Stilbe (genus)
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The Stilbe are a plant genus that the family of stilbaceae is attributed. It includes seven types .
description
Stilbe are small, single-stemmed or bulky, multi-stemmed shrubs . The leaves are in whorls of three to five. They are furrowed, linear-awl-shaped to narrowly lanceolate.
The inflorescences are dense, sessile spikes , old inflorescences remain as bald, scarred axes. The flowers are sessile and are accompanied by two opposite bracts . The calyx is usually hardened, tubular, slightly curved on the abaxial side (facing away from the inflorescence axis). It is set with five calyx lobes. The crown is tubular and divided into two lips. Two upper, upright and hairless tips are opposed to three narrower, also hairless tips. Inside the crown throat there is usually a dense ring of trichomes . The four stamens are slightly above the crown. The ovary is initially two-fold, but the abaxial ovary is stunted. The shape of the ovary is elongated and depressed. A single, basal ovule is formed in the non-stunted ovary compartment . The stylus is round and straight.
Systematics and occurrence
Within the genus, seven species are distinguished that are native to the Western Cape region of South Africa:
- Stilbe albiflora E. Mey.
- Stilbe ericoides (L.) L.
- Stilbe gymnopharyngia (Rourke) Rourke
- Stilbe overbergensis Rourke
- Stilbe rupestris Compton
- Stilbe serrulata Hochst.
- Stilbe vestita mountain.
literature
- HP Lindner: Stilbaceae . In: Klaus Kubitzki, Joachim W. Kadereit (eds.): Flowering Plants, Dicotyledons: Lamiales (except Acanthaceae Including Avicenniaceae) , Springer Verlag, 2004, ISBN 978-3-540-40593-1 , p. 439.
Individual evidence
- ↑ Rafaël Govaerts (ed.): Stilbe. In: World Checklist of Selected Plant Families (WCSP) - The Board of Trustees of the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew . Retrieved February 22, 2015.