Watsonia meriana

(Linnaeus) Miller

Gard. Dict. ed. 8, Watsonia no. 1. 1768.

IntroducedIllustrated
Basionym: Gladiolus merianus Linnaeus Syst. Nat. ed. 10, 2: 863. 1759
Synonyms: Watsonia bulbillifera J. W. Mathews & L. Bolus
Treatment appears in FNA Volume 26. Treatment on page 402. Mentioned on page 399.

Plants sometimes growing in dense clumps, 50–200 cm. Corms tunicate, depressed-globose, 30–45 mm diam.; tunic fibrous, fibers coarse, reticulate. Stems simple or 1–2-branched, often with large cormlets in proximal axils, occasionally also in distal axils of stem, spike. Leaves 4–6, basal leaves 3–4, blade lanceolate, 12–35 mm wide; cauline leaves smaller than basal, blade with margins and midribs hyaline, heavily thickened. Spikes 8–12(–25)-flowered; spathes often flushed with red, outer 18–30 mm, dry in distal 3–5 mm, inner slightly longer to slightly shorter than outer. Tepals orange, red, or purple, lanceolate, outer slightly narrower than inner, 22–27 × 8–15 mm; perianth tube proximally slender, 18–25 mm wide, abruptly expanded distally, 20–25 mm wide; filaments 35–45 mm; anthers 8–12 mm; ovary oblong, 3–4 mm; style branching opposite middle of anthers; branches 6–7 mm. Capsules 22–30 mm. Seeds prominently winged distally, weakly or not winged proximally, 10–18 mm.


Phenology: Flowering May–Jul.
Habitat: Roadsides and grassy banks

Distribution

Introduced; Calif., South Africa.

Discussion

Most Watsonia plants recorded from North America correspond to the triploid, sexually sterile form of W. meriana, also known as W. bulbillifera, which reproduces by means of cormlets produced at the aerial nodes. Most of the flowers do not produce capsules, but a few, containing viable seeds, are occasionally formed. Chromosome number in the Californian plants has not been determined.

Selected References

None.

Lower Taxa

None.