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Phyllanthus ovalifolius Forssk. [family EUPHORBIACEAE]
Date Updated: 26 July 2007
Herbarium
Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew (K)
Collection
Flora Zambesiaca
Resource Type
Reference Sources
Entry From
FZ, Vol 9, Part 4, (1996) Author: A. Radcliffe-Smith
Names
Phyllanthus guineensis Pax [family EUPHORBIACEAE], in Bull. Herb. Boissier, 6: 732 (1898). —Hutchinson in F.T.A. 6, 1: 699 (1912). —R.E. Fries, Wiss. Ergebn. Schwed. Rhod.-Kongo-Exped. 1, 1: 120 (1914). —Engler, Pflanzenw. Afrikas (Veg. Erde 9) 3, 2: 23 (1921). —Robyns & Tournay, Fl. Sperm. Parc Nat. Alb. 1: 441 (1948). —Brenan, Check-list For. Trees Shrubs Tang. Terr.: 222 (1949). —Topham, Check List For. Trees Shrubs Nyasaland Prot.: 52 (1958). —White, F.F.N.R.: 202 (1962). —Agnew, Upl. Kenya Wild Fls.: 212 (1974). —Drummond in Kirkia 10: 251 (1975). —K. Coates Palgrave, Trees Southern Africa, ed. 2, rev.: 399 (1983). Type from Angola (Huíla Province).
Phyllanthus floribundus [family EUPHORBIACEAE], sensu Hiern, Cat. Pl. Afr. Welw. 1, 4: 957 (1900), non Müll. Arg.
Phyllanthus ugandensis Rendle [family EUPHORBIACEAE], in J. Linn. Soc., Bot. 37: 210 (1905). Type from Uganda.
Phyllanthus ovalifolius Forssk. [family EUPHORBIACEAE], Fl. Aegypt.-Arab.: 159 (1775). —Müller Argoviensis in De Candolle, Prodr. 15, 2: 346 (1866). —Troupin, Fl. Pl. Lign. Rwanda: 267, fig. 90/3 (1982); Fl. Rwanda 2: 236, ? fig. 71/2 (1983). —Radcliffe-Smith in F.T.E.A., Euphorb. 1: 32 t. 4 (1987). —Beentje, Kenya Trees, Shrubs Lianas: 218 (1994). Type from Yemen.
Phyllanthus lalambensis Schweinf. [family EUPHORBIACEAE], in Penzig, Atti Congr. Bot. Genova: 360 (1895), nomen; in Bull. Herb. Boissier, 7, App. 2: 302 (1899). —Hutchinson in F.T.A. 6, 1: 698 (1912). —Engler, Pflanzenw. Afrikas (Veg. Erde 9) 3, 2: 24 (1921). —Brenan, Check-list For. Trees Shrubs Tang. Terr.: 222 (1949). Type from Ethiopia (Eritrea).
Information
A much-branched often dense scrambling or spreading weak-stemmed bush 2–5(10) m high; plants monoecious or dioecious, armed, glabrous; branches long slender horizontal, arching or pendent, blackish.Bark rough, dark brown.Twigs dark grey.Lateral shoots leafy, floriferous or both, not usually more than 10 cm long.Short shoots giving rise to one or more secondary laterals or lead shoots.Scale leaves 1.5–2 mm long, triangular-lanceolate, ciliate, dark brown, their bases becoming hard and spiny; their stipules triangular-ovate, otherwise resembling them.Foliage leaves distichous.Petioles 1 mm long.Stipules 1.3 mm long, oblong-linear to linear-lanceolate, chestnut-brown, ciliate-fimbriate.Leaf blades 0.7–2.3 × 0.4–1.5 cm, obovate-oblong to elliptic-oblong, usually ± parallel sided, obtuse, rounded or truncate, occasionally mucronulate, cuneate or rounded at the base, firmly membranaceous, bright yellow-green above, glaucous beneath; lateral nerves in 6–7(9) pairs, not or scarcely prominent above or beneath, often forming somewhat irregular loops.Flowers in clusters which are all male, or else a few male plus 1 female, or female flowers solitary.Male flowers: pedicels 2–3 mm, capillary; sepals (4)5, the 2 outer 1 × 1 mm, the 3 inner 1.3 × 1.3 mm, obovate-suborbicular, yellowish-green, cream-coloured or occasionally pinkish-, crimson- or purplish-tinged; disk glands (4)5, free, circular, ± smooth, fleshy; stamens (2)4(5), the 2 outer free, the rest united, or all united into a column 1 mm high, anthers 0.3 mm long, vertically held, longitudinally dehiscent.Female flowers: pedicels 1.5–2.5 mm long, slender; sepals ± as in the male; disk 0.67 mm in diameter, annular, crenellate, thick, fleshy; ovary 0.5 mm in diameter, sessile, rhomboid-ovoid, ± smooth; styles 3(4), 1 mm long, connate at the base, ± erect, slender, usually simple, slightly thickened and somewhat recurved at the apex.Fruit 3–4 × 4–5 mm, subglobose, smooth, fleshy, brownish at first later becoming dark reddish-purple, and black when dried.Seeds 1.5 × 1 × 1 mm, triquetrous, ± smooth, shiny, bright reddish-brown, with a round aperture by the hilum.
Habitat
In high rainfall deciduous woodlands, chipya woodland and thickets, and in evergreen rainforest, forest margins and gully forest, also in riverine forest and mushitu, sometimes on well-wooded rocky outcrops and termitaria
Range
Widespread in tropical Africa from southern Nigeria to Ethiopia and south to Angola and Mozambique; also in S Arabia (Yemen)
Altitude range
780–1950 m.
1950
780
Distribution
Mozambique MS Dombe, 4 km from Serração de Moribane, y. fr. 4.xii.1965, Pereira & Marques 951 (BR; LMU).Malawi S Mt. Mulanje, Likhubula Valley, fr. 29.v.1987, J.D. Chapman & E.J. Chapman 8539 (K; MO; PRE).Zimbabwe S Bikita Distr., female fl. & fr. 17.xii.1953, Wild 4424 (K; LISC; PRE; SRGH).Zambia C 17.5 km Lusaka–Kabwe, fl. 12.ix.1972, Strid 2104 (MO).Zambia W Kabompo Distr., Mwinilunga–Kabompo road, male & female fl. 4.x.1952, Angus 598 (BM; FHO; K).Mozambique N Malema, Serra Murripa, fr. 15.xii.1967, Torre & Correia 16531 (LISC).Malawi N Chitipa Distr., Misuku Hills, Mughesse Forest, fr. 28.xii.1972, Pawek 6181 (K; MAL; MO; SRGH; UC).Zimbabwe E Mutare Distr., Inyamatshira Mt., male fl. 25.xi.1962, Chase 7902 (K; LISC; SRGH).Zambia N Mbala Distr., Saisi Valley, Chitundi Marsh, male & female fl. & fr. 10.x.1970, Richards & Arasululu 26255 (K; SRGH).
Notes
Phyllanthus reticulatus var. glaber with P. ovalifolius produces the hybrid Phyllanthus × collium-misuku Radcl.-Sm. in Kew Bull. 47: 680 (1992).It also seems to hybridize with the typical variety.The flexible stems are used in making fish traps.
Date Updated: 26 July 2007
Herbarium
Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew (K)
Collection
Flora Zambesiaca
Resource Type
Reference Sources
Entry From
FZ, Vol 9, Part 4, (1996) Author: A. Radcliffe-Smith
Names
Phyllanthus guineensis Pax [family EUPHORBIACEAE], in Bull. Herb. Boissier, 6: 732 (1898). —Hutchinson in F.T.A. 6, 1: 699 (1912). —R.E. Fries, Wiss. Ergebn. Schwed. Rhod.-Kongo-Exped. 1, 1: 120 (1914). —Engler, Pflanzenw. Afrikas (Veg. Erde 9) 3, 2: 23 (1921). —Robyns & Tournay, Fl. Sperm. Parc Nat. Alb. 1: 441 (1948). —Brenan, Check-list For. Trees Shrubs Tang. Terr.: 222 (1949). —Topham, Check List For. Trees Shrubs Nyasaland Prot.: 52 (1958). —White, F.F.N.R.: 202 (1962). —Agnew, Upl. Kenya Wild Fls.: 212 (1974). —Drummond in Kirkia 10: 251 (1975). —K. Coates Palgrave, Trees Southern Africa, ed. 2, rev.: 399 (1983). Type from Angola (Huíla Province).
Phyllanthus floribundus [family EUPHORBIACEAE], sensu Hiern, Cat. Pl. Afr. Welw. 1, 4: 957 (1900), non Müll. Arg.
Phyllanthus ugandensis Rendle [family EUPHORBIACEAE], in J. Linn. Soc., Bot. 37: 210 (1905). Type from Uganda.
Phyllanthus ovalifolius Forssk. [family EUPHORBIACEAE], Fl. Aegypt.-Arab.: 159 (1775). —Müller Argoviensis in De Candolle, Prodr. 15, 2: 346 (1866). —Troupin, Fl. Pl. Lign. Rwanda: 267, fig. 90/3 (1982); Fl. Rwanda 2: 236, ? fig. 71/2 (1983). —Radcliffe-Smith in F.T.E.A., Euphorb. 1: 32 t. 4 (1987). —Beentje, Kenya Trees, Shrubs Lianas: 218 (1994). Type from Yemen.
Phyllanthus lalambensis Schweinf. [family EUPHORBIACEAE], in Penzig, Atti Congr. Bot. Genova: 360 (1895), nomen; in Bull. Herb. Boissier, 7, App. 2: 302 (1899). —Hutchinson in F.T.A. 6, 1: 698 (1912). —Engler, Pflanzenw. Afrikas (Veg. Erde 9) 3, 2: 24 (1921). —Brenan, Check-list For. Trees Shrubs Tang. Terr.: 222 (1949). Type from Ethiopia (Eritrea).
Information
A much-branched often dense scrambling or spreading weak-stemmed bush 2–5(10) m high; plants monoecious or dioecious, armed, glabrous; branches long slender horizontal, arching or pendent, blackish.Bark rough, dark brown.Twigs dark grey.Lateral shoots leafy, floriferous or both, not usually more than 10 cm long.Short shoots giving rise to one or more secondary laterals or lead shoots.Scale leaves 1.5–2 mm long, triangular-lanceolate, ciliate, dark brown, their bases becoming hard and spiny; their stipules triangular-ovate, otherwise resembling them.Foliage leaves distichous.Petioles 1 mm long.Stipules 1.3 mm long, oblong-linear to linear-lanceolate, chestnut-brown, ciliate-fimbriate.Leaf blades 0.7–2.3 × 0.4–1.5 cm, obovate-oblong to elliptic-oblong, usually ± parallel sided, obtuse, rounded or truncate, occasionally mucronulate, cuneate or rounded at the base, firmly membranaceous, bright yellow-green above, glaucous beneath; lateral nerves in 6–7(9) pairs, not or scarcely prominent above or beneath, often forming somewhat irregular loops.Flowers in clusters which are all male, or else a few male plus 1 female, or female flowers solitary.Male flowers: pedicels 2–3 mm, capillary; sepals (4)5, the 2 outer 1 × 1 mm, the 3 inner 1.3 × 1.3 mm, obovate-suborbicular, yellowish-green, cream-coloured or occasionally pinkish-, crimson- or purplish-tinged; disk glands (4)5, free, circular, ± smooth, fleshy; stamens (2)4(5), the 2 outer free, the rest united, or all united into a column 1 mm high, anthers 0.3 mm long, vertically held, longitudinally dehiscent.Female flowers: pedicels 1.5–2.5 mm long, slender; sepals ± as in the male; disk 0.67 mm in diameter, annular, crenellate, thick, fleshy; ovary 0.5 mm in diameter, sessile, rhomboid-ovoid, ± smooth; styles 3(4), 1 mm long, connate at the base, ± erect, slender, usually simple, slightly thickened and somewhat recurved at the apex.Fruit 3–4 × 4–5 mm, subglobose, smooth, fleshy, brownish at first later becoming dark reddish-purple, and black when dried.Seeds 1.5 × 1 × 1 mm, triquetrous, ± smooth, shiny, bright reddish-brown, with a round aperture by the hilum.
Habitat
In high rainfall deciduous woodlands, chipya woodland and thickets, and in evergreen rainforest, forest margins and gully forest, also in riverine forest and mushitu, sometimes on well-wooded rocky outcrops and termitaria
Range
Widespread in tropical Africa from southern Nigeria to Ethiopia and south to Angola and Mozambique; also in S Arabia (Yemen)
Altitude range
780–1950 m.
1950
780
Distribution
Mozambique MS Dombe, 4 km from Serração de Moribane, y. fr. 4.xii.1965, Pereira & Marques 951 (BR; LMU).Malawi S Mt. Mulanje, Likhubula Valley, fr. 29.v.1987, J.D. Chapman & E.J. Chapman 8539 (K; MO; PRE).Zimbabwe S Bikita Distr., female fl. & fr. 17.xii.1953, Wild 4424 (K; LISC; PRE; SRGH).Zambia C 17.5 km Lusaka–Kabwe, fl. 12.ix.1972, Strid 2104 (MO).Zambia W Kabompo Distr., Mwinilunga–Kabompo road, male & female fl. 4.x.1952, Angus 598 (BM; FHO; K).Mozambique N Malema, Serra Murripa, fr. 15.xii.1967, Torre & Correia 16531 (LISC).Malawi N Chitipa Distr., Misuku Hills, Mughesse Forest, fr. 28.xii.1972, Pawek 6181 (K; MAL; MO; SRGH; UC).Zimbabwe E Mutare Distr., Inyamatshira Mt., male fl. 25.xi.1962, Chase 7902 (K; LISC; SRGH).Zambia N Mbala Distr., Saisi Valley, Chitundi Marsh, male & female fl. & fr. 10.x.1970, Richards & Arasululu 26255 (K; SRGH).
Notes
Phyllanthus reticulatus var. glaber with P. ovalifolius produces the hybrid Phyllanthus × collium-misuku Radcl.-Sm. in Kew Bull. 47: 680 (1992).It also seems to hybridize with the typical variety.The flexible stems are used in making fish traps.
Date Updated: 26 July 2007
Herbarium
Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew (K)
Collection
Flora Zambesiaca
Resource Type
Reference Sources
Entry From
FZ, Vol 9, Part 4, (1996) Author: A. Radcliffe-Smith
Names
Phyllanthus guineensis Pax [family EUPHORBIACEAE], in Bull. Herb. Boissier, 6: 732 (1898). —Hutchinson in F.T.A. 6, 1: 699 (1912). —R.E. Fries, Wiss. Ergebn. Schwed. Rhod.-Kongo-Exped. 1, 1: 120 (1914). —Engler, Pflanzenw. Afrikas (Veg. Erde 9) 3, 2: 23 (1921). —Robyns & Tournay, Fl. Sperm. Parc Nat. Alb. 1: 441 (1948). —Brenan, Check-list For. Trees Shrubs Tang. Terr.: 222 (1949). —Topham, Check List For. Trees Shrubs Nyasaland Prot.: 52 (1958). —White, F.F.N.R.: 202 (1962). —Agnew, Upl. Kenya Wild Fls.: 212 (1974). —Drummond in Kirkia 10: 251 (1975). —K. Coates Palgrave, Trees Southern Africa, ed. 2, rev.: 399 (1983). Type from Angola (Huíla Province).
Phyllanthus floribundus [family EUPHORBIACEAE], sensu Hiern, Cat. Pl. Afr. Welw. 1, 4: 957 (1900), non Müll. Arg.
Phyllanthus ugandensis Rendle [family EUPHORBIACEAE], in J. Linn. Soc., Bot. 37: 210 (1905). Type from Uganda.
Phyllanthus ovalifolius Forssk. [family EUPHORBIACEAE], Fl. Aegypt.-Arab.: 159 (1775). —Müller Argoviensis in De Candolle, Prodr. 15, 2: 346 (1866). —Troupin, Fl. Pl. Lign. Rwanda: 267, fig. 90/3 (1982); Fl. Rwanda 2: 236, ? fig. 71/2 (1983). —Radcliffe-Smith in F.T.E.A., Euphorb. 1: 32 t. 4 (1987). —Beentje, Kenya Trees, Shrubs Lianas: 218 (1994). Type from Yemen.
Phyllanthus lalambensis Schweinf. [family EUPHORBIACEAE], in Penzig, Atti Congr. Bot. Genova: 360 (1895), nomen; in Bull. Herb. Boissier, 7, App. 2: 302 (1899). —Hutchinson in F.T.A. 6, 1: 698 (1912). —Engler, Pflanzenw. Afrikas (Veg. Erde 9) 3, 2: 24 (1921). —Brenan, Check-list For. Trees Shrubs Tang. Terr.: 222 (1949). Type from Ethiopia (Eritrea).
Information
A much-branched often dense scrambling or spreading weak-stemmed bush 2–5(10) m high; plants monoecious or dioecious, armed, glabrous; branches long slender horizontal, arching or pendent, blackish.Bark rough, dark brown.Twigs dark grey.Lateral shoots leafy, floriferous or both, not usually more than 10 cm long.Short shoots giving rise to one or more secondary laterals or lead shoots.Scale leaves 1.5–2 mm long, triangular-lanceolate, ciliate, dark brown, their bases becoming hard and spiny; their stipules triangular-ovate, otherwise resembling them.Foliage leaves distichous.Petioles 1 mm long.Stipules 1.3 mm long, oblong-linear to linear-lanceolate, chestnut-brown, ciliate-fimbriate.Leaf blades 0.7–2.3 × 0.4–1.5 cm, obovate-oblong to elliptic-oblong, usually ± parallel sided, obtuse, rounded or truncate, occasionally mucronulate, cuneate or rounded at the base, firmly membranaceous, bright yellow-green above, glaucous beneath; lateral nerves in 6–7(9) pairs, not or scarcely prominent above or beneath, often forming somewhat irregular loops.Flowers in clusters which are all male, or else a few male plus 1 female, or female flowers solitary.Male flowers: pedicels 2–3 mm, capillary; sepals (4)5, the 2 outer 1 × 1 mm, the 3 inner 1.3 × 1.3 mm, obovate-suborbicular, yellowish-green, cream-coloured or occasionally pinkish-, crimson- or purplish-tinged; disk glands (4)5, free, circular, ± smooth, fleshy; stamens (2)4(5), the 2 outer free, the rest united, or all united into a column 1 mm high, anthers 0.3 mm long, vertically held, longitudinally dehiscent.Female flowers: pedicels 1.5–2.5 mm long, slender; sepals ± as in the male; disk 0.67 mm in diameter, annular, crenellate, thick, fleshy; ovary 0.5 mm in diameter, sessile, rhomboid-ovoid, ± smooth; styles 3(4), 1 mm long, connate at the base, ± erect, slender, usually simple, slightly thickened and somewhat recurved at the apex.Fruit 3–4 × 4–5 mm, subglobose, smooth, fleshy, brownish at first later becoming dark reddish-purple, and black when dried.Seeds 1.5 × 1 × 1 mm, triquetrous, ± smooth, shiny, bright reddish-brown, with a round aperture by the hilum.
Habitat
In high rainfall deciduous woodlands, chipya woodland and thickets, and in evergreen rainforest, forest margins and gully forest, also in riverine forest and mushitu, sometimes on well-wooded rocky outcrops and termitaria
Range
Widespread in tropical Africa from southern Nigeria to Ethiopia and south to Angola and Mozambique; also in S Arabia (Yemen)
Altitude range
780–1950 m.
1950
780
Distribution
Mozambique MS Dombe, 4 km from Serração de Moribane, y. fr. 4.xii.1965, Pereira & Marques 951 (BR; LMU).Malawi S Mt. Mulanje, Likhubula Valley, fr. 29.v.1987, J.D. Chapman & E.J. Chapman 8539 (K; MO; PRE).Zimbabwe S Bikita Distr., female fl. & fr. 17.xii.1953, Wild 4424 (K; LISC; PRE; SRGH).Zambia C 17.5 km Lusaka–Kabwe, fl. 12.ix.1972, Strid 2104 (MO).Zambia W Kabompo Distr., Mwinilunga–Kabompo road, male & female fl. 4.x.1952, Angus 598 (BM; FHO; K).Mozambique N Malema, Serra Murripa, fr. 15.xii.1967, Torre & Correia 16531 (LISC).Malawi N Chitipa Distr., Misuku Hills, Mughesse Forest, fr. 28.xii.1972, Pawek 6181 (K; MAL; MO; SRGH; UC).Zimbabwe E Mutare Distr., Inyamatshira Mt., male fl. 25.xi.1962, Chase 7902 (K; LISC; SRGH).Zambia N Mbala Distr., Saisi Valley, Chitundi Marsh, male & female fl. & fr. 10.x.1970, Richards & Arasululu 26255 (K; SRGH).
Notes
Phyllanthus reticulatus var. glaber with P. ovalifolius produces the hybrid Phyllanthus × collium-misuku Radcl.-Sm. in Kew Bull. 47: 680 (1992).It also seems to hybridize with the typical variety.The flexible stems are used in making fish traps.
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