Dimorphotheca

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Plant Characteristics
Origin: ?
Cultivation
Exposure: ?"?" is not in the list (sun, part-sun, shade, unknown) of allowed values for the "Exposure" property.
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Scientific Names



Read about Dimorphotheca in the Standard Cyclopedia of Horticulture 

Dimorphotheca (Greek, two-formed achenes). Composite. Cape Marigold. Annual and perennial herbs or sub-shrubs, some of which are excellent flower- garden plants.

Leaves alternate or radical, entire, toothed, or incised, often narrow: heads solitary, long-peduncled; disk-fls. yellow or brown or purple, the rays yellow, purple, or white with purple beneath. The genus is closely allied to Calendula but has straight instead of incurved frs. The fls. usually close up, like those of Gazania, unless they have sunlight; their backs have as great a variety of coloring as their faces.—About 20 species in S. Afr.

The flowers are often 3 inches across, and their long, slender rays (20 or more) give a distinct and charming effect. A dozen kinds are grown abroad, representing a wide range of colors and foliage. They are wintered in coolhouses and flowered in spring or else transplanted to the open, where they flower freely during summer. The shrubby kind, D. Ecklonis, has been grown as a summer beading plant, flowering from July to frost, and as a coolhouse plant, making a much-branched subject 3 feet high, and flowering freely all spring.

D. Barberiae, Haw. Perennial: fls. purple above, paler beneath; disk all purple, with corollas of 2 forms. B.M. 5337. H.F. II. 5:78. Var. rosea, Hort., has rose-colored fls.—D. chrysanthemifolia, DC. Lvs. cut like a chrysanthemum: fls. yellow, reverse reddish. B.M. 2218.—D. cuneata, DC. Lvs. strongly cut: fls. scarlet- orange. B.M. 1343.—D. nudicaulis var. grammifolia, Harv. &. Sond. Fls. white, with a purple ring at the base, and orange- brown on the back, the disk purple. B.M. 5252.—D. Tragua. DC. Perennial: lvs. narrower than in D. Ecklonis, linear: fls. white, veined purple, the rays narrower at the base, reverse orange purplish, the disk purplish. B.M. 1981 (as Calendula). L. H. B. CH


The above text is from the Standard Cyclopedia of Horticulture. It may be out of date, but still contains valuable and interesting information which can be incorporated into the remainder of the article. Click on "Collapse" in the header to hide this text.


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