Gasteria batesiana
Gasteria batesiana | |
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Gasteria batesiana in cultivation | |
Scientific classification | |
Kingdom: | Plantae |
Clade: | Angiosperms |
Clade: | Monocots |
Order: | Asparagales |
Family: | Xanthorrhoeaceae |
Subfamily: | Asphodeloideae |
Genus: | Gasteria |
Species: | G. batesiana |
Binomial name | |
Gasteria batesiana Rowley | |
Gasteria batesiana ("Knoppies gasteria") is a species of succulent plant, native to the inland escarpment in the far north-east of South Africa.[1]
Description
This relatively small, variable species of Gasteria has extremely rough, pointed leaves, that eventually form a rosette (though leaves in seedlings are distichous as with all Gasterias). The mottled leaves usually have a strong keel, meaning that they are triangular in cross-section. They also have many tiny white spots, which occur in bands, giving a faint row of stripes on the leaves surfaces.
It is closely related to the "Natal Gasteria" (Gasteria croucheri), which occurs just to the south in KwaZulu-Natal. The extremely distinctive variety of Gasteria batesiana which seems to be transitional between these two species, is now considered as a separate (though transitional) species in its own right, Gasteria tukhelensis.
Distribution
It is the most northerly of all Gasteria species, occurring from northern KwaZulu-Natal province, northwards through Swaziland and Mpumalanga, as far north as the Olifants River in Limpopo Province. Here it occurs in rocky terrain in bushveld vegetation.
Varieties
It is an extremely variable species. Plants from the Barberton area are almost black in colour, while plants from the Mzimduzi river have almost smooth leaves, and those from Sifula in the south have extremely fine tubercles. The two recognised varieties are:
- G. batesiana var. batesiana: the common type variety, and the most widespread one.
- G. batesiana var. dolomitica: the northernmost variety of this species (and of the whole genus), occurring on sheer dolomite cliffs in Mpumalanga. It has long, slender, elongated leaves (100x15mm) and forms dense clumps.
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