Trisha Shetty (Editor)

Gasteria nitida

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Kingdom
  
Plantae

Clade
  
Monocots

Family
  
Asphodelaceae

Scientific name
  
Gasteria nitida

Clade
  
Angiosperms

Order
  
Asparagales

Subfamily
  
Asphodeloideae

Rank
  
Species


Similar
  
Gasteria glomerata, Gasteria baylissiana, Gasteria disticha, Gasteria bicolor, Gasteria ellaphieae

Gasteria nitida (the "Bathurst Gasteria") is a succulent plant, native to the Eastern Cape grasslands of South Africa.

Contents

Adult plants

Gasteria nitida httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

The species name "nitida" means "shiny" in Latin, and refers to the leaf surfaces. The fat, shiny, spotted, triangular leaves usually (but not always) grow as a rosette. The plant is acaulescent (without a stem) and some plants proliferate from the base to form offsets and clumps. It is highly variable and plants' appearance depends very much on the environment (eg. in fynbos which is subject to frequent fires, the plants never leave their juvenile phase, and stay tiny and close to the ground, not unlike the "armstrongii" plant discussed below).

Gasteria nitida Gasteria nitida Plantz Africa

It is easily confused with the larger Gasteria excelsa to the east, but that massive species has more spreading leaves with sharp serrulate margins, and marginate keels. Gasteria excelsa also has light pink flowers on its massive inflorescences.

Gasteria nitida Gasteria nitida var armstrongii

The flowers of nitida are a darker reddish pink, with yellow throats (the only Gasteria with this feature). The inflorescence is branched, and flowering time is in summer - from December to February in South Africa.

Juvenile plants

Gasteria nitida Gasteria nitida WikiVisually

Juvenile plants look markedly different to adults. Young plants are distichous (leaves only in two opposite rows); while adults are often rosettes. Juvenile leaves are tongue-shaped and recurved; while adults leaves are more upright and triangular. Juvenile leaves are rough with tubercles; while adult leaves are smooth and shiny.

"Armstrongii" form

Gasteria nitida Gasteria nitida Plantz Africa

A smaller plant, Gasteria armstrongii, which occurs just to the west on the banks of the Gamtoos river, is often considered to be a subspecies of G.nitida, which never leaves its juvenile phase (a possible case of neoteny). The armstrongii plant has rough, tuberculate, recurved, purely distichous leaves, and a solitary unbranched inflorescence.

Genetic relationships

Genetically, it is more closely related to the more restricted species Gasteria ellaphiae, Gasteria vlokii and Gasteria glauca. The flowers of all four species are also almost identical.

Distribution

This species occurs over an extensive coastal range of the Eastern Cape Province, South Africa, from Uniondale in the west, as far as the Fish river in the east.

Here is occurs on rocky hill slopes in grassland vegetation - one of the few Gasterias to favour an open habitat. The vegetation types tend to be grassveld, grassy fynbos or renosterveld. The soil tends to be coarse, mineral poor sands, derived from the quartzite sandstones of the region. The rainfall occurs all year round in this region (600-800mm per annum), but slightly more in the summer.

Near the Gamtoos river, it slowly transforms into Gasteria armstrongii, in a gradual continuum.

Cultivation

This plant is popular as an ornamental in cultivation. It thrives in full sun, as well as semi-shade. It is adaptable but prefers very well-drained, slightly acidic, poor, quartz-sandstone sands.

References

Gasteria nitida Wikipedia