Brunia is a genus of shrubs of the family Bruniaceae, native to the cape region of South Africa.[1]
Brunia | |
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The leaves and the knobby inflorescences of Brunia sp. (family Bruniaceae) | |
Scientific classification | |
Kingdom: | Plantae |
Clade: | Tracheophytes |
Clade: | Angiosperms |
Clade: | Eudicots |
Clade: | Asterids |
Order: | Bruniales |
Family: | Bruniaceae |
Genus: | Brunia Lam. |
Taxonomy
editThe genus was described by Carl Linnaeus and published in Species Plantarum 1: 199 in the year 1753. The type species is Brunia paleacea P.J.Bergius, Descriptiones Plantarum ex Capite Bonae Spei, 56. (1767)
The name Brunia is thought to have been derived from the apothecary, Dr Cornelis Brun, who travelled in Russia and the Levant, although it could also be in commemoration of Dr Alexander Brown, a ship's surgeon and a collector who worked in the East Indies around 1690.[2][3]
Species
editAs accepted by Plants of the World Online;[4]
- Brunia africana (Burm.f.) Class.-Bockh. & E.G.H.Oliv.
- Brunia angulata (Sond.) Class.-Bockh. & E.G.H.Oliv.
- Brunia barnardii (Pillans) Class.-Bockh. & E.G.H.Oliv.
- Brunia bullata (Schltr.) Class.-Bockh. & E.G.H.Oliv.
- Brunia callunoides (Oliv.) Class.-Bockh. & E.G.H.Oliv.
- Brunia compacta A.V.Hall
- Brunia cordata (Burm.f.) Walp.
- Brunia dregeana (Sond.) Class.-Bockh. & E.G.H.Oliv.
- Brunia esterhuyseniae (Strid) Class.-Bockh. & E.G.H.Oliv.
- Brunia fragarioides Willd.
- Brunia laevis Thunb.
- Brunia latebracteata A.V.Hall
- Brunia macrocephala Willd.
- Brunia microphylla Thunb.
- Brunia monogyna (Vahl) Class.-Bockh. & E.G.H.Oliv.
- Brunia monostyla (Pillans) Class.-Bockh. & E.G.H.Oliv.
- Brunia myrtoides (Vahl) Class.-Bockh. & E.G.H.Oliv.
- Brunia neglecta Schltr.
- Brunia noduliflora Goldblatt & J.C.Manning
- Brunia oblongifolia (Pillans) Class.-Bockh. & E.G.H.Oliv.
- Brunia paleacea P.J.Bergius
- Brunia palustris (Schltr. ex Dümmer) Class.-Bockh. & E.G.H.Oliv.
- Brunia pentandra (Thunb.) Class.-Bockh. & E.G.H.Oliv.
- Brunia phylicoides Thunb.
- Brunia pillansii Class.-Bockh. & E.G.H.Oliv.
- Brunia powrieae Class.-Bockh. & E.G.H.Oliv.
- Brunia purpurea (Pillans) Class.-Bockh. & E.G.H.Oliv.
- Brunia sacculata (Dümmer) ined.
- Brunia schlecteri (Dümmer) Class.-Bockh. & E.G.H.Oliv.
- Brunia sphaerocephala (Sond.) A.V.Hall
- Brunia squalida Sond.
- Brunia thomae Class.-Bockh. & E.G.H.Oliv.
- Brunia trigyna (Schltr.) Class.-Bockh. & E.G.H.Oliv.
- Brunia tulbaghensis (Schltr. ex Dümmer) Class.-Bockh. & E.G.H.Oliv.
- Brunia variabilis (Pillans) Class.-Bockh. & E.G.H.Oliv.
- Brunia villosa E.Mey. ex Sond.
- Brunia virgata Brongn.
The genus is accepted by United States Department of Agriculture and the Agricultural Research Service, but they only accept Brunia albiflora, Brunia lanuginosa,Brunia nodiflora, Brunia noduliflora, Brunia paleacea and Brunia stokoei.[5] Kew accepts the above species except Brunia nodiflora.[4]
References
edit- ^ "Brunia ". Global Biodiversity Information Facility. Retrieved 16 May 2021.
- ^ "Brunia noduliflora". www.plantzafrica.com. Retrieved 26 March 2021.
- ^ Umberto Quattrocchi CRC World Dictionary of Plant Names: Common Names, Scientific Names, Eponyms, Synonyms, and Etymology; Volume IV R-Z (2000) at Google Books
- ^ a b "Brunia L. | Plants of the World Online | Kew Science". Plants of the World Online. Retrieved 14 August 2021.
- ^ Species Records of Brunia. Germplasm Resources Information Network (GRIN).
Other sources
edit- Lamarck, J-B. 1785. Encyclopédie Méthodique, Botanique 1(2): 474