Protea sulphurea
Protea sulphurea, also known as the sulphur sugarbush, is a flowering plant of the genus Protea in the family Proteaceae, which is only known to grow in the wild in the Western Cape province of South Africa. A vernacular name for the plant in the Afrikaans language is heuningkoeksuikerbos or Skaamblom .
Taxonomy
Protea sulphurea was first described by Edwin Percy Phillips in 1910. A type series was originally collected by the German explorer Rudolf Marloth in 1903; there are at least three specimen sheets labelled as Marloth3208 housed at the Kew Herbarium. Another, possibly older, specimen was also collected by one Pearson, who was possibly the first European to collect this species. Phillips gives neither a type for the taxon, nor an etymology for the specific epithet. Otto Stapf designated the Pearson collection as the holotype in 1912, but in 1972 John Patrick Rourke overturned this for some reason, and selected one of the three sheets of Marloth's collections at Kew as the lectotype.Description
This species grows into a low, squat, woody, densely-branched shrub up to 0.5 1.8 or 2 m tall. The branches are glabrous. The leaves are glaucous, indistinctly veined, minutely rugulose, long, and 6 to 13 mm broad. Their shape is either narrowly obovate-cuneate or oblanceolate.The flowers are produced from April to August, densely packed together within large inflorescences. These inflorescences, or more specifically pseudanthia, are almost sessile, and hang downwards towards the ground. They have a long receptacles which are conical in shape. The flower head is surrounded by petal-like structures called 'involucral bracts', these are glabrous and arranged in a series of nine or ten rows. The outer bracts have somewhat pointy ends, ovate in shape and minutely ciliate. The inner bracts are oblong or spathulate-oblong in shape, and are longer than the actual flowers. It is monoecious, both sexes occur in each flower. The petals and sepals of the flowers are fused into a tube-like, long perianth-sheath. This sheath is dilated, has three keels and six to seven veins on the lower portion, has an 8.5 mm lip, and generally glabrous except for a few setose hairs from the base to near the upper parts of the outer surface. The lip is slightly recurved, has a few scattered setose hairs on it, and has three teeth at its end. The two outer of these teeth are longer than the middle one, at 1.4 mm long versus 1 mm. All of the stamens are fertile. Their filaments are 0.53 mm long and channelled. The anthers are linear and 4.8 mm long. The apical glands are 0.35 mm in length, ovate in shape and end in an acute point. There are oblong and obtuse hypogynous scales which are 1.4 mm in length. The ovary is covered in long, spreading, yellow-brown hairs. The style is 2.65 mm long, falcate, compressed, glabrous and tapers towards both ends. The stigma is 5.3 mm long, with an obtuse end, grooved, and almost imperceptibly becomes the style.