Rhaphiostylis beninensis is a woody, sprawling or scrambling glabrous, evergreen shrub or liane native to Tropical Africa, belonging to the family Metteniusaceae, and one of 3 species in the genus Rhaphiostylis. It is traditionally used as an anti-inflammatory by the Bantu people of Africa.
Occasionally forming thickets, it is found in or on the margins of rain-forest, where, as a climber, it reaches 10-15m in height, and rarely as a free-standing tree 5-8m. Its bark is smooth and dark grey, while young branches are reddish-brown to purple. Leaves are alternate and elliptic-lanceolate in shape with acuminate apex. Flowers in axillary clusters, white and fragrant. Fruit flattened and sub-reniform, persistent lateral style, reticulate or wrinkled, bright red turning black when ripe.
This species occurs in Liberia, Zambia, Zimbabwe, Mozambique, Senegal, Gambia, Congo and Angola.
Hook., Niger Fl.: 259, t. 28 âÂÂApodytes beninensisâ (1849). â R.E.Fr., Wiss. Ergebn. Schwed. Rhod.-Kongo-Exped. 1: 130 (1914). â Engl., Pflanzenw. Afr. 3, 2: 256 (1921), âÂÂRaphiostylesâÂÂ. â Sleumer in Engl. & Prantl, Nat. Pflanzenfam. ed. 2, 20b: 368 (1942). â Exell & Mendonça, C.F.A. 1, 2: 343 (1951). â Keay, F.W.T.A. ed. 2, 1, 2: 638 (1958). â Boutique, F.C.B., 9: 275 (1960). â White, F.F.N.R.: 221 (1962). TAB. 73. Type from Liberia.