Edit History
Pearsonia cajanifolia subsp. cryptantha Baker Polhill [family LEGUMINOSAE]
Date Updated: 26 July 2007
Herbarium
Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew (K)
Collection
Flora Zambesiaca
Resource Type
Reference Sources
Entry From
FZ, Vol 3, Part 7, (2003) Author: various authors
Names
Pearsonia cajanifolia subsp. cryptantha Baker Polhill [family LEGUMINOSAE], in Kew Bull. 29: 394 (1974). —Lock, Leg. Afr. Check-list: 228 (1989). Type: Malawi, Zomba Mt., Whyte s.n. (K, holotype).
Eriosema cryptanthum Baker [family LEGUMINOSAE], in Bull. Misc. Inform., Kew 1897: 264 (1897).
Pleiospora holosericea Schinz [family LEGUMINOSAE], in Bull. Herb. Boissier 7: 29 (1899). —Dummer in Trans. Roy. Soc. South Africa 3: 333 (1913). —Burtt Davy, Fl. Pl. Ferns Transvaal, pt. 2: 382 (1932). Syntypes from South Africa (Northern Province and Mpumalanga).
Pleiospora paniculata Bolus ex Dummer [family LEGUMINOSAE], in Trans. Roy. Soc. South Africa 3: 331 (1913). —Burtt Davy, Fl. Pl. Ferns Transvaal, pt. 2: 382 (1932). Type from South Africa (Northern Province).
Pleiospora bolusii Dummer [family LEGUMINOSAE], in Trans. Roy. Soc. South Africa 3: 333 (1913). —Burtt Davy, Fl. Pl. Ferns Transvaal, pt. 2: 382 (1932). Type from South Africa (Northern Province).
Pleiospora macrophylla Dummer [family LEGUMINOSAE], in Trans. Roy. Soc. South Africa 3: 334 (1913). —Burtt Davy, Fl. Pl. Ferns Transvaal, pt. 2: 382 (1932). Type from South Africa (Northern Province).
Pleiospora buchananii Harms [family LEGUMINOSAE], in Repert. Spec. Nov. Regni Veg. 14: 145 (1915), nom. illegit. Types as for Eriosema cryptanthum.
Pleiospora cryptantha Baker Baker f. [family LEGUMINOSAE], Legum. Trop. Africa: 14 (1926).
Phaenohoffmannia cajanifolia subsp. cryptantha Baker J.B. Gillett [family LEGUMINOSAE], in Kew Bull. 20: 298 (1966).
Information
Undersurface of leaflets ± hidden by a dense silky indumentum. Calyx 8–10 mm long.
Habitat
Submontane grassland and often rocky hillsides in higher altitude miombo or Uapaca woodland
Altitude range
1350–2100 m.
2100
1350
Distribution
Zimbabwe E Nyanga Distr., Juliasdale, fl. 8.i.1965, Wild 6744 (K; PRE; SRGH).Malawi S Zomba Plateau, near Nowimbe Fire Tower, fl. 12.i.1979, Blackmore & Patel 141 (BM; K; MAL); Zomba Plateau, near Chingwe’s Hole, fl. 7.ii.1985, Salubeni & Nachamba 4005 (K; MAL).Zimbabwe C Shurugwi (Selukwe) Police Camp, fl. 27.xii.1968, Corby 2063 (K; PRE; SRGH).
Distribution (external)
South Africa (Northern Province, Mpumalanga and probably KwaZulu-Natal)
Notes
Subsp. cajanifoliahas the surface of the leaflets clearly visible between the sparse covering of stiff hairs and slightly smaller flowers, the calyx 6–8 mm long. It occurs further south in the North-West, Gauteng and Mpumalanga Provinces of South Africa, with some intermediates in the Groblersdal and Lydenburg area. The Zimbabwean specimens from Shurugwi tend to have relatively sparse indumentum for subsp. cryptantha, but in general the differences have a distinct geographical bias.
Date Updated: 26 July 2007
Herbarium
Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew (K)
Collection
Flora Zambesiaca
Resource Type
Reference Sources
Entry From
FZ, Vol 3, Part 7, (2003) Author: various authors
Names
Pearsonia cajanifolia subsp. cryptantha Baker Polhill [family LEGUMINOSAE], in Kew Bull. 29: 394 (1974). —Lock, Leg. Afr. Check-list: 228 (1989). Type: Malawi, Zomba Mt., Whyte s.n. (K, holotype).
Eriosema cryptanthum Baker [family LEGUMINOSAE], in Bull. Misc. Inform., Kew 1897: 264 (1897).
Pleiospora holosericea Schinz [family LEGUMINOSAE], in Bull. Herb. Boissier 7: 29 (1899). —Dummer in Trans. Roy. Soc. South Africa 3: 333 (1913). —Burtt Davy, Fl. Pl. Ferns Transvaal, pt. 2: 382 (1932). Syntypes from South Africa (Northern Province and Mpumalanga).
Pleiospora paniculata Bolus ex Dummer [family LEGUMINOSAE], in Trans. Roy. Soc. South Africa 3: 331 (1913). —Burtt Davy, Fl. Pl. Ferns Transvaal, pt. 2: 382 (1932). Type from South Africa (Northern Province).
Pleiospora bolusii Dummer [family LEGUMINOSAE], in Trans. Roy. Soc. South Africa 3: 333 (1913). —Burtt Davy, Fl. Pl. Ferns Transvaal, pt. 2: 382 (1932). Type from South Africa (Northern Province).
Pleiospora macrophylla Dummer [family LEGUMINOSAE], in Trans. Roy. Soc. South Africa 3: 334 (1913). —Burtt Davy, Fl. Pl. Ferns Transvaal, pt. 2: 382 (1932). Type from South Africa (Northern Province).
Pleiospora buchananii Harms [family LEGUMINOSAE], in Repert. Spec. Nov. Regni Veg. 14: 145 (1915), nom. illegit. Types as for Eriosema cryptanthum.
Pleiospora cryptantha Baker Baker f. [family LEGUMINOSAE], Legum. Trop. Africa: 14 (1926).
Phaenohoffmannia cajanifolia subsp. cryptantha Baker J.B. Gillett [family LEGUMINOSAE], in Kew Bull. 20: 298 (1966).
Information
Undersurface of leaflets ± hidden by a dense silky indumentum. Calyx 8–10 mm long.
Habitat
Submontane grassland and often rocky hillsides in higher altitude miombo or Uapaca woodland
Altitude range
1350–2100 m.
2100
1350
Distribution
Zimbabwe E Nyanga Distr., Juliasdale, fl. 8.i.1965, Wild 6744 (K; PRE; SRGH).Malawi S Zomba Plateau, near Nowimbe Fire Tower, fl. 12.i.1979, Blackmore & Patel 141 (BM; K; MAL); Zomba Plateau, near Chingwe’s Hole, fl. 7.ii.1985, Salubeni & Nachamba 4005 (K; MAL).Zimbabwe C Shurugwi (Selukwe) Police Camp, fl. 27.xii.1968, Corby 2063 (K; PRE; SRGH).
Distribution (external)
South Africa (Northern Province, Mpumalanga and probably KwaZulu-Natal)
Notes
Subsp. cajanifoliahas the surface of the leaflets clearly visible between the sparse covering of stiff hairs and slightly smaller flowers, the calyx 6–8 mm long. It occurs further south in the North-West, Gauteng and Mpumalanga Provinces of South Africa, with some intermediates in the Groblersdal and Lydenburg area. The Zimbabwean specimens from Shurugwi tend to have relatively sparse indumentum for subsp. cryptantha, but in general the differences have a distinct geographical bias.
╳
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.