Isolona cooperi Hutch. & Dalziel ex G.P.Cooper & Record, Bull. Yale Univ. School For. No. 31: 15, 1931
publication ID |
https://dx.doi.org/10.3897/phytokeys.207.61432 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7228790 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/294CE15D-1B40-0140-E369-96A2031A003F |
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scientific name |
Isolona cooperi Hutch. & Dalziel ex G.P.Cooper & Record, Bull. Yale Univ. School For. No. 31: 15, 1931 |
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Isolona cooperi Hutch. & Dalziel ex G.P.Cooper & Record, Bull. Yale Univ. School For. No. 31: 15, 1931 View in CoL
Fig. 35 View Figure 35 ; Map 5B View Map 5
Type.
Liberia. Montserrado; near Firestone plantations, along Dukwai road, Cooper G.P. 417, 7 May 1929: lectotype, designated by Couvreur (2009), p. 148: GH[GH00286760]; isotypes: F[F0093217]; FHO[FHA00095994]; G[GH00286760]; K n.v.; NY[NY00026103]; WIS[WIS00000299MAD] .
Description.
Tree, 6-18 m tall, d.b.h. 20 cm; stilt roots or buttresses absent. Indumentum absent; old leafless branches glabrous, young foliate branches glabrous. Leaves: petiole 1-5 mm long, 2-3 mm in diameter, glabrous, grooved, blade inserted on top of the petiole; blade 15-29 cm long, 6-15 cm wide, oblong to obovate, apex acuminate, acumen 1-2 cm long, base cuneate to rounded, subcoriaceous, below glabrous when young and old, above glabrous when young and old, concolorous; midrib raised, above glabrous when young and old, below glabrous when young and old; secondary veins 9 to 18 pairs, glabrous below; tertiary venation reticulate. Individuals bisexual; inflorescences cauliflorous or ramiflorous on young foliate branches, axillary. Flowers with 9 perianth parts in 2 whorls, 1 to 2 per inflorescence; pedicel 14-25 mm long, 1 mm in diameter, glabrous; in fruit 16-27 mm long, 2 mm in diameter, glabrous; bracts 2 to 4, all basal, 1 mm long, 1mm wide; sepals 3, valvate, free, 2 mm long, 2 mm wide, ovate, apex rounded, base truncate, green, glabrous outside, glabrous inside, margins flat; petals basally fused, tube 6-11 mm long, inner and outer whorl not differentiated, equal; lobes 8-15 mm long, 4-6 mm wide, oblong, apex acute to rounded, green, margins flat, glabrous outside, glabrous inside, spreading horizontally; stamens numerous, in 3 to 4 rows, 2 mm long, broad; connective discoid, glabrous, green; staminodes absent; carpels fused into a single structure, 3 mm long, stigma capitate, glabrous. Fruit syncarpous, sessile, 30-90 mm long, 15-30 mm in diameter, ellipsoid, apex apiculate, glabrous, smooth, constricted over seeds in dried material, smooth when fresh, orange with white spots when ripe; seeds not counted, 10-15 mm long, 5-10 mm in diameter, ellipsoid; aril absent.
Distribution.
A mainly West African species, from Liberia to Ghana, with a few specimens from Cameroon and one from Gabon; in Cameroon known from South and South-West regions.
Habitat.
A rare species in Cameroon; in lowland primary and secondary forests, also along rivers, on sandy soils. Altitude 0-300 m a.s.l.
Local and common names known in Cameroon.
None recorded.
IUCN conservation status.
Least Concern (LC) ( Cosiaux et al. 2019r).
Uses in Cameroon.
None reported.
Notes.
Isolona cooperi is distinguished by its completely glabrous leaves, young foliate branches and flowers and with the leaf blade inserted on top of the petiole. In addition, the flowers emit a very strong sweet scent, noticeable even in dried material. It has a smooth corolla in dried material and corolla lobes with straight margins. Isolona cooperi is similar to I. hexaloba by the shape of its flowers, but the latter differs by its blade inserted sideways to the petiole and the absence of the strong sweet scent. Finally, I. cooperi resembles I. campanulata by the shape of the fruits.
Specimens examined.
South Region: Bipindi, 3.08°N, 10.41°E, 01 February 1910, Zenker G.A. s.n. (F). South-West Region : Korup National Park, 5.06°N, 8.855°E, 10 March 1998, Kenfack D. 1063 (MO,WAG) GoogleMaps .
No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.
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