''Hedbergia decurva'', formerly ''Bartsia decurva'', is a
hemiparasitic species of
flowering plant
Flowering plants are plants that bear flowers and fruits, and form the clade Angiospermae (). The term angiosperm is derived from the Ancient Greek, Greek words (; 'container, vessel') and (; 'seed'), meaning that the seeds are enclosed with ...
s in the family
Orobanchaceae.
Description
''Hedbergia decurva'' is a shrub covered in sticky glandular hairs and few non-glandular hairs. It reaches in height, having thin, woody, upright, sparsely branching stems. The mostly upright, narrowly ovate
seated leaves of long, have rounded teeth along the margins that are mostly rolled downwards, and are set in
opposite pairs. The shortly stalked flowers are set in a
raceme towards the tip of the stems in the axils of leaflike
bracts. The
sepal
A sepal () is a part of the flower of angiosperms (flowering plants). Usually green, sepals typically function as protection for the flower in bud, and often as support for the petals when in bloom., p. 106
Etymology
The term ''sepalum'' ...
s are merged into a calyx with 4 lobes with deeper incisions on the midline and shallower incisions left and right. The yellow to yellowish brown petals are merged into a stongly
mirror-symmetric corolla, with a long, in the upper part distinctly curved tube, topped by a helmet-shaped upper lip that encloses the anthers and a spreading, three-lobed lower lip that has two bulges in front of the throat of the tube. The
filaments of the 4 stamens have largely merged with the upper lip of the corolla and are topped by shaggy anthers that each have 2 district spines at their lower end. The style is on top of a shaggy ovary and tipped by a club-shaped stigma. The narrowly elliptical seeds are long, with several ribs along their length. The species probably has 14 pairs of
homologous chromosomes (2n=28).
Differences with related species
''Hedbergia decurva'' can be distinguished in having a curved upper corolla tube and spines on the lower end of the anthers, whereas ''Hedbergia longiflora'' has a straight corolla tube and acute but not spined anthers.
Distribution
''Hedbergia decurva'' occurs in the high mountains of Ethiopia, eastern Uganda, Kenya and Tanzania, above approximately where it grows in ericaceous and alpine vegetations.
Phylogeny
The phylogeny of the genera of
Rhinantheae has been explored using molecular characters.
''Hedbergia decurva'' groups with ''
Hedbergia longiflora'' and ''
Hedbergia abyssinica'' into a ''Hedbergia'' clade nested within the core Rhinantheae. These three taxa share evolutionary affinities with genera ''
Tozzia'', ''
Bellardia'', ''
Neobartsia'', ''
Parentucellia'', and ''
Odontites''.
References
{{Taxonbar, from1=Q17715313, from2=Q15347584
decurva
Species described in 1846