Corymbium
Corymbium is a genus of flowering plants in the daisy family comprising nine species. It is the only genus in the subfamily Corymbioideae and the tribe Corymbieae. The species have leaves with parallel veins, strongly reminiscent of monocots, in a rosette and compounded inflorescences may be compact or loosely composed racemes, panicles or corymbs. Remarkable for species in the daisy family, each flower head contains just one, bisexual, mauve, pink or white disc floret within a sheath consisting of just two large involucral bracts. The species are all endemic to the Cape Floristic Region of South Africa, where they are known as plampers.
Description
The species of Corymbium are monoecious, stemless, perennial, herbaceous plants of high, that grow in tufts and look like a monocotyledon as long as they are not flowering. The plants have a fibrous rhizome that is covered the persisting bases of old leaves and long, soft, silky hairs. Most parts of the plants may be covered in long soft hairs, or coarse hairs or lack indumentum. All leaves are in a basal and lack a discernable stalk. If the leaves are covered with glandular hairs, they are sticky. The leaf blades may be circular in cross-section, flat or the margins may be curved upward, have a line-shaped to broadly elliptic or lance-shaped outline, with a pointy tip or tapering, the base much narrowed, like a leaf stalk. The leaf margins are entire. The leaves may have prominent or more or less obscured parallel veins, and the leaf surfaces may be hairless, or carry long soft or coarse hairs. The texture of the leaves may be cartilaginous, leathery or herbaceous. The flowers are at the end of one or several branching inflorescence stalks, that carry several bracts much smaller than the leaves, at least substending each of the branches. These inflorescence stalks may be roughly hairy to hairless, and round or angular in cross-section. The compounded inflorescences may be compact or loosely composed racemes, panicles or corymbs. Each head is on a very short or long pedicel, except in C. cymosum, where it is absent.Remarkably, each flower head contains just one, bisexual, mauve, pink or white disc floret. The florets are enveloped by two whorls of involucral bracts. The outer whorl consists of two or three short bracts at the base. The inner whorl consist of only two, much larger, hairless or coarsely hairy bracts that usually are green in colour with purple tips or entirely tinged purple. The inner bracts form a sheath around the tube of the floret. The outer of these two bracts clasps the inner one, is keeled, split in two or three at the very tip, has three parallel veins along its length. The florets have a 5-merous star-symmetrical trumpet-shaped corolla consisting of a short tube near the base and five longer, spreading, oblong to line-shaped lobes at the top, and all contain both male and female parts. In the center of the corolla are five stamens with free filaments and line-shaped anthers fused into a tube, through which the style grows when the floret opens. The anthers have a shortly arrow-shaped base and no appendages at the top. The style sticks beyond the corolla, is round in cross-section, and splits in two style branches, which are coarsely hairy on outer surface. The dry, indehiscent, one-seeded fruits called cypselae, are line-shaped to elliptic, flattened in cross-section, and covered in long soft or coarse hairs. On the top of the cypselae is a whorl of crown-like or free pappus bristles.
C. congestum has eight homologous sets of chromosomes.
Species
The taxa within the genus Corymbium mainly differ in the width, indumentum, prominence of the veins of the leaves, the hairiness of the conflorescence stalk, the stalk of the individual flower head, the hairiness of the involucral bracts, the shape of the tip of these bracts, and the colour of the florets. The species, subspecies and varieties that are currently recognised, and their distinguishing features are summarized in the following table. Features of subtaxa identical to the typical subtaxon are not repeated.Taxon | leaf shape, width | leaf indument, consistency, veins, margin | conflorescence type | conflorescence stalk indument | pedicel length | inner involucral bracts indument, tip | floret colour |
C. a. africanum | linear to falcate, ≤5 mm | glabrous, coriaceous to cartilaginous, veins not prominent, flat or involute | panicle | scabrid | –1 mm | scabrid/viscid, fimbrate | mauve |
C. a. scabridum scabridum | linear to falcate, ≥1 mm | glabrous, involute, sometimes flat | corymb | mauve, pink or white with mauve style | |||
C. a. scabridum fourcadei | linear, ≥5 mm | glabrous, flat, thickened margins | |||||
C. a. scabridum gramineum | round in cross-section, ≤1 mm | glabrous | |||||
C. congestum | broadly ellipse to lance-shaped, 8–44 mm | scabrid/viscid on both surfaces, herbaceous | clustered panicle | hispid | 1–2 mm | scabrid/viscid, trifid | mauve |
C. cymosum | linear to falcate, 2–8 mm | glabrous, cartilaginous, finely impressed veins, flat to slightly involute | clustered corymb | glabrous or slightly muricate | absent | glabrous | white |
C. elsiae | narrowly linear to falcate, 1–2 mm | glabrous, coriaceous, no prominent veins, sometimes canaliculate | panicle | scabrid, glandularly muricate | present | scabrid, glandularly muricate, trifid or fimbriate | mauve |
C. enerve | linear to falcate, 3–18 mm | slightly muricate, coriaceous, finely impressed veins, flat, thickened margins | clustered corymb | scabrid | present | glabrous | white or pink |
C. glabrum glabrum | linear, sometimes falcate, ≥2 mm | glabrous, rigid, prominent veins | clustered corymb or panicle | glabrous | –1 mm | glabrous, fimbrate | mauve |
C. glabrum rodgersii | filiform, ≤2 mm | clustered corymb | |||||
C. laxum laxum | narrowly linear to sub-falcate, 1–3 mm | silky hairy, coriaceous, no prominent veins, involute, sometimes canaliculate | lax panicle of individual heads, dichotomous branching more than halfway down | glabrous | present | glabrous, fimbrate | mauve |
C. laxum bolusii | narrowly linear to sub-falcate, ±1.6 mm | lax panicle of individual heads, dichotomous branching less than halfway down | |||||
C. theileri | linear to falcate, 3–8 mm | glabrous, cartilaginous, prominent veins, thickened margin | panicle of corymbose clusters | scabrid, villous at base | ±1 mm | scabrid/viscid, trifid | mauve |
C. villosum | linear to sub-falcate, 2–9 mm | villous/viscid on both surfaces, herbaceous | clustered corymb | villous/viscid | 1–2 mm | scabrid/viscid, irregularly trifid | white |
Taxonomy
In 1680, Polish merchant, artist and naturalist Jacobus Breynius was the first to mention a species of plampers, describing it as Bupleuro affinis planta umbellifera folius liratis, longissimis . In 1696, the early English botanist Leonard Plukenet illustrated both C. glabrum and C. africanum in his book Almagestum Botanicum. Plukenet described africanum as having cauliculo scabro . The name Corymbium was first proposed by Jan Frederik Gronovius in 1737. In the Hortus Cliffortianus published in 1737, Carl Linnaeus distinguished the typical Corymbium and a variety α. All of these names are invalid since they were publish before 1753, the start of the modern scientific naming.In his Species Plantarum, Linnaeus recognised only Corymbium africanum. French botanist of Scottish descent, Michel Adanson described the genus Cantarena in 1763. In September 1767, Peter Jonas Bergius described C. scabridum based on Linnaeus' description in the Species Plantarum. In October 1767, Linnaeus distinguished two species, C. glabrum and C. scabrum, abandoning the name C. africanum. Thomas Archibald Sprague in 1940 concluded that C. africanum belongs to the same species and is an older name than C. scabridum. Nicolaas Laurens Burman in 1768 mentioned two species, C. gramineum and C. africanum. Carl Linnaeus the Younger distinguished two additional species, C. villosum and C. filiforme in 1781. Two more species, C. hirtum and C. nervosum, have been described by Carl Thunberg in 1794, who also recognised C. glabrum separately. In 1836, Augustin Pyramus de Candolle described for the first time C. congestum, C. cymosum and C. luteum. Danish botanist Christian Friedrich Ecklon mentions but does not describe the name C. hirsutum in 1836 in De Candolle's publication. The Irish botanist William Henry Harvey distinguished in 1865 seven species and three varieties, among which the newly introduced names C. latifolium, C. nervosum var. subulifolium, C. scabrum var. filiforme and var. luteum. John Hutchinson added C. fourcadei in 1932, and Robert Harold Compton described C. laxum in 1936. Markötter in 1939, recognized 12 species and two varieties, three of which were new and are upheld today: C. enerve, C. theileri and C. rogersii. Frans M. Weitz, in his 1989 Revision of the genus Corymbium , recognizes nine species, two subspecies and six varieties, including the new taxa C. elsiae and C. laxum subsp. bolusii.
The name Corymbium has been derived from the Ancient Greek κόρυμβος, meaning a cluster, which refers to the confloresence, which in some of the species looks like a corymb. The common name in Afrikaans, heuningbossie, is a reference to the copious production of nectar of the flowers.