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Senecio coronatus

(Thunb.) Harv.

Woolly grassland senecio, Crowned ragwort

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(c) Ricky Taylor, some rights reserved (CC BY-NC), uploaded by Ricky Taylor

Senecio coronatus (Thunb.) Harv. aka the woolly grassland senecio is a plant in the family Asteraceae, endemic to and widespread in Southern Africa, occurring in the moister southern and eastern regions. It is perennial with large, leathery, broadly elliptic, erect leaves growing from a large, underground rootstock with a woolly covering. Up to 20 capitula are arranged in a terminal cluster, each with some 10 slender yellow ray florets. rootstock very woolly; stem herbaceous, erect, ribstriate, terete, loosely woolly below, cobwebbed, becoming glabrous above, ending in a few-headed corymb; lower leaves broadly ovate or oblong-obovate, tapering at base into a petiole, subacute, penninerved, minutely calloso-crenulate, the younger loosely cobwebbed, older glabrous, rigid; upper sessile, stem-clasping, ovate, oblong or lanceolate, smaller upwards; corymb 3–20-headed, simple or branched, the pedicels long, naked; heads many-fl. radiate; inv. calycled with long, subulate bracteoles, glabrous or cobwebbed, of 20 or more, keeled, subulate scales; achenes short, subcompressed, variably hairy. Rootstock thick, very woolly. Stem 6 inches to 2 feet high, sparsely leafy, nude above. Root-leaves several, on longer or shorter petioles, 3–6 inches long, 1 1/2–3 inches broad, varying considerably in comparative length and breadth. Cauline leaves few and distant, broad or narrow. Young parts loosely cobwebbed. Heads like those of S. Albanensis. Rays numerous and long, yellow. Achenes sometimes densely, sometimes sparsely hairy. Var. β. is more slender, with smaller leaves and heads; but otherwise the same.

Description

An herb in the Asteraceae family found in subtropical regions, capable of growing in arid places.

This description is brief — help expand it

Edible Uses

The leaves are cooked and eaten as a spinach substitute.

Traditional Uses

The leaves are cooked and eaten as a spinach.

This uses section is brief — help expand it

Distribution

It is a subtropical plant. It can grow in arid places.

Where It Grows

Africa, Botswana, East Africa, Eswatini, Lesotho, South Africa, Southern Africa, Swaziland, Zimbabwe,

Synonyms

Cineraria coronata Thunb.Senecio lasiorhizoides Sch. Bip.Senecio lasiorhizus DC.

Also Known As

Izonkozonko, Ubulibazi

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