Edit History
AÏZOÖN canariënse L. [family ]
Date Updated: 19 August 2007
Herbarium
Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew (K)
Collection
Flora of Tropical East Africa
Resource Type
Reference Sources
Entry From
Flora of Tropical East Africa, page 1, (1961) Author: C. Jeffrey
Names
AÏZOÖN canariënse L. [family ], Sp. Pl.: 488 (1753); F.T.A. 2: 583 (1871); F.W.T.A. 1: 115 (1927); Andrews, Fl. Pl. Anglo-Egypt. Sudan 1: 95 (1950). Type: Canary Is. (LINN, lecto.)
Information
A prostrate often rather thick-stemmed and tough annual or perennial herb. Stem pilose, often also finely papillose, 1–5 mm. diameter, 0.5–30 cm. long or more. Leaves alternate, petiolate; blade suborbicular to oblanceolate-obovate, rounded obtuse or bluntly subacuminate at apex, decurrent into the petiole at the base, more or less pilose on both sides, entire, 6–40 mm. long, 2–40 mm. broad; petiole 3–16 mm. long. Flowers solitary in leaf-axils or in the forks of the branches, sessile, often numerous. Calyx-lobes 5 (rarely 4) triangular, acute, yellowish inside, greenish or reddish and pilose outside. Stamens about 12–15, inserted on the calyx-tube in fascicles at the bases of the sinuses between the calyx-lobes. Styles short, deciduous. Fruit usually red or pink, pentagonal (rarely tetragonal) stelliform, depressed centrally, 5–8 mm. diameter, splitting into 5 (rarely 4) valves, the valves as many as the carpels, inflexed and remaining attached to the centre of the ovary. Seeds many, reniform, concentrically ridged. Fig. 11/1–2, p. 33.
Range
DISTR. K1 tropical and North Africa from the Atlantic Islands and Cape Verde to Arabia and Baluchistan, in the drier regions; also Portuguese East Africa, South and South West Africa
Distribution
KENYA Northern Frontier Province Marsabit, on Moyale road, July 1942, Mrs. J. Bally in Bally 1842!
Notes
This species is very variable in the size of its parts and in its degree of hairiness.
Date Updated: 19 August 2007
Herbarium
Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew (K)
Collection
Flora of Tropical East Africa
Resource Type
Reference Sources
Entry From
Flora of Tropical East Africa, page 1, (1961) Author: C. Jeffrey
Names
AÏZOÖN canariënse L. [family ], Sp. Pl.: 488 (1753); F.T.A. 2: 583 (1871); F.W.T.A. 1: 115 (1927); Andrews, Fl. Pl. Anglo-Egypt. Sudan 1: 95 (1950). Type: Canary Is. (LINN, lecto.)
Information
A prostrate often rather thick-stemmed and tough annual or perennial herb. Stem pilose, often also finely papillose, 1–5 mm. diameter, 0.5–30 cm. long or more. Leaves alternate, petiolate; blade suborbicular to oblanceolate-obovate, rounded obtuse or bluntly subacuminate at apex, decurrent into the petiole at the base, more or less pilose on both sides, entire, 6–40 mm. long, 2–40 mm. broad; petiole 3–16 mm. long. Flowers solitary in leaf-axils or in the forks of the branches, sessile, often numerous. Calyx-lobes 5 (rarely 4) triangular, acute, yellowish inside, greenish or reddish and pilose outside. Stamens about 12–15, inserted on the calyx-tube in fascicles at the bases of the sinuses between the calyx-lobes. Styles short, deciduous. Fruit usually red or pink, pentagonal (rarely tetragonal) stelliform, depressed centrally, 5–8 mm. diameter, splitting into 5 (rarely 4) valves, the valves as many as the carpels, inflexed and remaining attached to the centre of the ovary. Seeds many, reniform, concentrically ridged. Fig. 11/1–2, p. 33.
Range
DISTR. K1 tropical and North Africa from the Atlantic Islands and Cape Verde to Arabia and Baluchistan, in the drier regions; also Portuguese East Africa, South and South West Africa
Distribution
KENYA Northern Frontier Province Marsabit, on Moyale road, July 1942, Mrs. J. Bally in Bally 1842!
Notes
This species is very variable in the size of its parts and in its degree of hairiness.
Date Updated: 19 August 2007
Herbarium
Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew (K)
Collection
Flora of Tropical East Africa
Resource Type
Reference Sources
Entry From
Flora of Tropical East Africa, page 1, (1961) Author: C. Jeffrey
Names
AÏZOÖN canariënse L. [family ], Sp. Pl.: 488 (1753); F.T.A. 2: 583 (1871); F.W.T.A. 1: 115 (1927); Andrews, Fl. Pl. Anglo-Egypt. Sudan 1: 95 (1950). Type: Canary Is. (LINN, lecto.)
Information
A prostrate often rather thick-stemmed and tough annual or perennial herb. Stem pilose, often also finely papillose, 1–5 mm. diameter, 0.5–30 cm. long or more. Leaves alternate, petiolate; blade suborbicular to oblanceolate-obovate, rounded obtuse or bluntly subacuminate at apex, decurrent into the petiole at the base, more or less pilose on both sides, entire, 6–40 mm. long, 2–40 mm. broad; petiole 3–16 mm. long. Flowers solitary in leaf-axils or in the forks of the branches, sessile, often numerous. Calyx-lobes 5 (rarely 4) triangular, acute, yellowish inside, greenish or reddish and pilose outside. Stamens about 12–15, inserted on the calyx-tube in fascicles at the bases of the sinuses between the calyx-lobes. Styles short, deciduous. Fruit usually red or pink, pentagonal (rarely tetragonal) stelliform, depressed centrally, 5–8 mm. diameter, splitting into 5 (rarely 4) valves, the valves as many as the carpels, inflexed and remaining attached to the centre of the ovary. Seeds many, reniform, concentrically ridged. Fig. 11/1–2, p. 33.
Range
DISTR. K1 tropical and North Africa from the Atlantic Islands and Cape Verde to Arabia and Baluchistan, in the drier regions; also Portuguese East Africa, South and South West Africa
Distribution
KENYA Northern Frontier Province Marsabit, on Moyale road, July 1942, Mrs. J. Bally in Bally 1842!
Notes
This species is very variable in the size of its parts and in its degree of hairiness.
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