Disperis anthoceros Rchb.

Kurzweil, Hubert & Manning, John C., 2005, A synopsis of the genus Disperis Sw. (Orchidaceae), Adansonia (3) 27 (2), pp. 155-207 : 184-185

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.5186519

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03D987CB-5E25-FFD2-18A3-52CEFF4FFB5E

treatment provided by

Carolina

scientific name

Disperis anthoceros Rchb.
status

 

35. Disperis anthoceros Rchb. View in CoL f.

Otia Bot. Hamburg. 2: 103 (1881); Schlechter, Bull. Herb. Boissier, ser. 1, 6: 951 (1898); Rolfe, Fl. Trop. Afr. 7: 292 (1898), Fl. Cap. 5, 3: 311 (1913); Summerhayes, Fl. W. Trop. Afr., ed. 2: 205 (1968); Verdcourt, Fl. Trop. East Afr.: 229 (1968), Kew Bull. 21: 99 (1968); Geerinck, Fl. Afr. Centr.: 230 (1984); la Croix F P. J. Cribb, Fl. Zambes.: 234 (1995); P. J. Cribb F Thomas, Fl. Ethiop. Eritr. 6: 247 (1997); Szlachetko F Olszewski, Fl. Camer. 34: 46 (1998); J. C. Manning in H. P. Linder F Kurzweil, Orch. S. Afr.: 303 (1999); la Croix et al., Adansonia 24: 58 (2002). — Type: Ethiopia, ex Tigre v. Begemder River, Schimper 1210 (syn-, W) F 1295 (syn-, W; isosyn-, BM, K). Disperis hamadryas Schltr., Ann. Transvaal Mus. 10 :

252 (1924). — Type: South Africa, KwaZulu-

Natal, Wood 841 (lecto-, K, designated by Linder F

Kurzweil 1999; isolecto-, NH, SAM).

Plants to 300 mm. Leaves 2, opposite, ovate, to 38 × 40 mm. Flowers to 4 (rarely to 7), white, petals marked with green or partly pale pink; median sepal with slender erect spur 7- 30 mm, lateral sepals obovate to semi-orbicular, 5-15 × 3-10 mm, united for about half; petals falcate, 6-7 × 4-5 mm; lip linear, ascending, 8- 15 mm long, blade minutely ligulate, appendage irregularly lobed, hanging over blade ( Figs 1B View FIG ; 6 View FIG D-F).

DISTRIBUTION AND PHENOLOGY. — The most widespread species of the genus, found throughout tropical Africa from Sudan and Ethiopia westwards to Nigeria and southwards to the northern provinces of South Africa, and recently also recorded in Madagascar; in leaf litter on the floor of evergreen forests, also in moss on rocks in deep shade, often along streams, also in bambooforests, Pinus and Cupressus plantations, or wet Brachystegia woodland, from 600 to 1800 m in southern Africa and from 1100 to 2700 m in tropical Africa. Flowering mainly in February and March.

W

Naturhistorisches Museum Wien

F

Field Museum of Natural History, Botany Department

P

Museum National d' Histoire Naturelle, Paris (MNHN) - Vascular Plants

J

University of the Witwatersrand

C

University of Copenhagen

H

University of Helsinki

S

Department of Botany, Swedish Museum of Natural History

BM

Bristol Museum

K

Royal Botanic Gardens

Kingdom

Plantae

Phylum

Tracheophyta

Class

Liliopsida

Order

Asparagales

Family

Orchidaceae

Genus

Disperis

Darwin Core Archive (for parent article) View in SIBiLS Plain XML RDF