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Published In: Journal of Botany, British and Foreign 66: 13. 1928. (J. Bot.) Name publication detailView in Botanicus
 

Project Name Data (Last Modified On 6/6/2016)
Acceptance : Accepted
Taxon Profile     (Last Modified On 12/30/2016)
Description: Plants 200–400 mm high. Corm globose, 14–18 mm diam.; tunics of somewhat wiry fibres. Stem erect, simple or with 1 branch, usually lightly flexed above sheaths of upper 2 leaves, 1.2–1.7 mm diam. below base of spike. Leaves 3(4), lower 2 lower, linear to falcate, 80–160 mm long, 2–4 mm wide, main vein moderately thickened, margins lightly or not raised, cauline leaves shorter. Spike weakly inclined, ± straight, 4–8-flowered; bracts dark green sometimes flushed purple, outer 16–18 mm long, inner shorter to almost as long, notched apically. Flowers white or sometimes faintly flushed with violet toward tepal apices, reverse of tepal apices mauve in bud, reverse of tepals and tube becoming pale mauve on fading, lower side of throat with fine red lines decurrent on lower tepal bases, remaining open and scented of carnation day and night; perianth tube 28–44 mm long, straight and cylindric below, curving outward ± 6 mm below mouth and then flaring, 2.5 times as long as bracts; tepals  broadly lanceolate to ovate, unequal, dorsal smallest, 18–24 × 12–16 mm, lightly inclined, broadly cordate above narrow base, upper laterals spreading gradually, 20–25 × 13–18 mm, lower 3 tepals joined to upper laterals for 4–6 mm, lower laterals 16–25 × 7.5–9 mm, lower median 14–22 × ± 11 mm. Filaments 8–9 mm long, included in upper part of tube or exserted for up to 2 mm; anthers 5–9 mm long, white or light mauve; pollen yellow. Style arching over stamens, dividing between upper 1/3 and apex of anthers, branches 3.5–4.5 mm long. Capsules ± globose, 10–14 mm long. Seeds ovate, broadly winged, 5–6 × 3–4 mm. Flowering time: mostly October, occasionally to late November and rarely early December.
Country: South Africa
South African Province: Free State, Mpumalanga
Distribution and ecology: scattered through the southern highveld of South Africa, from Ermelo in Mpumalanga to Frankfort and Villiers in eastern Free State; on dolerite outcrops and along drainage lines or seeps in moist grassland.
Diagnosis: recognized by the long-tubed white or pale lilac flowers, the narrow tube 28–44 mm long, filaments included or very shortly exserted, and ovate tepals, the dorsal smaller than the upper laterals. The linear to falcate leaves are 2--4 mm wide.

 


 

Specimens whose coordinates are enclosed in square brackets [ ] have been mapped to a standard reference mark based on political units.
 
 
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