Trochetiopsis

Genus of flowering plants
title: "Trochetiopsis" type: doc version: 1 created: 2026-02-28 author: "Wikipedia contributors" status: active scope: public tags: ["trochetiopsis", "flora-of-saint-helena", "dombeyoideae", "malvaceae-genera"] description: "Genus of flowering plants" topic_path: "general/trochetiopsis" source: "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trochetiopsis" license: "CC BY-SA 4.0" wikipedia_page_id: 0 wikipedia_revision_id: 0
::summary Genus of flowering plants ::
| fossil_range = Late Miocene-Present | image = Trochetiopsis_erythroxylon.jpg | image_caption = Trochetiopsis erythroxylon only survives in horticulture at present | image2 = Trochetiopsis ebenus.jpg | image2_caption = Flower of Trochetiopsis ebenus | taxon = Trochetiopsis | authority = Wessel Marais (1929- ), 1981 | subdivision_ranks = Species | subdivision = Trochetiopsis × benjaminii
Trochetiopsis erythroxylon (extinct in the wild)
Trochetiopsis melanoxylon (extinct)
The flowering plant genus Trochetiopsis consists of two extant and one extinct species endemic to the island of Saint Helena (South Atlantic Ocean). They were formerly placed in the family Sterculiaceae, but this is included in the expanded Malvaceae in the APG and most subsequent systematics.
There is evidence from fossil pollen that the Trochetiopsis lineage has been on Saint Helena since the late Miocene (some 9.5 million years).
Description
The species of this genus were formerly included in the genus Trochetia, but were separated by Marais in 1981 on the basis of geography and morphological characters. Unlike in Trochetia, the Trochetiopsis flowers have only five stamens, and the sepals generally have appressed sericeous indumentum on their interior faces (although one species, T. melanoxylon, lacks this last character).
The wood of all the species is attractively coloured and is used in island inlay work.
Phylogeny
Trochetiopsis is closely related to the genera Melhania and Paramelhania, with a 2021 study subsuming Trochetiopsis and Paramelhania into Melhania.
Species
There are three species (two living, one extinct), and one named hybrid:
- Trochetiopsis erythroxylon. Extinct in the wild
- Trochetiopsis ebenus. The St Helena ebony (critically endangered in the wild).
- Trochetiopsis melanoxylon - Extinct.
- Trochetiopsis × benjaminii (T. erythroxylon × T. ebenus).
Footnotes
References
- (1981) Trochetiopsis (Sterculiaceae), a new genus from St Helena. Kew Bulletin 36(3): 645–646. HTML abstract
- (1995): The endemic Flora of St Helena. Anthony Nelson Ltd, Oswestry.
- (1990): The history of the endemic flora of St Helena: late Miocene Trochetiopsis-like pollen from St Helena and the origin of Trochetiopsis. New Phytologist 114: 159–165.
References
- Cronk (1990)
- Marais (1981)
- (February 2021). "Indo‐Asian Eriolaena expanded to include two Malagasy genera, and other generic realignments based on molecular phylogenetics of Dombeyoideae (Malvaceae)". Taxon.
::callout[type=info title="Wikipedia Source"] This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page. ::