Edit History
HIBISCUS pusillus Thunb. [family MALVACEAE]
Date Updated: 19 August 2007
Herbarium
Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew (K)
Collection
Flora Capensis
Resource Type
Reference Sources
Entry From
Flora Capensis, Vol 1, page 157, (1894) Author: (By W. H. HARVEY).
Names
HIBISCUS pusillus Thunb. [family MALVACEAE], Cap. p. 550.;—Harv. Thes. t. 73.
HIBISCUS gossypinus E. & Z. [family MALVACEAE], ! 307, non Thunb.
HIBISCUS serratus E. Mey. [family MALVACEAE], !
HIBISCUS cuneifolius Garke [family MALVACEAE]
Information
dwarf, hispid or glabrescent; stems decumbent, sub-simple; leaves on short petioles, polymorphous (ovate, or tricuspidate, or 3-lobed, or tripartite) sharply and coarsely serrate, rigid, nearly glabrous, with prominent nerves and veins, coarsely reticulate; stipules setaceo-subulate, spreading; peduncles axillary, longer than the leaves, jointed below the flower; involucre of about 10 subulate leaflets, half as long as the acuminate, stellato-pubescent calyx-lobes; capsules glabrous, seeds woolly. Root thick and woody, throwing up several stems 6–12 inches long or more; the larger specimens branching. Leaves 1–1 1/2 inch long, extremely variable in shape and cutting, but always thick and rigid and sharply toothed; rarely stellato-pubescent, mostly sub-glabrous. The flowers are rather large, crimson or deep rosy-purple, rarely varying to orange or yellow, and appear throughout the summer.
Distribution
SOUTH AFRICA Near the Zwartkops and Sondag rivers, Uit. E. & Z.! Graaf Reynet and Somerset, Mrs. F. W. Barber! Macallisberg, Burke! (Herb. T.C.D., Hook., Sond.).
Date Updated: 19 August 2007
Herbarium
Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew (K)
Collection
Flora Capensis
Resource Type
Reference Sources
Entry From
Flora Capensis, Vol 1, page 157, (1894) Author: (By W. H. HARVEY).
Names
HIBISCUS pusillus Thunb. [family MALVACEAE], Cap. p. 550.;—Harv. Thes. t. 73.
HIBISCUS gossypinus E. & Z. [family MALVACEAE], ! 307, non Thunb.
HIBISCUS serratus E. Mey. [family MALVACEAE], !
HIBISCUS cuneifolius Garke [family MALVACEAE]
Information
dwarf, hispid or glabrescent; stems decumbent, sub-simple; leaves on short petioles, polymorphous (ovate, or tricuspidate, or 3-lobed, or tripartite) sharply and coarsely serrate, rigid, nearly glabrous, with prominent nerves and veins, coarsely reticulate; stipules setaceo-subulate, spreading; peduncles axillary, longer than the leaves, jointed below the flower; involucre of about 10 subulate leaflets, half as long as the acuminate, stellato-pubescent calyx-lobes; capsules glabrous, seeds woolly. Root thick and woody, throwing up several stems 6–12 inches long or more; the larger specimens branching. Leaves 1–1 1/2 inch long, extremely variable in shape and cutting, but always thick and rigid and sharply toothed; rarely stellato-pubescent, mostly sub-glabrous. The flowers are rather large, crimson or deep rosy-purple, rarely varying to orange or yellow, and appear throughout the summer.
Distribution
SOUTH AFRICA Near the Zwartkops and Sondag rivers, Uit. E. & Z.! Graaf Reynet and Somerset, Mrs. F. W. Barber! Macallisberg, Burke! (Herb. T.C.D., Hook., Sond.).
Date Updated: 19 August 2007
Herbarium
Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew (K)
Collection
Flora Capensis
Resource Type
Reference Sources
Entry From
Flora Capensis, Vol 1, page 157, (1894) Author: (By W. H. HARVEY).
Names
HIBISCUS pusillus Thunb. [family MALVACEAE], Cap. p. 550.;—Harv. Thes. t. 73.
HIBISCUS gossypinus E. & Z. [family MALVACEAE], ! 307, non Thunb.
HIBISCUS serratus E. Mey. [family MALVACEAE], !
HIBISCUS cuneifolius Garke [family MALVACEAE]
Information
dwarf, hispid or glabrescent; stems decumbent, sub-simple; leaves on short petioles, polymorphous (ovate, or tricuspidate, or 3-lobed, or tripartite) sharply and coarsely serrate, rigid, nearly glabrous, with prominent nerves and veins, coarsely reticulate; stipules setaceo-subulate, spreading; peduncles axillary, longer than the leaves, jointed below the flower; involucre of about 10 subulate leaflets, half as long as the acuminate, stellato-pubescent calyx-lobes; capsules glabrous, seeds woolly. Root thick and woody, throwing up several stems 6–12 inches long or more; the larger specimens branching. Leaves 1–1 1/2 inch long, extremely variable in shape and cutting, but always thick and rigid and sharply toothed; rarely stellato-pubescent, mostly sub-glabrous. The flowers are rather large, crimson or deep rosy-purple, rarely varying to orange or yellow, and appear throughout the summer.
Distribution
SOUTH AFRICA Near the Zwartkops and Sondag rivers, Uit. E. & Z.! Graaf Reynet and Somerset, Mrs. F. W. Barber! Macallisberg, Burke! (Herb. T.C.D., Hook., Sond.).
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