Disambiguating links to Petiole (link changed to Petiole (botany)) using DisamAssist.
← Previous revision | Revision as of 09:57, 6 July 2025 | ||
Line 7: | Line 7: | ||
}} |
}} |
||
'''''Dorstenia barnimiana''''' is a very small tuberous succulent native widely across tropical Africa from [[Cameroon]] east to [[Zambia]], and also in the southern Arabian Peninsula in [[Yemen]].<ref name="POWO">{{cite POWO |title=''Dorstenia barnimiana'' Schweinf. |id=60453283-2 |access-date=2025-07-06}}</ref> The variety ''D. b.'' var. ''tropaeolifolia'', found across most of the species' area,<ref name="POWO2">{{cite POWO |title=''Dorstenia barnimiana'' var. ''tropaeolifolia'' (Schweinf.) Rendle |id=77249775-1 |access-date=2025-07-06}}</ref> is the smallest known member of the family [[Moraceae]]. It has a single [[peltate]] leaf {{cvt|3|cm}} diameter springing from a tiny tuber 16 mm thick, with the leaf's [[petiole]] being {{cvt|4|cm}} height.<ref>{{cite book | last= Andrews | first= F.W. | date= 1952 | title= The Flowering Plants of the Anglo-Egyptian Sudan - Volume Two| location= Arbroath, Scotland | publisher= T. Buncle & Co. Ltd | page= 260 }}</ref> As with other ''Dorstenia'' species, the tiny flowers coat the upper surface of a disk-like inflorescence. |
'''''Dorstenia barnimiana''''' is a very small tuberous succulent native widely across tropical Africa from [[Cameroon]] east to [[Zambia]], and also in the southern Arabian Peninsula in [[Yemen]].<ref name="POWO">{{cite POWO |title=''Dorstenia barnimiana'' Schweinf. |id=60453283-2 |access-date=2025-07-06}}</ref> The variety ''D. b.'' var. ''tropaeolifolia'', found across most of the species' area,<ref name="POWO2">{{cite POWO |title=''Dorstenia barnimiana'' var. ''tropaeolifolia'' (Schweinf.) Rendle |id=77249775-1 |access-date=2025-07-06}}</ref> is the smallest known member of the family [[Moraceae]]. It has a single [[peltate]] leaf {{cvt|3|cm}} diameter springing from a tiny tuber 16 mm thick, with the leaf's [[Petiole (botany)|petiole]] being {{cvt|4|cm}} height.<ref>{{cite book | last= Andrews | first= F.W. | date= 1952 | title= The Flowering Plants of the Anglo-Egyptian Sudan - Volume Two| location= Arbroath, Scotland | publisher= T. Buncle & Co. Ltd | page= 260 }}</ref> As with other ''Dorstenia'' species, the tiny flowers coat the upper surface of a disk-like inflorescence. |
||
==References== |
==References== |