- Stylidium calcaratum
Taxobox
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regnum =Plant ae
divisio = Magnoliophyta
classis = Magnoliopsida
ordo =Asterales
familia =Stylidiaceae
genus = "Stylidium "
subgenus = "Centridium"
species = "S. calcaratum"
binomial = "Stylidium calcaratum"
binomial_authority = R.Br. 1810
synonyms = "Candollea calcarata" (R.Br.)F.Muell. "S. androsaceum"Lindl. 1839 "S. lindleyanum"Sond. 1845"Stylidium calcaratum", the book triggerplant, is a
dicotyledon ousplant that belongs to thegenus "Stylidium " (familyStylidiaceae ). It is an ephemeral annual that grows from 5 to 10 cm tall but can grow larger at 20-30 cm tall in damp forest or scrub habitat. The few ovate leaves produced by this plant form basal rosettes around the stem. The leaves are around 3-5 mm long on short petioles. The scapes are 2-30 cm tall and produce single flowers in smaller plants and up to nine flowers in larger, more robust plants. Flowers are pink or white with red spots or lines at the individual petal bases. The petals are vertically paired and will fold over to meet each other at night or in adverse weather conditions. "S. calcaratum" is endemic toAustralia and has a distribution that ranges from Victoria throughSouth Australia and intoWestern Australia . Its habitat is recorded as being wet flats or near creeks and seepages. Pollination is achieved by a grey fly, "Comptosia cuneata ".Darnowski, D.W. (2002). "Triggerplants". Australia: Rosenberg Publishing.] Mildbraed, J. (1908). Stylidiaceae. In: Engler, A. "Das Pflanzenreich: Regni vegetabilis conspectus". IV. 278. Leipzig.] Erickson, Rica. (1958). "Triggerplants". Perth: Paterson Brokensha Pty. Ltd.]Taxonomy
This species was first described by Robert Brown in his 1810 "
Prodromus Florae Novae Hollandiae et Insulae Van Diemen ". The same species was described as "Stylidium androsaceum " inJohn Lindley 's 1839 "A Sketch of the Vegetation of the Swan River Colony " and again as "Stylidium lindleyanum" in 1845 byOtto Wilhelm Sonder , both of which were later reduced to synonymy with this current and older name.One variety of this species was described by
Rica Erickson andJim Willis in 1956. "Stylidium calcaratum" var. "ecorne" was described as a variety on the basis of the absence of a nectary spur and the fact that they produced pure colonies. The variety was later elevated to the species level as "S. ecorne" by P.G. Farrell and Sydney Herbert James in 1979.See also
References
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