Wahlenbergia

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Wahlenbergia
Wahlenbergia stricta
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Plantae
(unranked): Angiosperms
(unranked): Eudicots
(unranked): Asterids
Order: Asterales
Family: Campanulaceae
Genus: Wahlenbergia
ex Roth
Species

See text.

Wahlenbergia capensis

Wahlenbergia is a genus of between 150-270 species of flowering plants in the family Campanulaceae, with a cosmopolitan distribution except for North America; the highest species diversity is in Africa and Australasia. Wahlenbergia species have dispersed widely, even to oceanic islands, and there are four species known from the island of Saint Helena, including the now extinct species W. roxburghii. The genus was named after Göran Wahlenberg (a Swedish botanist who taught at Uppsala University) by German botanist H. A. Schrader (Heinrich Schrader), in 1814.[1]

Selected species

Africa
  • Wahlenbergia androsacea (South Africa)
  • Wahlenbergia capensis (South Africa)
  • Wahlenbergia capillacea (South Africa)
  • Wahlenbergia lobelioides (Canary Islands, Madeira)
  • Wahlenbergia perrieri (endemic to Madagascar)
  • Wahlenbergia rivularis (South Africa)
  • Wahlenbergia undulata (South Africa; Giant Bellflower)
Asia
  • Wahlenbergia gracilis (also western Pacific Ocean islands)
  • Wahlenbergia hirsuta (Himalaya)
  • Wahlenbergia marginata (China, Himalaya)
  • Wahlenbergia peduncularis (Himalaya)
Australia
Europe
  • Wahlenbergia hederacea (Ivy-leaved Bellflower)
  • Wahlenbergia nutabunda
New Zealand
  • Wahlenbergia albomarginata
  • Wahlenbergia cartilaginea
  • Wahlenbergia congesta
  • Wahlenbergia matthewsii
  • Wahlenbergia tuberosa
South America
  • Wahlenbergia berteroi (Juan Fernandez Islands)
  • Wahlenbergia fernandeziana (Juan Fernandez Islands)
  • Wahlenbergia grahamiae (Juan Fernandez Islands)
  • Wahlenbergia larraini (Juan Fernandez Islands)
  • Wahlenbergia linarioides
  • Wahlenbergia peruviana
Saint Helena (South Atlantic Ocean)

References

  1. "Australian Floral Emblems - Wahlenbergia gloriosa". Reprinted from an issue of a newsletter of the Canberra Region of SGAP. Australian Plants Online. September 1982. Archived from the original on 23 December 2013. Retrieved 23 December 2013. 

External links


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