Edit History
Harpachne schimperi Hochst. ex A. Rich. [family GRAMINEAE]
Date Updated: 26 July 2007
Herbarium
Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew (K)
Collection
Flora Zambesiaca
Resource Type
Reference Sources
Entry From
FZ, Vol 10, Part 2, (1999) Author: T. Cope
Names
Harpachne schimperi Hochst. ex A. Rich. [family GRAMINEAE], Tent. Fl. Abyss. 2: 431 (1851). —Simon in Kirkia 8: 62 (1971). —S.M. Phillips in F.T.E.A., Gramineae: 270, fig. 74 (1974). TAB. 44. Type from Ethiopia.
Information
Densely caespitose perennial; culms up to 60 cm tall, erect or ascending from a procumbent base, simple or branched at the lower nodes, wiry; leaf laminas 3–20 cm × 1–4 mm, flat or convolute, tapering to a fine point.Inflorescence 3–8(10) cm long, oblong, the spikelets densely crowded; pedicels 2–4 mm long, villous, usually unbranched but the lowermost occasionally carrying 2 spikelets.Spikelets 10–14(17) mm long, 6–13-flowered, cuneate, the florets loosely imbricate with the slender sinuous rhachilla often visible, pale green tinged with purple; glumes linear-oblong, subacute, the inferior 1.6–2 mm long, the superior 2.8–3.5 mm long; lowermost lemma (3)3.2–3.5 mm long, lanceolate in profile, acute, successive lemmas becoming progressively narrower and more sharply pointed, the longest 4–6.8 mm long, thinly membranous or sometimes cartilaginous in the lower third.
Habitat
Growing on waste ground and disturbed areas, in dry grassland and open woodland, often forming extensive colonies
Range
northeast and East Africa from Sudan southwards
Altitude range
1500–1700 m.
1700
1500
Distribution
Zambia N Mbala (Abercorn), 1670 m, 8.ii.1958, Vesey-FitzGerald 1464 (K).Zimbabwe C Harare, Dunhiku School area, c. 1500 m, 12.i.1991, Laegaard 16264 (K).
Distribution (external)
Arabia
Date Updated: 26 July 2007
Herbarium
Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew (K)
Collection
Flora Zambesiaca
Resource Type
Reference Sources
Entry From
FZ, Vol 10, Part 2, (1999) Author: T. Cope
Names
Harpachne schimperi Hochst. ex A. Rich. [family GRAMINEAE], Tent. Fl. Abyss. 2: 431 (1851). —Simon in Kirkia 8: 62 (1971). —S.M. Phillips in F.T.E.A., Gramineae: 270, fig. 74 (1974). TAB. 44. Type from Ethiopia.
Information
Densely caespitose perennial; culms up to 60 cm tall, erect or ascending from a procumbent base, simple or branched at the lower nodes, wiry; leaf laminas 3–20 cm × 1–4 mm, flat or convolute, tapering to a fine point.Inflorescence 3–8(10) cm long, oblong, the spikelets densely crowded; pedicels 2–4 mm long, villous, usually unbranched but the lowermost occasionally carrying 2 spikelets.Spikelets 10–14(17) mm long, 6–13-flowered, cuneate, the florets loosely imbricate with the slender sinuous rhachilla often visible, pale green tinged with purple; glumes linear-oblong, subacute, the inferior 1.6–2 mm long, the superior 2.8–3.5 mm long; lowermost lemma (3)3.2–3.5 mm long, lanceolate in profile, acute, successive lemmas becoming progressively narrower and more sharply pointed, the longest 4–6.8 mm long, thinly membranous or sometimes cartilaginous in the lower third.
Habitat
Growing on waste ground and disturbed areas, in dry grassland and open woodland, often forming extensive colonies
Range
northeast and East Africa from Sudan southwards
Altitude range
1500–1700 m.
1700
1500
Distribution
Zambia N Mbala (Abercorn), 1670 m, 8.ii.1958, Vesey-FitzGerald 1464 (K).Zimbabwe C Harare, Dunhiku School area, c. 1500 m, 12.i.1991, Laegaard 16264 (K).
Distribution (external)
Arabia
Date Updated: 26 July 2007
Herbarium
Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew (K)
Collection
Flora Zambesiaca
Resource Type
Reference Sources
Entry From
FZ, Vol 10, Part 2, (1999) Author: T. Cope
Names
Harpachne schimperi Hochst. ex A. Rich. [family GRAMINEAE], Tent. Fl. Abyss. 2: 431 (1851). —Simon in Kirkia 8: 62 (1971). —S.M. Phillips in F.T.E.A., Gramineae: 270, fig. 74 (1974). TAB. 44. Type from Ethiopia.
Information
Densely caespitose perennial; culms up to 60 cm tall, erect or ascending from a procumbent base, simple or branched at the lower nodes, wiry; leaf laminas 3–20 cm × 1–4 mm, flat or convolute, tapering to a fine point.Inflorescence 3–8(10) cm long, oblong, the spikelets densely crowded; pedicels 2–4 mm long, villous, usually unbranched but the lowermost occasionally carrying 2 spikelets.Spikelets 10–14(17) mm long, 6–13-flowered, cuneate, the florets loosely imbricate with the slender sinuous rhachilla often visible, pale green tinged with purple; glumes linear-oblong, subacute, the inferior 1.6–2 mm long, the superior 2.8–3.5 mm long; lowermost lemma (3)3.2–3.5 mm long, lanceolate in profile, acute, successive lemmas becoming progressively narrower and more sharply pointed, the longest 4–6.8 mm long, thinly membranous or sometimes cartilaginous in the lower third.
Habitat
Growing on waste ground and disturbed areas, in dry grassland and open woodland, often forming extensive colonies
Range
northeast and East Africa from Sudan southwards
Altitude range
1500–1700 m.
1700
1500
Distribution
Zambia N Mbala (Abercorn), 1670 m, 8.ii.1958, Vesey-FitzGerald 1464 (K).Zimbabwe C Harare, Dunhiku School area, c. 1500 m, 12.i.1991, Laegaard 16264 (K).
Distribution (external)
Arabia
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