in Peters, Reise Mossamb. Bot. 1: 170 (1861). Type: Mozambique, Tete, Peters (B, holotype †).
Clematis thunbergii [family RANUNCULACEAE], sensu Eyles in Trans. Roy. Soc. S. Afr. 5: 352 (1916). — Garcia in Bol. Soc. Brot., Ser. 2, 19: 509 (1945).
Clematis wightiana [family RANUNCULACEAE], sensu Eyles, torn. cit.: 353 (1916).
Clematis viorna [family RANUNCULACEAE], sensu Eyles, loc. cit. (err. \" virona \").
Clematis brachiata Thunb. [family RANUNCULACEAE], Prodr. Pl. Cap. 2: 94 (1800). — Harv. & Sond., F.C. 1: 2 (1860) — Weim. in Bot. Notis. 1936: 30 (1936). — M. Henderson in Fl. Pl. Afr. 30: t. 1197 (1955). Type from S. Africa.
Clematis simensis [family RANUNCULACEAE], sensu Wild, Guide Fl. Vict. Falls: 143 (1953).
Information
Woody climber up to about 4 m. tall; younger stems more or less softly hairy, longitudinally ribbed and furrowed. Leaves pinnate with 5–7 leaflets or pinnate-ternate; leaflets suborbicular to ovate in outline, shortly acuminate, acute or more rarely subobtuse, cordate to rounded or obtuse at the base, often a longer central lobe with a shorter lateral one on each side but sometimes asymmetric, margins crenate-dentate, from glabrous to densely sericeous-pubescent or tomentose on the lower surface and from glabrous to sparsely appressed-pubescent on the upper surface. Inflorescences generally many-flowered; flowers sweet-scented; pedicels 0.5–3 cm. long; flower-buds spherical to ellipsoid, rounded to acuminate. Sepals 0.8–1.5 cm. long; cream or white. Anthers usually 1.5–2 mm. long. Achenes (including persistent style) up to 4 cm. long.
Habitat
In woodlands and wooded grassland
Range
Widespread in tropical and S. Africa.
Altitude range
from 500–1550 m.
1550
500
Distribution
Zimbabwe C Marandellas, fr. 21.vii.1947, Newton 94 (SRGH).Zambia S Namwala, on Kalahari sand, fr. 24.vi.1952, White 2986 (FHO).Zimbabwe W Matopos, near World’s View, fl. 13.iv.1955, E.M. & W. 1488 (BM; LISC; SRGH).Zambia E Mvuvye, fr. 16.viii.1955, Lees 32 (K).Zambia C Chalimbana, fl. 31.v.1937, Robinson 2215 (K).Botswana SE Mochudi, fr. viii.1914, Harbor (SRGH).Mozambique N Vila Cabral, 500 m., fl. 3.viii.1946, Torre 151 (BM; COI).Malawi N Nyika Plateau, Rumpi, 1520 m., fl. ix.1902, McClounie 129 (K).Zambia W Solwezi, fr. 12.ix.1952, White 2333 (FHO).Zimbabwe N Mazoe, 1310 m., fl. iv.1906, Eyles 326 (BM).Botswana N Ngamiland, Toakhe R., Gomane, fr. 19.vi.1937, Evans 252 (PRE).Mozambique GI between Macia and Monianga, fr. 9.vii.1947, Pedro & Pedrógão 1385 (LMJ; PRE; SRGH).Mozambique MS Chimoio, Serra de Garuso, fl. 5.iv.1948, Garcia 896 (BM; LISC).Mozambique Z Montes do Ile, fr. 26.vi.1943, Torre 5584 (BM; LISC).Malawi S Fort Johnston, Kalembo, fl. 31.v.1955, Jackson 1663 A (BM; LISC; SRGH).Malawi C Nchisi Mt., 1350 m., fl. 3.viii.1946, Brass 17112 (BM; K; PRE; SRGH).Zimbabwe S SE. Ndanga, fr. 14.vii.1955, Mowbray 49 (SRGH).Zimbabwe E Inyanga, 1550 m., fr. 24.xi.1930, F.N. & W. 3195 (LD); Melsetter, 1460 m., fl. 30.iii.1950, Williams 87 (BM; SRGH).
Notes
In Southern Rhodesia and Mozambique this species is certainly not separable from the South African C. brachiata Thunb., which is the earliest name available. In the northwest and northeast of the region our material is equally inseparable from an Angolan and East African \"species\" which has been called C. hirsuta Perr. & Guill. in the recent floras of those countries. Although we suspect that much of the material at present referred to C. hirsuta in various parts of tropical Africa will eventually have to be transferred to C. brachiata we have not formally included C. hirsuta in our synonymy because: (a) this latter species needs further collecting from the type locality (Cape Verde Peninsula); and (b) the problem of the \"species\" in East Africa is very complex (see Milne-Redh. & Turrill, F.T.E.A. Ranunc.: 6 (1952)) and does not directly concern us here. In our region the species is much less variable and identification is only difficult in a few cases where there has perhaps been hybridization with C. simensis in the wetter regions, with C. oweniae, more particularly in S. Africa, or with C. viridiflora in Nyasaland and Mozambique.

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