Euphorbia sudanica A. Chev.
E. trapiifolia A. Chev. E. paganorum auct., non A. Chev.
Monoecious shrub, fleshy, cactiform, spiny, glabrous, 1-2 m in height, with very short trunk and numerous erect ramifications. Branches green-glaucous to green-reddish, ± cylindrical (1.2 cm in diameter) covered by triangular protuberances, arranged spirally and protruding 5-10 mm. Spines (2-8 cm) arranged in pairs and located above each protuberance. They are also caducous, therefore the older stems are unarmed. Unlike the other species in its subgenus, the leaves are well developed (2-8 × 1-5 cm) alternate or bunched and arranged at the end of the branches, sessile, fleshy, glabrous, oblong-spatulate or obtriangular, cuneate at the base and truncated and finely dentate at the apex. Inflorescence comprised of 3 flowers at the end of the same peduncle (1 cm), born at the scars left by fallen leaves. Flowers greenish with 5 yellow nectaries. Fruit a capsule, trilobed, ± globose (3-7 mm in diameter), glabrous, green to beige when ripe, with a recurved pedicel 5-7 mm.
Flowering:
No data for this region
Fruiting:
No data for this region
Habitat:
Diverse soils, sandy, stony, rocky, in a semi-desert and sabanoid environment.
Distribution:
Tropical West Africa: from Mauritania and Senegal to Niger and possibly the extreme N of Nigeria.
Conservation status:
Rare but widely distributed species, it is not considered threatened. In the IUCN Red List of Threatened Species it is listed as Least Concern (LC) at global level (IUCN SSC Global Tree Specialist Group & Botanic Gardens Conservation International (BGCI), 2022). Cactiform euphorbias are included in Annex II of CITES.