3.
Bryophyllum delagoense
(Ecklon & Zeyher) Schinz, Mém. Herb. Boissier. 10: 38. 1900.
Chandelier plant, tingo tingo
Kalanchoe delagoensis
Ecklon & Zeyher, Enum. Pl. Afric. Austral., 305. 1837;
K. verticillata
Scott-Elliot
Herbs,
monocarpic, (sometimes suckering at base), pale green mottled with violet-brown, glaucous.
Stems
simple, terete, 5-20 dm × 0.5-1 cm.
Leaves
mostly in 3s, opposite or whorled, evenly spaced, simple; petiole and blade indistinguishable, reddish green to gray-green with reddish brown spots, narrowly oblong, subcylindric, grooved adaxially, 3-15 cm × 3-6 mm, margins entire except for 3-9 conic teeth at apex, apex blunt, surfaces not glaucous; bulbils borne between teeth, spurs spoon-shaped.
Cymes
mostly dense, corymbiform, 0.5-2 dm diam.; branches to 3 cm.
Pedicels
5-30 mm.
Flowers:
calyx pale green, not inflated, 8-16 mm, tube 3-6 mm, lobes triangular, 5-10 mm, longer than tube, apex acuminate; corolla orange to scarlet, 25-40 mm, not contracted basally, lobes obovate, 6-12 mm, apex rounded or apiculate.
2
n
= 68.
Flowering winter, spring. Cactus-mesquite thickets, shell mounds, waste places; 0 m; introduced; Fla., Tex.; Indian Ocean Islands (Madagascar); introduced also in s Africa, Pacific Islands (at least Hawaii), Australia.
The names
Bryophyllum tubiflorum
and
Kalanchoe tubiflora
are widely used in horticultural as well as botanical works, with
K. delagoensis
usually listed in synonymy as a nomen nudum. H. R. Toelken (1985) wrote that the three-word original diagnosis of
K. delagoensis
was enough to distinguish it from other species treated. R. W. Long and O. Lakela (1971) misidentified it as
K. grandiflora
A. Richards.
The subcylindric part of the leaf seems to be the petiole, bearing a greatly reduced blade with one to four pairs of teeth (P. Boiteau and L. Allorge-Boiteau 1995).
This prolific species is an aggressive weed, well established in southern Florida and coastal southern Texas. In Australia, where it is called "mother of millions," it is a serious pest because it is highly poisonous to cattle (P. I. Forster 1996).
SELECTED REFERENCE Everett, T. H. 1939.
Kalanchoe tubiflora
. Addisonia 20: 63-64.