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・ Dendrosenecio keniensis
Dendrosenecio keniodendron
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Dendrosenecio keniodendron : ウィキペディア英語版
Dendrosenecio keniodendron

''Dendrosenecio keniodendron'' or Giant Groundsel is a species of the genus ''Dendrosenecio'' of the large family Asteraceae and is one of the several species of giant groundsels endemic to the high altitudes of the Afrotropic, including ''Dendrosenecio johnstonii''
(''Senecio battiscombei'')〔(【引用サイトリンク】 ''Senecio johnstonii'' Oliv. var. ''johnstonii'' (COMPOSITAE ) )〕
occurring on Mount Kilimanjaro, Mount Kenya, and the Aberdare Mountains, ''Dendrosenecio keniensis'' occurring the lower alpine zone of Mount Kenya and ''D. keniodendron'' occurring in higher and drier sites on Mount Kenya. The giant rosette plants, sometimes tall, often grow in even-sized stands (presumably even-aged), with different understory communities under different-aged stands.〔〔

==Description==
''Dendrosenecio keniodendron'' is a giant rosette plant occurring at altitudes between and . ''D. keniensis'' grows in wetter sites, and therefore at lower altitudes on average, but their ranges abut and they occasionally hybridise.〔〔
Leaves and stems:
''D. keniodendron'' has woody stems up to tall〔
and in diameter with an diameter pith.〔
that grow to per year.〔
Its 1-15 evergreen rosettes which grow from the top of the stout stems〔
are composed of 50–100 leaves each long and wide.〔
The upper leaf-base has long, yellowish hairs, sometimes extending along upper midvein; the lower surface hairless or with sparse hairs becoming more dense along lower midvein.〔
Leaf longevity is less than a year.〔
''D. keniodendron'' protects itself against freezing temperatures by closing its leaves when it becomes cold (at night) and opening them when it is warm (during the day); an adaptive insulation method sometimes called nyctinasty, or a night bud. The older outer leaves freeze while the younger inner meristematic buds remain above the freezing point.〔
Flowers:
A reproductive rosette produces a single terminal flower stalk as much as tall.〔
Flower clusters are loosely branched below and gradually simpler toward the end to tall, in diameter; with flower heads that bend downwards.〔 Ray florets absent; 80–140 disc florets.〔
Flowers are predominantly wind pollinated and the original rosette dies after seed maturation, and up to eight new rosettes are produced around the flower stalk base.〔 Up to five of these new lateral rosettes survive (typically 2-3), each producing a new branch. Each flowering episode therefore results in new forks in the stem. Branching occurs only after flowering, and so provides a record of past reproduction.〔 These branching patterns suggest that plants seldom reproduce more than 4 times before dying.〔
Fruits:
Flowers produce plumed achenes which are wind-dispersed.〔
Reproduction occurs synchronously over the entire population on Mount Kenya, at intervals of 5 to 29 years,〔
making ''D. keniodendron'' a mast year species.〔〔
Communities:
In the alpine zone of Mount Kenya, ''Dendrosenecio keniodendron'' is the dominant woody species, forming evenly sized and evenly aged dense stands with nearly closed canopies. The taller stands tend to support a community of the shrubs from the ''Alchemilla'' genus: ''Alchemilla argyrophylla'' and ''Alchemilla johnstonii'' and shorter stands supporting grasses from the genus ''Festuca'' and ''Carex'': ''Festuca pilgeri'' and ''Carex monostachya'' which resemble each other and have perhaps been often misidentified. Also found in these communities are the species pairs: from ''Poa'': ''Poa schimperi'' and ''Poa leptoclada'', ''Cerastium'': ''Cerastium octandrum'' and ''Cerastium afromontanum'', and the pair of ''Ericas'': ''Erica timera'' and ''Erica arborea''.〔〔

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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