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Pachypodium namaquanum

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Kingdom
  
Family
  
Scientific name
  
Pachypodium namaquanum

Rank
  
Species

Order
  
Genus
  
Pachypodium

Higher classification
  
Pachypodium

Pachypodium namaquanum Pachypodium namaquanum

Similar
  
Pachypodium, Pachypodium succulentum, Pachypodium brevicaule, Pachypodium rosulatum, Pachypodium bispinosum

Pachypodium namaquanum is a succulent plant of Southern Africa. The genus name Pachypodium is from the Greek for 'thick foot', an allusion to its swollen base, while the species name namaquanum is a reference to Namaqualand.

Contents

Pachypodium namaquanum Pachypodium namaquanum Elephant39s Trunk World of Succulents

Pachypodium namaquanum top 10 facts


Distribution

Pachypodium namaquanum Pachypodium namaquanum Halfmens flowering in habitat by

The succulent plant is native to the arid, rocky mountains of the Richtersveld in the Northern Cape of South Africa and in southern Namibia.

Pachypodium namaquanum Pachypodium namaquanum

It is found in its greatest numbers in the Gariep Centre which has the greatest variety of succulents on earth. Rainfall here occurs mainly in winter and varies from 50 to 150 mm. Extremely arid conditions are to be found in the rain shadows of certain mountain ranges where the rainfall may be 15 mm or less. Thick fog moving inland from the Atlantic coast can add to the precipitation. Temperatures in summer may reach 50°C.

Description

Pachypodium namaquanum Pachypodiumnamaquanum 810jpg

Pachypodium namaquanum is a succulent single-stemmed plant growing to 4 metres (13 ft) tall. The warty trunk, thickset at the base and tapering to the top, is densely covered in sharp spines. Where damaged, the trunk produces side-branches that immediately curve back to the vertical. The very top of the plant is usually bent to the north, similar to the South American cactus Copiapoa cinerea.

Pachypodium namaquanum wwwbihrmanncomcaudiciformsfotopacnamJPG

There is a crown or tuft of undulate leaves at the apex of the trunk during the growing season which is throughout the winter months.

Pachypodium namaquanum Pachypodium namaquanum Wikipedia

The tubular velvet-textured flowers appear from August to October and result in twin seedpods in a V-shape. These split down one side to release the wind-dispersed plumed seeds. Seen from a distance, the plant has the appearance of a person trudging up a slope whence its common name of "Halfmens" (Afrikaans for 'semi-human'). It is also called Elephant's trunk.

Conservation

The plant is CITES-listed as an Appendix 1 and 2 species, prohibiting trade unless the necessary certificates and permits have been obtained. The removal of this species by collectors poses a distinct threat to its survival.

Relationships

This plant belongs to the Apocynaceae or Plumeria family, usually with milky latex rich in glycosides and alkaloids, of which many members are commonly cultivated. There are 23 species of Pachypodium of which 18 occur in Madagascar and 5 in southern Africa - three of these are succulent spiny shrubs while Pachypodium lealii, also tree-sized, occurs in the Kaokoveld in Namibia.

References

Pachypodium namaquanum Wikipedia