Felicia josephinae
Felicia josephinae is a species of flowering plant in the family Asteraceae. It is a roughly hairy annual herbaceous plant of high. It branches near its base, and has few leaves along its stems. The lower leaves are set oppositely, inverted lance-shaped, relatively large at long and wide, and soon withering, while the higher ones are smaller and relatively narrower. In the axils of the leaves grow flower heads of 7–8 mm wide on stalks of up to long, topped with an involucre of about high and wide, consisting of eleven to thirteen bracts in two rows with bristles near the tip, eight to nine white or cream-coloured ligulate florets surrounding fourteen or fifteen deep purple disc florets. Flowers can be found in September and October. The species is an endemic species that can only be found in a small area along the west coast of the Western Cape province of South Africa.
Description
Felicia josephinae is an annual herbaceous plant of high that branches regularly from near its base upward. The stems and leaves are prickly due to short and long hairs that each consist of several cells, mixed with glands on short stalks in the upper parts of the stems. The lower leaves are set oppositely, are inverted lance-shaped, relatively large at long and wide, have few prickly hairs and soon wither. The higher leaves are narrower, lance- to line-shaped, mostly alternately set, and prickly due to long and short hairs.The flower heads are set individually at the end of flower stalks of up to long, that stand in the axils of the leaves and carry few, scattered and very small awl-shaped bracts. The heads contain both female ray and bisexual and male disc florets. At the base of the head, surrounding and protecting the florets before opening, are two whorls of sepal-like bracts or scales that together make up the involucre, which is narrowly egg-shaped, about high and wide, consisting of eleven to thirteen bracts in two rows with bristles near the tip. The phyllaries are long, with papery margins and a row of hairs near the tip. The outer whorl of phyllaries are line-shaped, about wide with narrow papery margins, while the inner phyllaries are inverted lance-shaped, about 1.5 mm wide, having broad margins. The communal base on which the individual florets are implanted is flat, deeply pitted, and lacks receptacular bracts at the foot of the florets. The eight or nine white or cream-coloured ray florets surrounding the disc are female only, have a cylindrical tube of 2.5–3 mm long with some glandular hairs, at the top changing into a spreading, elliptic or inverted lance-shaped blade of long and wide with four veins running along its length.
At the base of each ray floret is a narrowly elliptic ovary with hairs pressed to its surface. From it rises a style that is circular in cross-section, ending in two pointy, line-shaped branches of about long, its outer margins functioning as stigma. There is no pappus. The one-seeded, indehiscent, dry fruit is flattened oval in shape, 2.5–3 mm long and about 1.5 mm in diameter, with thickened margins, its surfaces and margins being covered with pale brown hairs pressed against its surface. The fourteen or fifteen deep purple disc florets are bisexual, but those in the center of the head do not develop seed. The tube has glandular hairs, is cylinder-shaped, 2.5–3 mm long, widening a bit towards the upper end, where it splits into five back-curving triangular lobes of about 1 mm long and ¾ mm wide at its base, with thickened margins. Like in all Asteraceae, the five anthers have merged into a hollow tube through which the style grows with the floret opens, while gathering the pollen on its shaft. The anthers produce cream-coloured pollen, are themselves deep blue, about 2 mm long, including the oval, slightly keeled appendage at the top, while the base is blunt without an appendage. The ovary under the tube florets are narrowly elliptic, also with hairs pressed against its surface. It is topped by a purple style that is circular in cross-section, ending in two pointy, recurved, flattened, line-shaped branches of about long, its outer margins functioning as stigma. In the central florets the style ends in triangular grainy branches. The pappus on each of the cypselas of the tube florets consists of one row of about 25 spreading, short, stiff, hooked bristles of long but feathery near middle, and merged at their base, forming a short, white collar. The cypselas are identical to those of the ray florets.