Difference between revisions of "Hermannia"

Linnaeus

Sp. Pl. 2: 673. 1753.

,

Gen. Pl. ed. 5, 304. 1754.

Common names: Burstworts
Etymology: For Paul Hermann, 1646 – 1695, German-born Dutch botanist and explorer
Treatment appears in FNA Volume 6. Treatment on page 207. Mentioned on page 202, 208.
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|subfamily=Malvaceae subfam. Byttnerioideae
 
|subfamily=Malvaceae subfam. Byttnerioideae
 
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|genus=Hermannia

Latest revision as of 22:20, 5 November 2020

Subshrubs, [shrubs], prostrate to erect; taprooted. Stems hairy, hairs usually stellate, sometimes intermixed with capitate-glandular and subsessile glandular hairs. Leaves petiolate; stipules deciduous, foliaceous, narrowly dimidiate-lanceolate or narrowly dimidiate-ovate, triangular, margins simple-bristled; blade usually unlobed, rarely lobed, margins dentate or staminodes 0; filaments ligulate, very compressed, adnate to petal base and gynophore or ovary base, distally free, incurved, not abruptly dilated, expanded region narrowly oblong from base to above anther base, apex acuminate or acute, glabrous; anthers 2-thecate, lanceolate, [1–]2–3.5[–10] mm, inflexed, connivent to style, longitudinally dehiscent; thecae with rim ciliate from simple hairs, apex acuminate, slightly twisted, gland at apex only (H. texana) or also at theca base (H. pauciflora); gynoecium syncarpous, 5-carpellate, stipitate, 5-angled, locules opposite sepals; ovary 5-locular; ovules 4–14 per locule, ascending or horizontal, anatropous or amphitropous; styles persistent, 5, shortly exserted, presumably connate at anthesis (connate, distinct, or partially distinct dried), filiform; stigmas inconspicuous, terete and 1-dentate (acute) or filiform and often few-minutely papillate at apex, rarely truncate, inconspicuous. Fruits capsules, 5-locular, in apical view 5-angled, 5-lobed, parted between angles, in lateral view emarginate at apex, margins curved, stipitate, valve margins dark-rimmed, dentate, teeth terminated by hairy tubercles not elsewhere on fruit (H. pauciflora) or hairy processes (H. texana), denser on valves, stellate-pubescent. Seeds 0–8 per locule, brown, crescentiform-reniform, chalazal end wider, other end acute, large-pitted; elaiosome conspicuous, white; endosperm present; embryo curved, chlorophyllous; cotyledons flat, narrowly elliptic or oblong-elliptic. x = 6.

Distribution

sw, sc United States, Mexico, Central America (Guatemala), w Asia (Saudi Arabia), Africa, Australia, subtropical and tropical areas.

Discussion

Species ca. 180 (2 in the flora area).

Hermannia is primarily southern African, with other species found scattered outside Africa, notably former Gilesia biniflora F. Mueller from Australia, distinguished by totally free filaments. Only four species are exclusively from the Americas, found in Mexico and across its national borders. One species extends north to Arizona, and one extends north to Texas. Two are found

outside the flora area: H. palmeri Rose from rocky granitic hillsides, sandy mesas, and coastal dunes of Baja California Sur and H. inflata Link & Otto from tropical dry deciduous forests in mountains of southern Mexico and northern Guatemala.

I. C. Verdoorn (1980) placed the only two fringed-capsuled species in southern Africa in subg. Hermannia, the basal subgenus, and she related them to the two American species that are fringed-capsuled: H. texana (Texas and Mexico) and H. palmeri (Baja California Sur). Both species from the flora area would lie also within subg. Hermannia in her key to taxa by possession of “narrowly oblong stamen filaments with the expanded portion of the filaments overlapping the anther bases.”

The coherence of styles and connivance of anthers at anthesis (M. Jenny 1985, 1988), nectaries (S. Vogel 2000), and ovule/seed number per carpel need further study in the field to investigate possible cryptic floral differentiation between plants of Hermannia that would indicate the initial stages of the well-developed floral and pollen distylous dimorphisms of Melochia and Waltheria.

Key

1 Styles 3.9–5.8 mm; leaf blades olive, with terminal trichome at each tooth apex never simple, rather stellate or stellate-bristled and slightly exserted from stellate trichomes of tooth sides; distal petal lamina densely capitate-glandular abaxially; capsules: endocarp corneous, rigid, valve margins fringed, processes filiform, flexible, 0.9–3.2 mm; trichome rays of terminal trichome of fringe process with trichome rays ascending, fine, and only slightly firmer or slightly longer than trichome rays of hairs below process apex; seeds: elaiosome narrowly transversely rhombic. Hermannia texana
1 Styles 1.7–3 mm; leaf blades red to red-rimmed, with terminal trichome at each tooth apex with 1 simple thin seta or seta 2-rayed exserted to 2 times length of stellate trichomes of tooth sides; distal petal lamina subglabrous abaxially; capsules: endocarp chartaceous, slightly sclerified, flexible, valve margins tuberculate, tubercles rigid, 0.2–1.8 mm; terminal trichome of tubercle apex with trichome rays usually planar (spreading); seeds: elaiosome narrowly transversely elliptic. Hermannia pauciflora
... more about "Hermannia"
Janice G. Saunders +
Linnaeus +
Burstworts +
sw +, sc United States +, Mexico +, Central America (Guatemala) +, w Asia (Saudi Arabia) +, Africa +, Australia +  and subtropical and tropical areas. +
For Paul Hermann, 1646 – 1695, German-born Dutch botanist and explorer +
Sp. Pl. +  and Gen. Pl. ed. +
1753 +  and 1754 +
rose1897a +
Hermannia +
Malvaceae subfam. Byttnerioideae +