e-Key v3 - Celtis
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Interactive keys to the identification of seed plants of southern Africa using keys based on plant morphology.

Ulmaceae - Celtis L.

Description :

  • Deciduous trees or rarely shrubs; crown spreading, branches without spines; bark mostly grey and smooth, sometimes brown and fissured; plants monoecious or rarely polygamonoecious
  • Leaves alternate, usually asymmetrical at base, dentate to entire, 3-5-nerved from base to penninerved, cystoliths often present, giving scabrous texture to mature leaves, petiolate; stipules small, lateral, free, caducous
  • Inflorescences : male inflorescences cymose or fasciculate; female axillary, solitary or few-flowered clusters
  • Flowers usually unisexual, male and female on same plants, along with a few bisexual flowers, pedicellate on branches of current year, appearing with leaves in mid- or late spring
  • Perianth : lobes 4 or 5
  • Male flowers globular; perianth lobes imbricate in bud, free, recurved at anthesis; stamens 4 or 5, with filaments arising on pilose receptacle, connate at base, incurved in bud, exserted after anthesis; anthers dorsifixed, extrorse, ovate; ovary rudimentary or absent
  • Female flowers with staminodes usually present; ovary 1-locular, ovoid, sessile; style short, sessile, divided into 2 divergent, elongate, widely spreading or ascending lobes, lobes entire or 2-fid
  • Fruit a fleshy drupe, ovoid or globose; outer mesocarp thick, firm, inner mesocarp thin, fleshy; endocarp thick-walled, bony, smooth or rugose, persisting after leaves fall
  • Seed without endosperm; embryo curved; cotyledons broad
  • x = 5 (aneuploids, high polyploidy)

Nomenclature:

  • Celtis L.
    • Linnaeus: 1043 (1753)
    • Linnaeus: 467 (1754)
    • Adanson: 377 (1763)
    • Jussieu: 408 (1789)
    • Planchon: 168 (1873)
    • Bentham: 354 (1880)
    • Engler: 63 (1889)
    • Rendle: 3 (1916)
    • Brown: 517 (1925)
    • Polhill: 139 (1964)
    • Polhill: 4 (1966)
    • Polhill: 266 (1989)
    • Wilmot-Dear: 6 (1991)

Distribution & Notes:

  • Global : Species ± 60, widespread in tropical and temperate regions mostly of the northern hemisphere; fewer than 10 in Africa
  • Southern Africa : Species 3, the northern provinces, Swaziland, Free State, KwaZulu-Natal, Lesotho, Western and Eastern Cape.
    • Alien species such as * Celtis australis L. (Nettle tree) and * C. sinensis Pers. (Chinese hackberry), sometimes found as garden escapes, may be confused with the local species

References:

  • ADANSON, M. 1763. Famille des Châtaigniers. Castaneae . Familles des plantes 2. Vincent, Paris
  • BENTHAM, G. 1880. Urticaceae . Tribus Ulmae & Tribus Celtideae . In G. Bentham & J.D. Hooker, Genera plantarum 3,1. Lovell Reeve & Co., London
  • BROWN, N.E. 1925. Ulmaceae . Flora capensis 5,2
  • ENGLER, A. 1889. Ulmaceae . Die natürlichen Pflanzenfamilien 3,1
  • JUSSIEU, A.L. DE. 1789. Amentaceae , les Amentacées. Genera plantarum secundum ordines naturales disposita 2. Herissant & Barrois, Paris
  • LINNAEUS, C. 1753. Species plantarum , edn 1. Laurentius Salvius, Stockholm
  • LINNAEUS, C. 1754. Genera plantarum , edn 5. Laurentius Salvius, Stockholm
  • PLANCHON, J.E. 1873. Ulmaceae . In A. de Candolle, Prodromus 17. Masson, Paris
  • POLHILL, R.M. 1964. Enumeration of the Ulmaceae in Africa south of the Sahara. Kew Bulletin 19
  • POLHILL, R.M. 1966. Flora of tropical East Africa . Ulmaceae
  • POLHILL, R.M. 1989. Ulmaceae . Flora of Ethiopia 3
  • RENDLE, A.B. 1916. Ulmaceae . Flora of tropical Africa 6,2
  • WILMOT-DEAR, C.M. 1991. Ulmaceae . Flora zambesiaca 9,6