Keetia

Keetia is a genus of flowering plants in the family Rubiaceae. It consists of climbers or scrambling shrubs, rarely small trees.

Keetia
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Plantae
Clade: Tracheophytes
Clade: Angiosperms
Clade: Eudicots
Clade: Asterids
Order: Gentianales
Family: Rubiaceae
Subfamily: Ixoroideae
Tribe: Vanguerieae
Genus: Keetia
E.Phillips
Type species
Keetia gueinzii
(Sond.) Bridson

Distribution

The genus has a wide distribution area and occurs in tropical and southern Africa.

Taxonomy

It was originally described by Edwin Percy Phillips in 1926[1] and is named after J.D.M Keet, a South African forester and plant collector.[2] The type species was Keetia transvaalensis, which received its name from the region it was first collected, but is now included in Keetia gueinzii.[3]

Species

  • Keetia acuminata Bridson
  • Keetia angustifolia Bridson
  • Keetia bakossiorum Cheek
  • Keetia bridsoniae Jongkind
  • Keetia carmichaelii Bridson
  • Keetia cornelia (Cham. & Schltdl.) Bridson
  • Keetia ferruginea Bridson
  • Keetia foetida Bridson
  • Keetia gracilis Bridson
  • Keetia gueinzii (Sond.) Bridson
  • Keetia hispida (Benth.)Bridson
  • Keetia inaequilatera (Hutch. & Dalziel) Bridson
  • Keetia koritschoneri Bridson
  • Keetia leucantha (K.Krause) Bridson
  • Keetia lukei Bridson
  • Keetia lulandensis Bridson
  • Keetia mannii (Hiern) Bridson
  • Keetia molundensis (K.Krause) Bridson
  • Keetia multiflora (Schumach. & Thonn.) Bridson
  • Keetia obovata Jongkind
  • Keetia ornata Bridson
  • Keetia procteri Bridson
  • Keetia purpurascens (Bullock) Bridson
  • Keetia purseglovei Bridson
  • Keetia ripae (De Wild.) Bridson
  • Keetia rubens (Hiern) Bridson
  • Keetia rufivillosa (Robyns ex Hutch. & Dalziel) Bridson
  • Keetia rwandensis Bridson
  • Keetia tenuiflora (Welw. ex Hiern) Bridson
  • Keetia venosa (Oliv.) Bridson
  • Keetia venosissima (Hutch. & Dalziel) Bridson
  • Keetia zanzibarica (Klotzsch) Bridson
gollark: You have a reasonable point that you can be nice to people inside a conversation but (possibly inadvertently) non-nice to those outside it. I think niceness within conversations is more important, as people outside them can more easily choose not to participate in them, but this doesn't work excellently. Banning discussion of anything some people do not like reading is *a* fix for some of this, but I don't like the tradeoffs, given the wide range of things in this category. Isolating that elsewhere is also not good for various reasons I indicated before. A generalized rule-4-y approach could end up doing basically the same thing as preemptively banning it, and people seem dissatisfied with "ignore the channel for a bit". Thus, I'm unsure of how the issue can be solved nicely and it's worth actually investigating the options.
gollark: What a strange name.
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gollark: Too bad, you are to wait.
gollark: Somewhat, maybe. Please hold on while I engage in typing™.

References

  1. Phillips EP. 1926 "The genera of South African flowering plants, Edition 2." Memoirs of the Botanical Survey of South Africa 10.
  2. Gunn M, Codd LE (1981). Botanical exploration of southern Africa. Cape Town: Balkema.
  3. Tilney PM, Van Wyk AE (2009). "Taxonomy of the genus Keetia (Rubiaceae-subfam. Ixoroideae-tribe Vanguerieae) in southern Africa, with notes on bacterial symbiosis as well as the structure of colleters and the stylar head complex". Bothalia. 39: 165–175.
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