identifier	taxonID	type	CVterm	format	language	title	description	additionalInformationURL	UsageTerms	rights	Owner	contributor	creator	bibliographicCitation
83552453FFF79113640EA7F6FE07FD1B.text	83552453FFF79113640EA7F6FE07FD1B.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Leptopus	<div><p>LEPTOPUS</p><p>The genus Leptopus was established by Decaisne (1844), based on Leptopus cordifolius Decne. Morphologically the genus closely resembles Andrachne L., with which it has been united by various authors (Müller 1866, Pax &amp; Hoffmann 1922, Govaerts et al. 2000). In the most recent classifications (Webster 1994, 2014, Radcliffe-Smith 2001) it is kept separate. Phylogenetically (e.g., Vorontsova et al. 2007), it is distinct from Andrachne, but morphologically the main difference is only in the position of the ovules: anatropous in Leptopus, hemitropous in Andrachne (Vorontsova &amp; Hoffman 2009) . Pojarkova (1940, 1960) made the first revisions of Leptopus, the latest is by Vorontsova &amp; Hoffmann (2009), who also present a more elaborate history of the genus.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/83552453FFF79113640EA7F6FE07FD1B	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		Plazi	Martin, B. de Manuel;Welzen, P. C. van	Martin, B. de Manuel, Welzen, P. C. van (2022): Revision of the genera Leptopus and Notoleptopus (Phyllanthaceae) in Malesia. Blumea 67 (1): 20-25, DOI: 10.3767/blumea.2022.67.01.05, URL: https://doi.org/10.3767/blumea.2022.67.01.05
83552453FFF79113640EA590FF55F7BD.text	83552453FFF79113640EA590FF55F7BD.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Leptopus Decne.	<div><p>Leptopus Decne.</p><p>Leptopus Decne. (1844) 155; Pojark. (1960) 269; Airy Shaw (1972) 285; Whitmore (1973) 105; Airy Shaw (1982) 26, (1983) 33; G.L. Webster (1994) 40; Welzen (2000) 56, f. 7; Radcl.-Sm. (2001) 24; Welzen (2007) 352; Voronts. &amp; Petra Hoffm.(2009) 627;G.L. Webster (2014) 66.— Type: Leptopus cordifolius Decne.</p><p>[ Arachne Neck. (1790) 348, suppressed publication, nom. inval.: Turland et al. (2018: art. 34.1 App. 1)]. — Andrachne L. sect. Arachne Endl. (1840) 1119. — Arachne (Endl.) Pojark. (1940) 342. — Type: not indicated.</p><p>Hexakistra Hook.f. (1887): 283, nom. inval., in syn.</p><p>Thelypetalum Gagnep. (1925 ‘1924’) 876. — Type: Thelypetalum pierrei Gagnep. (= Leptopus australis (Zoll. &amp; Moritzi) Pojark.).</p><p>Archileptopus P.T. Li (1991) 38. — Type: Archileptopus fangdingianus P.T.Li (= Leptopus fangdingianus (P.T.Li) Voronts. &amp; Petra Hoffm.) (see WCSP 2021).</p><p>Herbs to subshrubs, ascending to erect, monoecious. Indumentum absent or of simple hairs. Stipules small, late caducous to persistent, not glandular. Leaves alternate, distichous, simple; petiole reniform in transverse section, not pulvinate; blade papery to coriaceous, eglandular, discolorous, margin entire, venation pinnate, nerves looped and closed near the margin, veins and veinlets reticulate, indistinct. Inflorescences axillary fascicles on the youngest branches, with a single to few flowers of both sexes, staminate ones forming after fruit formation / dehiscence, sometimes on short brachyblasts; bracts present, small, resembling stipules. Flowers pedicellate, 5-merous, actinomorphic; sepals 5, not to at most slightly accrescent, imbricate, herbaceous; petals 5(–6); disc outside stamens. Staminate flowers: pedicels filiform, with basal abscission zone; petals smaller to as long as sepals; disc of 5(–6) segments, often deeply bilobed (then seemingly 10 segments), lobes often rounded; stamens 5, free, alternipetalous, filaments filiform, an- thers opening latrorse with lengthwise slits; pistillode indistinct or 3-lobed or of 3 free parts. Pistillate flowers: pedicels widening towards apex, not articulate; petals small, hidden under disc; disc annular, divided into 5 parts; ovary 3(–4)-locular (seem- ing 4–5-locular in L. fangdingianus (P.T.Li) Voronts. &amp; Petra Hoffm.), superior, globose; ovules 2 per locule; style minute, stigmas apically to almost completely split, apically broadened. Fruits faintly lobed to subglobose, capsular; columella slen- der, persistent, apically not or slightly broadened, glabrous to somewhat hairy. Seeds naked (micropylar fleshy appendages in L. emicans (Dunn) Pojark.), triangular in transverse section to reniform.</p><p>Distribution — Nine species, ranging from the Caucasus and Iran to the Himalayas, China, S and SE Asia and into Malesia (with a single species) east to the Lesser Sunda Islands and the Moluccas.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/83552453FFF79113640EA590FF55F7BD	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		Plazi	Martin, B. de Manuel;Welzen, P. C. van	Martin, B. de Manuel, Welzen, P. C. van (2022): Revision of the genera Leptopus and Notoleptopus (Phyllanthaceae) in Malesia. Blumea 67 (1): 20-25, DOI: 10.3767/blumea.2022.67.01.05, URL: https://doi.org/10.3767/blumea.2022.67.01.05
83552453FFF791116747A788FEE2FC60.text	83552453FFF791116747A788FEE2FC60.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Leptopus australis (Zoll. & Moritzi) Pojark.	<div><p>1. Leptopus australis (Zoll. &amp; Moritzi) Pojark. — Fig. 1</p><p>Leptopus australis (Zoll. &amp; Moritzi) Pojark. (1960) 270; Airy Shaw (1972 ‘1971’) 285; Whitmore (1973) 105; Airy Shaw (1982) 26, (1983) 33; Welzen (2007) 353,f. 14; Voronts.&amp; Petra Hoffm.(2009) 629.— Andrachne australis Zoll. &amp; Moritzi in Zoll.(1845) 17;Backer &amp; Bakh.f.(1963) 470.— Arachne australis (Zoll. &amp; Moritzi) Pojark. (1940) 342, nom. inval. — Lectotype (designated by Vorontsova &amp; Hoffmann 2009): Zollinger 1399 (lecto W acqu. 1889 No. 24659*; isolecto A*, BM, L!, W*), Java, M. Gegger, Insula Madura (Vorontsova &amp; Hoffmann indicate that the lectotype is Zollinger &amp; Moritzi 1399, but Moritzi never collected in Malesia, only Zollinger: www. nationaalherbarium.nl/fmcollectors).</p><p>Andrachne tenera Miq. (1859) 365. — Agyneia tenera Zoll. &amp; Moritzi ex Miq. (1859) 365, nom. inval., in syn. — Type: Anonymous (Zollinger) 2799 (holo U!), Java, bij Soember-waroe in Panaroekan.</p><p>Andrachne australis Zoll. &amp; Moritzi var. angustifolia Müll.Arg. (1866) 235. — Lectotype (designated indirectly by Vorontsova &amp; Hoffmann 2009): Cuming 1528 (lecto G-DC*; isolecto K 2 sheets*, L 3 sheets!), Philippines, Luzon, Prov. Batangao.</p><p>Andrachne polypetala Kuntze (1891) 592. — Arachne polypetala (Kuntze) Pojark. (1940) 342, nom. inval. — Leptopus polypetalus (Kuntze) Pojark. (1960) 271. — Type: Kuntze 3661 (holo NY*), Vietnam, Turong in Annam.</p><p>Andrachne hirta Ridl. (1923) 360. — Leptopus hirtus (Ridl.) Pojark. (1960) 271. — Type: Ridley 14883 (holo K*), Malaysia, Perlis, Tebing Tinggi, near Kanga .</p><p>Andrachne calcarea Ridl. (1923) 361. — Leptopus calcareus (Ridl.) Pojark. (1960) 271; Airy Shaw (1972 ‘1971’) 285. — Lectotype (designated by Vorontsova &amp; Hoffmann 2009): Annandale 1835 (lecto K*), Thailand, Kau Koh Suwan near Lampan.</p><p>Thelypetalum pierrei Gagnep. (1925 ‘1924’) 876. — Type: Pierre 6257 (holo P*, photograph K!; iso A*), Vietnam, Prov. Bien-hoa, Gia-lo-me, vers Bao-chiang .</p><p>Andrachne lanceolata Pierre ex Beille (1927) 539. — Arachne lanceolata (Pierre ex Beille) Pojark. (1940) 342, nom. inval. — Leptopus lanceolatus (Pierre ex Beille) Pojark. (1960) 270. — Lectotype (designated by Vo- rontsova &amp; Hoffmann 2009): Poilane 3316 (lecto P*; isolecto P*), Vietnam, Nhatrang, vallé du Sõng Mow.</p><p>Leptopus philippinensis Pojark. (1960) 270. — Type: BS (M. Ramos) 43333 (holo LE; iso US*), Philippines, Bohol.</p><p>Leptopus sanjappae Sumathi, Karthig., Jayanthi &amp; Diwakar (2006) 155, f. 1. — Leptopus calcareus (Ridl.) Pojark. var. sanjappae (Sumathi, Karthig., Jayanthi &amp; Diwakar) Chakrab. &amp; N.P.Balakr. (2008) 604. — Type: Sumathi 17362 (holo CAL; iso K*, MCCH, PBL), Andaman Is., North Andaman, Tekkari, Saddle Peak National Park.</p><p>Subshrubs, 9 – 50 cm high, stem generally branched only at base; flowering branches 1 – 1.5 mm thick, often tinged red, densely hairy when young, glabrescent. Hairs sericeous-hirsute (base upright, upper part bent horizontally), to c. 0.5(–0.8) mm long. Stipules triangular to subulate, 0.8–2.8 by 0.2–0.6 mm, apex acute, densely hairy. Leaves: petiole 0.3–3.4 cm long, hairy; blade elliptic to somewhat obovate, 1–8(–10) by 0.5– 4 cm; (1–)2–3.5 times longer than wide, papery, symmetric, drying brownish or greyish green, base cuneate to attenuate, margin flat, apex rounded and mucronate to shortly acuminate, upper surface glabrous to (completely) hairy on midrib and margin, dark green when fresh, lower surface subglabrous to hairy on venation, light green when fresh, margin subglabrous to hairy; nerves 4–6, flat above, slightly raised below, distinct. Flowers green. Staminate flowers 2–3.8 mm diam; pedicel terete, 2.7–7 mm long, slightly hairy, green to maroonish; se- pals 5, obovate, 0.8–2.3 by 0.7–1 mm, hairy outside, glabrous inside, green, veined when dry; petals 5, oblong to obovate, 0.5–1.2 by 0.2–0.3 mm, glabrous, whitish; disc of 5 bilobed glands (to seemingly 10 separate glands), strap-like, 0.7–1.2 by 0.1–0.2 mm, glabrous, whitish; stamens 5, glabrous, filaments 0.5–1.3 mm long, whitish, anthers c. 0.2–0.3 mm long, light yellow, 2-thecate, each theca bilobed; pistillode of 3 free lobes, to 0.8 mm long, glabrous, top slightly split. Pistillate flowers 5–6 mm diam, disc-shaped; pedicel terete, 1.2–5(– 9 in fruit) mm long, pilose, green; sepals 5, ovate to obovate, 1.5–3.2 (– 5.5 in fruit) by 1.5–2(– 3.5 in fruit) mm, margin and outside pilose, shortly hirsute inside, green, clearly veined when dry; petals 5, minute and sticking to back of disk lobes, oblong to obovate, 0.1–0.4 by 0.1–0.2 mm, glabrous, single vein generally visible; disc lobes 5, almost completely split and V-shaped, 0.6–0.8 mm long, apically often somewhat erose; ovary 0.5–0.6 by 0.7–0.9 mm, densely pilose, yellowish to light greenish; style c. 0.2 mm long, white to light greenish, pilose; stigmas 0.7–0.8 mm long, glabrous except sometimes for some hairs on clavate lobe apices, white to greenish. Fruits triangular in transverse section, c. 5 by 2.5 mm, yellow-green to white when ripe, shortly pilose, reticulately veined, white to light greenish when young; columella 1–1.5 mm long. Seeds 1.2–2 by 1–1.5 by 1–1.5 mm, sides ribbed, back convex and smooth, brown when dry.</p><p>Distribution — China (Hainan), Thailand, Andaman Islands, Vietnam; Malesia: Malay Peninsula, Sumatra, Java (including Madura), Borneo (Sabah), Philippines, Lesser Sunda Islands (Bali, Timor), Moluccas (Tanimbar Islands, Wetar).</p><p>Habitat &amp; Ecology — Locally common in primary to disturbed tropical to evergreen forest, deciduous forest, dry Eucalypt savannah; in the shade to open spots, often on steep slopes, often between rocks or even lithophytic; soil: in shallow or deep soils on limestone or loam. Altitude: 15–1100 m. Presumably flowering and fruiting at least twice during the whole year except for January. According to Vorontsova &amp; Hoffmann (2009) the IUCN Red List category is Least Concern (LC), as the extent of occurrence far exceeds 20 000 km 2.</p><p>Note — The young branchlets are often very hairy, but they are glabrescent. The difference with Notoleptopus decaisnei is then mainly in the subglabrous older branchlets, which are hairy in N. decaisnei .</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/83552453FFF791116747A788FEE2FC60	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		Plazi	Martin, B. de Manuel;Welzen, P. C. van	Martin, B. de Manuel, Welzen, P. C. van (2022): Revision of the genera Leptopus and Notoleptopus (Phyllanthaceae) in Malesia. Blumea 67 (1): 20-25, DOI: 10.3767/blumea.2022.67.01.05, URL: https://doi.org/10.3767/blumea.2022.67.01.05
83552453FFF59111640EA308FEB5FB4A.text	83552453FFF59111640EA308FEB5FB4A.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Notoleptopus	<div><p>NOTOLEPTOPUS</p><p>A monotypic genus recently established by Vorontsova &amp; Hoffmann (2008), after a phylogenetic analysis by Vorontsova et al. (2007) of the tribe Poranthereae, in which the species appeared to be unrelated to Leptopus, the genus in which it was classified before.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/83552453FFF59111640EA308FEB5FB4A	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		Plazi	Martin, B. de Manuel;Welzen, P. C. van	Martin, B. de Manuel, Welzen, P. C. van (2022): Revision of the genera Leptopus and Notoleptopus (Phyllanthaceae) in Malesia. Blumea 67 (1): 20-25, DOI: 10.3767/blumea.2022.67.01.05, URL: https://doi.org/10.3767/blumea.2022.67.01.05
83552453FFF59111640EA22BFD89F7CE.text	83552453FFF59111640EA22BFD89F7CE.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Notoleptopus Voronts. & Petra Hoffm.	<div><p>Notoleptopus Voronts. &amp; Petra Hoffm.</p><p>Notoleptopus Voronts. &amp; Petra Hoffm. (2008) 50; G.L. Webster (2014) 67.</p><p>— Type: Notoleptopus decaisnei (Benth.) Voronts. &amp; Petra Hoffm. Leptopus auct. non Decne.: Airy Shaw (1980a) 122, (1980b) 645.</p><p>Small shrubs, erect, monoecious. Indumentum of simple hairs, most parts hirsute. Stipules small, late caducous. Leaves alternate, distichous, simple; petiole reniform in transverse section, not pulvinate; blade chartaceous, eglandular, margin entire, venation pinnate, nerves looped and closed near margin, veins and veinlets reticulate, indistinct. Inflorescences axillary fascicles, with a single to few flowers of both sexes; bracts pres- ent, small, similar to stipules. Flowers 5-merous, actinomorphic; pedicels likely articulate above base, but impossible to establish correctly; sepals 5, herbaceous; petals 5; disc outside stamens. Staminate flowers: pedicel slender; petals slightly shorter than sepals; disc glands 5, bilobed for less than 1/3, lobes rounded; stamens 5, free, filaments filiform, anthers opening latrorse with lengthwise slits; pistillode of 3 free segments, apices slightly bifid. Pistillate flowers: petiole sturdier than in staminate flowers, apically somewhat widening; sepals slightly accrescent in fruit; petals much shorter than sepals; disc annular, regularly and deeply divided into 5 emarginate or erose segments; ovary 3-locular, superior, densely pilose; ovules 2 per locule; style indistinct, stigmas bifid to base, apically rounded. Fruits 3-lobed, capsular; columella slender, persistent, apically not broadened, puberulent. Seeds naked, triangular to reniform in transverse section, abaxial side convex, all sides ribbed.</p><p>Distribution — A monotypic genus, Malesia: Java, Lesser Sunda Islands, New Guinea; and Australia.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/83552453FFF59111640EA22BFD89F7CE	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		Plazi	Martin, B. de Manuel;Welzen, P. C. van	Martin, B. de Manuel, Welzen, P. C. van (2022): Revision of the genera Leptopus and Notoleptopus (Phyllanthaceae) in Malesia. Blumea 67 (1): 20-25, DOI: 10.3767/blumea.2022.67.01.05, URL: https://doi.org/10.3767/blumea.2022.67.01.05
83552453FFF591176747A789FF4FFEF4.text	83552453FFF591176747A789FF4FFEF4.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Notoleptopus decaisnei (Benth.) Voronts. & Petra Hoffm.	<div><p>1. Notoleptopus decaisnei (Benth.) Voronts. &amp; Petra Hoffm. — Fig. 2</p><p>Notoleptopus decaisnei (Benth.) Voronts. &amp; Petra Hoffm. (2008) 53, f. 6. — Andrachne decaisnei Benth. (1873) 88; Backer &amp; Bakh.f. (1963) 470. — Arachne decaisnei (Benth.) Pojark. (1940) 342. — Leptopus decaisnei (Benth.) Pojark.(1960) 271; Airy Shaw (1980a) 123,(1980b) 645,(1982) 26. — Leptopus decaisnei (Benth.) Pojark. var. decaisnei: Airy Shaw (1980b) 645.— Lectotype (designated here): Bowman s.n. (lecto K [K000186432]*), Australia, Queensland, near Peak Downs.</p><p>Andrachne decaisnei Benth. var. orbicularis Benth.(1873) 88. — Andrachne fruticosa Decne.ex Müll.Arg var. orbicularis (Benth.) Pax &amp; K.Hoffm. (1922) 173. — Andrachne orbicularis (Benth.) Domin (1927) 315. — Arachne orbicularis (Benth.) Pojark. (1940) 342. — Leptopus orbicularis (Benth.) Pojark. (1960) 272.— Leptopus decaisnei (Benth.) Pojark. var. orbicularis (Benth.) Airy Shaw (1978) 379,(1980a) 123,(1980b) 646.― Type: C. Harper s.n. (holo K [K000186433]*), W Australia, Port Walcot.</p><p>[ Leptopus dominianus Pojark. (1960) 511 (index), nom. nud.]</p><p>Andrachne fruticosa Decne. ex Müll.Arg. (1866) 235, nom. illeg., non L. — Arachne fruticosa (Decne. ex Müll.Arg.) Hurus. (1954) 339. — Syntypes: Anonymous s.n. (ex Herb. P) (G-DC*, 2 sheets), Indonesia, Timor; F. von Mueller s.n. (G-DC*), New Holland (Australia), Victoria River; Zollinger 2795 (not seen), Indonesia, Java.</p><p>Subshrubs, 10‒50 cm high; internodes 0.5‒2 cm long; flower- ing branchlets 0.05‒0.3 mm diam, hairy, likely not glabrescent. Indumentum hirsute hairs of c. 0.8–1 mm long. Stipules triangular, 1‒2.5 by 0.25‒0.5 mm, membranous, apex attenuate, sometimes slightly acute, hairy. Leaves: petiole 0.25‒3 mm long, pubescent to densely pubescent; blade elliptic to obovate, 2.5‒50 by 2‒33 mm, 1‒2 times longer than wide, symmetric, base cuneate to slightly attenuate, margin flat to slightly sinuate, densely ciliate, apex attenuate to acute, adaxial surface puberulous to pubescent, abaxial surface densely pubescent, venation of 3‒5 lateral veins per side, midrib very prominent, flat on adaxial surface and elevated abaxially. Flowers: sepals ovate, with patent simple hairs, ciliate, apex acute to slightly rounded, midrib prominent; disc glabrous. Staminate flowers 0.4‒0.8 mm diam in bud, 0.9‒1.5 mm diam when open, coro- nate, light yellowish to reddish brown; pedicel terete, slightly thickened apically and basally, 0.8‒1.7 by 0.03‒0.12 mm, hairy; sepals ovate to elliptic, 0.6‒1 by 0.25‒0.5 mm; petals elliptic to obovate, 0.75‒1.1 by 0.1‒0.2 mm, glabrous to slightly pubescent, margin entire, apex acute to attenuate, midrib prominent; disc glands in Malesian material small and indistinct, bilobed; stamens: filaments 0.25‒0.5 mm long, glabrous, an- thers 0.15‒0.22 by 0.2‒0.25 mm, yellowish brown; pistillode 0.1‒0.2 mm long, subsessile. Pistillate flowers 1.5‒3 mm diam in bud, 2.5‒3.5 mm when open, disc-like, puberulous; pedicel terete, thickened especially apically, 1.5‒4.5(– 6.5 in fruit) mm long, pubescent to densely pubescent; sepals ovate, 2.2‒3(– 3.4 in fruit) by 1.2‒1.9(– 2.1 in fruit) mm; petals elliptic to ligulate to obovate, 0.35‒0.55 by 0.18‒0.3 mm, slightly pilose, margin en- tire, apex narrowly rounded, distinctly veined; disc lobes strap-like, c. 0.5 by 0.3 mm; ovary globose to slightly oblate, 0.5‒1 by 0.75‒1.3 mm, densely pubescent; stigmas 0.55‒0.8 mm long. Fruit triangular in transverse section, 1.5‒3.5 by 2.7‒4.5 mm, densely pubescent, reticulately veined; columella 1.2‒1.7 mm long. Seeds 1.35‒1.8 by 1‒1.3 by 0.75‒1 mm, black when dry.</p><p>Distribution — Malesia: Java (Madura), Lesser Sunda Islands (Roti, Sumba, Timor), Papua New Guinea (Central Province); Australia (Queensland).</p><p>Habitat &amp; Ecology — Scarce to locally fairly common in usu- ally (more) open places in rocky surroundings between grass tussocks and in open Eucalypt woodland. The plants appear to be much cropped by wallabies (Pullen 9616). Altitude: 1‒ 500 m. Flowering and fruiting: February to May.</p><p>Note — A geocline may be present as staminate disc lobes and pistillode seem to be smaller on Madura (near Java) and much larger in Australia. However, the material was too scarce to be certain.</p><p>24 Blumea – Volume 67 / 1, 2022 Acknowledgements We thank Jan van Os (†) and Esmée Winkel for the two beautiful drawings and the director of Naturalis Biodiversity Center for facilities and use of the collections.The other herbaria mentioned are thanked for providing high resolution images of the types. The last author thanks the Treub Maatschappij (the Society for the Advancement of Research in the Tropics) for their support of the Ornstein chair in Tropical Plant Biogeogra- phy. Two reviewers are thanked for their helpful suggestions that improved this manuscript.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/83552453FFF591176747A789FF4FFEF4	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		Plazi	Martin, B. de Manuel;Welzen, P. C. van	Martin, B. de Manuel, Welzen, P. C. van (2022): Revision of the genera Leptopus and Notoleptopus (Phyllanthaceae) in Malesia. Blumea 67 (1): 20-25, DOI: 10.3767/blumea.2022.67.01.05, URL: https://doi.org/10.3767/blumea.2022.67.01.05
