Biology:Acrodon

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Short description: Genus of succulents

Acrodon
Acrodon bellidiflorus illustration.jpeg
Acrodon bellidiflorus, illustration from Plantarum historia succulentarum, 1802.
Scientific classification e
Kingdom: Plantae
Clade: Tracheophytes
Clade: Angiosperms
Clade: Eudicots
Order: Caryophyllales
Family: Aizoaceae
Subfamily: Ruschioideae
Tribe: Ruschieae
Genus: Acrodon
N.E.Br.[1]
Type species
Acrodon bellidiflorus
(L.) N.E.Br.

Acrodon is a genus of ice plants from South Africa . It comprises five species, mostly endangered and all restricted to the southern Cape regions of the Western Cape and Eastern Cape Provinces, South Africa .[2]

Description

Species of Acrodon form dense, low mats or tufts of growth, and their leaves are triangular in cross-section.

Another distinctive feature is that the leaves and flowers have a few tiny teeth along the ends of their margins and keels.

The white or pink flowers often have striped petals. The fruits are solid and persistent, with five deep locules.[3]

History

Initially, Acrodon consisted of just one species - Acrodon bellidiflorus. A closer examination of Ruschia in 1986, however, found that several species shared traits with Acrodon bellidiflorus, resulting in them being moved to the genus Acrodon. Specifically, species in Acrodon had a more compact growth for while those in Ruschia formed shrubs, and Acrodon species had evenly spaced petals while Ruschia species had petals in five bundles. [4]

A later examination of Acrodon, specifically of the fruits, however, found that Acrodon likely consists of at least two distinct genera - Acrodon and Brianhuntleya. The species of Acrodon species have funnel-shaped capsule base while those of Brianhuntleya have flat capsule bases. These two fruit types require different positionings and orientations on and of the stalk holding them.[5]

Species

The following species are recognised as of January 2023:[6]

  • Acrodon bellidiflorus (L.) N.E.Br. A common Renosterveld species that extends from Hermanus to Oudtshoorn.[7]
  • Acrodon caespitosus H.E.K.Hartmann (Synonyms: Acrodon duplessiae (Bolus) Glen)[8]
  • Acrodon deminutus Klak. A rarer species restricted to quartz-fields in the Eastern Rûens Shale Renosterveld and Potberg Ferricrete Fynbos vegetation types.[9]
  • Acrodon parvifolius R.du Plessis. An endangered species restricted to quartz and silcrete patches near to the coast, in the Botrivier area.[10]
  • Acrodon subulatus (Mill.) N.E.Br. An endangered species restricted to shale Renostervelds in the far western Overberg.[11] (Synonymns: Acrodon leptophyllus (Bolus) Glen)[12]

The following were previously included in Acrodon but have been moved to other genera:

  • Acrodon purpureostylus (L.Bolus) Burgoyne - now Brianhuntleya purpureostyla (L.Bolus) H.E.K.Hartmann[13]
  • Acrodon quarcicola H.E.K.Hartmann - now Brianhuntleya quarcicola (H.E.K.Hartmann) H.E.K.Hartmann[14]

Relatives

This species has historically been confused with Ruschia.[5] It is frequently confused with related genera that grow in the same region, such as Brianhuntleya or Cerochlamys.

References

Wikidata ☰ Q149232 entry