Sesuvium mesembryanthemoides, Wawra
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.5061/dryad.tk922 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.10815425 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03C4186A-4F04-FFC0-FF36-FA8AFC43CDFB |
treatment provided by |
Mulmaswoliedza |
scientific name |
Sesuvium mesembryanthemoides |
status |
|
SESUVIUM MESEMBRYANTHEMOIDES Wawra in Wawra & Peyr., Sitzungsber. Kaiserl View in CoL . Acad. Wien, Math.- Nat. 38: 564. 1860.
Halimus [Halimum] mesembrianthemoides (Wawra & Peyr.) Hiern, Cat. Afric. Pl. (Hiern) 1(2): 413. 1898.— TYPE: ANGOLA. Waaera 210 (Type not found, possibly destroyed in B or W). Mossamedes, sea-shore, 01 Jul 1859, Welaeitsch 2389 (lectotype: LISU 214652 digital image!, designated here; isolectotypes: BM, BR, C 10005289 digital image!, COI, K!).
Sesuoium crystallinum Welw. ex Oliv., Fl. Trop. Afr. [Oliver et al.] 2: 586. 1871.— TYPE: ANGOLA. Mossamedes, sea-shore, 01 Jul 1859, Welaeitsch 2389 (holotype: LISU 214652 digital image!, isotypes: BM, BR, C 10005289 digital image!, COI, K!)
Creeping perennial herb with a deep taproot; bladder cells bulging and globose, covering shoots, leaves and outside of flowers; whitish when dry; internodes terete and succulent. Leaves 10–30 mm long, elliptic to oblong, up to 3 mm wide (when dry), subterete, and subsessile. Bracts in 2–4 pairs, large (up to 5 mm long), lanceolate to triangular; dark in color when dry. Flowers 10–13 mm long, subsessile, pink to violet. Stamens numerous. Ovary with 3–5 carpels. Fruit a many-seeded capsule (according to descriptions). Seeds not seen, described to be black and smooth.
Notes — C 4 species ( Bohley et al. 2015). The outermost pair of bracts sometimes shows a loose cover of small bladder cells along the midvein.
Sesuoium mesembryanthoides Welw., nomen nudum, Apont: 557. 1859, has been assigned to S. crithmoides by previous authors, e.g. Gonçalves (1970) in Conspectus Florae Angolensis.
Distribution and Habitat — Angola, Namibia, apparently also in Syria ( Fig. 5C). The species grows on sand (beaches, dunes) in coastal areas.
Representative specimens examined — ANGOLA. Cabo Negro, sand dunes, 15°40′S, 11°59′E, 5 m, 15 Apr 1973, P. Bamps et al. 4519 (K); Mossamedes, 1859, Welaeitsch 2387 (K); Lobito Bay, near Benguella, 12°36′16.1676″S, 13°21′39.9312″E, 01 Sep 1906, H. Bolus 12453 (BOL); Coroca Valley near Namibe, ca. 15°10′09.2424″S, 12°09′28.5012″E, Nov 1931, O. Jessen 337 (B).
SYRIA. Sur la piste d’ Akra á Khan Abou Chamat (desert du Syrie), 27 Mar 1931, R. Gombault 1998 (P, P04583848 digital image); Palmyra (desert du Syrie), 3 Apr 1934, R. Gombault 3468 (P, digital image, P04583849).
No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.
Kingdom |
|
Phylum |
|
Class |
|
Order |
|
Family |
|
Genus |
Sesuvium mesembryanthemoides
Bohley, Katharina, Winter, Pieter J. D. & Kadereit, Gudrun 2017 |
Sesuoium mesembryanthoides Welw., nomen nudum
1859: 557 |