. . . . "Mairia crenata Helme 1.jpg"@en . . . "Mairia crenata is a perennial herbaceous plant of mostly 2\u201315 cm (1\u20136 in) high that is assigned to the family Asteraceae. It has a woody rootstock of up to 5 cm (2 in) long, from which brown, fleshy roots develop. The five to eighteen, hard and leathery, spoon-shaped leaves are in one to three rosettes, have a distinct main vein, blunt or pointy tip, often dark red or blackish margins with rounded teeth and a \u00BD\u20132 cm (0.2\u20130.8 in) long stalk-like foot, often initially somewhat woolly hairy, on particularly the lower surface and the main vein, but this is easily rubbed off the shiny surfaces. Each rosette produces mostly one, sometimes up to four, mostly rusty or whitish woolly hairy, brown or dark red inflorescence stalks, usually 1\u00BD\u201315 cm (\u2154\u20136 in) long, each with two to eight, initially woolly, line-shaped to oval bracts, the lowest up to 3 cm (1.2 in), decreasing size further up, and carrying mostly one, rarely up to three flower heads. The flower heads have a bell-shaped involucre with about 40 bracts, sixteen to thirty three violet to white ray florets of about 1\u00BC\u20131\u215E cm long, and many yellow disc florets. The species flowers anywhere between February and December but only after a fire has destroyed the overhead biomass or serious disturbance. It is an endemic species that is restricted to the Eastern Cape and Western Cape provinces of South Africa."@en . "1087692870"^^ . . . "crenata"@en . . . "59323301"^^ . "Nees"@en . . . . . . . . . "* Arnica crenata, Aster crenatus, Gerbera crenata, Zyrphelis crenata"@en . . . . . . . "Mairia"@en . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . "Mairia crenata"@en . . . . . . . . . . . . . "11894"^^ . . "Mairia crenata is a perennial herbaceous plant of mostly 2\u201315 cm (1\u20136 in) high that is assigned to the family Asteraceae. It has a woody rootstock of up to 5 cm (2 in) long, from which brown, fleshy roots develop. The five to eighteen, hard and leathery, spoon-shaped leaves are in one to three rosettes, have a distinct main vein, blunt or pointy tip, often dark red or blackish margins with rounded teeth and a \u00BD\u20132 cm (0.2\u20130.8 in) long stalk-like foot, often initially somewhat woolly hairy, on particularly the lower surface and the main vein, but this is easily rubbed off the shiny surfaces. Each rosette produces mostly one, sometimes up to four, mostly rusty or whitish woolly hairy, brown or dark red inflorescence stalks, usually 1\u00BD\u201315 cm (\u2154\u20136 in) long, each with two to eight, initially woo"@en . . . . .
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