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Hypertelis

Hypertelis
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Plantae
Clade: Angiosperms
Clade: Eudicots
Order: Caryophyllales
Family: Molluginaceae
Genus: Hypertelis
E.Mey. ex Fenzl
Species: H. spergulacea
Binomial name
Hypertelis spergulacea
E.Mey. ex Fenzl
Synonyms

Mollugo linearis auct. non Ser.


Mollugo linearis auct. non Ser.

Hypertelis is a genus of flowering plants in the family Molluginaceae. Most of its former species have been transferred to the new genus Kewa, and the remaining species, Hypertelis spergulacea, may also need a different placement. Hypertelis spergulacea is a woody-based plant, up to 30 cm (1 ft) high, with whorled greyish green leaves. It is found on the border between Namibia and the Northern Cape province of South Africa.

Hypertelis spergulacea grows to about 30 cm (1 ft) high, woody at the base with softer ascending stems. The lower leaves are crowded together and fleshy; further up the stem the leaves are arranged in well spaced whorls of five to ten. The individual leaves are narrowly linear, hairless (glabrous) and greyish green in colour. The inflorescence is somewhat umbellate, with individual flowers borne on long thin stems (pedicels). The flowers have 20–30 stamens, most united at the base into 3–5 groups. The seeds are black and shiny.

The genus Hypertelis was first described by Eduard Fenzl in 1836 in the first part of a monograph on what he regarded as two parts of the family Portulacaceae (Mollugineae and Steudelieae); he attributed the genus name to Ernst Heinrich Friedrich Meyer. He described the species Hypertelis spergulacea in 1839 in a second part of his monograph, again attributing the name to Meyer. Fenzl did not give a type for the genus; H. spergulacea was designated as the "type species" by E. P. Philips in 1951.H. spergulacea has been called Mollugo linearis by some authors, but the true M. linearis Ser. is not a synonym.

The genus had grown to nine species by 2011, when molecular phylogenetic studies found that H. spergulacea appeared to be nested within the genus Mollugo, and the other eight species of the genus were included in a clade well removed from Molluginaceae, close to the families Aizoaceae, Phytolaccaceae and Nyctaginaceae. Accordingly, in 2014, a new genus, Kewa, and family, Kewaceae, were proposed to accommodate these eight species. H. spergulacea was left in the genus, although it was noted that further reorganization of Mollugo might change its placement.


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