the Arabian Peninsula and Socotra including new species, biological notes, and a new infrageneric classification
Author
Manning, John C.
Author
Goldblatt, Peter
text
Adansonia
2001
3
23
1
59
108
journal article
http://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5180119
1639-4798
5180119
46.
Romulea fibrosa
M.P. de Vos
J. S. African Bot., Suppl. 9: 183 (1972)
; Fl. S.
Africa 7(2), fasc. 2: 41 (1983). —
Type
:
Fourcade
2831,
South Africa
,
Western Cape
,
Uniondale
,
Bloubosberg
(lecto-,
BOL
!, designated by
M
.
P
.
DE VOS, 1972
; isolecto-,
K
!)
.
Plants to
35 cm
high, stem reaching
8-32 cm
above ground; corm with a crescent-shaped basal ridge of fibril clusters, often with fibrous neck and remains of tunics. Leaves 2-6, lowest 2 basal, narrowly 4-grooved, sometimes minutely ciliate,
0.5-1 mm
diam.; outer bracts submembranous or greenish in the centre with membranous, usually rusty red margins, inner bracts with wide colorless or rusty red membranous margins. Flowers magenta to pink with diffuse purple markings around a yellow cup, tepals oblanceolate,
16-25 mm
long; filaments
5-8 mm
long, anthers
4-6 mm
long. Fruiting peduncles suberect. Flowering: Oct.-Dec.
Romulea fibrosa
occurs at relatively high elevations in sandstone-derived soils, extending from the Langeberg and Swartberg Mountains in
Western Cape Province
eastward to the Great Winterhoek Mountains of
Eastern Cape Province
. It is distinguished in section
Aggregatae
by the fibrous neck around the base of the stem, two basal leaves and pink or magenta flowers.