taxonID	type	description	language	source
71340805FFB9FFEAFF6E4ABBFDD54B12.taxon	distribution	Distribution: — Western India (Bengal to Orissa). TDWG: 40 IND. Characteristics: — Psilanthus bababudanii was recognized as a new species allied to P. bengalensis (Roxb. ex Schult.) J. - F. Leroy by Sivarajan et al. (1992); the former being glabrous and the latter sparsely pubescent in many of its parts. It was placed in the synonymy of P. bengalensis by Deb (2002) but review of Indian material (including the type specimens) shows that this glabrous variant is worthy of taxonomic recognition and further taxonomic study.	en	Davis, Aaron P. (2010): Six species of Psilanthus transferred to Coffea (Coffeeae, Rubiaceae). Phytotaxa 10: 41-45, DOI: 10.11646/phytotaxa.10.1.6
71340805FFB9FFEAFF6E48F7FD034DF8.taxon	distribution	Distribution: — Papua New Guinea (Central Province) and Australia (Torres Strait Islands and Queensland). TDWG: 43 NWG; 50 QLD. Characteristics: — Coffea brassii is similar to C. mabesae (Elmer) J. - F. Leroy from the Philippines but differs because the leaves, flowers (corolla) and fruits are almost consistently glabrous (leaves sometimes with a few scattered hairs) instead of these parts being distinctly puberulous to pubescent. Further morphological information for this species can be found in Leroy (1968), Davis (2003) and Forster (2004).	en	Davis, Aaron P. (2010): Six species of Psilanthus transferred to Coffea (Coffeeae, Rubiaceae). Phytotaxa 10: 41-45, DOI: 10.11646/phytotaxa.10.1.6
71340805FFB9FFEAFF6E4E94FE064F9A.taxon	distribution	Distribution: — Western India (Malabar). TDWG: 40 IND. Characteristics: — Psilanthus malabaricus was synonymised under P. fragrans (Wall. ex Hook. f.) J. - F. Leroy by Deb (2020). These species, although similar in overall appearance, are easily distinguished by leaf and inflorescence morphology, in agreement with the circumscription proposed by Sivarajan et al. (1992). In particular, the leaves of C. malabarica lack the very distinctive cross veins of C. fragrans Wall. ex Hook. f., have inflorescences regularly confined to the nodes (vs. inflorescences terminal on short shoots or confined to the upper nodes only), a short calyx limb with rather few colleters (vs. large, cup-like calyx limb with many colleters). Coffea malabarica and C. fragrans possess leaf domatia, in contradiction to the identification key and descriptions for these species given in Sivarajan et al. (1992) which incorrectly states that domatia are in absent in these species.	en	Davis, Aaron P. (2010): Six species of Psilanthus transferred to Coffea (Coffeeae, Rubiaceae). Phytotaxa 10: 41-45, DOI: 10.11646/phytotaxa.10.1.6
71340805FFBAFFE9FF6E4BDDFC824ADD.taxon	distribution	Distribution: — S. India. TDWG: 40 IND. Characteristics: — Deb (2020) synonymised P. bridsoniae under P. wightianus (Wall. ex Wight & Arn.) J. - F. Leroy and, in error, under P. fragrans. I have no hesitation in resurrecting P. bridsoniae and providing a new name in Coffea. Coffea neobridsoniae is very easily set apart from and C. wightiana Wall. ex Wight & Arn., and in particular by its rather open habit (vs. congested, spiny-looking), membranous leaves (vs. chartaceous) with 4 or 5 secondary veins (vs. 3 or 4), long-acuminate leaf apex (vs. acute), and presence of colleters at the base of the hypanthium (vs. absent). Note: — A new name is required for this species because there is already a Coffea species with the same specific epithet: C. bridsoniae Davis & Mvungi (2004).	en	Davis, Aaron P. (2010): Six species of Psilanthus transferred to Coffea (Coffeeae, Rubiaceae). Phytotaxa 10: 41-45, DOI: 10.11646/phytotaxa.10.1.6
71340805FFBAFFE9FF6E4848FC104CEA.taxon	distribution	Distribution: — Southwest Ethiopia, northeast Uganda. TDWG: 24 ETH; 25 UGA. Characteristics: — Coffea neoleroyi differs from all other African Coffea species formerly placed in Psilanthus by its small obovate leaves (apex rounded), and from C. semsei (Bridson) A. P. Davis by having rounded (vs. distinctly apiculate) calyculi lobes and pedicellate fruits (vs. sessile). Further morphological information for this species can be found in Leroy (1981) and Bridson (1982). Notes: — A new name is required for this species as there is already a Coffea species with the same specific epithet: C. leroyi A. P. Davis (Davis & Rakotonasolo 2000).	en	Davis, Aaron P. (2010): Six species of Psilanthus transferred to Coffea (Coffeeae, Rubiaceae). Phytotaxa 10: 41-45, DOI: 10.11646/phytotaxa.10.1.6
71340805FFBAFFE9FF6E4FB3FD6A4EF7.taxon	distribution	Distribution: — Democratic Republic of Congo. TDWG: 23 ZAI. Characteristics: — Coffea sapinii is closely allied to C. gilgiana A. Froehner (= Psilanthus mannii Hook. f.) (Stoffelen 1998, Maurin et al. 2007) but differs in the following characters: fruits ca. 15 × 10 – 12 mm (vs. 16 – 22 × 12 – 13 mm), calyx lobes less than 20 mm long (vs. more than 25 mm long), fruits slightly costate (vs. prominently costate), the scars of the corolla, disc and style less than 4 mm in diameter (vs. more than 5 mm in diameter) (adapted from Stoffelen 1998).	en	Davis, Aaron P. (2010): Six species of Psilanthus transferred to Coffea (Coffeeae, Rubiaceae). Phytotaxa 10: 41-45, DOI: 10.11646/phytotaxa.10.1.6
71340805FFBAFFE8FF6E4D90FD65488A.taxon	distribution	Distribution: — Tanzania (Ulanga). TDWG: 25 TAN. Characteristics: — Coffea semsei can be set apart from all other species of Coffea formerly placed in Psilanthus due to the following combination of characters: habit deciduous; leaves membranous; leaf apex acuminate; stipules deltate to triangular, shortly apiculate (apiculum 1 – 2 mm long), stipular lobes of the calyculi narrowly triangular and glume-like; calyx with shortly triangular lobes, and each lobe bearing several colletes; and corolla lobes distinctly acuminate.	en	Davis, Aaron P. (2010): Six species of Psilanthus transferred to Coffea (Coffeeae, Rubiaceae). Phytotaxa 10: 41-45, DOI: 10.11646/phytotaxa.10.1.6
