Edit History
POUZOLZIA parasitica Schweinf. [family URTICACEAE]
Date Updated: 19 August 2007
Herbarium
Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew (K)
Collection
Flora of Tropical Africa
Resource Type
Reference Sources
Entry From
Flora of Tropical Africa, Vol 6, Part 2, page 240, (1917)
Names
POUZOLZIA parasitica Schweinf. [family URTICACEAE], in Bull. Herb. Boiss. iv. App. ii. 145. —Engl. in Mildbraed, Wiss. Ergebn. Deutsch. Zentr.-Afr. Exped. 1907–8, ii. 191.
POUZOLZIA procridioides Wedd. [family URTICACEAE], Monogr. Urtic. 412, and in DC. Prodr. xvi. i. 231; Engl. Hochgebirgsfl. Trop. Afr. 194; Hiern in Cat. Afr. Pl. Welw. i. 992.
Bœhmeria procridioides Bl. Mus. [family ], Bot. Lugd.-Bat. ii. 204.
Margarocarpus procridioides Wedd. [family ], in Ann. Sci. Nat. 4me sér. i. 204.
Urtica muralis Vahl [family URTICACEAE], Symb. i. 77.
Urtica parasitica Forsk. [family URTICACEAE], Fl. Ægypt.-Arab. 160.
Urtica procridioides E. Meyer ex Drège [family URTICACEAE], Zwei Pfl. Documente, 150, 151 (name only).
Information
Perennial shrub, growing in forest or under tree-shade; stems 3–6 ft. high, terete, reddish-brown with thin separable bark and about 1/4 in. thick, erect or ascending with long slender erect branches which are herbaceous, at any rate in the upper part, and hirtellous or pubescent, lower nodes bare. Leaves long- to shorter-stalked, ovate, ovate-elliptic, sometimes roundly ovate, acuminate, base cuneate to rounded, rarely truncate, entire, the rest of the margin crenate-serrate, 2–4 1/2 in. long, 1 1/4–2 3/4 in. wide, 3-nerved, the lateral nerves passing well above the middle generally into the upper third of the blade, with two upper lateral nerves on each side; upper face sparsely hispidly hairy and dotted with whitish cystoliths, more or less pubescent beneath especially on the somewhat prominent slender nerves; petiole slender, pubescent, generally between 3/4 and 2 in. long. Stipules brown, glumaceous, triangular-ovate to lanceolate, acuminate, 3–5 lin. long, with long hairs on the well-marked midrib and margin, persistent and forming an involucre for the axillary inflorescence. Flower-clusters 2–3 lin. in diam., consisting of numerous short-stalked male and a few sessile female. Male perianth campanulate, about 1 lin. long, divided to about the middle into 4 (sometimes 3) ovate shortly mucronate-acuminate segments, puberulous on the back. Stigma slender, longer than the perianth, soon falling. Fruiting perianth broadly ovoid, acute, a little over 1 lin. long, puberulous especially in the upper part, longitudinally nerved, closely investing the white polished achene.
Range
and also (according to Weddell) in tropical South America.
Distribution
Angola Lower Guinea Benguella; near Bumbo, Welwitsch, 6278!Nyasaland Mozamb. Dist. Buchanan, 920!Abyssinia Nile Land Mount Sholoda, at 6600 ft., Schimper, 278! and without further locality, Quartin Dillon, 45.British East Africa Nile Land Kitui, Hildebrandt, 2686!Uganda Nile Land Ruwenzori; Kasamaga, 5300 ft., Scott Elliot, 7540! and at 7000–8000 ft., Scott Elliot, 7761! Kipayo, 4000 ft., Dümmer, 761! 855!Congo South Central Kissenye, on the Ninagongo River, 8000–9500 ft., Mildbraed, 1342.
Distribution (external)
South Africa
Arabia
Notes
Schweinfurth (l.c.) states that Forskal's specimen of Urtica parasitica, upon which also U. muralis, Vahl, is based, is identical with Pouzolzia procridioides, Wedd.
Date Updated: 19 August 2007
Herbarium
Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew (K)
Collection
Flora of Tropical Africa
Resource Type
Reference Sources
Entry From
Flora of Tropical Africa, Vol 6, Part 2, page 240, (1917)
Names
POUZOLZIA parasitica Schweinf. [family URTICACEAE], in Bull. Herb. Boiss. iv. App. ii. 145. —Engl. in Mildbraed, Wiss. Ergebn. Deutsch. Zentr.-Afr. Exped. 1907–8, ii. 191.
POUZOLZIA procridioides Wedd. [family URTICACEAE], Monogr. Urtic. 412, and in DC. Prodr. xvi. i. 231; Engl. Hochgebirgsfl. Trop. Afr. 194; Hiern in Cat. Afr. Pl. Welw. i. 992.
Bœhmeria procridioides Bl. Mus. [family ], Bot. Lugd.-Bat. ii. 204.
Margarocarpus procridioides Wedd. [family ], in Ann. Sci. Nat. 4me sér. i. 204.
Urtica muralis Vahl [family URTICACEAE], Symb. i. 77.
Urtica parasitica Forsk. [family URTICACEAE], Fl. Ægypt.-Arab. 160.
Urtica procridioides E. Meyer ex Drège [family URTICACEAE], Zwei Pfl. Documente, 150, 151 (name only).
Information
Perennial shrub, growing in forest or under tree-shade; stems 3–6 ft. high, terete, reddish-brown with thin separable bark and about 1/4 in. thick, erect or ascending with long slender erect branches which are herbaceous, at any rate in the upper part, and hirtellous or pubescent, lower nodes bare. Leaves long- to shorter-stalked, ovate, ovate-elliptic, sometimes roundly ovate, acuminate, base cuneate to rounded, rarely truncate, entire, the rest of the margin crenate-serrate, 2–4 1/2 in. long, 1 1/4–2 3/4 in. wide, 3-nerved, the lateral nerves passing well above the middle generally into the upper third of the blade, with two upper lateral nerves on each side; upper face sparsely hispidly hairy and dotted with whitish cystoliths, more or less pubescent beneath especially on the somewhat prominent slender nerves; petiole slender, pubescent, generally between 3/4 and 2 in. long. Stipules brown, glumaceous, triangular-ovate to lanceolate, acuminate, 3–5 lin. long, with long hairs on the well-marked midrib and margin, persistent and forming an involucre for the axillary inflorescence. Flower-clusters 2–3 lin. in diam., consisting of numerous short-stalked male and a few sessile female. Male perianth campanulate, about 1 lin. long, divided to about the middle into 4 (sometimes 3) ovate shortly mucronate-acuminate segments, puberulous on the back. Stigma slender, longer than the perianth, soon falling. Fruiting perianth broadly ovoid, acute, a little over 1 lin. long, puberulous especially in the upper part, longitudinally nerved, closely investing the white polished achene.
Range
and also (according to Weddell) in tropical South America.
Distribution
Angola Lower Guinea Benguella; near Bumbo, Welwitsch, 6278!Nyasaland Mozamb. Dist. Buchanan, 920!Abyssinia Nile Land Mount Sholoda, at 6600 ft., Schimper, 278! and without further locality, Quartin Dillon, 45.British East Africa Nile Land Kitui, Hildebrandt, 2686!Uganda Nile Land Ruwenzori; Kasamaga, 5300 ft., Scott Elliot, 7540! and at 7000–8000 ft., Scott Elliot, 7761! Kipayo, 4000 ft., Dümmer, 761! 855!Congo South Central Kissenye, on the Ninagongo River, 8000–9500 ft., Mildbraed, 1342.
Distribution (external)
South Africa
Arabia
Notes
Schweinfurth (l.c.) states that Forskal's specimen of Urtica parasitica, upon which also U. muralis, Vahl, is based, is identical with Pouzolzia procridioides, Wedd.
Date Updated: 19 August 2007
Herbarium
Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew (K)
Collection
Flora of Tropical Africa
Resource Type
Reference Sources
Entry From
Flora of Tropical Africa, Vol 6, Part 2, page 240, (1917)
Names
POUZOLZIA parasitica Schweinf. [family URTICACEAE], in Bull. Herb. Boiss. iv. App. ii. 145. —Engl. in Mildbraed, Wiss. Ergebn. Deutsch. Zentr.-Afr. Exped. 1907–8, ii. 191.
POUZOLZIA procridioides Wedd. [family URTICACEAE], Monogr. Urtic. 412, and in DC. Prodr. xvi. i. 231; Engl. Hochgebirgsfl. Trop. Afr. 194; Hiern in Cat. Afr. Pl. Welw. i. 992.
Bœhmeria procridioides Bl. Mus. [family ], Bot. Lugd.-Bat. ii. 204.
Margarocarpus procridioides Wedd. [family ], in Ann. Sci. Nat. 4me sér. i. 204.
Urtica muralis Vahl [family URTICACEAE], Symb. i. 77.
Urtica parasitica Forsk. [family URTICACEAE], Fl. Ægypt.-Arab. 160.
Urtica procridioides E. Meyer ex Drège [family URTICACEAE], Zwei Pfl. Documente, 150, 151 (name only).
Information
Perennial shrub, growing in forest or under tree-shade; stems 3–6 ft. high, terete, reddish-brown with thin separable bark and about 1/4 in. thick, erect or ascending with long slender erect branches which are herbaceous, at any rate in the upper part, and hirtellous or pubescent, lower nodes bare. Leaves long- to shorter-stalked, ovate, ovate-elliptic, sometimes roundly ovate, acuminate, base cuneate to rounded, rarely truncate, entire, the rest of the margin crenate-serrate, 2–4 1/2 in. long, 1 1/4–2 3/4 in. wide, 3-nerved, the lateral nerves passing well above the middle generally into the upper third of the blade, with two upper lateral nerves on each side; upper face sparsely hispidly hairy and dotted with whitish cystoliths, more or less pubescent beneath especially on the somewhat prominent slender nerves; petiole slender, pubescent, generally between 3/4 and 2 in. long. Stipules brown, glumaceous, triangular-ovate to lanceolate, acuminate, 3–5 lin. long, with long hairs on the well-marked midrib and margin, persistent and forming an involucre for the axillary inflorescence. Flower-clusters 2–3 lin. in diam., consisting of numerous short-stalked male and a few sessile female. Male perianth campanulate, about 1 lin. long, divided to about the middle into 4 (sometimes 3) ovate shortly mucronate-acuminate segments, puberulous on the back. Stigma slender, longer than the perianth, soon falling. Fruiting perianth broadly ovoid, acute, a little over 1 lin. long, puberulous especially in the upper part, longitudinally nerved, closely investing the white polished achene.
Range
and also (according to Weddell) in tropical South America.
Distribution
Angola Lower Guinea Benguella; near Bumbo, Welwitsch, 6278!Nyasaland Mozamb. Dist. Buchanan, 920!Abyssinia Nile Land Mount Sholoda, at 6600 ft., Schimper, 278! and without further locality, Quartin Dillon, 45.British East Africa Nile Land Kitui, Hildebrandt, 2686!Uganda Nile Land Ruwenzori; Kasamaga, 5300 ft., Scott Elliot, 7540! and at 7000–8000 ft., Scott Elliot, 7761! Kipayo, 4000 ft., Dümmer, 761! 855!Congo South Central Kissenye, on the Ninagongo River, 8000–9500 ft., Mildbraed, 1342.
Distribution (external)
South Africa
Arabia
Notes
Schweinfurth (l.c.) states that Forskal's specimen of Urtica parasitica, upon which also U. muralis, Vahl, is based, is identical with Pouzolzia procridioides, Wedd.
╳
We're sorry. You don't appear to have permission to access the item.
Full access to these resources typically requires affiliation with a partnering organization. (For example, researchers are often granted access through their affiliation with a university library.)
If you have an institutional affiliation that provides you access, try logging in via your institution
Have access with an individual account? Login here
If you would like to learn more about access options or believe you received this message in error, please contact us.