Wageningen 71-18, 1971, a few noteworthy additional facts. have become known. This was mainly on account

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Acta 801. Neerl. 21(5), October 1972, p. 560-566 Additional notes on Ethiopian Adenia (Passifloraceae) W.J.J.O. de Wilde Rijksherbarium,Leiden SUMMARY In Ethiopiathe occurrence of6 species ofadenia is established. One new combination,adenia inermis (de Wilde) de Wilde, is proposed. Key to the species. Illustrations. Since the publication of my monograph of the genus Adenia in Meded. Landbouwhogeschool Wageningen 71-18, 1971, a few noteworthy additional facts on some species from Ethiopia have become known. This was mainly on account of intensive field observations and the collections made of both herbariumand living specimens of Adenia by my brother J. J. F. E. de Wilde in 1970 and 1971, and also by the results of the cultivationof some material collected by myself in Ethiopia in 1965 and 1966. The living material was cultivated in the greenhouses of the Laboratory for Plant Taxonomy of the Agricultural University at Wageningen. In the Enumeratio Plantarum Ethiopiae Spermatophyta by Cufodontis, Bull. Jard. Bot. Etat Bruxelles XXIX, Suppl. Sept. (1959) 599-600, there are 7 species listed for NE. Africa, of which 2 species, viz. A. ellenbeckii and A. venenata for Ethiopia proper. In my monograph 5 species for Ethiopia were accepted. Through new evidence it became clear that one taxon placed in a subspecific rank under A. aculeata in my monograph, namely A. aculeata ssp. inermis, deserves specific rank. Some notes regarding other Ethiopian Adenias, with reference to my monograph, are also given. At present the following 6 species are known for Ethiopia: KEY TO THE SPECIES 1. Sepals and petals free. 2. Glands at blade- base 2(-4) 1. A. gedoensis 2. Gland at blade-base 1. 3. Stem prickly 2. A. aculeata 3. Stem unarmed. 4. Leaves entire. Flowers up to 11 mm long. Tuber, but no swollen main stem 3. A. inermis 4. Leaves 3-5(-7)-lobed. Flowers more than 15 mm long. Conspicuously swollen main stem 4. A. venenata 1. Sepals partially unitedinto a tube.

ADDITIONAL NOTES ON ETHIOPIAN ADENIA (PASSIFLORACEAE) 561 Adenia aculeata aculeata Fig. 1. ssp. : a. x longitudinalsection ofd flower, 5 (de Wilde 7374); b. leaf seen from above, x J (de Wilde 7192); c. old stem, x \ (de Wilde 7192); d. infructes- cence, x J (de Wilde 7373) Adenia inermis: e. longitudinalsection of 0 flower, X 5 (de Wilde 7321, type); f. habit ofbranch with c? inflorescences, x (de Wilde 7321, type); leaf g. seen from above, x (from a cultivated specimen); h. infructescence, x J (de Wilde 7319). All drawn from spirit material collected by J.J.F.E. de Wilde.

562 W. J. J. O. DE WILDE

Adenia Modecca Adenia ADDITIONAL NOTES ON ETHIOPIAN ADENIA (PASSIFLORACEAE) 563 5. Large climber. Glands at blade-base on two distinct auricles. Flowers broadly urceolate 5. A. rumicifolia 5. Herb with erect or low climbing branches to up 70 cm. Glands at bladebase sessile. Flowers narrowly tubiform 6. A. ellenbeckii 1. Adenia gedoensis de Wilde, Meded. Landbouwhogeschool Wageningen 71-18(1971)62 This species Fig. 3c. is only known from a cultivated female specimen originating from cuttings collected by me from a sterile specimen growing in a patch of riverine forest some kilometres West of Gedo, Shoa Province, at c. 2000 m altitude. It thrives fairly well in a temperate greenhouse, especially in spring and summer, when it regularly produces greenish flowers with mostly 5-merous pistil with peculiar cauliflower-like stigmas. Though, in the absence of pollination, the flowers usually fade after a few days, in 1970 some produced distinctly enlarged 5-ribbed ovaries before the flowers failed off. (Fig. 3c). 2. Adenia aculeata (Oliv.) Engl., Bot. Jahrb. 14 (1891) 375; Cufodontis, Bull. Jard. Bot. Etat Bruxelles, XXIX, Suppl. Sept. (1959) 599; de Wilde, Meded. Landbouwhogeschool Wageningen 71-18 (1971) 65 aculeata Oliv. in Hook, f., Fc. PI. 14 (1880) 11, tab. 1317. Fig. la-d, 3d-e. In my monograph A. aculeata was subdivided into three subspecies. Because ssp. inermis should be accepted as a separate species, only ssp. aculeata occurs in Ethiopia. The other subspecies, ssp. manganiana, is endemic in S. Somalia and NE. Kenya. 3. Adenia inermis (de Wilde) de Wilde, comb. nov. aculeata (Oliv.) Engl. ssp. inermis de Wilde, Meded. Landbouwhogeschool Wagenmgen 71-18 (1971) 69. Fig. le-h. As mentioned in a note under the original description of ssp. inermis this taxon was regarded as specifically distinct from the type-subspecies of A. aculeata by J. J. F. E. de Wilde who found several specimens of both taxa growing close together in a dry vegetation on limestone at c. 1000 to 1300 m altitude in Bale Province, Ethiopia. When I describedthe new subspecies, the material at hand showed in the male flowers a very close similarity to the male flowers of ssp. aculeata, apparently only essentially differing in size. The observation of the two taxa in the field and the study of abundant additional material, both dry and in spirit, revealed that, in spite of the great similarity in the male flowers, two different species are involved. The differences Fig. 2. ellenbeckii: a. longitudinalsection of3 flower, x4 (a coarse erect specimen, spirit material de Wilde 6410); b. longitudinal section of $ flower, x4 (Gillett 4202 type A., vitifolia); c-d. two stages x ofseedlings, J (cultivated at Wageningen from seeds of specimen collected as de Wilde 7385) Adenia venenata: e. seedling, x \ (cultivated at Wageningen from seeds of specimen collected asde Wilde 7384).

Arab. Modecca 564 W. J. J. O. DE WILDE mainly relate to overall habit, the shape of the leaves, the architecture of the inflorescences, and the shape of the fresh fruits. These characters were further stressed by the cultivationofboth species in the greenhouse. The differences elucidated by fig. I and the photographs fig. 3d-e, can be summarized as follows; Adenia aculeata Adenia inermis Slender climber with thin, terete, not Large lianawith strong, densely prickly stems up to 8 cm thick. Very young spiny stems but a few metres long, twigs without spines. No tuber. growing from a subterranean napiform tuber. Leaves suborbicular to ovate, 3-7- lobed, 2-7(-16) by cm, Leaves ovate-elliptic, entire, 3-6 by mostly scabrous beneath. Blade with 2-4 cm, not scabrous. Leaf blade without glands. submarginal glands on the lower surface. Inflorescences generally grouped in fascicles along short shoots of 1-10 cm, rarely (in de Wilde 7374) pedunculate Inflorescences in fascicles along the shoots, not on special inflorescences -bearing short shoots. and along normal shoots. Flowers: flowers inch stipe 11-18 mm, Ç flowers 8-12 mm long. Fruit broadly ellipsoid, distinctly apiculate, 1-lj by 0.8-1.3 cm. Seeds 3 - Flowers: $ flowers inch stipe 10-11 mm, $ flowers 5-6 mm long. Fruit subglobular, not apiculate, 1-1L by 0.8-1.3 cm. Seeds 4-5 mm diam. 4mm diam. 4. Adenia venenata Forsk., Fh Aegypt. - (1775) 77; Cufodontis, Bull. Jard. Bot. tat Bruxelles XXIX, Suppl. Sept. (1959) 600; de Wilde, Meded. Landbouwhogeschool Wageningen 71-18 (1971) 133 abyssinica Höchst, ex A. Rich., Tent.Fh Abyss. 1 (1847) 297 Fig. 2e, 3a-b. This is a well-known species with a large area in NE. and Central Africa. The fruits are characteristically showy veined. A seedling cultivated in the greenhouse is depicted in fig. 2e. 5. Adenia rumicifolia Engl. & Harms, Pfl. welt Afr. 3, 2 (1921) 603, cf. var. rumicifolia; de Wilde, Meded. Landbouwhogeschool Wageningen 71-18 (1971) 154. This species is common in a large area in tropical Africa. From Ethiopia I have seen no herbarium material.in 19651observed a sterile specimen climbing c. 10 m high in a riverine forest between Lekemti and Ghimbi in Wollega Province. It was not collected because of the absence of flowers or fruits, but the species was never found again. 6. Adenia ellenbeckii Harms in Engh, Pfl. welt Afr. 3, 2 (1921) 606; Cufodontis, Bull. Jard. Bot. Etat Bruxelles XXIX, Suppl. Sept. (1959) 599; de Wilde, Meded.

Photographs ADDITIONAL NOTES ON ETHIOPIAN ADENIA (PASSIFLORACEAE) 565 Fig. 3. of various Adenias: a-b. infructescences of Ade nia venenata. x J and x î respectively (collected as de Wilde 7384); c. Ç flowers of Adenia gedoensis, x 1 (greenhouse Wageningen, 1970); d-e. infructescences of A. aculeata ssp. aculeata x 1 and x 1J respectively, (collected asde Wilde 7373); f. fruits of A. ellenbeckii, xf (de Wilde 6411).

A. A. 566 W. J. J. O. DE WILDE Landbouwhogeschool Wageningen 71-18 (1971) 178 toxicaria Harms, Notizbl. Berl.-Dahl. 13 (1936) 426 vitifolia Hutch. & Bruce, Kew Bull. (1941) 98; Cufodontis, Bull. Jard. Bot. État Bruxelles XXIX, Suppl. Sept. (1959) 600 Fig. 2a-d, 3f The species as accepted by me in my monograph comprises a wide range of forms, varying from coarse specimens with low erect habit, without with but or a few tendrils, and with more or less entire leaves, to specimens which are much more slender, provided with tendrils and with much more and more deeply dissected leaves. The species as a whole is usually pubescent, but a few specimens from Somaliaand N. Tanzania are entirely glabrous. The coarse erect specimens have somewhat larger male flowers with a corona consisting of a few hairs, whereas in most other specimens the corona is absent {fig. 2a-b). In the herbarium specimens, which are often poorly preserved, apparently all kinds of intermediates can be found, so that they were treated all as one single species, A. ellenbeckii. The types of A. ellenbeckii (type a 9 specimen), and the types of the synonyms A. toxicaria (ex description; flowers incompletely known) and A. vitifolia (a slender form, type a <$ specimen ; fig. 2b) are all provided with tendrils and evidently belong to one single taxon. The coarse erect specimens as mentioned above, collected in Ethiopia and also represented by some other collections (e.g. J. J. F. E. de Wilde 6410 and 6411 in WAG, from E. Ethiopia; Bally 7308, in K, from British Somaliland; Paoli 1347, in FI, from Somaliland) most likely concern only phenotypic variation, possibly also influenced by grazing. Future field study may prove, however, that they represent some distinct form. ACKNOWLEDGEMENT I thank the Director of the Laboratory for Plant Taxonomy at Wageningen (WAG) for all facilities received. Mr. J. van Os prepared the line drawings, except the longitudinal sections of the flowers. Photographs a, b, d, and e are by Dr. J. J. F. E. de Wilde, c and f by Prof. Dr. H. C. D. de Wit, Wageningen.