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Type of Clematis oweniae Harv. var. junodii Burtt Davy [family RANUNCULACEAE]

Junod, H.A., #1063
None
Specimens
K
Type of Clematis oweniae Harv. var. junodii Burtt Davy [family RANUNCULACEAE] (stored under name); Verified by Burtt Davy, J.
Clematis brachiata Thunb. [family RANUNCULACEAE]; Verified by McCallum, D.A.,
Clematis oweniae Harv. [family RANUNCULACEAE]

CLEMATIS Oweniæ Harv. [family RANUNCULACEAE]

Flora Capensis, Vol 1, page 1, (1894) Author: (By W. H. HARVEY).
Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew (K)
Reference Sources
densely pubescent; leaves bipinnately parted, pinnæ 3–4 pairs, with an odd one, distant, trifoliolate, leaflets ovate-acuminate, coarsely toothed, the lateral ones small and subsessile, the middle one stalked, the teeth mucronulate; panicles axillary, shorter than the leaf; flower-buds obtuse; sepals spreading, elliptic-lanceolate; filaments filiform, hairy at base, anthers oval. Slender, densely pubescent in all parts. Leaves horizontally patent at their insertion, the petiole reflexed. Flowers small, in much branched panicles. Anthers scarcely longer than broad.

CLEMATIS brachiata Thunb. [family RANUNCULACEAE]

Flora Capensis, Vol 1, page 1, (1894) Author: (By W. H. HARVEY).
Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew (K)
Reference Sources
pubescent; leaves bipinnately or tripinnately parted; pinnæ distant, trifoliolate, leaflets petiolate, ovate-acuminate, toothed, the teeth mucronulate; panicles elongate, spreading; flower-buds very obtuse; sepals spreading, elliptical, obtuse; filaments flat, hairy at base, anthers linear. Climbing over trees and bushes. The pubescence varies greatly in different specimens, and the old leaves are frequently nearly smooth. Flowers in long terminal or axillary, naked panicles, whose branches spread at right angles with the stem. Known from C. Thunbergii by its obtuse buds and sepals; and from C. Oweniæ, besides other marks, by the filaments and anthers. The carpels are glabrescent, orbicular, compressed and margined, with long, feathery tails.

Clematopsis scabiosifolia group a DC. Hutch. [family RANUNCULACEAE]

FZ, Vol 1, Part 1, page 89, (1960) Author: A. W. Exell and E. Milne-Redhead
Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew (K)
Reference Sources
Abundant in the Transvaal but apparently rare elsewhere.
None

Clematis oweniae Harv. [family RANUNCULACEAE]

FZ, Vol 1, Part 1, page 89, (1960) Author: A. W. Exell and E. Milne-Redhead
Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew (K)
Reference Sources
Woody climber very similar to C. brachiata but with leaves twice divided and the ultimate segments deeply incised, sepals not exceeding 1–2 cm. in length, anthers usually about 1 mm. long, sometimes up to 1–5 mm. and achenes (including persistent style) 1–2 cm. long.

Clematis brachiata Thunb. [family RANUNCULACEAE]

FZ, Vol 1, Part 1, page 89, (1960) Author: A. W. Exell and E. Milne-Redhead
Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew (K)
Reference Sources
Widespread in tropical and S. Africa.
Woody climber up to about 4 m. tall; younger stems more or less softly hairy, longitudinally ribbed and furrowed. Leaves pinnate with 5–7 leaflets or pinnate-ternate; leaflets suborbicular to ovate in outline, shortly acuminate, acute or more rarely subobtuse, cordate to rounded or obtuse at the base, often a longer central lobe with a shorter lateral one on each side but sometimes asymmetric, margins crenate-dentate, from glabrous to densely sericeous-pubescent or tomentose on the lower surface and from glabrous to sparsely appressed-pubescent on the upper surface. Inflorescences generally many-flowered; flowers sweet-scented; pedicels 0.5–3 cm. long; flower-buds spherical to ellipsoid, rounded to acuminate. Sepals 0.8–1.5 cm. long; cream or white. Anthers usually 1.5–2 mm. long. Achenes (including persistent style) up to 4 cm. long.