Senecio coronatus

Senecio coronatus (Thunb.) Harv. aka the woolly grassland senecio is a plant in the family Asteraceae, endemic to and widespread in Southern Africa, occurring in the moister southern and eastern regions. [2]

Senecio coronatus
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Plantae
Clade: Tracheophytes
Clade: Angiosperms
Clade: Eudicots
Clade: Asterids
Order: Asterales
Family: Asteraceae
Genus: Senecio
Species:
S. coronatus
Binomial name
Senecio coronatus
(Thunb.) Harv., 1865
Synonyms
  • Cineraria coronata Thunb.
  • Senecio lachnorhizus O.Hoffm.
  • Senecio lasiorhizoides Sch.Bip.
  • Senecio lasiorhizus DC. [1]

It is perennial with large, leathery, broadly elliptic, erect leaves growing from a large, underground rootstock with a woolly covering. Up to 20 capitula are arranged in a terminal cluster, each with some 10 slender yellow ray florets. [3]

rootstock very woolly; stem herbaceous, erect, ribstriate, terete, loosely woolly below, cobwebbed, becoming glabrous above, ending in a few-headed corymb; lower leaves broadly ovate or oblong-obovate, tapering at base into a petiole, subacute, penninerved, minutely calloso-crenulate, the younger loosely cobwebbed, older glabrous, rigid; upper sessile, stem-clasping, ovate, oblong or lanceolate, smaller upwards; corymb 3–20-headed, simple or branched, the pedicels long, naked; heads many-fl. radiate; inv. calycled with long, subulate bracteoles, glabrous or cobwebbed, of 20 or more, keeled, subulate scales; achenes short, subcompressed, variably hairy. Rootstock thick, very woolly. Stem 6 inches to 2 feet high, sparsely leafy, nude above. Root-leaves several, on longer or shorter petioles, 3–6 inches long, 1 1/2–3 inches broad, varying considerably in comparative length and breadth. Cauline leaves few and distant, broad or narrow. Young parts loosely cobwebbed. Heads like those of S. Albanensis. Rays numerous and long, yellow. Achenes sometimes densely, sometimes sparsely hairy. Var. β. is more slender, with smaller leaves and heads; but otherwise the same.

Flora Capensis, Vol 3, page 44, (1894) - William Henry Harvey

Phytochemicals

This species is capable of concentrating the toxic element nickel in its leaves, a strategy which appears to be an effective deterrent against herbivory.[4][5]

gollark: That too.
gollark: Perhaps we are in the same time zone, or same country, or same constituency, or even same village, or same house, or same room.
gollark: It is 17:02:33 for me too!
gollark: Phrasing it as "the EVIL CAPITALISTS want us to unlockdown because they only care about the economy" is ridiculous - *we need to produce things* and people will probably become increasingly unhappy/crazy as time spent at home drags on.
gollark: Unfortunately the UK does not appear to *have* a plan, and the government is completely refusing to explain anything it's going to do.

References

  1. "Senecio coronatus (Thunb.) Harv. — The Plant List". www.theplantlist.org.
  2. CJB, CJB, DSIC, Cyrille Chatelain -. "CJB - African plant database - Detail". www.ville-ge.ch.
  3. "Senecio coronatus - Overview - Encyclopedia of Life". Encyclopedia of Life.
  4. Boyd, Robert S; Davis, Micheal A; Wall, Michael A; Balkwill, Kevin (2002). "Nickel defends the South African hyperaccumulator Senecio coronatus (Asteraceae) against Helix aspersa (Mollusca: Pulmonidae)". Chemoecology. 12 (2): 91. doi:10.1007/s00049-002-8331-3.
  5. Boyd, R.S; Davis, M.A; Balkwill, K (2008). "Elemental patterns in Ni hyperaccumulating and non-hyperaccumulating ultramafic soil populations of Senecio coronatus". South African Journal of Botany. 74: 158. doi:10.1016/j.sajb.2007.08.013.
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