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Aptenia

Aptenia sp.

Photo by Benno Ibold
Published on Project Noah
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-33.5918, 22.2004

Field Notes

Description:

These are succulent subshrubs growing from a system of fibrous, often fleshy roots. The stems lie prostrate on the ground or may climb. The stem bases are woody, and the stems are green. The leaves are mostly oppositely arranged, but those near the inflorescences may be alternate. The leaf blades are flat, hairless, sometimes waxy, and usually heart-shaped, or occasionally lance-shaped. Flowers are solitary or grow in small, whorled clusters, usually in the leaf axils along the stem. The flower is about a centimeter wide. There are two large sepals and two smaller. The corolla contains many narrow petals in shades of pink, purple, yellow, or white, and several staminodes that look very much like the petals. The many fertile stamens at the center are white or yellow. The fruit is a capsule with four valves.

Habitat:

Little Karoo, a semi-desert natural region of South Africa.

Species ID Suggestions

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Photographed
PublishedNovember 20, 2014

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