Flora of Cameroon - Annonaceae Vol 45
Author
Couvreur, Thomas L. P.
https://orcid.org/0000-0002-8509-6587
IRD, DIADE, Univ Montpellier, Montpellier, France & Universite de Yaounde I, Ecole Normale Superieure, Departement des Sciences Biologiques, Laboratoire de Botanique systematique et d'Ecologie, B. P. 047, Yaounde, Cameroon & Naturalis Biodiversity Center, Botany Section, Darwinweg 2, 2333 CR Leiden, Netherlands
thomas.couvreur@ird.fr
Author
Dagallier, Leo-Paul M. J.
https://orcid.org/0000-0002-3270-1544
IRD, DIADE, Univ Montpellier, Montpellier, France
Author
Crozier, Francoise
IRD, DIADE, Univ Montpellier, Montpellier, France
Author
Ghogue, Jean-Paul
Universite de Yaounde I, Ecole Normale Superieure, Departement des Sciences Biologiques, Laboratoire de Botanique systematique et d'Ecologie, B. P. 047, Yaounde, Cameroon & Green Connexion, Environmental Group, siege face GP Melen, a cote de l'immeuble Palais des verres. Yaounde, Cameroun
Author
Hoekstra, Paul H.
Naturalis Biodiversity Center, Botany Section, Darwinweg 2, 2333 CR Leiden, Netherlands
Author
Kamdem, Narcisse G.
Universite de Yaounde I, Ecole Normale Superieure, Departement des Sciences Biologiques, Laboratoire de Botanique systematique et d'Ecologie, B. P. 047, Yaounde, Cameroon
Author
Johnson, David M.
https://orcid.org/0000-0003-2896-7419
Department of Botany-Microbiology, Ohio Wesleyan University, Delaware, OH, 43015, USA
Author
Murray, Nancy A.
Department of Botany-Microbiology, Ohio Wesleyan University, Delaware, OH, 43015, USA
Author
Sonke, Bonaventure
https://orcid.org/0000-0002-4310-3603
Universite de Yaounde I, Ecole Normale Superieure, Departement des Sciences Biologiques, Laboratoire de Botanique systematique et d'Ecologie, B. P. 047, Yaounde, Cameroon
text
PhytoKeys
2022
2022-09-20
207
1
532
http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/phytokeys.207.61432
journal article
http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/phytokeys.207.61432
1314-2003-207-1
29CD4EF8FB525DBAA022DF25CDB649C9
Xylopia villosa Chipp, Bull. Misc. Inform. Kew: 183, 1923
Fig. 153
; Map 1E
≡ Xylopiastrum villosum
(Chipp)
Aubrev
., Flor. For.
Cote
d'Ivoire
, ed. 2, 1: 140, 1959.
Type
.
Nigeria
.
Lagos State
;
Ibadan Forest Reserve
,
Lagos
,
Punch C.
119
,
Dec 1913
:
lectotype
, designated by
Johnson and Murray (2018)
, p. 215: K[000199069]
.
Description.
Tree, up to 30 m tall, d.b.h. up to 90 cm;
buttresses narrowly concave ca. 1 m high
. Old branches sparsely pubescent to glabrous,
young branches densely villous, with erect orange or reddish brown hairs 0.5-1.3 mm long
. Leaves: petiole 2-4 mm long, ca. 2 mm wide, pubescent, grooved, blade inserted on top of the petiole; blade 8.6-12.6 cm long, 2.6-4.1 cm wide, lanceolate to lanceolate-elliptic or oblong-lanceolate, apex acuminate to acute, acumen 0.4-1.3 cm long, base cuneate to rounded, subcoriaceous,
below golden-sericeous when young, sparsely golden-sericeous to golden-sericeous when old
, above glabrous when young and old, discolorous; midrib impressed, above pubescent when young, glabrous to pubescent when old, below glabrous to pubescent when young, pubescent when old; secondary veins 10 to 15 pairs, glabrous above; tertiary venation reticulate. Individuals bisexual; inflorescences ramiflorous on young foliate branches, axillary, peduncle 8.5-17 mm. Flowers with 9 perianth parts in 3 whorls, 1 to 8 per inflorescence; pedicel 2-5 mm long, ca. 2 mm in diameter, densely pubescent; in fruit 6-42 mm long, 7-11 mm in diameter, glabrous; bracts 2 to 4, evenly spaced, 3-4 mm long, 3-4 mm wide; sepals 3, valvate,
basally to
1/2
fused, forming a cup
, 4-6 mm long, 3-4 mm wide, ovate, apex acute, base truncate, densely pubescent outside, glabrous inside; petals free, subequal; outer petals 3, 22-34 mm long, 3.5-3.9 mm wide at base, linear, apex acute to obtuse, base broad and concave, light yellow, pubescent, base glabrous outside, pubescent, base glabrous inside; inner petals 3, valvate, 17.4-23 mm long, 2.5-3.6 mm wide at base, linear, apex acute, base broad and concave, light yellow, pubescent with glabrous base outside, pubescent towards base to pubescent and glabrous towards center inside; stamens ca. 200, in 4 to 6 rows, 1-2 mm long, oblong; connective apex shield-like, glabrous; carpels 10 to 12, ovary 1-2 mm long, stigmas connivent with tips free, linear, 2.5-4 mm long, pubescent to sparsely pubescent. Monocarps stipitate, stipe ca. 3 mm long, ca. 9 mm in diameter; monocarps 1 to 10, ca. 46 mm long, ca. 23 mm wide, oblongoid, apex rounded, sparsely pubescent, verrucose and wrinkled when dried, green outside, endocarp color unknown; seeds unknown (sarcotesta blue?).
Distribution.
A widespread species in West Africa from Liberia to Ghana, and in Central Africa from southern Nigeria to Cameroon; in Cameroon known from East, South, Central and South-West regions. Given the past confusion with
X. letestui
, it is difficult to state the full distribution of
X. villosa
precisely.
Habitat.
A large tree species not commonly collected, although locally common westward (O. Lachenaud, personal communication); in evergreen or semi-deciduous rain forests of
Sterculiaceae
and
Ulmaceae
, and old secondary forest with
Lophira alata
,
Coula edulis
, and
Sacoglottis gabonensis
. Altitude 0-100 m a.s.l.
Local and common names known in Cameroon.
oyakwi (
Letouzey 9524
,
Yaounde
).
IUCN conservation status.
Least Concern (LC) (Botanic Gardens Conservation International and IUCN SSC Global Tree Specialist Group 2019h).
Uses in Cameroon.
None reported.
Notes.
Xylopia villosa
and
X. letestui
share thick pubescent leaves but the former differs in the broadly cuneate to rounded rather than truncate leaf bases, the longer petioles (2-4 versus 1-1.8 mm), and the longer outer petals (22-34 versus 16.5-19.1 mm).
Xylopia villosa
also lacks the marginal hair tufts toward the base of the inner petals. The specimen
Thomas 7703
, which consists of fallen fruits containing seeds, reported the seeds to be
"blue,"
suggesting the presence of a sarcotesta.
Specimens examined.
Central Region
:
pres
Nkomeyo
10 km
d'Esse
,
4.07°N
,
11.97°E
,
07 November 1969
,
Letouzey R.
9524 (P,YA).
East Region
:
65 km
south of
Yokadouma
30 km
after Ngato
15 km
after river ALPICAM 'base de
vie'
then
40 km
on forestry road starting
4 km
before
Masea
village
,
3.08°N
,
14.67°E
,
08 March 2019
,
Couvreur T.L.P.
1227 (MPU,WAG,YA).
South Region
:
Campo
Ma'an
National Park
11 km
on trail from
Ebinanemeyong village
on road
7 km
from Nyabessan to
Campo town
,
2.49°N
,
10.34°E
,
12 February 2015
,
Couvreur T.L.P.
686 (WAG,YA);
3 km
E of km 58 of road
Edea-Kribi
,
3.72°N
,
10.3°E
,
05 October 1965
,
Leeuwenberg A.J.M.
6815 (BR,K,MO,P,WAG,YA).
South-West Region
:
Korup National Park
,
5.26°N
,
9.2°E
,
08 April 1988
,
Thomas D.W.
7703 (MO)
.
Unresolved names
Uvaria busgenii
Unwin (non Diels), West African Forests & Forestry: 263, 1920
This species was published by Unwin in his West African Forests & Forestry book (
Unwin 1920
) suggesting it grows in the region of
Johann-Albrechtshoehe
(now Kumba, South-West region). Unwin states (p. 263) it is a common "large tree" and wood is used to make
"European"
houses in the Calabar region of Nigeria. The name is accompanied by the description of the plant (mainly the wood) and its uses. However, no specimen is listed. The species is presumably named in honor of the German collector Moritz
Buesgen
(1858-1921), who collected in SW Cameroon in 1908. It is possible that Unwin could have seen a specimen collected by
Buesgen
. Specimens of
Buesgen
are deposited in Berlin (B) and four collections of
Annonaceae
species are available online. Only one refers to an
Uvaria
collected in
Johann-Albrechtshoehe
[B 10 0153104,
Buesgen
191
]. This specimen is however the holotype (and only specimen) of
Uvaria marginata
Diels (now synonym of
U. obanensis
) and does not correspond to a tree as stated in the description.
Uvaria
species are generally scrambling shrubs or lianas. However, several tree genera were initially included in
Uvaria
based on flower characters, such as
Uvariodendron
("section
Uvariodendron
" within
Uvaria
in Engel and Diels (1901)) or
Hexalobus
(
Botermans et al. 2011
). These were generally erected to genus status afterwards (
Candolle 1832
, in the case of
Hexalobus
,
Fries 1930
, in the case of
Uvariodendron
). Thus,
Uvaria busgenii
certainly refers to a species in a different genus than
Uvaria
, possibly
Uvariodendron
. However, without further material it will be hard to confirm this.
Uvaria busgenii
Diels (non Unwin), nom. nud.
This name was first (?) published in
Gilg (1909)
page 124, although it
doesn't
appear to be the description of a species per se. Only a local name is provided and the indication that it occurs in North Cameroon, and represents a tree. The name has also been used in various other publications (e.g.
Wiesner 1918
, pages 558, 762). We were however unable to find the original publication describing this name, nor does it appear on IPNI. This name does not refer to the same species as Unwin (see above) as it occurs in North Cameroon. It is probably a manuscript name that was never published, although we have not found any herbarium sheets with this name marked on it yet. Northern Cameroon harbors very few
Annonaceae
species, and it is hard to see what species or even genus Gilg is referring too here. The common name is
"bongele"
, but this name is attributed to
Eribroma oblongum
(Mast.). Pierre ex A.Chev.) now a synonym of
Sterculia oblonga
Mast. (
Malvaceae
).