A revision of the Old World Black Nightshades (Morelloid clade of Solanum L., Solanaceae)
Author
Saerkinen, Tiina
Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh, 20 A Inverleith Row, Edinburgh EH 3 5 LR, United Kingdom
tsarkinen@rbge.org.uk
Author
Poczai, Peter
Botany Unit, Finnish Museum of Natural History, University of Helsinki, P. O. Box 7, FI- 00014 Helsinki, Finland
Author
Barboza, Gloria E.
Instituto Multidisciplinario de Biologia Vegetal (CONICET-Universidad Nacional de Cordoba), Casilla de Correo 495, 5000 Cordoba, Argentina
Author
Weerden, Gerard M. van der
Experimental Garden, Radboud University, Faculty of Science Box 49, P. O. Box 9010, 6500 Nijmegen, The Netherlands
Author
Baden, Maria
Max-Planck Odense Center on the Biodemography of Aging and Department of Biology, University of Southern Denmark, Campusvej 55, DK- 5230 Odense M, Denmark
Author
Knapp, Sandra
Department of Life Sciences, Natural History Museum, Cromwell Road, London SW 7 5 BD, United Kingdom
s.knapp@nhm.ac.uk
text
PhytoKeys
2018
2018-07-25
106
1
223
http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/phytokeys.106.21991
journal article
http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/phytokeys.106.21991
1314-2003-106-1
FF8BFFC82928FFA84734FFCB2E61E260
1326005
15.
Solanum scabrum Mill., Gard. Dict. ed. 8, no. 6. 1768
Figures 46
, 47
Solanum nigrum L. var. guineense
L., Sp. Pl. 186. 1753.
Solanum scabrum
Type. "Solanum guineense fructu magno instar cerasi nigerrimo umbellato" cultivated in England, at James
Sherard's
garden in Eltham (Hortus Elthamensis) (lectotype, designated by
Edmonds 1979b
, pg. 224: Dillenius, Hort. Eltham. 2: 366, t. 274, f. 354. 1732).
Solanum guineense
(L.) Mill., Gard. Dict., ed. 8, no. 7. 1768, nom. illeg., not
Solanum guineense
L. (1753)
Solanum scabrum
Type. Based on
Solanum nigrum L. var. guineense
L.
Solanum melanocerasum
All., Auct. Syn. Meth. Stirp. Hort. Regii Taur. 664. 1774.
Solanum scabrum
Type. "Solanum guineense, fructo magno, instar cerasi nigerrimo, umbellato" cultivated in England at John
Sherard's
garden in Eltham (Hortus Elthamensis),
Herb. Dillenius 336
(neotype, designated by
Edmonds 2012
, pg. 129 [as lectotype]: OXF [Dill. HE-274-234]).
Solanum guineense
(L.) Lam. Tabl. Encycl. 2: 18. 1794, nom. illeg., not
Solanum guineense
L. (1753),
Solanum guineense
(L.) Mill. (1768)
Solanum scabrum
Type. Based on
Solanum nigrum L. var. guineense
L.
Solanum triangulare
Lam., Tabl. Encycl. 2: 18. 1794.
Solanum scabrum
Type. "Ex Ind. Orient",
Herb. Lamarck s.n.
(lectotype, designated by
D'Arcy
1974a
, pg 735 [as type]: P-LAM [P00357626]).
Solanum quadrangulare Lam. var. triangulare
(Lam) Pers., Sys. 225. 1805.
Solanum scabrum
Type. Based on
Solanum triangulare
Lam.
Solanum melanocerasum
Willd., Enum. Pl. (Willdenow) 1: 237. 1809, nom. illeg., not
Solanum melanocerasum
All. (1773)
Solanum scabrum
Type. Cultivated in Berlin Botanical Garden, from "Europa australi" [southern Europe] (no original material labelled as
"melanocerasum"
found in B-W; neotype, designated here: B-W [BW04368010]).
Solanum pterocaulum
Dunal, Hist. Nat.
Solanum
153. 1813, nom. illeg. superfl.
Solanum scabrum
Type. Based on
Solanum scabrum
Mill. (cited in synonymy).
Solanum fistulosum
Dunal, Encycl. [J. Lamarck & al.] Suppl. 3: 749. 1814.
Solanum scabrum
Type. "Originaire de
l'Isle
de France [Mauritius], est
cultivee
en Amerique [Brazil]",
Herb. Richard s.n.
(lectotype, designated by
D'Arcy
1974a
, pg. 735: P [P00335259]).
Solanum memphiticum
Mart., Pl. Hort. Erlang. 63. 1814, nom. illeg., not
Solanum memphiticum
J.F.Gmel. (1791)
Solanum scabrum
Type. Cultivated in Erlangen, Bavaria, Germany, origins not known (no specimens cited; no original material located, possibly at ER?).
Solanum nigrum L. var. melanocerasum
(Willd.) Dunal, Solan. Syn. 12. 1816.
Solanum scabrum
Type. Based on
Solanum melanocerasum
Willd.
Solanum nitens
Opiz, Oekon.-techn. Fl.
Boehm
. [Berchtold & al.] 3(2): XXI. 1843.
Solanum scabrum
Type. Czech Republic. Prague, "in Semubackern por dem Reuthore Prag",
P.M. Opiz 10/840
(no herbaria cited; no original material found, perhaps at PR?).
Solanum oleraceum Dunal var. macrocarpum
Dunal, Prodr. [A. P. de Candolle] 13(1): 50. 1852.
Solanum scabrum
Type. Brazil. Bahia: Ilheus, 1841,
C.F.P. Martius 1255
(lectotype, designated by
Edmonds 1972
, pg. 108 [as holotype]: G-DC [G00144295]; isolectotype: P [P00366815]).
Solanum tinctorium
Welw., Apont. 590. 1859 [1858].
Solanum scabrum
Type. Angola. Golungo Alto, 1856,
F.M.J. Welwitsch 6103
(lectotype, designated here: BM [BM000942995]; isolectotypes: BM [BM000942996], K [K001029777]).
Solanum nigrum L. var. pterocaulum
(Dunal) Schur, Enum. Pl. Transsilv. 478. 1866, as '
Solanum pterocaulon
'.
Solanum scabrum
Type. Based on
S. pterocaulum
Dunal ["excl. German floras"]
Solanum boerhaavii
Thell., Rep. Bot. Soc.& Exchange Club Brit. Isles 8: 187. 1927, as "
Boerhaavii
".
Solanum scabrum
Type. Based on
Solanum nigrum L. var. guineense
L. [as replacement name for
Solanum guineense
(L.) Mill.]
Solanum nigrum L. var. pterocaulum
(Dunal) Domin, Biblioth. Bot. 89: 1127. 1928.
Solanum scabrum
Type. Based on
S. pterocaulum
Dunal
Solanum intrusum
Soria, Baileya 7: 33. 1959.
Solanum scabrum
Type. Based on (replacement name for)
Solanum nigrum L. var. guineense
L., and
Solanum guineense
(L.) Lam.
Solanum scabrum Mill. subsp. laevis
Olet, Novon 16(4): 510. 2006.
Solanum scabrum
Type. Uganda. Buganda: Kampala district, Kawempe div., Kawempe North, Kalerwe, Tula road, 1220 m, 14 Feb 2001,
E.A. Olet 88
(holotype: MHU; isotypes: H, K, MO [ex descr.]).
Type
.
Cultivated in Chelsea Physic Garden
, said in protologue to "grow naturally in North America",
Herb. Miller s.n.
(
lectotype
, designated by
Henderson 1974
, pg. 61 [as type]: BM [BM000847083])
.
Description.
Annual or short-lived erect or ascending perennial herbs to 1.5 m tall, often woody at the base. Stems spreading, terete, ridged or winged, green to purple, if ridged or winged the stems later spinescent, older stems with or without prominent pseudospines, usually somewhat hollow; new growth puberulent with simple, spreading, uniseriate, translucent, eglandular trichomes, these 2-8-celled, 0.3-0.8 mm long; older stems glabrescent. Sympodial units difoliate, the leaves usually not geminate, but if leaves paired, then one is usually smaller. Leaves simple, 4-15(-20) cm long, 3-10(-16) cm wide, broadly ovate to elliptic, very variable in size depending on cultivars and growth conditions, membranous to somewhat fleshy, green to dark green to somewhat purple coloured above, slightly paler below, without smell; adaxial and abaxial surfaces glabrous or sparsely pubescent with simple uniseriate trichomes like those on the stem mainly along veins and scattered along lamina; major veins 3-6(-8) pairs, paler green or often purple tinged; base abruptly acute or truncate, narrowly winged on to the petiole; margins entire or rarely shallowly sinuate; apex rounded to acute; petioles 1-5(-8) cm long, glabrous or sparsely pubescent with simple uniseriate trichomes like those of the stem. Inflorescences 1-2(-4) cm long, internodal, simple, furcate or many times branched (in cultivars), sub-umbelliform, with 4-10(-30+) flowers clustered towards the tip(s) of the rhachis, glabrous or sparsely pubescent with simple uniseriate trichomes like those on the stem; peduncle 1-5(-8) cm long, erect and thick, much thickened at apex, subwoody; pedicels 0.4-1 cm long, 0.3-0.5 mm in diameter at the base, 0.75-0.9 mm in diameter at the apex, abruptly expanding to the calyx tube, stout, erect and/or spreading, articulated at the base; pedicel scars tightly clustered near the tip of the rhachis, spaced 0-2 mm apart, sometimes with short stumps ca. 0.5-1.0 mm long. Buds globose to subglobose, the corolla exserted 1/2-1/3 from the calyx tube before anthesis. Flowers 5-merous or occasionally fasciated and 6-7-merous in cultivars, all perfect. Calyx tube 0.9-1.1 mm long, abruptly cup-shaped with a broad base, the lobes slightly unequal, 0.9-1.5 mm long, 0.8-1.4 mm wide, broadly deltate with a rounded tip, green or purple-tinged, glabrous or sparsely pubescent with simple uniseriate trichomes like those of the pedicels, the margins often drying scarious and white. Corolla 7-12 mm in diameter, white, purple-tinged or occasionally lilac to dark purple, with a yellow basal star, stellate, lobed ca. 1/2 way to the base, the lobes 2.5-4 mm long, 1.5-3 mm wide, spreading or reflexed, densely papillate on tips and margins. Stamens equal; filament tube very short, to 0.1 mm long; free portion of the filaments 0.5-0.8 mm long, glabrous or pubescent with tangled uniseriate simple trichomes; anthers 2-3 mm long, ellipsoid or slightly tapering towards the tips, yellow, orange or brown, poricidal at the tips, the pores lengthening to slits with age and drying, the connective often becoming brownish-black in dry specimens. Ovary rounded, glabrous; style 2.5-5 mm long, densely pubescent with simple uniseriate trichomes 0.2-0.5 mm long in the basal 1/2 where included in the anther cone, exserted beyond anthers 0-1.5 mm; stigma capitate, the surface minutely papillate. Fruit a globose to depressed-globose berry, 10-20 mm in diameter, purplish-black at maturity, the pericarp thick, shiny or somewhat matte, not transparent; fruiting pedicels 0.7-1.5(-2.0) cm long, 0.5-1 mm in diameter at the base, 1.1-1.5 mm in diameter at the apex, stout, erect and spreading, purple or brown, usually not falling with the fruit, remaining on the plant and often persistent on older inflorescences; fruiting calyx not accrescent, the tube 1.5-2 mm long, usually tearing unevenly, the lobes 2-3 mm long, usually with thicker white margins in dry material, appressed or spreading to slightly reflexed. Seeds (20-)100-150 per berry, 2-2.8 mm long, 1.5-1.8 mm wide, flattened and tear-drop shaped with a subapical hilum, yellow-brown or purple, the surfaces minutely pitted, thin and the embryo clearly visible, the testal cells rectangular to pentagonal in outline. Stone cells absent. Chromosome number:
2n
=6x=72 (
Soria and Heiser 1961
[as
S. melanocerasum
];
Heiser et al. 1965
[as
S. melanocerasum
];
Henderson 1974
;
Edmonds 1977
,
1983
;
Symon 1981
;
Jacoby and Labuschagne 2006
;
Bukenya 1996
;
Olet et al. 2015
).
Figure 46.
Solanum scabrum
A
Habit of wild form
B
Flower of wild form
C
Infructescence of wild form
D
Habit of cultivated form
E
Inflorescence of cultivated form
F
Fruit of cultivated form
G
Seed (
A-C
Pilz 2108
;
D-G
Nee 16088
). Scale bar: 4 cm (
A, D
), 3.3 mm (
B
), 1.5 cm (
C, F
), 7 mm (
E
) and 2 mm (
G
). Drawing by L. Smith.
Figure 47.
Solanum scabrum
A
Common habit
B
Habit in taller varieties
C
Flowers of the larger berried variety at full anthesis
D
Fruits of a larger berried variety
E
Flowers of the smaller berried variety at full anthesis
F
Fruits of a smaller berried variety (
A
Nijmegen acc. BG13;
B
Nijmegen acc. A34750072;
C
Nijmegen acc. GB22;
D
Nijmegen acc. H065;
E
Nijmegen acc. A34750067;
F
Nijmegen acc. 2010/3). Photos by S. Knapp.
Distribution
(Figure
48
). Native to tropical Africa, but introduced worldwide as a cultivated plant.
Figure 48.
Distribution of
Solanum scabrum
in its native range.
Ecology.
Grows in open areas, in a wide variety of habitats, in wet forests or drier areas, along roads and at field edges; often cultivated; between sea level and 2,300 m elevation.
Common names.
Benin: odu, ogomo, feibii (
Essou and Hermans 2006
); Cameroon: houlohada, legume vert, njebanyoon, ossan, tindar noon, wikitiniho, zom/zoum; China: mu long kui (
Zhang et al. 1994
);
Cote
d'Ivoire
: foue; Equatorial Guinea: hierba mora,
nahu
, seba [Bubi people], sisa; Ghana: nsusua; Madagascar: anamamy, brede; Nigeria: awa ibo, gautan kaji, kumbi, odu, ogunmo, ugumakbe;
Sao
Tome e Principe: losua; Sierra Leone: a-kempa,borisuguli, filami, kemba, kembei, kholekoleden-na, magboli, reinpa, timbainyi; Slovenia:
cucoried
kovity
(
Bertova
and
Goliasova
1993
); South Africa: nastagal; South Sudan. nzuobire; Tanzania: isonga (Kinyakyusa language); Uganda: eshwiga, eshwiga enzungu, kujikuji, nswiga ya kizungu; United Kingdom: garden huckleberry (
Stace 2010
).
Uses.
Leaves used as greens (spinach) and cooked, sold in markets; berries used as ink; in Benin, the powdered leaves are used to cure dysentery (
Essou and Hermans 2006
).
Preliminary conservation status
(
IUCN 2016
).
Solanum scabrum
is widespread across Africa and an important leafy vegetable in cultivation; it can be assigned a preliminary status of LC (Least Concern; Table
7
), but it may become important to conserve local populations in order to preserve genetic variation for plant breeding.
Discussion.
Solanum scabrum
is the most commonly cultivated and widespread of the African black nightshades. It is the most important indigenous leafy vegetable in the black nightshade group and is commonly known as the African nightshade (
Edmonds and Chweya 1997
;
Dinssa et al. 2016
).
Solanum scabrum
shows great variation in growth form, leaf shape and size and berry number, in part due to the significant local variation introduced by human selection in cultivated populations.
The species has also been introduced to Europe, North America, Australia and New Zealand. In the United States of America,
S. scabrum
is known as "Garden Huckleberry" and its identity, origin and suitability to human consumption were the subject of great interest in the 1960s (as
S. guineense
, e.g.
Soria and Heiser 1959
,
1961
;
Heiser 1969
).
Different cultivars are recognised, the late flowering plants cultivated for their larger abundance of leaves with smaller number of fruits and earlier flowering plants that have larger inflorescences which are cultivated for their fruits (
Manoko 2007
). Cultivated forms of
S. scabrum
stand out as quite distinctive; all forms have larger flowers and anthers that are often brownish in colour, while the forms cultivated for their leaves have larger, longer petiolate leaves and those cultivated for their fruits have larger, more numerous and shinier berries (the size of cherries) on erect or spreading pedicels. The pericarp in
S. scabrum
berries in all varieties is quite thick compared to other black nightshades, but mature berries of cultivars show variation in anthocyanin content where some individuals have dark purple mesocarp and others pale green. One of the major limitations to cultivation of
S. scabrum
as a leaf vegetable is the relatively low leaf yield due to early flowering and excessive fruiting (
Ojiewo et al. 2013
;
Ojiewo et al. 2006
). In response to this, enhanced varieties are being developed and new registered varieties are being released (
Ojiewo et al. 2006
;
Ojiewo et al. 2013
) such as "Medium leaf long-lasting" released in Kenya in 2006. Breeding is also focussing on local variation and drought resistance (
Dinssa et al. 2016
).
The presumed wild forms were described at the infraspecific rank by
Olet et al. (2006)
as subsp.
Solanum scabrum laevis
. This differs from the cultivated forms in having narrower leaves and smaller fruits that are globose rather than subglobose.
Dehmer (2001)
and
Olet et al. (2011)
have shown, however, that these differences are not reflected in relationships based on AFLP molecular markers. These wild forms of
S. scabrum
have often been called
S. nigrum
(e.g.
Edmonds 2006a
,
2006b
,
2012
), but they differ from true
S. nigrum
which, in Africa only occurs in the north along the Mediterranean, in their congested inflorescences, spreading pedicels, calyx lobes that tear unevenly and long-petiolate leaves.
Olet et al. (2011)
clearly demonstrated that the wild forms of
S. scabrum
are genetically closely related with cultivated
S. scabrum
accessions and form a distinct cluster away from European
S. nigrum
.
Solanum scabrum
can be distinguished from the somewhat similar
S. americanum
by its larger anthers (2-3 mm long versus 0.8-1.5 mm long). In both these species, as well as
S. retroflexum
, the berries usually lack stone cells (some populations of
S. americanum
can have up to 4 stone cells) and drop without the pedicels at maturity, leaving the pedicels behind on old inflorescences. In both
S. scabrum
and
S. americanum
, berries are purple-black and shiny, while
S. retroflexum
has dull purple-black berries with a distinct grey bloom. The pedicels of
S. scabrum
are usually erect or spreading.
Plants described as
S. fistulosum
and
S. oleraceum var. macrocarpon
by
Dunal (1814
,
1852
respectively, see synonymy) from Brazil were almost certainly taken there from western Africa by enslaved people and were either collected from home gardens or became established in the New world.
Solanum scabrum
is closely related to
S. nigrum
and
S. villosum
based on molecular data (
Manoko 2007
;
Poczai and
Hyvoenen
2011
). The close relationship amongst these polyploids indicates that they might share the same diploid parent. The idea that
S. villosum
is the likely tetraploid parent of the hexaploids
S. nigrum
and
S. scabrum
has also been supported by evidence from crossing experiments and cytological studies (
Soria and Heiser 1961
;
Heiser et al. 1965
;
Rao et al. 1971
;
Jardine and Edmonds 1974
;
Edmonds 1977
,
1978
;
Edmonds and Glidewell 1977
;
Edmonds 1978
). Two possibilities still remain: one of the hexaploid species (
S. nigrum
and
S. scabrum
) evolved first and gave rise to the other or that the two hexaploids originated from the same parents independently (
Poczai and
Hyvoenen
2011
). These two scenarios will be difficult to distinguish based on molecular data due to the complexity caused by high ploidy level.
The nomenclature and typification of the various synonyms of
S. scabrum
and the earliest name applied to the taxon, have been extensively discussed by others (e.g.
Gras 1863
;
Thellung 1927
;
Polgar
1939
;
Stebbins and Paddock 1949
;
Soria and Heiser 1959
;
Heine 1960
;
Edmonds 1979b
). We merely add additional notes for our lectotypifications designated here or for those that have been designated inadvertently (e.g.
Prado et al. 2015
).
Edmonds (2012)
designated a specimen in the Dillenian herbarium at OXF as the lectotype for
S. melanocerasum
All.; Allioni did not cite and probably never saw these specimens; this is correctable to neotype.
D'Arcy
(1974a
: 737) inadvertently lectotypifed
S. guineense
Lam. by citing a specimen in "Herb.
Lam. s.n.
(P)" as
"Type"
; this corresponds to a specimen in the Lamarck herbarium (P00357674) that is labelled "Solanum nigrum guineense L. planta glabra.. fructu magno nigro. Sol. guineense Lam. Ill", suggesting that Lamarck was basing his name on
Linnaeus'
S. nigrum var. guineense
. In the protologue,
Lamarck (1794)
indirectly referred to Linnaeus, through citing the single element in the protologue of
S. nigrum var. guineense
, the illustration in
Dillenius (1732)
. We are therefore treating these two names (
S. nigrum var. guineense
L. and
S. guineense
Lam.) as homotypic, rendering
D'Arcy's
(1974a)
lectotypification superfluous.
Lamarck's
(1794)
S. triangulare
has traditionally been considered a synonym of
S. africanum
Mill. (a member of the Dulcamaroid clade,
Knapp 2013
); the protologue cites two elements, only one of which
"?"
represents
S. africanum
and was questioned as only possibly being the same by Lamarck. The other cited element of
S. triangulare
is an illustration from
Herbarium Amboinense
(
Rumphius 1750
) that represents
S. americanum
.
D'Arcy
(1974a)
, however, cited the specimen in
Lamarck's
herbarium ("Lamarck s.n. (P)"; P00357626) as
"Type"
and we must accept this as a valid lectotypification. This specimen is of a narrow-leaved plant of
S. scabrum.
Willdenow (1809)
did not specifically reference
Allioni's
epithet in his protologue, so we are treating it as a new name. There is no material in the Willdenow herbarium labelled as
S. melanocerasum
, but a specimen (B-W04368010) of
S. scabrum
(labelled as "S. guineense" and "ex horto proprio W") was clearly grown in Berlin and seen by Willdenow. We designate this as the neotype for
S. melanocerasum
Willd.
Solanum pterocaulum
is illegitimate because
Dunal (1813)
cited
S. scabrum
in synonymy. In the
Prodromus
(
Dunal 1852
), his use of '
Solanum pterocaulon
' was simply an orthographic variant and is correctable (see
McNeill et al.. 2012
, Art. 61.5 and associated provisions in Art. 61); it does not alter the legitimacy of the name.
No original material has been traced for
S. memphiticum
Mart., but the emphasis placed on the dark purplish colour of the stems and leaves by
Martius (1814)
in the protologue, coupled with the petiolate nature of the leaves and the erect peduncles, suggests this plant was
S. scabrum.
Of the several species in this group described by P.M. Opiz (see discussion under
S. nigrum
), we are convinced from the description that
S. nitens
is a synonym of
S. scabrum
, rather than of
S. nigrum
, although
Opiz (1843)
places it in his
"superspecies"
S. nigrum
. The mention of shiny berries on erect pedicels is distinctive; we have yet to confirm this with specimens from
Opiz's
herbarium at PR.
The lectotype (G00144295) chosen for
S. oleraceum var. macrocarpum
is the better preserved of the two duplicates of
Martius 1225
cited by
Dunal (1852)
.
The lectotype chosen for
S. tinctorium
(
Welwitsch 6103
) is the more clearly duplicated of the collections cited in the protologue; we have selected the best preserved sheet (BM000942995) as the lectotype. The name apparently comes from the staining berries that were used as ink.
Selected specimens examined.
Angola
.
Bengo
:
Ambriz
,
Abriz
,
Dec 1872
,
Monteiro
s.n.
(K)
;
Benguela
:
Hochland
zwischen Ganda und Caconda
,
Dec 1933
,
Hundt
797
(BM)
;
Cuanza Norte
:
Varzea do Isidoro
ad rivum
Cuango
,
Dto. Golungo Alto
,
Jul 1855
,
Welwitsch
6100
(BM)
;
Malanje
:
Distr. Pungo Andongo
, prope
Lusillo
,
Jan 1857
,
Welwitsch
6108
(BM)
;
Namibe
:
Mofsamedes
,
Herb. Moira
,
Habit Cavalheiros
,
Jul 1859
,
Welwitsch
6033
(BM)
.
Benin
.
Atlantique
:
Wida
,
Dahomey
,
26 Aug 1903
,
Esteve
111
(BM)
.
Botswana
.
Ghanzi
:
Ghanzi
camp,
4 May 1969
,
Brown 6019
(K); Ghanzi camp,
4 May 1969
,
Cole 6019
(K)
;
North West
:
Mutsoi
NE of Nokaneng
,
21 Mar 1967
,
Lambrecht 90
(K)
.
Burkina Faso
.
Seno
:
Dori Dam
,
16 Oct 2007
,
Sanou
&
Leonard
BUR-596
(K)
.
Cameroon
.
Adamaoua
:
Mayo-Banyo
,
Mambilla Plateau Cameroon
, around
Somie village
,
21 Jun 2009
,
Komaromi
48
(K)
;
Centre
:
Mimboman area
,
Yaounde
,
16 Sep 1986
,
Manning
235
(MO)
;
Extreme-Nord
:
Monts Mandara
,
Hossere Oupay
,
15 km
NNO de Mokolo
,
15 Sep 1964
,
Letouzey
6880
(K, P)
;
Littoral
:
Donala
,
16 Aug 1986
,
Johns
86-481
(K)
;
Nord-Ouest
:
Mezam
,
Above Bamenda
,
20 Jan 1928
,
Migeod
358
(BM, K)
;
Sud-Ouest
:
Mt Kupe
,
Kupe Village
,
24 May 1996
,
Ryan
289
(K, MO, P)
.
Central African Republic
. Mboukou Griko,
Territoire du Haut-Obangi
,
24 Sep 1902
,
Chevalier 5518
(K)
.
Comoros
.
Anjouan
:
Anjouan
(Comoro-Insel Johanna),
Jun 1875
,
Hildebrandt 1626[b
] (BM, W)
;
Moheli Island
:
Moheli
, NE center of island,
14 Aug 1987
,
D'Arcy
17617
(MO, P);
1 Nov 1990
,
D'Arcy
17765
(MO);
Njazidja
:
Grande Comore
,
9 Aug 1981
,
Doutrelepont 1203
(MO, P)
.
Cote
d'Ivoire
.
Abidjan
:
Adjame
,
31 May 1973
,
De Koning
1747
(MO)
;
Dimbokro
: c.
5 km
W of
Dimbokro
,
13 Oct 1975
,
van der Burg
1177
(MO);
M'Bahiakro
: Koffi-Akakro (s. Prikro),
25 Jul 1973
,
Smittenberg-Visser
61
(MO)
;
Montagnes
:
Man
,
6 km
N nr
Yebegouin
,
27 Jan 1984
,
Hepper
&
Maley
7849
(K)
.
Democratic Republic of the Congo
.
Katanga
:
Lukonzolwa
,
Moero
, 1933,
Quarre
3297
(K);
Kongolo
,
5 Feb 1920
,
Schantz 646
(K)
;
Kinshasa
:
Maluku
,
Route Menkao-Kingankati
,
5 Nov 1971
,
Breyne 2227
(MO)
;
Nord-Kivu
: Lubarika, 1953,
Gilon 315[a
] (MO);
Orientale
:
Ituri
, w.
v. Albert-See
,
Oct 1934
,
Gusinde s.n.
(W); Yangambi,
26 Jul 1938
,
Louis 10507
(K, P);
Sud
Kivu
:
Kizozi
,
Jul 1933
,
Lejeune 55
(K)
.
Egypt
.
Giza
:
Faculty of Agriculture
,
Giza
,
13 Jun 1971
,
Sisi s.n.
(MO)
.
Equatorial Guinea
.
Annobon
:
Pico de Fogo, SW
side,
25 Jul 1959
,
Melville
188
(BM, K, MA, P)
;
Bioko
:
entre Moca y Riaba
por el camino viejo,
20 Feb 1989
,
Fernandez-Casas
11820
(K, MA, MO, P)
;
Bioko Norte
:
Pico
Basile
,
Carretera
del pico
Basile
,
28 Mar 1990
,
Do Carvalho
4305
(K, MA, MO, P)
;
Bioko Sur
:
Moca
, camino
de Ureca
,
18 Feb 1989
,
Fernandez-Casas
11725
(K, MA, MO)
.
Eritrea
.
Maekel
:
Asmara
,
1 May 1892
,
Terracciano
&
Pappi
187 [2206
] (FT)
;
Semienawi Keyih Bahri
:
Asmara
,
Beless
,
Hamasen
,
4 May 1892
,
Terracciano
&
Pappi
2536
(FT)
.
Gabon
.
Estuaire
:
Jardin Cenarest
,
Libreville
,
Poubelle
,
16 Jan 1986
,
Louis 1990
(MO)
.
Ghana
.
Ashanti
: nr
Mampong
,
Ashanti
,
7 Aug 1963
,
Darko
5115
(K)
;
Central
:
Aswansi, W.P
,
12 Oct 1954
,
Darko
1032
(K)
;
Eastern
:
Akosombo
,
25 May 1970
,
Enti
1723
(MO); Akwapim, Mampong Scarp,
14 Jun 1953
,
Morton
s.n.
(K)
;
Greater Accra
:
Accra
,
May 1961
,
Irvine
5095
(K)
;
Volta
:
Adzido
,
Keta
,
16 Sep 1960
,
Akpabla
2117
(K)
.
Guinea
.
Nzerekore
:
Lola
,
Mt. Nimba
,
1 Nov 2012
,
Diabate
&
Mas
1419
(MO)
.
Indonesia
.
Java
:
Central Java
,
Mt. Slamet
,
15 Mar 2004
,
Hoover et al. 89
(A);
Seram
:
Manusela National Park
,
12 Sep 1987
,
Argent C
87-179
(A, E)
;
Sumatra
: E of
Berastagi
,
Karo Highlands
,
4 Jun 1928
,
Si Toroes
407
(A, GH)
.
Lesotho
.
Sehlabathebe
,
4 Jan 1973
,
Bayliss 5476
(MO)
.
Liberia
.
Central
:
3 mi
NE of Suacoco
,
Gbarnga
,
7 Feb 1951
,
Daniel
117
(B, BM, MO)
;
Grand Gedeh
:
Tchien
,
Mim Timber Co
(
Fijnhout
),
16 May 1970
,
de Koning
519
(MO)
;
Lofa
: mi along rd to
Wologesi
,
15 Jul 1970
,
Jansen
2015
(K, MO, P)
;
Nimba
:
Nimba Mountains
,
27 Jul 1962
,
Leeuwenberg
&
Voorhoeve
4668
(B, K, MO, P)
.
Madagascar
.
Antananarivo
:
Grande Terre-Ouangani
,
Apendzo-Jivany. Barakani
,
7 May 2002
,
Barthelat et al. 885
(K, MO, P)
;
Antsiranana
:
Mt.
d'Ambre
, partie centrale,
Prov. Diego-Suarez
,
11 Nov 2007
,
Gautier 5198
(K, MO)
;
Fianarantsoa
:
Ankafana
, 1880,
Cowan
s.n.
(BM);
10 km
W of Ivato on Route
35,
25 Jan 1975
,
Croat 29606
(MO)
;
Toamasina
: au km 26 de la route
de Tamatave
,
18 Oct 1951
,
Benoist 147
(P)
;
Toliara
:
Beroroha
,
Vallee
du Mangoky
et de
l'
Isahaina
aux environs
de Beroroha
,
Oct 1933
,
Humbert 11309
(K, MO, P); Andohahela RNI,
Mt. Trafonaomby
, Taolagnaro,
7 Apr 1994
,
Randriamampionona 692
(MO, P)
.
Malawi
.
Central
:
Salima Distr.
,
Liganga village
A. Mpemba
,
14 Jun 1985
,
Kwatha et al. 210
(MO);
Salima Distr.
, Luwadzi stream,
14 Jun 1985
,
Salubeni et al. 4242
(MO)
;
Northern
:
Nkhata Bay
,
Musalowa village
,
Chizumulu Island
,
25 Mar 1989
,
Balaka
&
Patel 2025
(K, MO)
;
Southern
:
Malawe Hill
, W of
Port Herald
,
23 Mar 1960
,
Phipps 2653
(K, MO)
.
Mauritania
.
Trarza
:
Rosso Administrative area
,
Village Rosso
,
9 Oct 1962
,
Adam 18728
(MO)
.
Mozambique
.
Baroma
:
N'kanya
, N of
Zambesi River
,
25 Jul 1950
,
Chase 2857
(BM)
;
Cabo Delgado
:
Pemba
,
Jun 1909
,
Rogers 8256
(K)
;
Manica
:
Lower
slopes of
Chimanimani Mountains
,
Apr 1967
,
Westwater 192954
(K)
.
Namibia
.
Onjossariviers
, im
Ufergestrupp
,
21 Jun 1957
,
Seydel 1162
(A, K)
.
New Zealand
.
North Island
:
Bay of Plenty
,
Ohope
,
Whakatane Ecological Region
,
Taneatua Ecological District
,
13 Mar 1979
,
Grant s.n.
(AK)
.
Nigeria
.
Delta
: [
Ogwashi-Ukwu
],
25 Nov 1912
,
Thomas
2042
(K)
;
Edo
:
Nikrowa Forest Reserve
,
Mid-west State
,
Iyekovia Distr.
,
8 Oct 1973
,
Daramola
FHI-72483
(K, MO)
;
Enugu
:
10 mi
E of Erugu
,
Mar 1948
,
Irvine
3607
(K)
;
Gongola
:
Gemu Distr.
,
Mambilla
plateau,
18 Aug 1977
,
Fagbemi
438
(MO)
;
Jos
:
Naraguta
,
Lely
31
(K)
;
Kaduna
:
Zaria
, 1975,
Magaji
MG-725
(K)
;
Kano
:
Kano
,
Wudil Distr
,
50 km
SE of the city of
Kano
,
16 Mar 1988
,
Etkin
63[b
] (MO)
;
Kogi
:
Odu, SW
Nigeria
,
Van Eyenhuisen
7
(K)
;
Lagos
:
Lagos
,
Dalziel
1188a
(K);
Lagos
,
Dalziel
1188b
(K)
;
Niger
:
Nupe
,
Barter 1054
(K, P)
;
Ondo
: between
Ikare
and
Oke-Agbe
,
Ikare District
,
2 May 1979
,
Daramola
&
Osanyinlusi
154
(K)
;
Oyo
:
Ibadan
,
7 km
W of Polytechnic
,
11 Jun 1977
,
Pilz
2108
(K, MO)
;
Taraba
:
State of Gongola
,
Distr. Mambilla Plateau
,
Nguroje township
,
23 May 1982
,
Odewo
130
(MO)
.
Sao
Tome e Principe
.
Bom Sucesso
,
27 Jan 1949
,
Espirito
Santo 218
(BM); Vanhulst (
Macambrara
),
28 Oct 1932
,
Exell 89
(BM)
.
Senegal
. In paludilb[us]
N'Boro
nec non ins[ula] Bonavista, 1838,
Brunner 108
(BM, G, W); Sin. loc., 1828,
Perrottet 555
(BM, W);
Perrottet 556
(BM);
Seychelles
.
Morne Blanc
,
2 Oct 1970
,
Schlieben 11670
(B, K)
.
Sierra Leone
.
Eastern
: Kailahun, Musaia,
19 Dec 1946
,
Deighton 4571
(K);
Northern
: Port Loko, Rokupr, Magbema,
18 Apr 1959
,
Jordan
,
1059
(K); Yonibana,
12 Nov 1914
,
Thomas 4909
(W);
Western
: Freetown,
28 Apr 1965
,
Morton s.n.
(K).
South Africa
.
Eastern Cape
:
Grahamstown
,
7 Sep 1970
,
Bayliss
4594
(A)
;
KwaZulu-Natal
: 2632
CD Bella Vista
grid, between
Ndumu Store
and the
Game Reserve
,
30 Oct 1969
,
Moll
4138
(A, K)
;
Limpopo
:
Mopani
,
Shiluvane
,
Aug 1899
,
Junod
575
(K)
;
North West
:
Okawango Delta
,
Okavango Delta
,
Delta
camp,
16 Jun 1994
,
Cole
923
(K)
;
Northern Cape
:
Augrabies Falls National Park
,
Orange river
bank,
14 Mar 1978
,
Balsinhas
&
Harding
3290
(K, MO)
;
Western Cape
:
Dowweklip
,
Voelklip
,
Hermanus
,
6 Jun 1980
,
Williams
287
(K, MO);
Skeleton Ravine
,
3 Oct 1897
,
Wolley-Dod
3180
(K)
.
South Sudan
.
Bahr El Ghazal
: Anglo-Egyptian Sudan,
Bahr El Ghazal Prov.
, Ibba,
10 Mar 1934
,
Dandy 624
(BM, EA)
;
Equatoria
:
R. Napere
,
25 Nov 1937
,
Wyld 347
(BM)
.
Tanzania
.
Dodoma
:
Mpwapwa
,
Mbuga Village
,
Kibakwe Division
,
Mbuga Ward
,
31 May 2005
,
Kindeketa
et al. 2549
(EA, MO)
;
Iringa
:
Ruaha National Park
, FTEA region T7, top of
Mpululu mountain
,
21 May 1968
,
Renvoize
&
Abdallah
2312
(EA, K)
;
Kagera
:
Bukoba
,
30 Oct 1992
,
Breteler
11599
(MO)
;
Mbeya
:
Rungwe
,
Ngumbulu Village, NE
part of
Rungwe Forest Reserve
,
14 Mar 2008
,
Abeid
et al. 2848
(MO)
;
Morogoro
:
Tanganyika
,
Ulugurus
,
Jan 1935
,
Bruce
524
(BM, K)
;
Shinyanga
:
Shinyanga
,
Nov 1938
,
Koritschoner
2191
(EA, K)
.
Togo
.
Lome
,
22 Sep 1976
,
Ern et al. 883
(B); slopes of Bauman Peak,
14 Aug 1962
,
Morton A
4277
(MO)
.
Uganda
.
Central
:
Kyadondo Mengo
(U4);
Nr Kanyanya
,
16 Jun 1990
,
Rwaburindore
2992
(MO)
;
Mengo
:
Distr.
W.
Mengo
,
4 mi
Gayaza
rd,
5 Jul 1980
,
Rwaburindore
701
(MO)
;
Northern
:
Yumbe
,
26 Nov 1941
,
Thomas
4070
(EA, K)
;
Western
:
Kigezi
DFI,
28 Aug 1972
,
Goode G
3-72
(K);
Kigezi
,
Bugangari
,
Rhuzumbura
,
Kigezi
,
Feb 1949
,
Purseglove
2712
(EA, K)
.
United Kingdom
. England
:
Hertfordshire
,
Rye Meads Sewage Works
, nr
Rye House
,
1 Oct 1996
,
Hanson s.n.
(K)
.
Zimbabwe
.
Mashonaland Central
:
Imayanga
,
Nyamaropa
TTk,
16 Jan 1967
,
Biegel 1767
(MO)
;
Matabeleland North
:
Binga Distr.
,
Sanyam R.
and
Zambezi R.
confluence,
Sep 1955
,
Davies 1514
(MO)
;
Matabeleland North
:
Binga
,
Chizarira Game Reserve
,
Busi River
,
10 Nov 1971
,
Thomson 481
(K);
Wankie
:
Wankie Distr.
,
Victoria Falls
, Elephant Hills Hotel,
19 Dec 1978
,
Mshasha 144
(MO)
.