Kleinia fulgens explained

Kleinia fulgens is a species of flowering plant in the genus Kleinia and the family Asteraceae native to Southern Africa, which used to be of the genus Senecio.[1] It is native to the countries Angola, Mozambique, Swaziland, Zambia, and Zimbabwe, as well as to KwaZulu-Natal and the Northern Provinces in South Africa.[2]

Description

It is a perennial herbaceous plant with a rather soft stem and succulent leaves, extensive, up to 60 cm long, without long hair. Leaves narrow down to the base of the wings, oval with prominent triangular pointed teeth, total length up to 15 cm x 5 cm wide.

There are few flowerheads which resemble a thistle; involucral bracts few, very unequal in width, membranous with border, up to 2 cm long; disk 2.5 cm in diameter; without rays, corolla crimson, scarlet or cherry in colour. The flowers appear from late autumn to winter.[3]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Species Information: Kleinia fulgens Hook.f. . 2008-05-22 . Swaziland's Flora Database . Compton's Flora of Swaziland . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20110614062844/http://www.sntc.org.sz/flora/speciesinfo.asp?spid=3362 . 2011-06-14 .
  2. Web site: Kleinia fulgens . 2024-07-07 . Plants of the World Online . Kew Science . en.
  3. https://www.llifle.com/Encyclopedia/SUCCULENTS/Family/Asteraceae/30411/Senecio_fulgens Senecio fulgens (Hook.f.) G.Nicholson