Aeonium haworthii

Aeonium haworthii

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

  • 3.1 Literature
  • 3.2 Notes and references

Description

Vegetative characteristics

Aeonium haworthii grows as a perennial, densely branched small shrub, reaching heights of growth of up to 60 centimeters. The almost bare, somewhat reticulate patterned, ascending or hanging, winding drives have a diameter of 3-6 mm. Your pretty flat rosettes reach a diameter of 6 to 11 centimeters. The inner sheets are more or less upright. The obovate, green or yellowish green, often very strong bluish tinged, almost leafless deciduous leaves are 3 to 5.5 inches long, 1.5 to 3 inches wide and 0.25 to 0.4 inches thick. Towards the peak, they are pointed and truant. The base is wedge-shaped. The leaf margin is busy with curved eyelashes, which are 0.4 to 0.8 millimeters long. The leaves are often reddish variegat along the edge.

Generative features

Of loose, semi-spherical inflorescence has a length of 6 to 16 centimeters and a width from 6 to 16 centimeters. The peduncle is 1-9 inches long. The seven-to neunzähligen flowers are on a 2 to 12 millimeters long, leafless flower stalk. Their sepals are bald. The pale yellow to whitish, variegaten pink, lance-shaped, pointed petals are 7-9 mm long and 1.2 to 1.8 millimeters wide. The stamens are almost bare to sparsely pubescent weak.

Systematics and distribution

Aeonium haworthii is common in the north of Tenerife, at altitudes up to 1000 meters.

The first description by Philip Barker Webb and Sabin Berthelot was published in 1840.

Evidence

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