Oedera imbricata
Oedera imbricata is a prickly shrublet belonging to the daisy family (Compositae or Asteraceae).
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Species: | O. imbricata |
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Oedera imbricata Lam. | |
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It is indigenous to the southern Cape region of South Africa, where it occurs in Fynbos and Renosterveld vegetation, from the West Coast, eastwards as far as Grahamstown.[1]
Description
Oedera imbricata is a small (50cm high), sprawling shrublet. The leaves are small (15 x 5 mm), hard and stiff, with a prominent midrib. They grow densely packed along the stems.
The yellow flowerheads appear in Spring. They are 40mm wide, consist of more than one individual flowerheads (a diagnostic character), of which the outer ones have visible ray-florets.[2][3]
Related species
It resembles Oedera capensis, which however has longer, spreading, marginally-toothed leaves.
gollark: Aaaand gone.
gollark: Anyone want it?
gollark: There's a nebula in the AP.
gollark: Well, ignore, not abandon, it's already abandoned.
gollark: Due to the ongoing Nocturnepocalypse, it may die when people decide that they don't like nocturnes and abandon it to die.
References
- "Threatened Species Programme | SANBI Red List of South African Plants". redlist.sanbi.org.
- "Factsheet -Oedera imbricata". Keyserver.lucidcentral.org. Retrieved 2020-02-25.
- "Photos of South African Plants - Category: Fynbos - Image: Oedera imbricata". www.operationwildflower.org.za.
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