Scientific Name
Maesopsis eminii Engl.
Synonyms
Maesopsis eminii subsp. eminii [1]
Vernacular Name
English | Umbrella tree, musizi (standard trade name) [2] |
Indonesia | Kayu Afrika [2] |
France | Musizi [2] |
Cameroon | Esenge, londo, nkala, nkangela [3] |
Congo | Nabit [3] |
Ivory Coast | Manasati; pou-doue [3] |
Nigeria | Awuru (Igbo); igologbon (Yoruba); ovbiogiekhue (Edo) [3] |
Zaire | Bosungu, ishongo, osongo [3]. |
Geographical Distributions
Maesopsis eminii occurs naturally between 6°S and 8°N in tropical Africa along the Gulf of Guinea (including Sao Tome) from Liberia to Angola and through Zaire, Southern Sudan and Uganda to Kenya and Tanzania. It was introduced into Java in the 1920s and is cultivated there and also in Sumatra and Kalimantan. From Java, it was introduced into Peninsular Malaysia in 1952. Plantations of M. eminii have been established in Africa, India, Indonesia, Malaysia and Fiji, while it has been introduced for testing in Costa Rica, Hawaii, Puerto Rico, the Solomon Islands and Western Samoa. [2]
Botanical Description
M. eminii is a member of the family Rhamnaceae. It is an unarmed, evergreen to deciduous tree which can reach up to 15-25(-45) m tall with an open and spreading crown. Its bole is exceptionally straight, cylindrical, measures up to 15 m tall and 50(-180) cm in diametre, while the buttresses are small or absent. The bark is pale grey to grey brown or almost white, smooth or with deep, vertical and often twisted furrows. The branchlets are with patent short hairs. [2]
The leaves are mostly subopposite, simple and glandular-serrulate. The stipules are subulate, measure 2-6 mm long, puberulent and caducous. The petiole is 6-12 mm long and hairy to nearly hairless. The blade is ovate-elliptical to oblong-ovate, measuring 7-14 cm x 2.5-6 cm, lustrous above and paler beneath. It is smooth except when young, with rounded to subcordate base, and acuminate at apex, while the margins are 0.3-5 mm long and with rounded teeth. [2]
The inflorescence is a many flowered axillary cyme and measures about 1-5 cm long. The peduncle is 4-25 mm long. The flowers are bisexual, 5-merous and yellowish-green. The pedicel is 1-3(-6) mm long. The sepals are 2-6 mm long and deltoid, while the petals are very strongly concaveconvex, hiding the anthers and not clawed. The anthers are subsessile with short style and dilated. The stigma is stellately 10-lobed. The style and stigma are persistent in fruit. [2]
The fruit is an obovoid drupe, measuring 20-35 mm x 10-18 mm, turns from green to yellow to purple-black when mature. The mesocarp is floury and cream-coloured while endocarp is creamy-brown. [2]
Cultivation
In Africa, M. eminii occurs in association with many other species from lowland tropical rain forest to savanna, extending into submontane forest up to 1500 m altitude, in Rwanda even up to 1800 m. In Java and Malaysia, it is mostly planted in the lowland, but it is more vigorous at 600-900 m altitude. It prefers a mean annual rainfall of at least 1200-1300 mm and tolerates a dry season of up to 2 months. In its habitat, the mean annual temperature ranges from 22-27°C, while the mean maximum temperature of the hottest month from 26-32°C, and the mean minimum temperature of the coldest month from 16-24°C. It is very light-demanding. M. eminii grows best on deep fertile soils. It tolerates a wide range of soils, from medium to light and from neutral to very acid, but it does not tolerate waterlogging. In Malaysia, good growth was obtained on alluvial and sedimentary, granite-derived soils. It was introduced first in German colonial times in the Usambara Mountains in eastern Tanzania, then in the 1930s and 1960s, it has rapidly invaded submontane rainforest, to become the dominant species there. [2]
Chemical Constituent
No documentation
Plant Part Used
No documentation
Traditional Use
No documentation
Preclinical Data
No documentation
Clinical Data
No documentation
Poisonous Management
No documentation
Line Drawing
References
- The Plant List. Ver 1.1. Maesopsis eminii Engl. [homepage on the Internet]. c2013 [updated 2012 April 18; cited 2015 July 7] Available from: http://www.theplantlist.org/tpl1.1/record/kew-2509037
- Schabel HG, Latiff A. Maesopsis eminii Engl.In: Faridah Hanum I, van der Maesen LJG, editors. Plant Resources of South-East Asia no 11: Auxiliary plants. Leiden, Netherlands: Backhuys Publication; 1997. p. 184-187.
- Quattrocchi U. CRC world dictionary of medicinal and poisonous plants: Common names, scientific names, eponyms, synonyms and etymology; Volume IV M-Q. Boca Raton, Florida: CRC Press; 2012. p. 19-20.