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Old 17-10-2005, 05:51 PM
Malcolm Manners
 
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Default Another African root parasite

mel turner wrote:
"Malcolm Manners" wrote in message
news:SoE4f.7171$l_2.403@trnddc02...


Thanks again, Mel Turner, for identifying my Thonningia sanguinea.



Here's another puzzler -- found in the Springbok area of Namaqualand,
South Africa. I'm thinking perhaps Cytinus sanguineus, in Cytinaceae, but
can find only photos of pistillate flowers, and these are staminate.
Descriptions do say the "staminal column sticks out of the flower." But
I'm guessing here.

Anyone know for sure? thanks.



I don't know for sure, but I get an impression of a "scroph"-like
tubular corolla in your photograph.

Perhaps it's Hyobanche sanguinea? [botanists seem fond of naming
red-flowered S. African parasites "sanguinea" and "sanguineus"]

This looks pretty similar to yours:
http://www.parasiticplants.siu.edu/S...che_sang1.JPEG

partly excavated:
http://www.parasiticplants.siu.edu/S...che_sang2.JPEG

cheers


Thanks again Mel. You beat me to it -- I was just about to reply to
myself here, that I found a Hyobanche (in South frican Wild Flower Guide
I: Namaqualand) that looks a lot like it. And here was your post.
Malcolm