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Published In: Journal of South African Botany 50: 47. 1984. (J. S. African Bot.) Name publication detail
 

Project Name Data (Last Modified On 6/6/2016)
Acceptance : Accepted
Taxon Profile     (Last Modified On 8/15/2016)
Description: Plants 80–150 mm high. Corm ovoid, with obliquely flattened side, ± 9 mm diam.; tunics dark brown, ± concentric layers fragmenting into elliptic segments. Stem unbranched, smooth. Leaves 3(4), lower 2 basal, falcate, ± half as long as stem, 3–9 mm wide, main vein and margins barely thickened, upper 1 or 2 leaves cauline and largely sheathing. Spike mostly 2–5-flowered; bracts (12–)15–22 mm long. Flowers diurnal, ± salver-shaped, white to pale pink, outer tepals flushed pink to red outside; perianth tube funnel-shaped, 13–17 mm long, cylindric; tepals narrowly ovate-elliptic, 10–15 mm long, spreading. Filaments ascending, ± 3 mm long; anthers ± 6 mm long, pale yellow; pollen whitish. Style branches spreading, 8–10 mm long, exceeding anthers in closed flower. Capsules ovoid, 10–15 mm long. Seeds light brown, angular. Flowering time: late July to mid August.
Country: South Africa
South African Province: Western Cape
Distribution and ecology: restricted to southern Namaqualand near Bitterfontein in Western Cape, South Africa, growing on sandy banks of watercourses: poorly documented and is evidently a very narrow endemic
Diagnosis: Hesperantha namaquana is recognized by the ovoid corm with prominently flattened side and relatively large pale pink to nearly white flowers with a perianth tube 13–17 mm long and slightly shorter tepals 10–15 mm long.

 
 
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