Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective

Hedbergia decurva

Species of flowering plants in the broomrape family Orobanchaceae From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Hedbergia decurva
Remove ads

Hedbergia decurva, formerly Bartsia decurva, is a hemiparasitic species of flowering plants in the family Orobanchaceae.[2][1]

Quick Facts Scientific classification, Binomial name ...
Remove ads

Description

Summarize
Perspective

Hedbergia decurva is a shrub covered in sticky glandular hairs and few non-glandular hairs. It reaches 50–200 cm (20–79 in) in height, having thin, woody, upright, sparsely branching stems. The mostly upright, narrowly ovate seated leaves of 8–36 mm (0.31–1.42 in) long, have rounded teeth along the margins that are mostly rolled downwards, and are set in opposite pairs. The shortly stalked flowers are set in a raceme towards the tip of the stems in the axils of leaflike bracts. The sepals are merged into a calyx with 4 lobes with deeper incisions on the midline and shallower incisions left and right. The yellow to yellowish brown petals are merged into a stongly mirror-symmetric corolla, with a long, in the upper part distinctly curved tube, topped by a helmet-shaped upper lip that encloses the anthers and a spreading, three-lobed lower lip that has two bulges in front of the throat of the tube. The filaments of the 4 stamens have largely merged with the upper lip of the corolla and are topped by shaggy anthers that each have 2 district spines at their lower end. The style is on top of a shaggy ovary and tipped by a club-shaped stigma. The narrowly elliptical seeds are 0.6–1.9 mm (0.024–0.075 in) long, with several ribs along their length. The species probably has 14 pairs of homologous chromosomes (2n=28).[3]

Hedbergia decurva can be distinguished in having a curved upper corolla tube and spines on the lower end of the anthers, whereas Hedbergia longiflora has a straight corolla tube and acute but not spined anthers.[3]

Remove ads

Distribution

Hedbergia decurva occurs in the high mountains of Ethiopia, eastern Uganda, Kenya and Tanzania, above approximately 2,500 m (1.6 mi) where it grows in ericaceous and alpine vegetations.[3]

Phylogeny

Summarize
Perspective

The phylogeny of the genera of Rhinantheae has been explored using molecular characters.[1][4][5][6][7] Hedbergia decurva groups with Hedbergia longiflora and Hedbergia abyssinica into a Hedbergia clade nested within the core Rhinantheae. These three taxa share evolutionary affinities with genera Tozzia, Bellardia, Neobartsia, Parentucellia, and Odontites.

Genus-level cladogram of tribe Rhinantheae.
  Rhinantheae  
         

  Melampyrum  

         

  Rhynchocorys  

         

  Lathraea

  Rhinanthus

  Core Rhinantheae  
         

  Bartsia sensu stricto (Bartsia alpina)

         

  Euphrasia

         

  Hedbergia
  (including Bartsia decurva + B. longiflora)

  Tozzia

  Odontites sensu lato
  (including Bartsiella
  and Bornmuellerantha)

         

  Bellardia

         

  Neobartsia
(New World Bartsia)

  Parentucellia

The cladogram has been reconstructed from nuclear DNA (ribosomal ITS) and plastid DNA (rps16 intron, trnK, and other regions) molecular characters.[5][7][1][4][6]

References

Loading related searches...

Wikiwand - on

Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.

Remove ads