Huernia transvaalensis

    Botanical name

    Huernia transvaalensis

    Other names

     

    Family

    Apocynaceae; Subfamily: Asclepiadoideae

    Dimensions

    Low growing and spreading clumps of succulent stems, seldom taller than 10 cm

    Description of stem

    Pinkish-grey, fleshy and finger-like, with four or five toothed longitudinal ridges

    Description of leaves

     

    Description of flowers

    Very attractive flowers of about 5 cm in diameter; a distinctive shiny, deep maroon ridge (annulus) encircles the inner flower parts with dark mottling towards the inner edge; five creamy yellow triangular petal lobes on the outside of the ridge are spreading or erect, covered on the upper surface in attractive, irregular maroon markings arranged roughly circular; long dark hairs around the inner edge of the flower at the base of the ridge

    Description of seed/fruit

     

    Description of roots

     

    Variation

     

    Propagation and cultivation

     

    Tolerances

     

    Uses

     

    Ecological rarity

     

    Pests and diseases

     

    Other

    There are about cialis prix 64 species of Huernia worldwide, mostly native to Africa and the Arabian Peninsula; 38 of the species occur in southern Africa; H. transvaalensis resembles H. zebrina on which the purple petal lobe markings are more zebra stripe-like in arrangement; H zebrina also occurs more to the north in Limpopo and the east in Mpumalanga and KZN

    Location

    In grassland and open woodland and bushveld

    Distribution (SA provinces)

    Gauteng; North West

    Country

    South Africa