Phaenocoma prolifera young flowerhead

    Phaenocoma prolifera young flowerhead
    Author: Ivan Lätti
    Photographer: MC Botha

    The Phaenocoma prolifera bracts around the flowerheads are really the floral feature of the plant from the human admirer’s point of view. Pollinators must also benefit from bright colouring for spotting their next meal. But it’s the tiny, inconspicuous florets, still shielded inside by the deep purple-pink bracts here that ensure the future of the plant species.

    The generic name of the monotypic genus, Phaenocoma, is derived from the Greek words phaino meaning to bring to light or to show and kome meaning the hair of the head, referring to the bracts.

    This is a misnomer as far as these developed bracts are concerned: they are not hairy. New stems, however, are silvery white with hair and terminal bristles initially present on all the bracts (Vlok and Schutte-Vlok, 2015; Manning, 2007; Bean and Johns, 2005; Andrew, 2017; iNaturalist).

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