Duvalia is a succulent plant genus in the subfamily Asclepiadoideae, in the family Apocynaceae (dogbane).
The genus was first described in 1812, named after the French physician and botanist Henri-Auguste Duval (1777-1814).Haworth, Adrian Hardy. 1812. Synopsis Plantarum Succulentarum: cum descriptionibus, synonymis, locis, observationibus anglicanis, culturaque 44.
The stems of some species, such as the rounded Duvalia parviflora, are distinctive, and these species can be identified even when not in flower. However the stems are very variable, and most Duvalia species can only be distinguished from each other when the flower is seen.
The stems are superficially very similar to those of the related genus Piaranthus, and the two are often confused when not in flower. In cross-section, Duvalia stems are sometimes five or six sided ( Piaranthus stems are always four-sided in cross-section). To accurately distinguish them however, it is necessary to examine the flowers.
Each flower has five thin, elongated Petal, radiating in a star-shape, from a central raised disk or annulus.
The colour of most species flowers is shades of reddish brown, except for those of the rare Duvalia parviflora which are cream-coloured. The hermaphroditic flowers measure 1–5 cm in diameter, and have five parts. The crown is yellow ocher, brown, red to dark purple. The five corolla lobes are flat or folded along the middle nerve.
Four species, occurring on the other side of the continent on the verges of the Red Sea, were formerly included in the genus Duvalia. However phylogenetic studies have shown them to be relatively unrelated to the rest of the genus, and more closely related to genus Ballyanthus Bruyns.P. Bruyns, C. Klak, P. Hanacek: Evolution of the stapeliads (Apocynaceae-Asclepiadoideae) - repeated major radiation across Africa in an Old World group. Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution. 2014. v. 77, no. 1, p. 251--263. ISSN 1055-7903.
transferred to Mannia
Portions of this page were translated from the equivalent page on the German wikipedia accessed July 3, 2012
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