|

Consisting mostly of bulbous plants, this family occurs naturally
throughout the tropics and warm temperate regions of the world. Many
species have extravagantly lovely flowers and are highly prized
garden plants
.
Description All Amaryllidaceae are perennials and apart
from Clivia, Cryptostephanus and Scadoxus, which have
rhizomes, the majority have bulbous storage organs. While growing,
the bulb is kept sufficiently deep below ground by special roots
that lengthen and contract.
Most
often the leaves are strap-shaped and smooth but occasionally they
have unusual shapes, markings and coverings. Genera like
Eucrosia and Scadoxus,
which occupy habitats with low light-intensity, have leaves that are
especially broad and flattened, whereas in the semi-arid parts of
southern Africa, species of Brunsvigia, Crossyne, Gethyllis
and Haemanthus have leaves covered with variously shaped
hairs. The leaves in Crossyne and some Haemanthus
species are also attractively spotted with dark green or red.
Amaryllidaceae usually have numerous flowers held in an
umbrella-like cluster at the end of a leafless stem, called a scape.
In unusual genera like Gethyllis (kukumakranka), however, the
scape carries only one flower and remains subterranean. Flowers are
frequently large and showy and vary from star-like to trumpet-shaped
or tubular. Colours range from red, orange, yellow and pink to
white, whereas bluish flowers are only found in Griffenia,
Worsleya and Lycoris. They all produce nectar and are
often heavily scented. Each flower has six segments (tepals),
frequently arising from a long to short tube. The flowers of
Narcissus (the daffodil) characteristically have a large,
cup-shaped corona, which is an outgrowth of the tepals. six stamens
are typical of the family, but some Griffenia species have
five stamens and some Gethyllis species have multiple stamens
with about 60 anthers. In Pancratium and Hymenocallis
the stamens are fused to form a large cup, which resembles the
corona in Narcissus. The ovary is inferior (i.e. located
below the tepals) and carries a single style.

The fruits are dry or fleshy and contain dry, dark and often
flattened, or fleshy, round, and greenish seeds.
The basic chromosome number of x = 11 is most common.
Distribution World-wide the family has 59 genera and
about 850 species. Major centres of diversity are South America (28
genera) and South Africa (18 genera). Despite the Mediterranean
being the source of numerous horticultural introductions, the region
has only eight genera, whereas Australia is poor in having only
three genera.
Southern Africa has 210 endemic Amaryllidaceae species.
Namaqualand and the Cape Region together have 111 species and 77% of
these are found nowhere else.
Amaryllidaceae occupy many different habitats: seasonally dry
places, ephemeral pools, the understorey of rainforests, and
rivers.
Name and History First described by Jean Henri Jaume
St. Hilaire in 1805, the family is named after Amaryllis, a pretty
shepherdess mentioned by Theocritus, Virgil and Ovid. Close
relatives are Alliaceae (the onion family) and Agapanthaceae (the
agapanthus family). Despite recent proposals to combine the three
families, their chemical compounds are nevertheless sufficiently
different to keep them apart.
Ecology
In South Africa, many Amaryllidaceae species
are adapted to cope with wildfires and those that depend on fire to
flower are appropriately known as fire lilies. Especially in Cyrtanthus
the flowers are so diverse that they attract sunbirds, bees,
long-tongued flies, butterflies and moths. Southern Africa also has
several Amaryllidaceae with remarkable dispersal abilities. Species
of Brunsvigia, Boophone and Crossyne in particular
have large, light, spherical fruiting heads that tumble along the
ground in the wind, shedding their seeds as they move. Habitat
loss is currently the greatest threat to the Amaryllidaceae in South
Africa, where 59 species are endangered or vulnerable and 58 species
are near threatened.
Economic and cultural value World-wide the
Amaryllidaceae have greatest economic value as ornamentals. In
addition, huge numbers of plants are traded for traditional
medicines. Africans use the bulbs and leaves as poultices and
decoctions for treating sores and digestive disorders, but in large
dosages they are extremely poisonous. The Zulu people of South
Africa also use rhizomes of clivias as protective charms. In
Peru, the Inca people frequently depicted flowers of Amaryllidaceae
(Ismene, Pyolirion and Stenomesson) on ceremonial
drinking vessels. In southern Africa, however, indigenous art
portraying plants is rare. The single known rock painting of a
Brunsvigia species in Lesotho probably emphasizes how much
the San people valued the bulbs for their psychoactive effects.
In the Garden In cool temperate climates,
Narcissus (daffodils), Leucojum (snowflakes) and
Galanthus (snowdrops) are among the most important
spring-flowering bulbs in commerce. Elsewhere, in warm temperate and
subtropical climates, species of Amaryllis,
Clivia,
Hippeastrum, Nerine,
and Zephyranthes are the most popular choices for gardens and
containers.
To find all
the Amaryllidaceae listed on this site, please enter Amaryllidaceae
into the search box below
References and further reading
- Du Plessis, N. & Duncan, G.D. 1989. Bulbous plants of
southern Africa. A guide to their cultivation and propagation.
Tafelberg, Cape Town.
- Loubser, J. & Zietsman, P.C. 1994. Rock painting of
postulated Brunsvigia sp. (Amaryllidaceae) at Thaba Bosiu, western
Lesotho. South African Journal of Science 90: 611, 612.
- Manning, J, Goldblatt, P. & Snijman, D. 2002. The color
encyclopedia of Cape bulbs. Timber Press, Portland, Oregon.
- Meerow, A. & Snijman, D.A. 1998. Amaryllidaceae. In K.
Kubitzki, The families and genera of vascular plants 3:
83-110. Springer, Berlin.
- Meerow, A.W., Fay, M.F., Chase, M.W., Guy, C.L., Li, Q-B.,?
Snijman, D. & Yang, S-Y. 2000. Phylogeny of Amaryllidaceae:
Molecules and morphology. In K. Wilson & D. Morrison,
Monocots: systematics and evolution: 368-382. CSIRO,
Melbourne.
- Paterson-Jones, C. & Snijman, D. 1996. Dramatically
different-winter rainfall amaryllids. Africa-Environment &
Wildlife 4,2: 25-30.
- Snijman, D.A. 2000. Amaryllidaceae. In O.A. Leistner, Seed
plants of southern Africa: families and genera. Strelitzia
10: 570-576. National Botanical Institute, Pretoria.
- Vargas, F.C. 1981. Plant motifs on Inca ceremonial vases from
Peru. Botanical Journal of the Linnean Society 82:
313-325.
|
|
Author Dee Snijman Compton Herbarium, May
2004
Images Colin
Paterson-Jones
|
|