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  • Lithops julii f. reticulata Tischer
    식물/들꽃-번행초과(Aizoaceae) 2024. 12. 1. 09:43

    국표에 없다.

    Oesterreich, KUAS. Pflanzen 1937 (7) 97 [Jul. 1937] nom. nud se also Swhantes Flow. Stones 230 (1957)
    Family: AIZOACEAE

    = Lithops julii var. reticulata Tischer ex de Boer
    Succulenta (Netherlands) 1961 (4) 43-44 [Apr. 1961] see also Tisch.in Jacobsen, Succ. Plants 198, 1935 (nom. inval.)

    Accepted Scientific Name: Lithops julii (Dinter & Schwantes) N.E.Br.
    Gard. Chron. 1926, Ser. III. lxxix. 102.

    Origin and Habitat: Namibia, Vahldoorn; west of Warmbad.
    Habitat: It grows among quartz pebbles in desert limestone. Background colours white, grey, pink, red and brown. The plants mimic the small, haphazardly arranged rocks that surround them. They grow sunken in fine gravel and can tolerate extreme hight temperature and only temperature that exceed 60° C are lethal.

    Synonyms:

    Common Names include:
    ENGLISH: Stone Plant, Flowering Stone
    ITALIAN (Italiano): Pianta Sasso

    Description: Lithops juliiSN|13037]]SN|13037]] is a very pretty species conspicuously pale, usually pearl- to pink-grey leaves but very variable in colour, with characteristic “lip-smears” which is a distinctive feature of this species. The lip-smear occurs occasionally as a narrow edging or lining all along the outer margins. Three main forms have been proposed and were even given varietal status (“pallid”, “reticulated” and “fuscous”) but wild populations tend to have at least two and many have all three of this forms variously intermingled. The “reticulated” form has a noticeable reddish-brown network on the pearly top.
    Habit: Lithops juliiSN|13037]]SN|13037]] is a stemless small to medium sized species that grows solitary or forming clumps of 2 or up to 15 or more) bodies.
    Body (paired leaves): Cone-shaped, truncate, separated by a 5-10 mm deep fissure with (usually) conjunct lobes. Face slightly reniform flat or slightly convex; sides coloured pate to very pate (bordering on slightly yellowish-white); in the young stage rugulose, the islands irregular in shape, coloured same as sides; the depressions of a dark yellowish-brown colouration forming a fairly broad network, in the depressions isolated dark red dots and very short prominent, broad dark-red tines, sometimes all the tines interconnected with one another, thereby giving the whole depression a deeper tint; in the older stage the islands are fewer, due to the depressions flowing into one another and forming a fairly large window of a much tighter colour, with here and there the remains of a dot or tine; these entirely absent afterwards, giving the whole a much tighter colour and the appearance of a different plant; the islands verging on white and the depressions a pate grey-green colour; in the later stage the outer margin with teeth of irregular shape and size; inner margins straight; in the very old leaves blue-green dots. This species is very variable some specimens being opaque whitish-grey and almost uniform in colour, others opaque but strongly reticulated with fine impressed brown markings, yet others with largely open obscurely translucent windows.
    Flowers: Single, white, daisy-like, about 3 cm in diameter, emerging from the fissure and as large as the pair of fleshy leaves below.
    Blooming season: From mid-summer through fall.
    Fruit: Seed capsules mostly 6-loculed, top more or less flat, faces elliptic.
    Seeds: Yellow-brown to light yellow-brown.

    Lithops julii f. reticulata (llifle.com)

     

    https://youtu.be/qchSJ1Pi604?t=315

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