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Published In: Botanical Magazine 14: , t. 1406. 1811. (Bot. Mag.) Name publication detailView in BotanicusView in Biodiversity Heritage LibraryView in Biodiversity Heritage Library
 
 

Project Name Data (Last Modified On 6/6/2016)
Acceptance : Synonym
Taxon Profile     (Last Modified On 7/29/2016)
Description: Plants 250–400 mm high. Corm sub-globose, 20–30 mm diam.; tunics coarsely netted. Stem erect, simple or 1 or 2 short, ascending branches. Leaves 5 to 7, mostly ± basal with uppermost partly sheathing stems below, ± half as long as spike, narrowly lanceolate, up to 16 mm wide, midrib and margins lightly thickened and hyaline; bract-like cauline leaf 1. Spike 4 to 10-flowered; bracts overlapping, green, becoming dry at brown apically at flowering, (15–)20–25(–33) mm long, inner somewhat shorter, acute or minutely forked apically. Flowers zygomorphic, rose pink with dark maroon star-shaped marking in centre; perianth tube slender and weakly funnel-shaped, lower part 20–35 long, upper part flaring slightly and nearly horizontal, 8–14 mm long, ± 6 mm diam. at mouth; tepals spreading, obovate, 22–25 × 11–15 mm. Filaments unilateral and declinate, 13–15 mm long, recurved apically; anthers 8–10 mm long, dark purple. Style arching below stamens, dividing between middle and upper half of anthers, branches 4–5 mm long. Capsules ovoid, 14–20 × 6–9 mm. Seeds 4–5 mm long, 2-winged. Flowering time: November to early December.
Country: South Africa
South African Province: Western Cape
Distribution and ecology: a rare and local endemic of lower slopes and flats between Durbanville and Klapmuts in Western Cape, mainly granite outcrops in renosterveld. Now known only from two severely fragmented populations.
Diagnosis: distinguished from other pink-flowered species with declinate stamens and purple anthers by the longer perianth tube, 30–50 mm long with the lower part 20–35 mm long and the upper part 8–14 mm long, and comparatively short bracts, mostly 15–30 mm long. Watsonia dubia from Wellington and Tulbagh has slightly longer bracts, mostly 30–50 mm long enclosing all or most of the lower part of the perianth tube, with the upper part of the tube relatively short, 5–8 mm long, and proportionally shorter filaments usually 6–12 mm long.

 


 

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