Moraea polystachya

Moraea polystachya is a species of plant in the family Iridaceae native to southern Africa.[1]

Moraea polystachya
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Plantae
Clade: Tracheophytes
Clade: Angiosperms
Clade: Monocots
Order: Asparagales
Family: Iridaceae
Genus: Moraea
Species:
M. polystachya
Binomial name
Moraea polystachya
(Thunb.) Ker Gawl.

Description

Moraea polystachya is a herbaceous perennial geophyte growing to about 80mm high.[2] Leaves are green, linear, long and narrow, resembling a grass blade. Flowers in clusters at the tip of branches. The flowers are blue to lilac and have a typical Iris appearance. It flowers mainly March to May (in the southern hemisphere).[3] The plant is found in Namibia, Western Cape, Eastern Cape and North West Province of South Africa.[4] The plant is listed as Least Concern in the SANBI redlist.[5]

gollark: A vaguely convincing argument I heard about the humans-liking-punishment thing is that it effectively works as a species-wide precommitment to punish people for doing bad things, which discourages people from doing those bad things in advance.
gollark: I mean, the only real arguments I can see for it:- humans just like punishing people if they do bad things (for evolutionary psychology reasons?)- a deterrent, but that only works if... people actually believe it as a serious threat
gollark: Also, it's pretty pointless.
gollark: ...
gollark: I also do not believe in the afterlife, but I am still against eternal torture abstractly speaking.

References

  1. "Plants of Southern Africa". Plants of Southern Africa. SANBI.
  2. "African Plant Database". African Plant Database.
  3. Manning, John (2001). South African Wildflower Guide 11: Eastern Cape (1 ed.). Botanical Society of South Africa. p. 82. ISBN 9781874999232.
  4. "African Plant Database". African Plant Database.
  5. "Threatened Species Program". Redlist South African Plants. SANBI.
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