Leaves
paripinnate; leaflets usually in 3-18 pairs, coriaceous, lower usually smaller than upper; stipules small, deciduous
Inflorescence
a short lateral or terminal panicle or raceme, sometimes produced from old wood, many-flowered
Flowers
bisexual, red or pink; bracts caducous
Calyx
turbinate or subcampanulate, with 4 imbricate lobes longer than tube, persisting in fruit
Petals
5, or, in
S. brachypetala
, some or all petals reduced to linear filaments, arising in mouth of calyx tube, somewhat unequal, imbricate
Stamens
10, arising with petals, free or connate at base
Ovary
somewhat unequal-sided, with stalk adnate to calyx tube, many-ovuled; style terete, with terminal, capitate stigma
Pod
often woody, oblong or broadly linear, often falcate, sometimes beaked, compressed, with a hard margin or wing along upper suture, which persists, often with seeds attached, poorly dehiscent
Seeds
compressed-orbicular, with funicle small or sometimes expanded into a fleshy, cup-like aril
x = 12
Nomenclature:
Schotia
Jacq.
Jacquin: 93 (1787) name conserved
Harvey: 273 (1862)
Codd: 515 (1956)
Hutchinson: 240 (1964)
Ross: 23 (1977)
Distribution & Notes:
Global
: Species ± 5, restricted to Africa south of the Zambesi River
Southern Africa
: Species 4, Namibia, the four northern provinces, Swaziland, KwaZulu-Natal and through Eastern Cape to Riversdale area in Western Cape
References:
CODD, L.E. 1956. The
Schotia
species of southern Africa.
Bothalia
6
HARVEY, W.H. 1862.
Leguminosae
.
Flora capensis
2
HUTCHINSON, J. 1964. Order LEGUMINALES.
The genera of flowering plants
1. Oxford University Press, Oxford
JACQUIN, N.J. VON. 1787.
Collectanea austriaca ad botanicum, chemiam et historiam naturalem spectantia, cum figuris
1. Wappler, Vienna
ROSS, J.H. 1977.
Fabaceae
.
Caesalpinioideae
.
Flora of southern Africa
16,2
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