Wet Tropics: Africa
Dom Community Forest, NW Province, Cameroon. Photo: Y. Harvey.
Introduction
The great tropical rainforests of Africa are some of the most species-rich natural habitats in the world. Powered by sunlight, heat, and abundant rainfall, these ancient, complex ecosystems teem with life, providing homes to a unique assemblage of plants, animals, and fungi, most of which are found nowhere else on earth. Many of these habitats, and their species, are threatened with destruction before their species are even inventoried. In some areas in Cameroon, 1 in every 10 specimens gathered has proved to be a new species to science. The Wet Tropics of Africa team seeks to work with and build the capacity of national botanists in Guineo-Congolian (W and C) Africa. Our country priorities are those where species diversity is believed to be high but is poorly surveyed, where the national botanical capacity needs building, and which are politically stable. Our fieldwork focus is on conducting collaborative, specimen-based surveys of plants and fungi in protected areas or potentially protected areas. These are usually aimed at producing 'conservation checklists' that document the plant species present and assess their IUCN global conservation status and include information that allows those which are threatened (Red Data species) to be better identified, monitored and managed.
Background
Within the Wet Tropics Africa, Kew’s special area of expertise is the rainforests of western Cameroon, where most of our current research projects and co-operative ventures are based and have been developed. More recently Kew has strengthened its support of botanical and conservation activities elsewhere in the Wet Tropics of Africa, e.g. in Guinea-Conakry, Gabon, Central African Republic, Liberia, Ghana and Congo-Brazzaville.
The Cameroon link goes right back to 1861, when Kew’s first director, Sir William Hooker, sent a botanist, Gustav Mann, to explore and collect in the Gulf of Guinea. Since then, the herbarium at Kew has built up an unrivalled reference collection of Cameroon plants – some 60,000 which are now databased – that has provided the source material for conservation assessments, regional floras, botanical accounts, inventories, and practical guidebooks. This wealth of knowledge is now being shared with a new generation of Cameroon biologists keen to continue researching, monitoring, and conserving the extraordinary biodiversity of their rainforest heritage.
Kew’s main partner in Cameroon is the National Herbarium at Yaoundé, with which we have jointly secured project funding that has enabled the training of new staff through workshops, new computer and email access, and essential logistical support. We also have a long association with the Botanic Garden at Limbe, involving not only Kew’s botanists but horticulturists as well, helping redevelop their important nineteenth century gardens and associated herbarium.
We are delighted to acknowledge the help and support of Earthwatch for substantial funding of field trips and for enabling over 100 African botanists and conservationists from fourteen different countries to join us in training programmes in Cameroon since 1995. Additional funding for specific projects has come from the Darwin Initiative, BAT (under their partnership with Kew) and the Global Environment Facility.
SIGNIFICANT ACCOMPLISHMENTS (2001 - 2005)
- External website for Wet Tropics Africa went live (2002) http://www.kew.org/scihort/wta/
- Publication of The Plants of Bali Ngemba Forest Reserve, Cameroon: A Conservation Checklist (incorporating Red Data treatments) (2004)
- Activities in western Cameroon extended to other provinces in Cameroon, Guinea-Conakry, Liberia, Ghana, Nigeria, Gabon and Congo-Brazzaville (2005)
- Funds secured to begin survey of the Simandou range and to set up a National Herbarium in Guinea-Conakry (2005)
- Publication of The Plants of Kupe, Mwanenguba and the Bakossi Mountains, Cameroon: A Conservation Checklist (incorporating 2,412 Red Data assessments) (2004)
- Collaboration in the PROTA (Plant Resources of Tropical Africa) Preparatory Phase (2000-2002) and First Implementation Phase (2003-2010)
- Flora of West Tropical Africa and Useful Plants of Tropical Africa made available electronically to Aluka (2005)
KEY ELEMENTS OF FUTURE PLANS (2006 onwards)
- Two more protected-area conservation checklists to be published (by end 2009)
- Expand total specimen database from 65,000 to 75,000 specimens (by end 2009)
- AETFAT (Association pour l'Etude Taxonomique de la Flore D'Afrique Tropicale) 2007, Cameroon, Yaoundé: assist in making a success (Feb 2007)
- Red list assessments for all vascular plant species (8,000-10,000) in Cameroon completed (by end 2009)
- Continue as a collaborating partner in the PROTA programme, and host the UK Country Office (2003-2010)
RECENT ACHIEVEMENTS (2001 - 2005)
Collections (2001-2005)
Over the last five years some 6,850 collections, usually in sets of about five, mostly from Cameroon, have been made as part of the surveys of the protected areas tabulated below, the most recent of which concluded in November 2005.
Areas surveyed in the Wet Tropics Africa 2001-2005:
|
Year |
Survey Area (Those in bold are extra-Cameroon) |
|
2001 |
Bali Ngemba & Northern Bakossi Mts (Oct-Nov) |
|
2002 |
Bali Ngemba & Ijim (April-May) and Mefou (Oct) |
|
2003 |
Nyandong in W Bakossi (March) |
|
2004 |
Mefou, Bali Ngemba and Fosimondi (April-May) |
|
2005 |
Gabon (Jan); Congo-Brazzaville (Jan); Kupe/Bakossi, Ebo, Dom, Fosimondi (Apr-May); Guinea-Conakry-Simandou (Nov) |
All of these specimens are databased. Many have associated photographic, carpological, and spirit collections, and notes on local names and uses. Many also have associated silica gel and wood collections. About 1,700 fungal collections are held at Kew from Cameroon, dating back to 1894. About half of these are on the Mycology database. Additional specimens have been donated for naming by collaborators in countries such as Nigeria, Cameroon, The Gambia, Congo-Brazzaville and the Central African Republic.
Baseline Plant Diversity Research (2001-2005)
Outputs from these surveys appear in the Wet Tropics Africa list of publications. These are mainly in the form of publications of new species or studies of sites of particular interest.
Major publications have been: The Plants of Bali Ngemba Forest Reserve: A Conservation Checklist (published December 2004); and The Plants of Kupe, Mwanenguba and Bakossi Mountains: A Conservation Checklist (published December 2004).
These books enumerate all the vascular plant species known from the protected areas concerned. They also include detailed assessments of the Red Data species present, supplemented with management suggestions, making them key outputs for the conservation and monitoring (see below) side of the Wet Tropics Africa team. This information on conservation-priority species is intended in the first instance for those managing these protected or potentially protected areas at the local level and at the national level. However, these books are also vital for promoting the importance of the areas they concern to sponsors, Government officials and local communities and for engaging interest and support from these quarters. The books also provide a vehicle for publications of family accounts by up-and-coming Cameroonian botanists. To the international audience the books provide specimen-based species records for those plotting species distributions or assessing species diversity patterns. They also contain information on vegetation types, climate, plant geography, etc. that is necessary for understanding the context in which the flora occurs
The Cameroon Database. This comprises a plant and fungal specimen database and a species database in customised Access software that is RBG Kew core-field compliant and was developed in 1999 by George Gosline. Before this date we used the Botanical Research and Herbarium Management System (BRAHMS). The database is central to Kew’s Wet Tropics Africa programme. Future conservation checklists will continue to be generated directly from the database. The main features are tabulated below. In addition 2,151 specimens from Cameroon are documented on the API (African Plants Initiative) system which seeks to make available over the net digitised images of key specimens of plants, especially of types.
Main Features of the Cameroon database:
|
64,000 |
Georeferenced specimen records |
|
21,826 |
Bar-coded specimens at RBG Kew |
|
4,740 |
Verified checklist level taxon records |
|
1,567 |
Specimens with local names and uses |
Comparative Plant Biology (2001-2005)
Our highest priority in Cameroon is conservation-focused botanical inventory, and not comparative biology. However, fieldwork provides opportunities to conduct studies on plant groups that are not possible in the Herbarium and Kew botanists have taken advantage of this (Mackinder, legume nitrogen assimilation studies with Nwaga and Kiam, Univ.Yaoundé, and revision of Berlinia (Leguminosae-Caesalpinoideae); Rønsted, molecular phylogeny of African Ficus (Moraceae); Salazar and Roberts, Orchidaceae; Baena, forest-change GIS analysis; Gosline, revision of Octoknema; Cheek, e.g. monographic studies of rheophytes with Swaine, Univ. Aberdeen, and Ameka, Univ. Ghana; saprophytes with Paula Rudall). Pollination biology, intra-populational variation and tree root observations are examples of studies conducted that would be impossible in the Herbarium.
One ongoing project is the reassessment of the classification of endemic tropical African plant families, all of which, except Barbeyaceae (Somalia) are restricted to the Wet Tropics. Owing to difficult access to recent material with viable DNA, several of such families had remained unplaced in APG (Angiosperm Phylogeny Group). Pre-2001 we secured material from Cameroon of Huaceae (maintained as an independent family) and Octoknemataceae (now sunk in Olacaceae). Post 2001 we secured material of Medusandraceae. Molecular evidence acquired by Savolainen and colleagues has shown that this latter is an unnatural assemblage. While Medusandra itself can be maintained as a monogeneric family in the Passiflorales, Soyauxia has been placed with Peridiscaceae of S America, in the Saxifragales. Silica gel material of Hoplestigmaceae, possibly the last unsampled vascular plant family, has now been obtained and awaits analysis.
Our greatest contribution to the field of comparative biology has been to facilitate the work of other researchers who would not otherwise be able to study their groups in W and C Africa, and supplying material for comparative biology studies, for example of endemic genera/families for molecular work. We are able to help provide such researchers with national research permits, clearance with local projects and communities, Cameroonian collaborators, and with research assistants to locate and introduce them to their subject material in the forest quickly and efficiently and with a stable field base. Researchers in comparative plant biology whom we have supported since 2000 include those tabulated below.
Foreign researchers in Comparative Biology who have joined Kew-HNC surveys:
|
Year |
Researchers |
|
2001 |
Dr Lou Fay (retired), USA, Pteridophytes; Rolland Ranaivojaona, Jeanne Norosoarinaivo, Madagascar |
|
2002 |
Dr Alex Asase, Univ. Legon, Ghana, surveying techniques; Dr Richard Brinklow, Aberdeen Museum, forest cryptogams. Dr Alex Wortley, Univ. Oxford, U.K., Thomandersia, Acanthaceae; Dr Gabriel Ameka, Univ. Legon, Ghana and Dr Rolf Rutishauser, Univ. Zurich (both Podostemaceae); Dr Lou Fay (see 2001) |
|
2003 |
Dr Doug Stone, Univ. California, Memecylon |
|
2004 |
Dr Celia Cabral, Univ. Coimbra, essential oils of Vitex; Dr Lou Fay (see 2001); Dr Brinklow (see 2002); Anna Saltmarsh, Univ. Montpellier, extra-floral nectaries of Leonardoxa |
|
2005 |
Dr Fay (see 2001) |
Sustainable Utilisation of Plant Resources (2001-2005)
Our main activity in this programme is identification of sites where unsustainable utilisation of plant resources should cease, or be modified in order to protect endangered plant species or communities.
We have initiated the development of a scheme to provide revenue to communities protecting their own forests in NW Province in Cameroon through the conservation NGO ANCO (Apicultural & Nature Conservation Organisation). We envisage that sustainably harvested, dried forest fruits will be sold by Kew, the profits being returned by ANCO to the harvesters, providing them with a return for protecting their forests.
In conducting our inventories we have collected a substantial quantity of specimen-linked primary data on local names and uses of wild plants and now have separate fields for these in our database. We are well placed to gather such data, being usually based for two weeks or more at a time in traditional rural communities while conducting our inventories. This facilitates building a rapport with the community from which we recruit our guides. It also allows validation of data by cross-referencing with other sources. Interrogation of the database shows that currently we have records of either local names/uses or both for 1,567 specimens. The actual total is far higher but obscured by the fact that in the early stages of the Cameroon Programme, such data was entered into a general notes field and has not yet been transferred. Ethnobotanical research is an aspect that we hope to develop further in future.
Kew became a collaborating partner of the PROTA (Plant Resources of Tropical Africa) Foundation (co-ordinated by Wageningen University, The Netherlands) in 2000. PROTA is concerned with collecting and facilitating access to data on the 7000 useful plants/ species of the tropical African region.
Conservation and Environmental Monitoring (2001-2005)
Conservation and Environmental Monitoring (2001-2005)
This is the main purpose of our work in the Wet Tropics of Africa. There is no doubt that our work has made a difference to plant conservation in Cameroon. We can cite examples that show that our data have been used to support the official protection or upgrade the protection status, of several areas. We can also show that we have reduced the threat to several rare species and enabled conservation projects to educate local communities to conserve what is most endangered, and also to obtain funding. This has been done by providing information to such projects, and also more directly by producing species-specific conservation posters, giving presentations to local communities and renting threatened plant sites from local owners.
At the National level we have contributed data to Cameroon’s National Strategy for the Conservation of Biodiversity (drafted 1999, awaiting ministerial ratification 2005).
We have also provided more IUCN Red Data assessments of Cameroonian plant species (c. 450) than any other single organisation.
Examples of where Kew data have helped establish newly protected areas include the following:
1. In SW Province Cameroon four new sites in the Kupe-Bakossi area have been accepted (2004/2005) by the Government of Cameroon for protection based in part upon data on the endemic and threatened plant species, supplied by our work with the Herbier National Camerounais (HNC). These are:
|
Site |
Proposed Status |
Size (Ha) |
|
Bakossi Mts |
National Park |
76,551 |
|
Mt Mwanenguba |
Integrated Ecological Reserve |
5,252 |
|
Mt Kupe |
Integrated Ecological Reserve |
4,676 |
|
Lake Edib |
Integrated Ecological Reserve |
80 |
2. In NW Province Cameroon, the forest around Lake Oku has been designated as a “Plant Sanctuary” by the Government of Cameroon on the basis of our survey work with HNC over a larger area there, published in 2000 as a conservation checklist.
Cataloguing diversity. Many of the species that we collect in the course of our inventory work are unknown to science. In 2004 we publicised the news that we had in recent years published 50 new species of flowering plant from Cameroon. This featured very widely in the British press after appearing in The Times. A high proportion of the Red Data species that we document are local endemics uncovered as new to science or rediscovered from among our collections. A large proportion of the publications resulting from our Cameroon programme describe new species or revise species-groups. In some species-rich yet poorly surveyed areas, such as Mt Kupe, as many as 10% of the specimens collected have proven to be new species to science.
A new centre of plant diversity. In 2005 we publicised the discovery of a new centre of plant diversity once the total number of species that we had recorded from Mt Kupe and the Bakossi Mts in western Cameroon (2,440 taxa) had passed that of all other previously documented centres of plant diversity in tropical Africa. The area also has more documented strict endemic species (82) and more Red Data taxa (232) than any other of the tropical African centres. Before we began our survey work at Mt Kupe in 1995, only 130 species had been listed, and no strict endemics had been documented; the Bakossi Mts being botanically unknown (see Kupe-Bakossi project).
Botanic Gardens. Although our main partners are national herbaria, we also have links with three old, formerly colonial Botanic Gardens, with which we have or are assisting, with their redevelopment as centres for environmental education. These Botanic Gardens are: Camayenne, in Conakry (Guinea-Conakry: see Project on Guinea), Calabar, Nigeria and Limbe, Cameroon.
Capacity building and training. Supporting and strengthening the National Herbarium of Cameroon (HNC) is an important part of Kew’s role in Cameroon. The task of defining the units of plant diversity, mapping them, monitoring them, and providing the means to identify them is their key role. Pre-2001, with GEF support, we helped achieve for HNC: repair work and overhauling of the herbarium building, publication of papers by HNC staff in western peer-reviewed journals, grant funding to double the number of technicians and researchers for 3-4 years, to purchase new furniture, to fund overseas visits abroad of HNC staff botanists, to obtain the first ever HNC computers and email access, the resurrection of the Flore Du Cameroun programme (it had been moribund for several years), two 4WD field vehicles and so enable the first independent HNC expeditions in many years. We have also arranged workshops at HNC on specimen databasing and training in the field on conducting botanical inventories for conservation management.
Since 2001 we have built on the foregoing. We continued supporting HNC with Darwin Initiative and Bentham-Moxon funding. This has mainly taken the form of further support for visits of HNC staff and associates to RBG Kew, further collaborative fieldwork in Cameroon and further support for publications of HNC staff in peer-reviewed journals.
In 2002, with funding from BAT and hosting from HNC in Yaoundé, Kew ran a two week training course in Herbarium Techniques (in French) for herbarium technicians from W and C Africa and from Cameroon. Eight RBG Kew staff participated in teaching.
In 2003, with funding from the Darwin Initiative, we ran a training workshop in the assessment of conservation threats for plant species using IUCN (2001) standards, again with hosting by HNC in Yaoundé.
In 2005 we helped HNC in their successful approach for a grant from the African Plant Initiative (API) to digitise for the web (Aluka) their type specimens and endemic species. This has helped support 3 HNC researchers as well as bringing equipment and software to HNC. In addition, HNC’s capacity to seek, manage and execute grant-funded work has been substantially enhanced.
Apart from HNC staff, and the staff of whichever conservation project is hosting us during field surveys, we have also trained and financially supported (within the limits of our budget) botanists from other institutes in Cameroon that have joined our surveys. These include both lecturers, students and volunteers, a selection of whom are indicated in the table below.
Botanists from Cameroon who have been supported on Kew-HNC surveys 2001-2005:
|
Louis Zapfack |
Lecturer, Univ. Yaoundé I |
|
Placide Simo |
PhD student, Univ. Yaoundé I |
|
Walters Etuge |
Student, Univ. Buea |
|
Elvire Biye |
Lecturer, Univ. Yaoundé I |
|
Bonaventure Sonké |
Lecturer, Ecole Normale Superieur, Yaoundé I |
|
Dieudonné Nwaga |
Lecturer, Univ. Yaoundé I |
|
Hermine Kiam |
PhD student, Univ. Yaoundé I |
|
Kenneth Tah |
Volunteer with BHFP (Bamenda Highlands Forest Project) (NGO) |
|
Dorisse Jiofak |
PhD student, Univ. Yaoundé I |
|
Gilbert Todou |
PhD student, Univ. Yaoundé I |
|
Terence Suinyuh |
Volunteer with BHFP (NGO) |
2002 saw the conclusion of a very successful programme in which the Earthwatch Institute, Europe, provided funds to support training for African botanists and conservationists with us in Cameroon since 1995. Over 130 nationals from Ghana, Nigeria, Congo-Kinshasa, Uganda, Kenya, Ethiopia, Tanzania, Mozambique, Malawi, Zimbabwe, South Africa, Madagascar and Namibia have participated. Between five and eight trainees joined us for two-week periods that gave training in conducting botanical inventories for conservation management. These structured courses provided in-the-field training in a range of skills including specimen collecting techniques, recording voucher data, databasing techniques, and use of associated equipment and literature, from keys to GPS units. Presentations were given on the methods of conducting inventories, the need for them and how one goes about identifying a Red Data taxon. We also gave training in plant family recognition and arranged lectures by specialists on different families or genera. As far as we are aware, the first lectures in Cameroon on cladistics and molecular techniques (as applied to botany) were given on these courses.
An added benefit of these training programmes was that they enabled specialists from institutions in eastern Africa to study their family/genus of expertise in the field in West-central Africa. Generally it was relatively easy for such scientists to obtain funds to journey to Europe/USA, but almost impossible to go to other parts of Africa for fieldwork. These expeditions also provided the opportunity for African and western botanists to work as equals and build lasting collaborations. One former participant, Geoffrey Mwachala of the Kenyan National Herbarium, applied for a grant from Earthwatch to conduct a similar inventory programme in the Taita Hills of Kenya. This was supported and has now been running, to the great satisfaction of Earthwatch, for several years.
FUTURE PLANS (2006 onwards)
Collections (2006 onwards)
The Wet Tropics Africa plant specimen database is to be expanded from 65,000 to 75,000 specimens, by 1) further databasing of existing specimens at Kew, such as those from eastern Cameroon and 2) by the collection of more specimens on future surveys (by end 2009).
Baseline Plant Diversity Research (2006 onwards)
Two more protected-area conservation checklists in our existing series are to be published following further field surveys in Cameroon (by end 2009). Funding permitting, these are to be Mefou proposed National Park, and also the Fosimondi-Bechati forest.
Botanical survey work in Mikongo, Gabon, is to be started with the Zoological Society of London (ZSL), Earthwatch funding permitting. Mikongo is a Gorilla sanctuary, unsurveyed for plants. Data on plant species is required for Gorilla ecology work as well as for conservation management (by end 2007).
In 2007 the AETFAT Congress, will be held in Cameroon, Yaoundé. RBG Kew is committed to assisting Yaoundé to host this triennial congress for African botanists by co-ordinating the registration process, sponsoring some attendees and compiling the proceedings volume (Feb 2007).
Guinea-Conakry, Simandou Range. The conservation-focused survey of this, the most poorly surveyed upland area in the Loma-Man complex of Upper Guinea is to be extended from its inception in 2005. Linked with this survey is the development of a national herbarium for Guinea, and capacity building for Guinean botanists (see Guinea project) (by end 2007).
Comparative Plant Biology (2006 onwards)
Monographs are to be published of genera which are diverse in Wet Tropics of Africa: Berlinia (Leguminosae-Caesalpinoideae – see Project document), Octoknema (Olacaceae), Omphalocarpum (Sapotaceae), Oxygyne (Burmanniaceae) (by end 2009).
The sampling and molecular analysis of taxonomically anomalous genera and endemic families in the Wet Tropics of Africa is to be extended so as to better classify these taxa. Two papers are to be published. Work on Soyauxia, Medusandra and Hoplestigma is underway (by end 2009).
Sustainable Utilisation of Plant Resources (2006 onwards)
RBG Kew plans to continue as a collaborating partner in the PROTA programme, and to host the UK Country Office (2003-2010).
RBG Kew plans to see through to completion the marketing at Kew of sustainably sourced forest fruits, profits being returned through ANCO to the harvesters, providing them with a return for protecting their forests (by 2008).
Conservation and Environmental Monitoring (2006 onwards)
Red List assessments for all vascular plant species (8,000-10,000) in Cameroon are to be completed, supporting the initiative of Jean-Michel Onana and extending the work included in our previous conservation checklists (by end 2009).
Liberia GIS analysis of WAG-FFI botanical data-sets is to be completed to facilitate better prioritisation of the location of protected areas by the Liberian government.
RBG Kew plans to continue training African partners in Red Data assessment methodology and the techniques required for conducting conservation surveys of plants.
The Wet Tropics of Africa team is to support the HOTSPOTS project (see project document) in increasing the knowledge and understanding of those hotspots that occur in the Wet Tropics Africa region (by end of initial funding period that extends until 2009).
Projects
Guinea-Conakry: Developing a National Herbarium and Survey of the Simandou Range
Interactive Key to African Plants
Liberia GIS: National Plant Conservation Prioritisation
Mefou Proposed National Park, Cameroon: A Conservation Checklist
Monograph of Octoknema (Olacaceae)
Monograph of Omphalocarpum (Sapotaceae)
Plant Resources of Tropical Africa (PROTA)
Poroid Fungi from Korup National Park, Cameroon
Systematics of the Tropical African Genus Berlinia (Detarieae: Caesalpinioideae: Leguminosae)
The Plants of Bali Ngemba Forest Reserve, Cameroon: A Conservation Checklist
The Plants of Kupe, Mwanenguba and the Bakossi Mountains: A Conservation Checklist
Understanding and Conserving the Earth’s Biodiversity Hotspots (HOTSPOTS)
People
Herbarium
Susana Baena, Martin Cheek, George Gosline (Research Associate), Yvette Harvey, Don Kirkup, Barbara Mackinder, Patricia Malcolm Tompkins, Justin Moat, Simon Owens, Laura Pearce, David Roberts
HPE
Marcella Corcoran, Greg Redwood, Kath Smith
Jodrell Laboratory
Olwen Grace, Peter Roberts, Vincent Savolainen
Partners
Cameroon
Apicultural and Nature Conservation Organisation (ANCO), Bamenda
Conservation and Research for Endangered Species (CRES)
Environment and Rural Development Foundation (ERUDEF)
National Herbarium, Institute of Agricultural Research for Development - Ministry of Scientific Research and Innovation (IRAD-MINRESI)
Central African Republic
National Herbarium
Congo-Kinshasa
National Herbarium
France
Agropolis International
Gabon
Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique et Technologique (CENAREST)
The Gambia
Darwin Field Centre
Ghana
Forestry Research Institute of Ghana (FORIG)
National Herbarium and University of Ghana
Guinea-Conakry
Guinée-Ecologie
Rio Tinto
Liberia
Flora and Fauna International (FFI )
The Netherlands
Wageningen University
Nigeria
National Herbarium of Nigeria, Forestry Research Institute (FRI), Ibadan
Publications
Achoundong, G. & Cheek*, M. (2003). Two new species of Rinorea (Violaceae) from western Cameroon. Kew Bulletin 58 (4): 957-964.
Cheek*, M. (2001). Good news: Drosera longifolia L. rejected, Sarracenia purpurea L. conserved with a new type. Carnivorous Plant Newsletter 30: 29-30.
Cheek*, M. (2001). Cameroon's rainforest checklists. Earthwatch Fellowship Programme Newsletter 5: 1.
Cheek*, M. (2002). Three new species of Cola (Sterculiaceae) from western Cameroon. Kew Bulletin 57 (2): 403-415.
Cheek*, M. (2003). Kupeaeae, a new tribe of Triuridaceae from Africa. Kew Bulletin 58 (4): 939-949.
Cheek*, M. (2003). A new species of Ledermanniella (Podostemaceae) from western Cameroon. Kew Bulletin 58 (3): 733-737.
Cheek*, M. & Becker, R. (2004). A new species of Myosotis L. (Boraginaceae) from Cameroon, with a key to the Tropical African species of the genus. Kew Bulletin 59 (2): 227-231.
Cheek*, M. & Bridson*, D.M. (2002). Two new species of Psychotria (Rubiaceae) from western Cameroon. Kew Bulletin 57 (2): 389-395.
Cheek*, M. & Csiba*, L. (2002). A revision of the Psychotria chalconeura complex (Rubiaceae) in Guineo-Congolian Africa. Kew Bulletin 57 (2): 375-387.
Cheek*, M. & Csiba*, L. (2002). A new epiphytic species of Impatiens (Balsaminaceae) from western Cameroon. Kew Bulletin 57 (3): 669-674.
Cheek*, M. & Etuge, M. (1999 [2001]). Bakossi tea: Dicliptera laxa C.B.Cl. [Online article in electronic newsletter, Acanthus 7] University of the Witwatersand, C.E.Moss Herbarium: Johannesburg. Available at http://www.wits.ac.za/museums/herbarium/acanthus7.htm
Cheek*, M. & Mathew*, B. (2001). Plant portraits 431. Modiolastrum gilliesii. Malvaceae. Curtis's Botanical Magazine 18 (4): 214-217.
Cheek*, M. & Sonké, B. (2004). Psydrax bridsoniana (Rubiaceae), a new species of tree from western Cameroon. Kew Bulletin 59 (4): 605-608.
Cheek*, M. & Sonké, B. (2005). Two further new species of Psychotria (Rubiaceae) from western Cameroon. Kew Bulletin 60 (2): 293-300.
Cheek*, M., Csiba*, L. & Bridson*, D.M. (2002). A new species of Coffea (Rubiaceae) from western Cameroon. Kew Bulletin 57 (3): 675-680.
Cheek*, M., Gosline*, G. & Csiba*, L. (2002). A new species of Rhaptopetalum (Scytopetalaceae) from western Cameroon. Kew Bulletin 57 (3): 661-667.
Cheek*, M., Mackinder*, B., Gosline*, G., Onana, J.M. & Achoungdong, G. (2001 [2002]). The phytogeography and flora of western Cameroon and the Cross River-Sanaga River interval. In Robbrecht, E., Degreef, J. & Friis, I. (eds) Plant systematics and phytogeography for the understanding of African biodiversity. Proceedings of the XVI AETFAT Congress, held at the National Botanic Garden, Belgium, Aug. 28 - Sept. 2, 2000. Meise: National Botanic Garden (Belgium). Systematics and Geography of Plants, 71(2) special issue. 1097-1100.
Cheek*, M., Pollard*, B.J., Darbyshire*, I., Onana, J.M. & Wild, C. (eds) (2004). The plants of Kupe, Mwanenguba and the Bakossi Mountains: a conservation checklist - with introductory chapters on the physical environment, vegetation, endemics, invasives, phytogeography and refugia, ethnobotany, bryophytes, the macrofungi, the vertebrate fauna, the protected areas system, sacred groves and IUCN Red Data species. Kew: Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew. (Includes contributions by Baker*, W.J., Bhandol*, P., Bidgood*, S., Bridson*, D., Brummitt*, N.A., Cheek*, M., Cope*, T.A., Cribb*, P.J., Darbyshire*, I., Dawson*, S.E., Dransfield *, J., Edwards*, P.J., Frodin*, D.G., Gosline*, G., Goyder*, D.J., Green*, P.S., Harvey*, Y.B., Hoffmann*, P., Lock*, J.M., MacKinder*, B.A., Norup*, M V, Phillips*, S.M., Polhill*, R.M., Pollard*, B.J., Prance*, G.T., Roberts*, P.R., Sothers*, C.A., Townsend*, C., Utteridge*, T.M.A., Vollesen*, K., Wilkin*, P., Woodgyer*, E., Zappi*, D. - Kew staff only listed) 508 pp.
Cheek*, M., Williams, S.A. & Etuge, M. (2003). Kupea martinetugei, a new genus and species of Triuridaceae from western Cameroon. Kew Bulletin 58 (1): 225-228.
Cribb*, P. & Pollard*, B.J. (2002). New orchid discoveries in western Cameroon. Kew Bulletin 57 (3): 653-659.
Cribb*, P.J. & Pollard*, B.J. (2004). Bulbophyllum kupense P.J.Cribb & B.J.Pollard, an unusual new orchid from western Cameroon. Kew Bulletin 59 (1): 137-139.
Darbyshire*, I. & Cheek*, M. (2004). A new species of Peucedanum L. (Umbelliferae) from Mt Kupe, western Cameroon. Kew Bulletin 59 (1): 133-136.
Daws*, M.I., Gaméné, C.S., Sacandé*, M., Pritchard*, H.W., Groot, S.P.C. & Hoekstra, F.A. (2004). Desiccation and storage of Lannea microcarpa seeds from Burkina Faso. In Sacandé, M., Joker, D., Dulloo, M.E. & Thompsen, K.A. (eds) Comparative storage biology of tropical tree seeds. Rome: IPGRI. 32-39.
Dawson*, S. (2002). A new species of Stelechantha Bremek. (Rubiaceae, Urophylleae) from Cameroon. Kew Bulletin 57 (2): 397-402.
Dessein, S., Jansen*, S., Robbrecht, E. & Smets, E. (2002 [2004]). A new species of Spermacoce (Rubiaceae) from the Manika high plateau (Katanga; R.D. Congo). Nordic Journal of Botany 22: 513-523.
Dransfield*, J. (2002). General introduction to rattan: biological background to exploitation and the history of rattan research. In Dransfield, J., Tesoro, F.O. & Manokaran, N. (eds) Rattan: current research issues and prospects for conservation and sustainable development. Rome: FAO. Non-wood forest products, 14. 23-34.
Dransfield*, J., Tesoro, F.O. & Manokaran, N. (eds) (2002). Rattan: current research issues and prospects for conservation and sustainable development. Rome: FAO. Non wood forest products, 14. 272 pp.
Gaméné, C.S., Pritchard*, H.W. & Daws*, M.I. (2004). Effects of desiccation and storage on Vitellaria paradoxa seed viability. In Sacandé, M., Joker, D., Dulloo, M.E. & Thompsen, K.A. (eds) Comparative storage biology of tropical tree seeds. Rome: IPGRI. 57-66.
Gosline*, G. (2001 [2002]). New floras from old: a roadmap for converting existing floras to electronic media. In Robbrecht, E., Degreef, J. & Friis, I. (eds) Plant systematics and phytogeography for the understanding of African biodiversity. Proceedings of the XVI AETFAT Congress, held at the National Botanic Garden of Belgium, Aug. 28 - Sept. 2, 2000. Meise: National Botanic Garden (Belgium). Systematics and Geography of Plants, 71(2) special issue. 357-362.
Harley*, M.M., Song, U. & Banks*, H.I. (2005). Pollen morphology and systematics of Burseraceae. Grana 44: 282-299.
Harvey*, Y., Pollard*, B.J., Darbyshire*, I., Onana, J.M. & Cheek*, M. (eds) (2004). The plants of Bali Ngemba Forest Reserve, Cameroon: a conservation checklist. Kew: Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew. (Includes contributions by Beentje*, H.J., Bhandol*, P., Challen*, G.L., Cheek*, M., Clark*, R.P., Cope*, T.A., Cribb*, P.J., Darbyshire*, I., Dawson*, S.E., Frodin*, D.G., Gosline*, G., Goyder*, D.J., Green*, P.S., Harvey*, Y.B., Hind*, D.J.N., Hoffmann*, P., Lock*, J.M., MacKinder*, B.A., Polhill*, R.M., Pollard*, B.J., Prance*, G.T., Roberts*, D.L., Rønsted*, N., Sothers*, C.A., Townsend*, C., Vollesen*, K., Wilkin*, P., Woodgyer*, E. - Kew staff only listed) 154 pp.
Hepper*, F.N. (2004). The quest for Timbuktu. Nigerian Field 69 (1): 41-49.
Hepper*, F.N. (2005). The search for Mungo Park on the river Niger. Nigerian Field 70: 27-348.
Hoffmann*, P. & Cheek*, M. (2003). Two new species of Phyllanthus (Euphorbiaceae) from southwest Cameroon. Kew Bulletin 58 (2): 437-446.
Iwarsson, M. & Harvey*, Y. (2003). Monograph of the genus Leonotis (Pers.) R. Br. (Lamiaceae). Kew Bulletin 58 (3): 597-645.
Laessøe, T. & Cheek*, M. (2002). A new Xylaria (Xylariaceae, Ascomycota) from Cameroon. Kew Bulletin 57 (3): 687-691.
Litt, A. & Cheek*, M. (2002). Korupodendron songweanum, a new genus and species of Vochysiaceae from west-Central Africa. Brittonia 54 (1): 13-17.
Mackinder*, B. (2001 [2002]). Further systematic studies in Berlinia (Leguminosae, Caesalpinioideae, Detarieae sensu lato). In Robbrecht, E., Degreef, J. & Friis, I. (eds) Plant systematics and phytogeography for the understanding of African biodiversity. Proceedings of the XVI AETFAT Congress, held at the National Botanic Garden, Belgium, Aug. 28 - Sept. 2, 2000. Meise: National Botanic Garden (Belgium). Systematics and Geography of Plants, 71(2) special issue. 443-441.
Mackinder*, B. & Cheek*, M. (2003). A new species of Newtonia (Leguminosae-Mimosoideae) from Cameroon. Kew Bulletin 58 (2): 447-452.
Ndam, N., Healey, J., Cheek*, M. & Fraser, P. (2001 [2002]). Plant recovery on the 1922 and 1959 lava flows on Mount Cameroon, Cameroon. In Robbrecht, E., Degreef, J. & Friis, I. (eds) Plant systematics and phytogeography for the understanding of African biodiversity. Proceedings of the XVI AETFAT Congress, held at the National Botanic Garden of Belgium, Aug. 28 - Sept. 2, 2000. Meise: National Botanic Garden (Belgium). Systematics and Geography of Plants, 71(2) special issue. 1023-1032.
Pollard*, B.J. (2002). Cameroon's rainforest checklists. Books for Kings. Data repatriation of a different kind. Earthwatch Fellowship Programme Newsletter 6: 1.
Pollard*, B.J. (2005). Two new names in African Plectranthus (Labiatae). Kew Bulletin 60 (1): 145-147.
Pollard*, B.J. & Paton*, A. (2001). A new rheophytic species of Plectranthus L'Her. (Labiatae) from the Gulf of Guinea. Kew Bulletin 56 (4): 975-982.
Pollard*, B.J., Cheek*, M. & Bygrave, P. (2003). New Dorstenia (Moraceae) discoveries in western Cameroon. Kew Bulletin 58 (1): 185-193.
Pollard*, B.J., Tenner*, C.A., Utteridge*, T.M.A. & Van Slageren*, M. (2003). Status and trends of, and threats to, mountain biodiversity, marine, coastal and inland water ecosystems. CBD Technical Series, no. 8 Montreal: Secretariat of the Convention on Biological Diversity. 127 pp.
Roberts*, P. (2001). Heterobasidiomycetes from Korup National Park, Cameroon. Kew Bulletin 56 (1): 163-187.
Roberts*, P. (2003). Tremella arachispora: a new species from Mount Cameroon. Kew Bulletin 58 (3): 763-764.
Salazar*, G.A., Franke, T., Zapfack, L. & Beenken, L. (2002). A new species of Manniella (Orchidaceae, Cranichideae) from western tropical Africa, with notes on protandry in the genus. Lindleyana 17 (4): 239-246.
Sanon, M.D., Gaméné, C.S., Sacandé*, M. & Neya, O. (2004). Desiccation and storage of Kigelia africana, Lophira lanceolata, Parinari curatellifolia and Zanthoxylum zanthoxyloides seeds from Burkina Faso. In Sacandé, M., Joker, D., Dulloo, M.E. & Thompsen, K.A. (eds) Comparative storage biology of tropical tree seeds. Rome: IPGRI. 16-23.
Simpson*, D.A., Lye, K.A. & Cheek*, M. (2004). Hypolytrum pseudomapanioides (Cyperaceae): a new species from Cameroon. Kew Bulletin 59 (4): 613-615.
Sonké, B. & Bridson*, D. (2001). Une nouvelle espèce d'Aulacocalyx (Rubiaceae, Aulacocalyceae) du Sud-Ouest du Cameroun. Systematics and Geography of Plants 71: 17-23.
Sonké, B., Cheek*, M., Nambou D, M. & Robbrecht, E. (2002). A new species of Tricalysia A. Rich. ex DC. (Rubiaceae) from western Cameroon. Kew Bulletin 57 (3): 681-686.
Sonké, B., Dawson*, S. & Beina, D. (2005). A new species of Aulacocalyx (Rubiaceae, Gardenieae) from southern Cameroon. Kew Bulletin 60 (2): 301-304.
Sosef, M.S.M. & Simpson*, D.A. (2005). Hypolytrum unispicatum (Cyperaceae), a new species from Cameroon. Blumea 50 (3): 523-525.
Stévart, T. & Cribb*, P.J. (2004). New species and records of Orchidaceae from São Tomé and Principe. Kew Bulletin 59 (1): 77-86.
Stévart, T. & Cribb*, P.J. (2004). Five new taxa of Tridactyle (Orchidaceae) from West Central Africa. Kew Bulletin 59 (2): 195-205.
Sunderland*, T.C., Blackmore, P., Ndam, N. & Nkefor, J. (2002). Conservation through cultivation: the work of the Limbe Botanic Garden, Cameroon. In Maunder, M., Clubbe, C., Hankamer, C. & Groves, M. (eds) Plant conservation in the tropics: perspectives and practice. Kew: Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew. 395-419.
Sunderland, T.C. & Dransfield*, J. (2002). Species profiles: rattans In Dransfield, J., Tesoro, F.O. & Manokaran, N. (eds) Rattan: current research issues and prospects for conservation and sustainable development. Rome: FAO. Non wood forest products, 14. 9-22.
Sunderland, T.C. & Dransfield*, J. (2002). Rattan (various species). In Shanley, P., Pierce, A.R., Laird, S.A. & Guillen, A. (eds) Tapping the green market: certification and management of non-timber forest products. London: Earthscan. 225-239.
Van Valkenburg, J. & Dransfield*, J. (2004). Hyphaene guineensis. Palms 48 (1): 10-16.
Vollesen*, K., Cheek*, M. & Ghogue, J.P. (2004). Justicia leucoxiphus (Acanthaceae), a spectacular new species from Cameroon. Kew Bulletin 59 (1): 129-131.
Wilkin*, P. (2001). Dioscoreaceae of South-Central Africa. Kew Bulletin 56 (2): 361-404.
Wortley*, A. (2004). Systematics of Thomandersia Baill. DPhil (unpublished) Thesis. Oxford: University of Oxford. 352 pp.