Hexriver Mountains
Between Worcester and Ceres stands the rugged Hexriver mountains. It is here that both the Mountain & Ski Club of the University of Cape Town and the Mountain Club of South Africa have huts.
Nodes
Roodebergia kitamurana
Agathosma odoratissima
Metalasia phillipsii
Phylica reversa
Roodebergia
Syncarpha marlothii
Syncarpha flava
Untitled
Arctotis sp
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Taxonomy term
Agathosma
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Gk. agathos = good; osmē = smell, odour; referring to fragrant oils in the glands of the leaves.
Anthoxanthum
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Gk. anthos = flower; xanthos = yellow; referring to the colour of the panicles (spikelets), which are yellow-green.
Arctotis sp
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Aspalathus
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From aspalathos, a scented bush that grew in Greece, now in the related genus Astragalus.
Cliffortia
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For George Clifford (1685–1760), Dutch merchant and banker, amateur botanist and zoologist. He was a director of the Dutch East India Company and owned a magnificent garden at Hartecamp, Netherlands, as well as a private zoo in Amsterdam. George Clifford is best known as a patron of the Swedish naturalist Linnaeus, whom he employed as ‘hortulanus’ and who catalogued the family’s unique collection of plants, herbarium and library. The result was Linnaeus’s 530-page book Hortus Cliffortianus (1738), his first important work, in which he described many species from Clifford’s garden. The publication was paid for by George Clifford as a private edition.
Dimorphotheca
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Gk. di- = two; morphe = form; theke =a fruit (a case or container); referring to the two different forms of cypselae (fruit) produced by the ray and disk flowers: those of the ray flowers wingless, three-cornered; those of the disk flattened and two-winged.
Felicia cymbalariae
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From the Latin ‘cymbalar’ / ‘cymbalaris’ meaning ‘a plant called the cotyledon’; and the Latin ‘iae’ / ‘ia’ meaning ‘adjectival suffix’.
Gladiolus
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La. gladiolus = a small sword; referring to the sword-like shape of the leaves.
Hermas
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The origin of the genus name Hermas is not known. Some sources state that Hermas, a freed slave who lived in Rome in the first or second century, was the seer of an apocalypse entitled The Shepherd, a work treated with great authority in ancient times and ranked with the Holy Bible. According to the Muratorian Canon and also stated in the Liberian Catalogue, he was the brother of Bishop Pius I, (c 145), who occupied the chair of the church of the city of Rome. However, there is no evidence that the genus name referred to him when Linnaeus created it in 1771.
Ixia
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Ancient Gk. Ixia = a Linnaeus-derived name for a plant noted for the variability of its flower colour or Gk. ixos = mistletoe (viscum), birdlime; referring to the viscous sap (WPU Jackson).
Ixia latifolia
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From the Latin lati / latus meaning ‘wide’; and folius meaning ‘leaf’; i.e. the plant is broad-leafed
Juncus
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Name for a rush, possibly from La. jungere = to tie together, bind; referring to the ancient practice of using rushes to make ropes.
Metalasia
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Gk. meta- = meaning reverse; lasios = shaggy, woolly. The leaves are twisted, rolled upward, to present the woolly side of the leaf from the top to the bottom.
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