Abstract

Desplatsia is a genus made up of about four to eight species which are mostly trees native to tropical Africa. The leaf and pollen characters of three West African species of Desplatsia were investigated using light microscopy. The study was aimed at investigating the leaf epidermis and pollen morphology of the species to further enhance the understanding of the taxonomic relationships in the genus. The epidermal cells were isodiametric, polygonal to irregular with straight, curved to wavy anticlinal cell walls. The species were hypostomatic with anisocytic and staurocytic stomata types. The adaxial and abaxial walls of Desplatsia chrysochlamywere characterised by three-celled head multicellular glandular trichomes with highest number of cells and stomata and striated adaxial surface. The four-armed branched and stellate trichomes with the largest stomata size of 19.5 µm × 15.6 µm distinguished D. dewevrei from D. subericarpa in which the largest cells, lowest number of stomata and size were recorded. The pollen grains were medium in size 26.5 µm–47.5 µm, tricolporate with long colpi. However, the subprolate, baculate exine surface, small ora and lumen width separated D. chrysochlamy from D. dewevrei and D. subericarpa in which prolate, perforated exine surface and colpi margo were recorded. A key is provided for the identification of the species. Therefore, the ora size, lumen width, number of epidermal cell and stomata are additional taxonomic characters that can be used for species delimitation in the genus.

Highlights

  • Desplatsia Bocq. a native to Tropical Africa was first described by Bocquillon in 1867, with a single species Desplatsia subericarpa (Brink 2009)

  • The epidermal cells on the adaxial surface are isodiametric, polygonal to irregular with straight curved to wavy anticlinal walls (Figure 1a)

  • Stomata and crystals were absent on this surface

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Summary

Introduction

Desplatsia Bocq. a native to Tropical Africa was first described by Bocquillon in 1867, with a single species Desplatsia subericarpa (Brink 2009). A native to Tropical Africa was first described by Bocquillon in 1867, with a single species Desplatsia subericarpa (Brink 2009). It is made up of four to eight species mostly trees (Bayer & Kubitzki 2003; Brink 2009; Burret 1926; Hutchinson 1967). The genus is currently placed in the tribe Grewieae in the subfamily Grewioideae alongside Duboscia Bocq., Microcos Linn. The large globose to ellipsoid and angular fibrous juicy ripe fruit of Desplatsia species are boiled to obtain a black dye used for cloth and stains like printers ink (Brink 2009). In west tropical Africa, the genus is represented by three species, viz. Desplatsia chrysochlamys

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