Mimetes splendidus
Mimetes splendidus or splendid pagoda is an evergreen, rather sparsely branching, upright shrub of up to 2.5 m high from the family Proteaceae. It has broadly lance-shaped to oval, silvery-hairy leaves with three or four teeth crowded at the tip. It has cylinder-shaped inflorescences that consists of many heads, each containing eleven to thirteen flowers, in the axils of the highest leaves. These leaves form a hood over a lower flowerhead and are flushed orangy pink. It flowers during winter, from early May to September. It is an endemic species that is restricted to the south face of the coastal mountains of the Western Cape province of South Africa.
Description
Mimetes splendidus is an evergreen, rather sparsely branching, upright shrub of up to 2.5 m high, which develops from a single trunk of up to 6 cm thick that is covered by a thin, grey bark with a smooth surface except for the horizontal striping. In older specimens, the lower stems have lost their leaves. Young branches are stiffly upright, seldom branching, silky hairy and 6–10 mm thick, later tilting over. The leaves are set alternately along the branches, at an upward angle and overlapping. They lack both stipules and leaf stalks, are broadly lance-shaped or elliptic, 4–5.5 cm long and 1.8–2.5 cm wide, are silvery in colour due to a dense covering of silky hairs, with more or less pointy tips, often with three or four reddish or amber-coloured, thickened teeth closely cropped.The inflorescence is broadly cylinder-shaped, 8–12 cm long and 6–8 cm in diameter, topped by smallish, more or less flattened, silvery-pink leaves. In the axils of the leaves just below the crest are flower heads each containing ten to fourteen flowers, the subtending leaves with ears at its base, forming a hood over the underlying flower head, that is flushed in a brilliant orangy pink when flowering. The bracts that encircle the flower heads are broadly oval to inverted egg-shaped or tending to rectangular with a blunt tip, a hairless or powdery hairy surface and a fringe of hairs along its margin, papery when dry, warm yellow or amber-coloured when fresh, the margins curving inwards and enveloping the base of the flowers, 1.3–1.8 cm long and 0.7–1 cm wide, the inner whorl lance-shaped to narrowly lance-shaped, with a sharply pointy tip, 1.5–4 cm long and ¾–1 cm wide.
The bract subtending the individual flower is line-shaped, 12–16 mm long, about 2 mm wide, and densely silky hairy. The 4-merous perianth is 3–3.5 cm long. The lower part, that remains merged when the flower is open, is slightly inflated, hairless, and about 3–4 mm long. The segments in the middle part, are thread-shaped and silky hairy. The segments in the upper part, which enclosed the pollen presenter in the bud, are boat-shaped, line-shaped with a pointy tip in outline, 8–10 mm long, covered in dense silky hairs, and a tuft of stiff hairs at its tip. From the centre of the perianth emerges the style of 4.5–5.5 cm long, straight and thread-shaped. The thickened part at the tip of the style called pollen presenter is 5–7 mm long, line-shaped with a pointy tip and a thickened ring at the base. The sigmatic groove sits obliquely across the very tip. The egg-shaped ovary is silky hairy and about 1 mm long. It is subtended by four bright orange, fleshy, awl- to line-shaped scales of about 2 mm long. The fruit is narrowly oval in shape, 6–7 mm long and 4–5 mm in diameter.