Bulb
subglobose, ovoid-ellipsoid or flattened at base and apex; outer covering of thin, membranous, brown tunics, inner scales fleshy, cataphyll tubular and membranous
Leaves
2, contemporary with flowers; often flat on ground or spreading; usually broadly obovate, ovate or orbicular; folded at base; veins conspicuously sunken; glabrous or hairy, pustulate or echinulate; sometimes maculate
Inflorescence
a condensed subcorymb or subcapitate raceme of few to many flowers, close to ground level; peduncle short, tapered; outer bracts large and sterile, inner bracts much smaller and fertile
Flowers
usually white or pink, occasionally greenish, occasionally with conspicuous orange filaments; regular; often fragrant; pedicels short
Tepals
fused below, forming a tube, usually long and narrow; lobes linear, erect or spreading to reflexed, sometimes with a double fold at base; withering but persistent
Stamens
6, in one whorl, prominent, arising from mouth of perianth tube; filaments free or fused, forming a basal cup or swollen disk; anthers oblong to linear, versatile
Ovary
globose to obtriangular; ovules few to many; style tapering; stigma small, apical
Fruit
an obtriangular capsule, winged or deeply lobed, thin-walled; dehiscing loculicidally
Seeds
globose, black, reticulate or verrucose
Classification Notes:
This concept of
Massonia
includes 5 species detailed by Reid: ### (1993)~(Page number missing. No access to the publication) plus three species previously included under
Neobakeria
(following Müller-Doblies & Müller-Doblies, 1997)
It is different to Goldblatt & Manning: 104 (2000) who have taken a broad view of
Massonia
and included
Neobakeria
,
Androsiphon
,
Amphisiphon
and
Daubenya
It does not include the 4 reinstated species and 1 new species described by Müller-Doblies & Müller-Doblies (1997)
The latter also described a closely related, monospecific genus,
Namophila
D.Müll.-Doblies & U.Müll.-Doblies, endemic to Namibia
Nomenclature:
Massonia
Thunb. ex Houtt.
Houttuyn: 424, t. 85 (1780)
Baker: 408 (1897)
Merrill: 331 (1938)
Obermeyer: t. 1451 (1965)
Merxmüller & Roessler: 83 (1973)
Jessop: 406 (1976)
Hilliard: 35 (1990)
Müller-Doblies & Müller-Doblies: 66 (1997)
Goldblatt & Manning: 104 (2000)
Distribution & Notes:
Southern Africa
: Species ± 8, Namibia, North-West, Free State, KwaZulu-Natal, Lesotho, Northern, Western and Eastern Cape
Massonia
is widespread in dry areas, often on clay or sandy flats or rocky slopes
References:
BAKER, J.G. 1897.
Liliaceae
.
Flora capensis
6,2
GOLDBLATT, P. & MANNING, J.C. 2000. Cape plants. A conspectus of the Cape flora of South Africa.
Strelitzia
9
HILLIARD, O.M. 1990.
Flowers of the Natal Drakensberg
. University of Natal Press, Pietermaritzburg
HOUTTUYN, M. 1780.
Natuurlijke historie
2(12). Legacy of F. Houttuyn, Amsterdam
JESSOP, J.P. 1976. Studies in the bulbous
Liliaceae
in South Africa. The taxonomy of
Massonia
and allied genera.
Journal of South African Botany
42
MERRILL, E.D. 1938. A critical consideration of Houttuyn's new genera and new species of plants, 1773-1783.
Journal of the Arnold Arboretum
19
MERXMÜLLER, H. & ROESSLER, H. 1973. Eine bisher verkannte Liliacee der Gattung
Massonia
in Südwestafrika.
Mitteilungen aus der Botanischen Staatssammlung München
11
MÜLLER-DOBLIES, U. & D. 1997. A partial revision of the tribe
Massonieae
.
Feddes Repertorium
108
OBERMEYER, A.A. 1965.
Massonia grandiflora
.
Flowering Plants of Africa
37
REID, C. 1993.
Hyacinthaceae
. In T.H. Arnold & B.C. de Wet, Plants of southern Africa: names and distribution.
Memoirs of the Botanical Survey of South Africa
No. 48
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