Operation Wildflower Mobi
  • Home
  • Albums
  • Links
    • Botanical Gardens
    • Other Sites
    • OWF Sites
  • Information
    • About Us
    • Articles
    • Contact Us
    • Disclaimer
    • Glossary
    • Plant Records
      • Aloes
      • Bulbs
      • Climbers
      • Cycads
      • Euphorbias
      • Ferns
      • Grasses
      • Herbs
      • Orchids
      • Parasites
      • Shrubs
      • Succulents
      • Trees
    • Sources of Information
    • Subject Index
Home Home » TYPES » Bulbs » Crossyne flava leaf
Back to Category Overview
Total images in all categories: 12,423
Total number of hits on all images: 7,762,046

Crossyne flava leaf

Crossyne flava leaf
Start View full size
[Please activate JavaScript in order to see the slideshow]
Previous Previous
Image 50 of 237  
Next Next
Image 52 of 237  
  • Crocosmia aurea
  • Crocosmia aurea buds growing in spikes
  • Crocosmia aurea in flower
  • Crocosmia aurea style branches
  • Crossyne flava
  • Crossyne flava dense umbel
  • Crossyne flava flower
  • Crossyne flava flower profile
  • Crossyne flava leaf
  • Crossyne flava thick, short scape
  • Crossyne flava, a stand on a Namaqualand plain
  • Crossyne guttata
  • Cyrtanthus brachyscyphus
  • Cyrtanthus elatus
  • Cyrtanthus elatus flower
  • Cyrtanthus elatus leaves and scape
  • Cyrtanthus epiphyticus

Image information

Description

Four to six Crossyne flava leaves grow opposite and flat on the ground, prostrate or spreading.

The leaves are broad, long and flat; strap-shaped with rounded tips. The leaf-shape tends slightly away from symmetrical, the tip veering to one side, compensated for by a mild bulge lower down on the other.

Faint, longitudinal lines cover the smooth surface that is dully dark green with a hint of shine. The lower surface is marked with angular red spots. Leaf dimensions are 20 cm to 43 cm long and 5 cm to 12 cm wide.

The slightly raised margins are conspicuously fringed with bristly hairs, pale brown, yellow or whitish in colour. Part of the lower margin in picture is reddish brown.

It is the marginal hairiness that distinguishes the leaves from other Amaryllidaceae leaves, particularly those of Brunsvigia. Several Brunsvigia species also produce four to six strap-shaped leaves flat on the ground, like B. bosmaniae growing in roughly the same region and B. radulosa of the eastern part of the country.

Some brunsvigias, like B. bosmaniae also have leaves when there are no flowers as does C. flava. B. marginata leaves have red, cartilaginous margins that are slightly toothed and B. elandsmontana has reddish-pink leaf margins, slightly crisped. Others, like B. grandiflora of the Eastern Cape have wavy margins, but none of them have bristles seen here (Duncan, et al, 2016; Le Roux, et al, 2005; iNaturalist).

Hits
519
Photographer
Thabo Maphisa
Author
Ivan Latti
 
Back to Category Overview
Powered by JoomGallery