Trichodiadema marlothii

Trichodiadema marlothii is succulent plant of the genus Trichodiadema, native to the Western Cape Province, South Africa, where it is known from the Robertson and Swellendam areas.

Trichodiadema marlothii
Trichodiadema marlothii in flower.
Scientific classification
Kingdom:
(unranked):
(unranked):
(unranked):
Core eudicots
Order:
Family:
Genus:
Species:
T. marlothii
Binomial name
Trichodiadema marlothii
L.Bolus

Description

Leaves and fruit capsules of Trichodiadema marlothii, growing near Ashton.

A small, semi-decumbent shrub, usually about 4 cm tall. The internodes are not visible on the stems.

The leaves are papillate and each is tipped with 5-10 large, white, radiating bristles (diadems), that are parted and spread out in two directions. The centre-point of the diadem is brown.

The flowers are dark pink in colour, with filamentous staminodes at the centre that have pink tips and pale bases. The petals are sometimes slightly emarginate. The flower stalk and base are covered in brown hairs.

The fruit capsule has six locules, each with very well developed covering membranes.
This species resembles Trichodiadema emarginatum, which however has five locules, an even lower growth-habit and petals that are emarginate.[1]

gollark: It's obviously the product of a political opinion calendar.
gollark: But they also specified universal healthcare, basically just killing off people they don't like and capped profits on companies.
gollark: Oh, and their suggestion of "free 15Mbps internet connectivity" is underspecified and stupid. I would just have someone or other design a mandatorily-implemented-in-all-computers-with-communications-hardware self-organizing mesh network protocol.
gollark: Schools would be replaced with large warehouse-type spaces with computers, vaguely intelligent-looking adults and arbitrarily large quantities of children in them.
gollark: The profit margin cap on companies is obviously stupid. Instead, clones of me (technology TODO) would be authorized to randomly inspect and restructure companies to make them work better.

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.