Kalanchoe × verdoorniae [K. luciae × K. winteri] (Crassulaceae subfam. Kalanchooideae), a new, large-growing nothospecies from South Africa
Author
Smith, Gideon F.
text
Phytotaxa
2022
2022-10-11
568
1
72
82
http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/phytotaxa.568.1.5
journal article
162340
10.11646/phytotaxa.568.1.5
173f70c6-3bbe-496e-a909-eabaaf6fe797
1179-3163
7184296
Kalanchoe
×
verdoorniae
Gideon F.Sm.
nothospec. nov.
(
Fig. 2A–D
).
Type
:—
SOUTH AFRICA
.
Gauteng province
—2528 (Pretoria):
Tshwane
, (–
CA
), ex hort.,
04 May 2022
,
G
.
F
.
Smith
1182
(
holotype
PRU
)
.
Parentage
:—
K. luciae
Hamet (1908: 256)
×
K. winteri
Gideon F.Sm., N.R.Crouch & Mich.Walters
in
Crouch
et al
. (2016: 219)
.
Diagnosis
:—Plants of
Kalanchoe ×verdoorniae
are large to robust, completely white-waxy, bi- to triennial to perennial leaf succulents that are intermediate between its parents,
K. lucia
and
K. winteri
. As the waxy layer becomes thinner on older leaves, a light green leaf colour is revealed, as is found in its parents,
K. luciae
and
K. winteri
. The pseudo-rosulate, distinctly decussate leaf arrangement of
K
. ×
verdoorniae
was also inherited from both parents.
Kalanchoe ×verdoorniae
differs from
K. luciae
by its leaves generally being slightly smaller and basally conspicuously auriculate, as in
K. winteri
.
Kalanchoe ×verdoorniae
further differs from its other parent,
K. winteri
, by its leaves being consistently obovate(paddle-shaped) rather than sometimes round. The inflorescences of
K
. ×
verdoorniae
are denseflowered,as found in both parents. The corolla tubes of
K
. ×
verdoorniae
, as well as those of
K. luciae
and
K. winteri
are cigar-shaped and densely white-waxy-covered. However, with the white-flowered form of
K. luciae
having been used as one parent when producing
K
. ×
verdoorniae
, the adaxial surface of the corolla lobes of the nothospecies is light yellow, with that of
K. winteri
being more intensely yellow.
FIGURE 3.
Dr h.c. Inez Clare Verdoorn (1896–1989), for whom
K
. ×
verdoorniae
is named. Photograph © and reproduced with the permission of the South African National Biodiversity Institute.
Description
:—Bi- to triennial to perennial, few- to many-leaved, unbranched, post-flowering slowly sprouting from base, completely white-waxy, large, robust succulent,
1.75–2.50 m
tall when in flower.
Stems
light greenish white, unbranched or with few branches arising from sturdy base, erect to leaning, sterile and fertile shoots round in crosssection.
Leaves
opposite-decussate, light green, densely white-wax-covered at first, succulent, spreading to erectly spreading, not longitudinally recurved, coriaceous and papery-flimsy when dry;
petiole
absent, leaves clasping stem;
blade
200–250 ×
120–140 mm
, lacking red infusion, obovate, flat;
base
cuneate, distinctly auriculate;
apex
roundedobtuse;
margins
sometimes with very faint red infusion, smooth, flat.
Inflorescence
an erect to leaning, dense-, manyflowered, club-shaped thyrse consisting of several dichasia terminating in monochasia, flowering portion
350–500 mm
long, branches opposite, very short, subtended by leaf-like bracts, sometimes with leafy branchlets in axils, axis light greenish white, white-waxy-covered;
pedicels
6–8 mm
long, slender.
Flowers
horizontally-spreading at anthesis;
calyx
consisting of 4 sepals, light green, densely white-wax-covered;
sepals
4.0–5.0 × 2.0–
2.5 mm
, triangular-lanceolate, succulent, basally fused for ±
1 mm
, acute-tipped, hardly contrasting against light green corolla tube;
corolla
11–14 mm
long, tapering to base and mouth, not twisted apically after anthesis;
tube
10–13 mm
long, light greenish yellow, white-wax-covered, cigar-shaped, indistinctly to distinctly 4-angled, round when viewed from below, longitudinally indistinctly fluted in bud;
lobes
5–7 × 3.0–
3.5 mm
, uniformly pale yellow, elongated-triangular, ± straight lower down, tapering towards apex, margins often distinctly in-folded, horizontally spreading at first, later strongly recurved, yellowtipped in bud, blunt-tipped.
Stamens
8, inserted in two indistinct ranks, both ranks high up in corolla tube;
filaments
3.5–5.0 mm long, whitish yellow, thin, tapering upwards;
anthers
0.75–1.00 mm long, reddish orange in bud before anthesis, yellow at anthesis, all 8 distinctly exserted.
Pistil
consisting of 4 carpels, stipitate;
carpels
5–6 mm
long, light green;
styles
3.5–4.0 mm long, light green;
stigmas
minutely capitate, yellowish green;
scales
2.0–2.5 × 2.00–
2.25 mm
, ± square, slightly tapering towards base, minutely but distinctly repand apically, light yellow in distal ⅔, light green in proximal ⅓.
Fruit
not recorded.
Seed
not recorded.
Chromosome number
: unknown.
Flowering time
:—
Kalanchoe ×verdoorniae
flowers mainly in the autumn and winter months, (March–)April to July in the southern hemisphere.
Eponymy
:—
Kalanchoe
×
verdoorniae
is named for Dr h.c. Inez Clare Verdoorn (born
15 June 1896
, Pretoria,
Gauteng
,
South Africa
–died
02 April 1989
, Pretoria,
Gauteng
,
South Africa
) (
Gunn & Codd 1981: 361
,
Fourie 1989
) (
Fig. 3
). In 1919, at the age of 23, she was appointed to Herb. PRE, the National Herbarium of
South Africa
, and carried on working at the Herbarium until 1980, i.e., for 29 years after she retired in 1951. In 1979 she published her final plant name, so crowning a species-description career of 60 years. She started at Herb. PRE as an herbarium assistant mounting specimens but, even without formal botanical qualifications, rose to the professional officer ranks in the civil service and in 1944, until her retirement, served as Curator of the National Herbarium. She published several hundred papers, including a pioneering Afrikaans botanical text book (
Verdoorn 1942
). Inez was widely respected and the undisputed doyenne of South African botany during the 20
th
century; in 1967 an honorary doctorate was conferred on her by the University of Natal, now the University of
KwaZulu-Natal
(
Germishuizen 1976: 45
,
Figueiredo & Smith 2021: 282
, 287–288, 292, 306). In 1946 she described
Kalanchoe crundallii
Verdoorn (1946
: t. 967) from the Soutpansberg,
Limpopo province
,
South Africa
(
Hahn 2002
,
2017
,
Smith & Hahn 2019
).