Trichodiadema attonsum

Trichodiadema attonsum is succulent plant of the genus Trichodiadema, native to the Western Cape Province, South Africa, where it is common among pale quartzite rocks, and in the Riversdale region. Unlike most other species in its genus, it does not have a typical diadem on its leaf-tips.

Trichodiadema attonsum
Scientific classification
Kingdom:
(unranked):
(unranked):
(unranked):
Core eudicots
Order:
Family:
Genus:
Species:
T. attonsum
Binomial name
Trichodiadema attonsum
Schwantes

Description

A small, erect shrub, up to 15 cm tall. The leaves are papillate, and are not tipped with clear diadems, unlike most of the other species of its genus. Instead, the concolorous papillae near the tip are just slightly elongated.

The flowers are white, with petals in three series, and with filamentous staminodes at the centre. The flower stalks have especially long papillae.

The fruit capsule has five locules (sometimes four), each with well-developed covering membranes and thinning expanded keels.[1]

gollark: I mean. Not using DDG because you don't care about privacy I can sort of understand, but actively saying "hahaha this is bad"? Weird.
gollark: Does it run over Google's servers? Is it end to end encrypted?
gollark: > Google
gollark: RCS?
gollark: It's open source and end to end encrypted.

References

  1. H.E.K. Hartmann and I.M. Niesler. (2013). A new morphological study of the genus Trichodiadema (Aizoaceae) permits the description of a new subgenus, t. subg. Gemiclausa. Bradleya 31:58-75.


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.