Aeonium cuneatum

Aeonium cuneatum

Aeonium cuneatum is a species of the genus Aeonium in the family Crassulaceae ( Crassulaceae ).

  • 3.1 Literature
  • 3.2 Notes and references

Description

Vegetative characteristics

Aeonium cuneatum grows as a perennial, single or sometimes budding rosette plant. Your strong shoots are bare and smooth. Their becherigen rosettes reach a diameter of 15 to 50 centimeters. Inner leaves are closely pressed normally against each other. The obovate to obovate - spateligen, almost bare leaves are 10 to 25 inches long, 5-8 inches wide and 0.5 to 0.9 inches thick. Towards the peak, they are tapered and carry a mounted Spitzchen. The base is wedge-shaped. The sometimes slightly wavy leaf margin is occupied with cone-shaped lashes that are up to 0.4 mm long.

Generative features

The inflorescence has a length of 18 to 60 centimeters and a width of 12 to 30 centimeters. The leafy inflorescence stalk is 12 to 30 inches long. The eight - to neunzähligen flowers are at a 1-6 mm long, slightly downy hairy flower stalk. Their sepals are slightly pubescent. The yellow, inverted lanceolate, pointed petals are 6.5 to 7.5 mm long and 1.3 to 1.6 millimeters wide. The stamens are bald.

Systematics and distribution

Aeonium cuneatum is common in Tenerife at an altitude 500-950 meters.

The first description by Philip Barker Webb and Sabin Berthelot was published in 1841. A synonym is nomenklatorisches Sempervivum cuneatum ( Webb & Berthel. ) Webb ex. Christ ( 1888).

Evidence

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