Guardian Nature School Team Contact Blog Project Noah Facebook Project Noah Twitter

A worldwide community photographing and learning about wildlife

Join Project Noah!
nature school apple icon

Project Noah Nature School visit nature school

China Flower

Adenandra obtusata

Description:

Showy, white flowers that shimmer in the sun brighten up this evergreen shrub and attract insects, butterflies and bees to your garden. Belonging to the Rutaceae family (citrus family), Adenandra obtusata can be recognized by the scent it releases from oil glands when the leaves are touched or crushed. Adenandra obtusata forms a robust, single stem upright shrub and grows to a height of 30-50cm. With its showy flowers and aromatic foliage it forms an ideal plant for your garden.

Habitat:

Adenandra obtusata is endemic to Southern Overberg and grows naturally on rocky, coastal and inland slopes from Bredasdorp to Swellendam. It is found growing on coastal fynbos, flats and limestone hills at low attitudes and abundant on hard on exposed hills of hard limestone at Cape Agulhas. It only extends some 25 kms inland and is unlikely to be frost hardy, but the fact that it grows naturally in limestone locations suggests that it might be easier to cultivate in the garden than species from nutrient poor, acid sandstone.

Notes:

Of the world's six floral kingdoms, this is the smallest and richest per area unit. Contrast it in size with the Holarctic kingdom, which incorporates the whole of the northern hemisphere apart from the tropical regions. The diversity of fynbos plants is extremely high, with over 9000 species of plants occurring in the area, around 6200 of which are endemic, i.e. they do not grow anywhere else in the world. This level of variety is comparable to tropical rainforests or large islands and is unique in a relatively dry continental area. Of the Ericas, 600 occur in the fynbos kingdom, while only 26 are found in the rest of the world. This is in an area of 46,000 km² - by comparison, the Netherlands, with an area of 33,000 km², has 1400 species, none of them endemic. Table Mountain in Cape Town supports 2200 species, more than the entire United Kingdom. Thus, although the Fynbos comprises only 6% of the area of southern Africa, it has half the species on the subcontinent – and in fact has almost 1 in 5 of all plant species in Africa.

Species ID Suggestions



Sign in to suggest organism ID

3 Comments

Smith'sZoo
Smith'sZoo 11 years ago

ID corrected

Smith'sZoo
Smith'sZoo 11 years ago

Thanks Cindy! Two missions where right underneath each other, and I must have chosen both, when I went to edit, it took it off but when I saved it kept showing again! Thank you for the complement too!

Beautiful plant! I removed it from Mushroom Mapping for you. Not sure why it was giving you trouble.

Smith Zoo
Spotted by
Smith Zoo

Cape Town, Western Cape, South Africa

Spotted on Aug 27, 2012
Submitted on Aug 27, 2012

Spotted for Mission

Related Spottings

small yellow flower China Flower Bonsai China flower

Nearby Spottings

African Sacred Ibis Fynbos Restios Sea Roach Fynbos
Noah Guardians
Noah Sponsors
join Project Noah Team

Join the Project Noah Team