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Protea burchellii

Protea burchellii, also known as Burchell's sugarbush,[2][5][6][7] is a flowering shrub in the genus Protea,[2][5][6] which is endemic to the southwestern Cape Region of South Africa.[2][4]

Protea burchellii
Protea burchellii, Proteaceae, flowerhead; Caledon, South Africa.
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Plantae
Clade: Tracheophytes
Clade: Angiosperms
Clade: Eudicots
Order: Proteales
Family: Proteaceae
Genus: Protea
Species:
P. burchellii
Binomial name
Protea burchellii
Synonyms[2][4]

The shrub is known by the vernacular name of blinksuikerbos in the Afrikaans language.[7]

Taxonomy edit

Protea burchellii was described by Otto Stapf in the Flora Capensis in 1912.[3][8] Although Stapf was unaware of it at the time,[8] the species had in fact been described in other works over a century before him, but under the name P. pulchella or some of its synonyms.[2][4]

The species P. burchellii had first been described just before the turn of the 18th century under the name P. pulchella by Henry Cranke Andrews in his magazine The Botanists' Repository,[9] however this name was illegitimate, because it had already been used a few years before in 1796 by Heinrich Schrader and Johann Christoph Wendland for a plant that was growing in the Royal Gardens of Hanover in what is now Germany,[10][11] which in Robert Brown's 1810 work On the Proteaceae of Jussieu was moved to Petrophile pulchella.[11]

Nonetheless, Andrews' Protea pulchella lived on. Richard Anthony Salisbury moved it to Erodendrum pulchellum in the notorious 1809 On the cultivation of the plants belonging to the natural order of Proteeae published under the name of Joseph Knight,[12][citation needed] much later Otto Kuntze moved it to Scolymocephalus pulchellus in 1891,[13] although his Protea reclassification was soon rejected. Edwin Percy Phillips described a P. pulchella var. undulata, also known as variety β, for a plant with leaves with undulating margins,[citation needed] and then Stapf described a P. subpulchella in 1925.[14]

Type edit

Stapf designated a specimen collected by the English explorer William John Burchell numbered 8332 as the holotype. It was collected somewhere between Sir Lowry's Pass and Jonkers Hoek, in the area of Stellenbosch, at the very end of March, 1815.[8][15] Burchell had in fact collected a type series, according to the South African botanist John Patrick Rourke, and thus in 1978 accordingly designated one of the two specimen sheets labelled as Burchell8332 housed at the Kew Herbarium as the lectotype; this specific sheet had originally been part of Burchell's personal herbarium, and had been donated to Kew upon his death by his widow in 1865.[15]

Etymology edit

The specific epithet commemorates the collector of the type specimens, William Burchell.[7][8]

Description edit

The plant takes the form of a spreading, evergreen, multi-branched shrub.[6][7] It grows one or two,[7] or up to three metres in height,[6] and three metres wide. It has been called "mid-sized" for a Protea.[7] The branches all arise from a single, central,[7] branched, subterranean stem.[8] These branches are erect-growing according to some sources,[6][7] or, according to the original description, grow just above the ground. The upper, younger part of the branches are clothed in fine hairs.[8]

The length of a generation in this species is estimated to be around 20 years.[2] It is quite fast-growing, and in cultivation the first flowers can appear after the plant is two years old.[7]

Leaves edit

The leaves are glossy,[8] olive-green in colour, and are spotted with tiny black points. Their shape is linear to narrowly oblong,[7] or also described as linear to narrowly oblanceolate, attenuated on the lower part, with an acute but callous end. They are 6–9 inches (15–23 cm) in length and 23–1 inch (1.7–2.5 cm) broad. The leaves have prominent veins on both sides, with lateral nerves that run into a narrow, somewhat thickened band along the margin. The leaves are usually glabrous, but may have an indumentum of fine hairs at and around their bases.[8]

Flowers edit

It blooms in the Winter,[5][7] specifically primarily from June to August in most of its native South Africa,[6][8] but sometimes into Spring on the Cape Peninsula.[5] The flowers are clustered together in a pseudanthium, a special type of inflorescence, which is also called a flower head. In this species this structure will grow up to 10 centimetres (3.9 in) in length by 7 centimetres (2.8 in) in diameter,[7] although the original description gives a length of 2.5 inches (6.4 cm) and diameter of 1.5 inches (3.8 cm). It is almost round in shape, has a rounded base, and lacks a peduncle (i.e. it is sessile).[8]

The flower head is surrounded by petal-like appendages called 'involucral bracts'.[7][8] The bracts are often pink, but forms with white-coloured bracts exist, as do red-[5] and yellow-coloured forms. The colour range has been described as "cream-coloured to deep carmine",[7] or "dark chestnut-brown" for the outer bracts in the original description (possibly based on dried herbarium material). The outer bracts are ovate in shape, with their ends obtuse (blunt) to somewhat obtuse, and when very young are covered in a layer of greyish, finely pubescent hairs, with the margins of the bracts being ciliate (i.e. fringed with a hairs like an eyelash), although this soon falls off and they become glabrous. The inner bracts are oblong and elongated in shape and their ends are obtuse; they are just a bit smaller in length than the actual flowers.[8]

The plant is monoecious with both sexes in each flower.[6] The petals and sepals of the flowers are fused into a 1.25 inches (3.2 cm) long perianth-sheath. The last two thirds of this sheath is slender, but then it widens towards the base, this area having three inconspicuous keels and five veins. The outside of the sheath is covered in dense amounts of dark brown, pubescent hairs on the slender part, but the widened base is ciliolate but otherwise glabrous. The sheath has a 12.7 mm long lip. This lip is shaggy-haired (i.e. villous), except for its back, which is glabrescent. The two outer of these teeth are much longer than the middle one: they are thread-like in shape, sharply pointed, and 3.2 mm long, whereas the middle one is much shorter and less conspicuous. All of the stamens are fertile. Their filaments are 0.53 mm long and widen towards their tops. The anthers are linear and 4.2 mm long. The apical glands are 0.53 mm in length, oblong in shape and end in an obtuse point. The ovary is densely covered in reddish hairs and is subobovate-oblong in shape. The style is subulate and terete, and arises from a narrowly compressed and obliquely lanceolate base. It is 3.7 mm long, covered in pubescent hairs from the top up until its middle section, strongly curved below its middle, and constricted where it joins with the ovary. The stigma is subulate, with an obtuse end, and almost imperceptibly becomes the style.[8]

Fruit edit

The fruit is a nut.[7] The seed is stored in a capsule which is retained in the dried, fire-resistant inflorescence, which itself remains attached to the plant after senescence. When they are eventually released after fires stimulate the capsules to open, the seeds are dispersed by means of the wind.[2][6][7]

Distribution edit

Protea burchellii is endemic to the southern and southwestern Cape Region of South Africa,[2][4] where it is only found in the Western Cape province.[2][5] The range extends from the Hottentots Holland Mountains to the Olifants River Mountains, and on the lowland flatlands on the Cape Peninsula (historically) to the plains of the Hopefield Flats. Isolated populations occur on the Witzenbergvlakte, Piketberg, and the upper part of the Breede River Valley.[2][6][7] It grows around the Paarl Rock and near the town of Mamre.[5]

Ecology edit

The periodic wildfires which occur in its habitat will destroy the adult plants, but the seeds can survive such an event safely stored in the old flower heads. Pollination occurs through the action of birds.[2][6][7]

Habitat edit

The plant grows in a variety of habitats but prefers to grow in more fertile soils,[2][6][7] fully exposed to sun on lower mountain slopes.[7] It has been found growing in fynbos, renosterveld, coastal vegetation and the vegetation found on the more fertile shale bands. It often grows in shale, but it is found in a variety of soil types as well: alluvium, sand and silcrete; as well as substrates derived from granite.[2] It occurs at altitudes of 100 to 850 metres.[2][6][7]

Uses edit

Protea burchellii and its hybrids are popular crops in the cut flower industry.[7]

Horticulture edit

This species is quite winter hardy for use in South African gardens. Many hybrid varieties are commercially available in South Africa. It can be used in the rock garden, as a specimen plant, or, due to its average height, as a shrub in the mid-layer of the border. It is best grown in a sandy, well-drained, fynbos soil.[7]

Propagation is easiest done by sowing the seeds, but it has also been achieved via cuttings. Seeds should be sown shallowly in May in South Africa (late autumn) in a well-drained substrate treated with a fungicide. Germination requires warm day and cold night temperatures. Germination is irregular, with some seeds starting to grow a year after sowing. Seedlings are easily killed by overwatering. Cuttings can be taken from the tips of shoots from December to March in South Africa. These should be treated with a rooting hormone, planted in a very well-drained substrate, and kept moist, but not wet. Roots should appear after some five weeks.[7]

The pathogenic, fungi-like Phytophthora is an important disease of the roots in cultivated plants. Infected plants become wilted and dry, eventually yellowing and then dying. The best one can do in such situations is to pull up the plant and burn it, apply fungicide to the soil where the plant stood, and no longer replant Proteaceae in that area.[7]

Conservation edit

In 1998 and in 2008 Protea burchellii was considered locally common and not threatened, but by this time the species was already considered extinct on the Cape Peninsula.[6][7] Nonetheless, it has been photographed blooming on the Lion's Head on the Cape.[5]

The species was classified as "vulnerable" on the Redlist of South African Plants by the South African National Biodiversity Institute (SANBI) in 2008; this was upheld again in 2009. They believe the total population numbers are decreasing.[2]

It grows in areas generally unsuitable for normal cultivation, and most habitat loss was thought to be fairly recent in 2008. Nonetheless, SANBI estimated that the 'historical' population had been reduced at least 30% based on a habitat loss of some 40%, primarily to agricultural development. This was especially caused by the recent success of the vineyards and olive orchards. SANBI estimated that with the continuing viability of these farms a further reduction of the population by 30% is likely by the year 2028. Other threats identified by SANBI are over-harvesting, pollution, invasive plants, natural disasters and changes in native species dynamics.[2]

Gallery edit

References edit

  1. ^ Rebelo, A.G.; Mtshali, H.; von Staden, L. (2020). "Protea burchellii". IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. 2020: e.T113208739A185564106. doi:10.2305/IUCN.UK.2020-3.RLTS.T113208739A185564106.en. Retrieved 27 May 2021.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q Rebelo, A.G.; Mtshali, H.; von Staden, L. (21 March 2008). "Burchell's Sugarbush". Red List of South African Plants. version 2020.1. South African National Biodiversity Institute. Retrieved 9 August 2020.
  3. ^ a b "Protea burchellii". International Plant Names Index. The Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, Harvard University Herbaria & Libraries and Australian National Botanic Gardens. Retrieved 10 August 2020.
  4. ^ a b c d "Protea burchellii Stapf". Plants of the World Online. Kew Science. 2017. Retrieved 10 August 2020.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h "Protea burchellii (Burchell's sugarbush)". Biodiversity Explorer. Iziko - Museums of South Africa. Retrieved 10 August 2020.
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m "Spoon-bract Sugarbushes - Proteas". Protea Atlas Project Website. 11 March 1998. Retrieved 10 August 2020.
  7. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z McQuillan, Monique (June 2008). "Protea burchellii Stapf". PlantZAfrica. South African National Biodiversity Institute. Retrieved 11 August 2020.
  8. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Stapf, Otto (January 1912). "CXVII. Proteaceæ". In Thiselton-Dyer, William Turner (ed.). Flora Capensis; being a systematic description of the plants of the Cape Colony, Caffraria & Port Natal. 5. Vol. 1. London: Lovell Reeve & Co. pp. 603, 604. doi:10.5962/bhl.title.821. OCLC 869067.
  9. ^ "Protea pulchella Andrews". International Plant Names Index. The Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, Harvard University Herbaria & Libraries and Australian National Botanic Gardens. Retrieved 18 August 2020.
  10. ^ "Protea pulchella Schrad". International Plant Names Index. The Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, Harvard University Herbaria & Libraries and Australian National Botanic Gardens. Retrieved 18 August 2020.
  11. ^ a b "Protea pulchella Schrad. & J.C.Wendl". International Plant Names Index. The Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, Harvard University Herbaria & Libraries and Australian National Botanic Gardens. Retrieved 18 August 2020.
  12. ^ "Erodendrum pulchellum". International Plant Names Index. The Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, Harvard University Herbaria & Libraries and Australian National Botanic Gardens. Retrieved 18 August 2020.
  13. ^ "Scolymocephalus pulchellus". International Plant Names Index. The Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, Harvard University Herbaria & Libraries and Australian National Botanic Gardens. Retrieved 18 August 2020.
  14. ^ "Protea subpulchella". International Plant Names Index. The Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, Harvard University Herbaria & Libraries and Australian National Botanic Gardens. Retrieved 18 August 2020.
  15. ^ a b "Specimen Details K000423656". Kew Herbarium Catalogue. Board of Trustees of the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew. Retrieved 18 August 2020.

protea, burchellii, also, known, burchell, sugarbush, flowering, shrub, genus, protea, which, endemic, southwestern, cape, region, south, africa, proteaceae, flowerhead, caledon, south, africa, conservation, status, vulnerable, iucn, vulnerable, sanbi, list, s. Protea burchellii also known as Burchell s sugarbush 2 5 6 7 is a flowering shrub in the genus Protea 2 5 6 which is endemic to the southwestern Cape Region of South Africa 2 4 Protea burchellii Protea burchellii Proteaceae flowerhead Caledon South Africa Conservation status Vulnerable IUCN 3 1 1 Vulnerable SANBI Red List 2 Scientific classification Kingdom Plantae Clade Tracheophytes Clade Angiosperms Clade Eudicots Order Proteales Family Proteaceae Genus Protea Species P burchellii Binomial name Protea burchelliiStapf 3 Synonyms 2 4 Protea pulchella Andrews later homonym not of Schrad amp J C Wendl Erodendrum pulchellum Salisb ex Knight Scolymocephalus pulchellus Kuntze Protea subpulchella Stapf Protea pulchella var undulata E Phillips Protea pulchra Rycroft The shrub is known by the vernacular name of blinksuikerbos in the Afrikaans language 7 Contents 1 Taxonomy 1 1 Type 1 2 Etymology 2 Description 2 1 Leaves 2 2 Flowers 2 3 Fruit 3 Distribution 4 Ecology 4 1 Habitat 5 Uses 5 1 Horticulture 6 Conservation 7 Gallery 8 ReferencesTaxonomy editProtea burchellii was described by Otto Stapf in the Flora Capensis in 1912 3 8 Although Stapf was unaware of it at the time 8 the species had in fact been described in other works over a century before him but under the name P pulchella or some of its synonyms 2 4 The species P burchellii had first been described just before the turn of the 18th century under the name P pulchella by Henry Cranke Andrews in his magazine The Botanists Repository 9 however this name was illegitimate because it had already been used a few years before in 1796 by Heinrich Schrader and Johann Christoph Wendland for a plant that was growing in the Royal Gardens of Hanover in what is now Germany 10 11 which in Robert Brown s 1810 work On the Proteaceae of Jussieu was moved to Petrophile pulchella 11 Nonetheless Andrews Protea pulchella lived on Richard Anthony Salisbury moved it to Erodendrum pulchellum in the notorious 1809 On the cultivation of the plants belonging to the natural order of Proteeae published under the name of Joseph Knight 12 citation needed much later Otto Kuntze moved it to Scolymocephalus pulchellus in 1891 13 although his Protea reclassification was soon rejected Edwin Percy Phillips described a P pulchella var undulata also known as variety b for a plant with leaves with undulating margins citation needed and then Stapf described a P subpulchella in 1925 14 Type edit Stapf designated a specimen collected by the English explorer William John Burchell numbered 8332 as the holotype It was collected somewhere between Sir Lowry s Pass and Jonkers Hoek in the area of Stellenbosch at the very end of March 1815 8 15 Burchell had in fact collected a type series according to the South African botanist John Patrick Rourke and thus in 1978 accordingly designated one of the two specimen sheets labelled as Burchell8332 housed at the Kew Herbarium as the lectotype this specific sheet had originally been part of Burchell s personal herbarium and had been donated to Kew upon his death by his widow in 1865 15 Etymology edit The specific epithet commemorates the collector of the type specimens William Burchell 7 8 Description editThe plant takes the form of a spreading evergreen multi branched shrub 6 7 It grows one or two 7 or up to three metres in height 6 and three metres wide It has been called mid sized for a Protea 7 The branches all arise from a single central 7 branched subterranean stem 8 These branches are erect growing according to some sources 6 7 or according to the original description grow just above the ground The upper younger part of the branches are clothed in fine hairs 8 The length of a generation in this species is estimated to be around 20 years 2 It is quite fast growing and in cultivation the first flowers can appear after the plant is two years old 7 Leaves edit The leaves are glossy 8 olive green in colour and are spotted with tiny black points Their shape is linear to narrowly oblong 7 or also described as linear to narrowly oblanceolate attenuated on the lower part with an acute but callous end They are 6 9 inches 15 23 cm in length and 2 3 1 inch 1 7 2 5 cm broad The leaves have prominent veins on both sides with lateral nerves that run into a narrow somewhat thickened band along the margin The leaves are usually glabrous but may have an indumentum of fine hairs at and around their bases 8 Flowers edit It blooms in the Winter 5 7 specifically primarily from June to August in most of its native South Africa 6 8 but sometimes into Spring on the Cape Peninsula 5 The flowers are clustered together in a pseudanthium a special type of inflorescence which is also called a flower head In this species this structure will grow up to 10 centimetres 3 9 in in length by 7 centimetres 2 8 in in diameter 7 although the original description gives a length of 2 5 inches 6 4 cm and diameter of 1 5 inches 3 8 cm It is almost round in shape has a rounded base and lacks a peduncle i e it is sessile 8 The flower head is surrounded by petal like appendages called involucral bracts 7 8 The bracts are often pink but forms with white coloured bracts exist as do red 5 and yellow coloured forms The colour range has been described as cream coloured to deep carmine 7 or dark chestnut brown for the outer bracts in the original description possibly based on dried herbarium material The outer bracts are ovate in shape with their ends obtuse blunt to somewhat obtuse and when very young are covered in a layer of greyish finely pubescent hairs with the margins of the bracts being ciliate i e fringed with a hairs like an eyelash although this soon falls off and they become glabrous The inner bracts are oblong and elongated in shape and their ends are obtuse they are just a bit smaller in length than the actual flowers 8 The plant is monoecious with both sexes in each flower 6 The petals and sepals of the flowers are fused into a 1 25 inches 3 2 cm long perianth sheath The last two thirds of this sheath is slender but then it widens towards the base this area having three inconspicuous keels and five veins The outside of the sheath is covered in dense amounts of dark brown pubescent hairs on the slender part but the widened base is ciliolate but otherwise glabrous The sheath has a 12 7 mm long lip This lip is shaggy haired i e villous except for its back which is glabrescent The two outer of these teeth are much longer than the middle one they are thread like in shape sharply pointed and 3 2 mm long whereas the middle one is much shorter and less conspicuous All of the stamens are fertile Their filaments are 0 53 mm long and widen towards their tops The anthers are linear and 4 2 mm long The apical glands are 0 53 mm in length oblong in shape and end in an obtuse point The ovary is densely covered in reddish hairs and is subobovate oblong in shape The style is subulate and terete and arises from a narrowly compressed and obliquely lanceolate base It is 3 7 mm long covered in pubescent hairs from the top up until its middle section strongly curved below its middle and constricted where it joins with the ovary The stigma is subulate with an obtuse end and almost imperceptibly becomes the style 8 Fruit edit The fruit is a nut 7 The seed is stored in a capsule which is retained in the dried fire resistant inflorescence which itself remains attached to the plant after senescence When they are eventually released after fires stimulate the capsules to open the seeds are dispersed by means of the wind 2 6 7 Distribution editProtea burchellii is endemic to the southern and southwestern Cape Region of South Africa 2 4 where it is only found in the Western Cape province 2 5 The range extends from the Hottentots Holland Mountains to the Olifants River Mountains and on the lowland flatlands on the Cape Peninsula historically to the plains of the Hopefield Flats Isolated populations occur on the Witzenbergvlakte Piketberg and the upper part of the Breede River Valley 2 6 7 It grows around the Paarl Rock and near the town of Mamre 5 Ecology editThe periodic wildfires which occur in its habitat will destroy the adult plants but the seeds can survive such an event safely stored in the old flower heads Pollination occurs through the action of birds 2 6 7 Habitat edit The plant grows in a variety of habitats but prefers to grow in more fertile soils 2 6 7 fully exposed to sun on lower mountain slopes 7 It has been found growing in fynbos renosterveld coastal vegetation and the vegetation found on the more fertile shale bands It often grows in shale but it is found in a variety of soil types as well alluvium sand and silcrete as well as substrates derived from granite 2 It occurs at altitudes of 100 to 850 metres 2 6 7 Uses editProtea burchellii and its hybrids are popular crops in the cut flower industry 7 Horticulture edit This species is quite winter hardy for use in South African gardens Many hybrid varieties are commercially available in South Africa It can be used in the rock garden as a specimen plant or due to its average height as a shrub in the mid layer of the border It is best grown in a sandy well drained fynbos soil 7 Propagation is easiest done by sowing the seeds but it has also been achieved via cuttings Seeds should be sown shallowly in May in South Africa late autumn in a well drained substrate treated with a fungicide Germination requires warm day and cold night temperatures Germination is irregular with some seeds starting to grow a year after sowing Seedlings are easily killed by overwatering Cuttings can be taken from the tips of shoots from December to March in South Africa These should be treated with a rooting hormone planted in a very well drained substrate and kept moist but not wet Roots should appear after some five weeks 7 The pathogenic fungi like Phytophthora is an important disease of the roots in cultivated plants Infected plants become wilted and dry eventually yellowing and then dying The best one can do in such situations is to pull up the plant and burn it apply fungicide to the soil where the plant stood and no longer replant Proteaceae in that area 7 Conservation editIn 1998 and in 2008 Protea burchellii was considered locally common and not threatened but by this time the species was already considered extinct on the Cape Peninsula 6 7 Nonetheless it has been photographed blooming on the Lion s Head on the Cape 5 The species was classified as vulnerable on the Redlist of South African Plants by the South African National Biodiversity Institute SANBI in 2008 this was upheld again in 2009 They believe the total population numbers are decreasing 2 It grows in areas generally unsuitable for normal cultivation and most habitat loss was thought to be fairly recent in 2008 Nonetheless SANBI estimated that the historical population had been reduced at least 30 based on a habitat loss of some 40 primarily to agricultural development This was especially caused by the recent success of the vineyards and olive orchards SANBI estimated that with the continuing viability of these farms a further reduction of the population by 30 is likely by the year 2028 Other threats identified by SANBI are over harvesting pollution invasive plants natural disasters and changes in native species dynamics 2 Gallery edit nbsp nbsp References edit Rebelo A G Mtshali H von Staden L 2020 Protea burchellii IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2020 e T113208739A185564106 doi 10 2305 IUCN UK 2020 3 RLTS T113208739A185564106 en Retrieved 27 May 2021 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q Rebelo A G Mtshali H von Staden L 21 March 2008 Burchell s Sugarbush Red List of South African Plants version 2020 1 South African National Biodiversity Institute Retrieved 9 August 2020 a b Protea burchellii International Plant Names Index The Royal Botanic Gardens Kew Harvard University Herbaria amp Libraries and Australian National Botanic Gardens Retrieved 10 August 2020 a b c d Protea burchellii Stapf Plants of the World Online Kew Science 2017 Retrieved 10 August 2020 a b c d e f g h Protea burchellii Burchell s sugarbush Biodiversity Explorer Iziko Museums of South Africa Retrieved 10 August 2020 a b c d e f g h i j k l m Spoon bract Sugarbushes Proteas Protea Atlas Project Website 11 March 1998 Retrieved 10 August 2020 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z McQuillan Monique June 2008 Protea burchellii Stapf PlantZAfrica South African National Biodiversity Institute Retrieved 11 August 2020 a b c d e f g h i j k l m Stapf Otto January 1912 CXVII Proteaceae In Thiselton Dyer William Turner ed Flora Capensis being a systematic description of the plants of the Cape Colony Caffraria amp Port Natal 5 Vol 1 London Lovell Reeve amp Co pp 603 604 doi 10 5962 bhl title 821 OCLC 869067 Protea pulchella Andrews International Plant Names Index The Royal Botanic Gardens Kew Harvard University Herbaria amp Libraries and Australian National Botanic Gardens Retrieved 18 August 2020 Protea pulchella Schrad International Plant Names Index The Royal Botanic Gardens Kew Harvard University Herbaria amp Libraries and Australian National Botanic Gardens Retrieved 18 August 2020 a b Protea pulchella Schrad amp J C Wendl International Plant Names Index The Royal Botanic Gardens Kew Harvard University Herbaria amp Libraries and Australian National Botanic Gardens Retrieved 18 August 2020 Erodendrum pulchellum International Plant Names Index The Royal Botanic Gardens Kew Harvard University Herbaria amp Libraries and Australian National Botanic Gardens Retrieved 18 August 2020 Scolymocephalus pulchellus International Plant Names Index The Royal Botanic Gardens Kew Harvard University Herbaria amp Libraries and Australian National Botanic Gardens Retrieved 18 August 2020 Protea subpulchella International Plant Names Index The Royal Botanic Gardens Kew Harvard University Herbaria amp Libraries and Australian National Botanic Gardens Retrieved 18 August 2020 a b Specimen Details K000423656 Kew Herbarium Catalogue Board of Trustees of the Royal Botanic Gardens Kew Retrieved 18 August 2020 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Protea burchellii amp oldid 1189783845, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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