Edit History
Cryptocarya woodii Engl. [family LAURACEAE]
Date Updated: 26 July 2007
Herbarium
Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew (K)
Collection
Flora Zambesiaca
Resource Type
Reference Sources
Entry From
FZ, Vol 9, Part 2, page 45, (1997) Author: B.L. Stannard
Names
Cryptocarya woodii Engl. [family LAURACEAE], Bot. Jahrb. Syst. 26: 391 (1899). —Stapf in F.C. 5, 1: 496 (1912). —Bews, Fl. Natal Zululand: 94 (1921). —Kostermans in Bull. Jard. Bot. État 15: 99, pl. 8 (1938). —Palmer & Pitman, Trees of Southern Africa 1: 602 cum 1 fig. (p. 602) and 2 photogr. (p. 600) (1972). —K. Coates Palgrave, Trees Southern Africa, ed. 3 revised: 180 (1990).Type from South Africa (KwaZulu-Natal).
Cryptocarya acuminata Sim [family LAURACEAE], For. Fl. Col. Cape Good Hope: 289 (err. t. CXXIII), t. 158 (1907); For. Fl. Port. E. Africa: 95 (1909).Type from South Africa.
Information
An evergreen shrub, or small to medium sized tree 4–10 m high, occasionally up to 20 m.Bark smooth, grey or greyish-brown; branches terete, glabrous with ± prominent lenticels, becoming verruculose; young branchlets subangular and sparsely appressed pubescent particularly towards the apex; apical buds sericeous-tomentellous.Leaves chartaceous to subcoriaceous, glabrous; petiole 3–5 mm long; lamina 1.5–9 x 1.5–5 cm, ± orbicular to elliptic, cuspidate-acuminate or abruptly acuminate with a blunt tip, rounded to ± cuneate at the base, slightly revolute and undulate on the margin; upper surface drying greyish-brown with an impressed midrib and 3–4(7) pairs of slightly raised lateral nerves; lower surface with midrib and lateral nerves prominent; tertiary veins finely and inconspicuously reticulate.Cymes paniculately arranged, few-flowered, axillary; rhachis 1–3.5 cm long, sparsely and minutely appressed pubescent; peduncle 0.2–1 cm long, slender; bracts ovate-lanceolate, minute, soon caducous.Flowers c. 3 mm long, greenish-white to yellowish, pedicels 1–5 mm long, slender; receptacle 1–1.5 mm long, subcylindric, enlarged near the apex, sparsely appressed tomentellous outside, glabrous inside; tepals erect-patent, 1–1.5 mm long, ovate-elliptic, acute and incurved at the apex.Fertile stamens in 3 whorls, with an innermost whorl of staminodes; filaments very short, with the inner slightly shorter than the outer, slender, pilose; anthers up to 0.8 mm long, ovate, apiculate, glabrous; glands c. 0.4 mm in diameter, subglobose with stalks c. 0.2 mm long, pilose; staminodes c. 1 mm long with pilose filaments and ovate, acute to apiculate, glabrous antherodes.Ovary 0.5–0.8 mm long, ovoid to ellipsoid, glabrous; style 1.5–2 mm long, stigma capitate.Fruit 1.5–2 cm in diameter when ripe, subglobose, mature ovary enveloped by the dark purplish-black receptacle; fruiting pedicel slender.
Habitat
In coastal forests in the Flora Zambesiaca area, in riverine forest, woodland and in evergreen forest margins in South Africa
Range
South Africa (from eastern Transvaal and southwards to eastern Cape Province)
Altitude range
up to 1500 m. in South Africa.
1500
0
inferred only top
Distribution
Mozambique M Matutuíne, fl. & fr. 23.ii.1947, R.M. Hornby 2544 (K; LMA; SRGH).
Distribution (external)
Swaziland
Notes
The wood is brown, close grained and hard.
Date Updated: 26 July 2007
Herbarium
Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew (K)
Collection
Flora Zambesiaca
Resource Type
Reference Sources
Entry From
FZ, Vol 9, Part 2, page 45, (1997) Author: B.L. Stannard
Names
Cryptocarya woodii Engl. [family LAURACEAE], Bot. Jahrb. Syst. 26: 391 (1899). —Stapf in F.C. 5, 1: 496 (1912). —Bews, Fl. Natal Zululand: 94 (1921). —Kostermans in Bull. Jard. Bot. État 15: 99, pl. 8 (1938). —Palmer & Pitman, Trees of Southern Africa 1: 602 cum 1 fig. (p. 602) and 2 photogr. (p. 600) (1972). —K. Coates Palgrave, Trees Southern Africa, ed. 3 revised: 180 (1990).Type from South Africa (KwaZulu-Natal).
Cryptocarya acuminata Sim [family LAURACEAE], For. Fl. Col. Cape Good Hope: 289 (err. t. CXXIII), t. 158 (1907); For. Fl. Port. E. Africa: 95 (1909).Type from South Africa.
Information
An evergreen shrub, or small to medium sized tree 4–10 m high, occasionally up to 20 m.Bark smooth, grey or greyish-brown; branches terete, glabrous with ± prominent lenticels, becoming verruculose; young branchlets subangular and sparsely appressed pubescent particularly towards the apex; apical buds sericeous-tomentellous.Leaves chartaceous to subcoriaceous, glabrous; petiole 3–5 mm long; lamina 1.5–9 x 1.5–5 cm, ± orbicular to elliptic, cuspidate-acuminate or abruptly acuminate with a blunt tip, rounded to ± cuneate at the base, slightly revolute and undulate on the margin; upper surface drying greyish-brown with an impressed midrib and 3–4(7) pairs of slightly raised lateral nerves; lower surface with midrib and lateral nerves prominent; tertiary veins finely and inconspicuously reticulate.Cymes paniculately arranged, few-flowered, axillary; rhachis 1–3.5 cm long, sparsely and minutely appressed pubescent; peduncle 0.2–1 cm long, slender; bracts ovate-lanceolate, minute, soon caducous.Flowers c. 3 mm long, greenish-white to yellowish, pedicels 1–5 mm long, slender; receptacle 1–1.5 mm long, subcylindric, enlarged near the apex, sparsely appressed tomentellous outside, glabrous inside; tepals erect-patent, 1–1.5 mm long, ovate-elliptic, acute and incurved at the apex.Fertile stamens in 3 whorls, with an innermost whorl of staminodes; filaments very short, with the inner slightly shorter than the outer, slender, pilose; anthers up to 0.8 mm long, ovate, apiculate, glabrous; glands c. 0.4 mm in diameter, subglobose with stalks c. 0.2 mm long, pilose; staminodes c. 1 mm long with pilose filaments and ovate, acute to apiculate, glabrous antherodes.Ovary 0.5–0.8 mm long, ovoid to ellipsoid, glabrous; style 1.5–2 mm long, stigma capitate.Fruit 1.5–2 cm in diameter when ripe, subglobose, mature ovary enveloped by the dark purplish-black receptacle; fruiting pedicel slender.
Habitat
In coastal forests in the Flora Zambesiaca area, in riverine forest, woodland and in evergreen forest margins in South Africa
Range
South Africa (from eastern Transvaal and southwards to eastern Cape Province)
Altitude range
up to 1500 m. in South Africa.
1500
0
inferred only top
Distribution
Mozambique M Matutuíne, fl. & fr. 23.ii.1947, R.M. Hornby 2544 (K; LMA; SRGH).
Distribution (external)
Swaziland
Notes
The wood is brown, close grained and hard.
Date Updated: 26 July 2007
Herbarium
Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew (K)
Collection
Flora Zambesiaca
Resource Type
Reference Sources
Entry From
FZ, Vol 9, Part 2, page 45, (1997) Author: B.L. Stannard
Names
Cryptocarya woodii Engl. [family LAURACEAE], Bot. Jahrb. Syst. 26: 391 (1899). —Stapf in F.C. 5, 1: 496 (1912). —Bews, Fl. Natal Zululand: 94 (1921). —Kostermans in Bull. Jard. Bot. État 15: 99, pl. 8 (1938). —Palmer & Pitman, Trees of Southern Africa 1: 602 cum 1 fig. (p. 602) and 2 photogr. (p. 600) (1972). —K. Coates Palgrave, Trees Southern Africa, ed. 3 revised: 180 (1990).Type from South Africa (KwaZulu-Natal).
Cryptocarya acuminata Sim [family LAURACEAE], For. Fl. Col. Cape Good Hope: 289 (err. t. CXXIII), t. 158 (1907); For. Fl. Port. E. Africa: 95 (1909).Type from South Africa.
Information
An evergreen shrub, or small to medium sized tree 4–10 m high, occasionally up to 20 m.Bark smooth, grey or greyish-brown; branches terete, glabrous with ± prominent lenticels, becoming verruculose; young branchlets subangular and sparsely appressed pubescent particularly towards the apex; apical buds sericeous-tomentellous.Leaves chartaceous to subcoriaceous, glabrous; petiole 3–5 mm long; lamina 1.5–9 x 1.5–5 cm, ± orbicular to elliptic, cuspidate-acuminate or abruptly acuminate with a blunt tip, rounded to ± cuneate at the base, slightly revolute and undulate on the margin; upper surface drying greyish-brown with an impressed midrib and 3–4(7) pairs of slightly raised lateral nerves; lower surface with midrib and lateral nerves prominent; tertiary veins finely and inconspicuously reticulate.Cymes paniculately arranged, few-flowered, axillary; rhachis 1–3.5 cm long, sparsely and minutely appressed pubescent; peduncle 0.2–1 cm long, slender; bracts ovate-lanceolate, minute, soon caducous.Flowers c. 3 mm long, greenish-white to yellowish, pedicels 1–5 mm long, slender; receptacle 1–1.5 mm long, subcylindric, enlarged near the apex, sparsely appressed tomentellous outside, glabrous inside; tepals erect-patent, 1–1.5 mm long, ovate-elliptic, acute and incurved at the apex.Fertile stamens in 3 whorls, with an innermost whorl of staminodes; filaments very short, with the inner slightly shorter than the outer, slender, pilose; anthers up to 0.8 mm long, ovate, apiculate, glabrous; glands c. 0.4 mm in diameter, subglobose with stalks c. 0.2 mm long, pilose; staminodes c. 1 mm long with pilose filaments and ovate, acute to apiculate, glabrous antherodes.Ovary 0.5–0.8 mm long, ovoid to ellipsoid, glabrous; style 1.5–2 mm long, stigma capitate.Fruit 1.5–2 cm in diameter when ripe, subglobose, mature ovary enveloped by the dark purplish-black receptacle; fruiting pedicel slender.
Habitat
In coastal forests in the Flora Zambesiaca area, in riverine forest, woodland and in evergreen forest margins in South Africa
Range
South Africa (from eastern Transvaal and southwards to eastern Cape Province)
Altitude range
up to 1500 m. in South Africa.
1500
0
inferred only top
Distribution
Mozambique M Matutuíne, fl. & fr. 23.ii.1947, R.M. Hornby 2544 (K; LMA; SRGH).
Distribution (external)
Swaziland
Notes
The wood is brown, close grained and hard.
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