Gasteria
Gasteria | |
---|---|
Gasteria pillansii | |
Scientific classification | |
Kingdom: | Plantae |
Clade: | Angiosperms |
Clade: | Monocots |
Order: | Asparagales |
Family: | Xanthorrhoeaceae |
Subfamily: | Asphodeloideae |
Genus: | Gasteria Duval |
Synonyms[1] | |
Ptyas Salisb. |
Gasteria is a genus of succulent plants, native to South Africa (and the far south-west corner of Namibia).[1]
Naming
The genus is named for its stomach-shaped flowers ("gaster" is Latin for "stomach"). Common names include ox-tongue, cow-tongue, lawyer's tongue and, occasionally, mother-in-law's tongue.[2]
Description
Gasterias are recognisable from their thick, hard, succulent "tongue-shaped" leaves. Their inflorescence is also unique, with their curved, stomach-shaped flowers, which hang from inclined racemes.
Distribution
The species of this genus are mostly native to the Eastern Cape Province, South Africa, where the bulk of the species occur - especially in the small area between Grahamstown and Uniondale which enjoys rainfall throughout the year. However distribution of several species extends widely across the low-altitude coastal regions of the country, in an arched horseshoe shape across South Africa. At the one end of the genus's distribution, a species Gasteria pillansii extends into the far south-west corner of Namibia. At the other end, a species reaches the Lebombo mountains of Swaziland.
Cultivation
Gasteria species are grown in well-drained, sandy soils in light shade. The species can all be propagated by off-sets and cuttings (leaf cuttings can usually be rooted easily). They are also commonly propagated by seed. Germination usually occurs within 8 days but may take as long as one month depending on the species.
Gasteria species are prone to Fusarium root rot, if they are over-watered. [3][4]
Several hybrids with species in other related genera have been created in cultivation, such as between Gasteria and Aloe (×Gasteraloe), and between Gasteria and Haworthia (×Gasterhaworthia).
Taxonomy
Gasteria is part of the family Xanthorrhoeaceae, subfamily Asphodeloideae. Closely related genera include Aloe and Haworthia, and the species of these genera are known to hybridise relatively easily with each other.[5]
Dividing Gasteria into species is extremely difficult, as each plant can be highly variable. One plant will look different depending on its location, its soil and its age. Young Gasteria plants typically look entirely different to older specimens. (Usually, young plants have flat, strap-shaped, highly tubercled leaves, in a distichous formation.) In addition, the species tend to flow into each other in gradual transitions, with many intermediate forms, rather than being cleanly divided into discrete and separate species. Lastly, hybrids occur easily and naturally, whenever the range of two species overlap in habitat.
There is therefore considerable disagreement on how many species exist, with as many as 100 names being listed. Current studies tend to agree that there are between 16 and 23 species.
Taxonomy according to flower morphology
Using morphology (especially flower structure), a traditional and widely accepted taxonomy was described in 1994 (van Jaarsveld et al.), dividing the genus into two sections, four series, and 23 species.
- Section Gasteria (2 series, 9 species)
- Series Gasteria (8 species):
- Gasteria baylissiana Rauh - Suurberg Range in Cape Province
- Gasteria bicolor (vars. bicolor, fallax, liliputana)(Aiton) Duval - Cape Province; naturalized in Mexico
- Gasteria brachyphylla (vars. brachyphylla, bayeri)(Salm-Dyck) van Jaarsv. - Little Karoo in Cape Province
- Gasteria disticha (vars. disticha, langebergensis, robusta)(L.) Haw. - Robertson Karoo and surrounds, Western Cape
- Gasteria dorineae van Jaarsv. & A.E.van Wyk - Cape Province
- Gasteria glomerata van Jaarsv. - Konga Dam in Cape Province
- Gasteria rawlinsonii Oberm. - Baviaanskloof in Cape Province
- Series Namaquana (1 species):
- Gasteria pillansii (vars. pillansii, ernesti-ruschii, hallii)Kensit - Namibia, Cape Province
- Series Gasteria (8 species):
- Section Longiflorae (2 series, 14 species)
- Series Longifoliae (4 species):
- Gasteria acinacifolia (J.Jacq.) Haw. - southern coast of Cape Province
- Gasteria batesiana (vars. batesiana, dolomitica)G.D.Rowley - Limpopo, Mpumalanga, KwaZulu-Natal
- Gasteria croucheri (subspp. croucheri, pendulifolia, pondoensis)(Hook.f.) Baker - KwaZulu-Natal
- Gasteria tukhelensis van Jaarsv. - KwaZulu-Natal
- Series Multifariae (10 species):
- Gasteria carinata (vars. carinata, glabra, verrucosa)(Mill.) Duval - Cape Province
- Gasteria ellaphieae van Jaarsv. - Konga Dam in Cape Province
- Gasteria excelsa Baker - Transkei, Eastern Cape
- Gasteria glauca van Jaarsv - Cape Province
- Gasteria armstrongii / Gasteria nitida (Salm-Dyck) Haw. - Cape Province
- Gasteria polita van Jaarsv. - Cape Province
- Gasteria pulchra (Aiton) Haw. - Cape Province
- Gasteria thunbergii van Jaarsv. - Cape Province
- Gasteria vlokii van Jaarsv. - Great Swartberg + Witteberg in Cape Province (a higher altitude species)
- Series Longifoliae (4 species):
Taxonomy according to genome
Recent phylogenetic studies[6] suggest that the genus may actually be sub-divided into:
- Gasteria rawlinsonii (possibly a relict species; genetically an outlier, with the smallest genome)
- 8 rare and restricted inland species (possibly also relict species, with relatively small genomes):
- 5 widespread, distichous species, mainly from the west of southern Africa:
- 5 widespread, rosette-forming species, mainly large coastal species:
- Gasteria carinata
- Gasteria acinacifolia
- Gasteria excelsa
- Gasteria croucheri (including Gasteria pendulifolia)
- Gasteria batesiana (most northerly species, with the largest genome)
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Gasteria. |
References
- 1 2 Kew World Checklist of Selected Plant Families
- ↑ Bailey, L.H.; Bailey, E.Z.; the staff of the Liberty Hyde Bailey Hortorium. 1976. Hortus third: A concise dictionary of plants cultivated in the United States and Canada. Macmillan, New York.
- ↑ Propagation of Gasterias - article
- ↑ Gasteria
- ↑ Stevens, P.F., Angiosperm Phylogeny Website: Asparagales: Asphodeloideae
- ↑ B. J. M. Zonneveld, E. J. van Jaarsveld: Taxonomic implications of genome size for all species of the genus Gasteria Duval (Aloaceae). 24 Feb 2005