JSTOR Global Plants Home
  • Home
  • Browse
  • About
  • Access
  • Account
    • Saved Items
    • Profile
  • Log in

Global Plants

Skip to Main Content
  • JSTOR Global Plants Home
  • Global Plants

    • Browse
    • About
    • Access
    • Account
      • Saved Items
      • Profile
Log in
  • Browse
  • About
  • Access
  • Account
    • Saved Items
    • Profile
Advanced Search

Compilation
Abutilon macropodum

3 Images see all

Type of Abutilon macropodum Guill. & Perr. [family MALVACEAE]
Type of Abutilon macropodum Guill. & Perr. [family MALVACEAE]
Type of Abutilon macropodum Guill. & Perr. [family MALVACEAE]
Previous
Next

Name

Identification
Abutilon macropodum Guill. & Perr. [family MALVACEAE ] (stored under name); Abutilon macropodum Guill. & Perr. [family MALVACEAE ]
Related name
  • Abutilon macropodum

Flora

Entry for ABUTILON macropodum Guill. et Perr. [family MALVACEAE]
Herbarium
Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew (K)
Collection
Flora of Tropical Africa
Resource Type
Reference Sources
Entry From
Flora of Tropical Africa, Vol 1, page 175, (1868) Author: (by Dr. Maxwell T. Masters).
Names
ABUTILON macropodum Guill. et Perr. [family MALVACEAE], Fl. Seneg. i. 69. t. 14.
Information
A low-growing, much-branched, suffrutescent perennial, the younger shoots and leaves downy. Petioles 1–2 in. long, equalling the leaves, which are cordate, roundish, obscurely 3-lobed; lobes broad entire or crenate. Stipules linear. Pedicels nearly as long as the leaves, simple, solitary, axillary, 1-flowered, thickened at the apex, jointed. Sepals ovate, acute, slightly cuspidate, downy, much shorter than the ripe fruit, which is cylindrical, truncate, scarcely an inch long, about an inch across, and consisting of 20 or more membranous, readily-separable carpels, each terminated by two awns, which are at first erect and ultimately spread horizontally. Seeds large; columella thick cylindrical or clavate, longer than the calyx.
Distribution
Senegambia Upper Guinea Perrottet!
Notes
Apparently a well-marked species as to its habit and the great comparative size of the ripe carpels.

Related Materials

  • Terms and Conditions
  • Privacy Policy
  • Cookie Policy
  • Cookie Settings
  • Accessibility
  • Help
  • Contact Us
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
ITHAKA

JSTOR is part of ITHAKA, a not-for-profit organization helping the academic community use digital technologies to preserve the scholarly record and to advance research and teaching in sustainable ways.

©2000-2026 ITHAKA. All Rights Reserved. JSTOR®, the JSTOR logo, JPASS®, Aluka®, and ITHAKA® are registered trademarks of ITHAKA.

╳