Moraea Mill. section Homeria Vent. (including Moraea collina Thunb., Moraea flaccida (Sweet) Steudel, Moraea miniata Andrews, Moraea ochroleuca (Salisbury) Drapiez, and Moraea pallida (Baker) Goldblatt)
(=Homeria Vent.)
Iridaceae
Cape tulip
seed
Fruit a 3-valved loculicidal capsule with numerous seeds. Seeds angular, variously shaped, ca. 1–2 mm in diameter. Reddish-brown to black, edges forming membranous ridges. Testa glossy, rugose-reticulate. Embryo small, linear; endosperm present.
Moraea polystachya (Thunb.) Ker-Gawl. sect. Polyanthes (non-FNW)
Britain; Africa: Botswana, Lesotho, Namibia, South Africa; Australia, New Zealand, Tasmania
native to South Africa
a variety of habitats from desert to Mediterranean shrubland to grassland; coarse, sandy soils or fertile, clay soils
Moraea sect. Homeria consists of 32 species of corm-bearing perennial herbs, with attractive flowers that resemble tulips. The corms are cultivated in the Netherlands and have been imported into the U.S. These plants contain a cardiac glycoside, homeridin, that is toxic to livestock. In South Africa, poisoning from this section results in significant economic losses. Moraea miniata, M. flaccida, and M. pallida are important weedy species in South Africa, infesting overgrazed pasture, vineyards, plowed fields, abandoned fields, and disturbed roadsides, while M. collina and M. schlechteri (L. Bolus) Goldblatt are locally weedy. Moraea collina, M. miniata, and M. flaccida are crop weeds and pasture problems in Australia, while M. ochroleuca is a naturalized weed growing in natural vegetation in that country. Reproduction is by corms and seeds, which are spread by wind, water, and by adhering to and passing through animals. Some weedy species are sterile (non seed-producing) and these reproduce by cormlets surrounding the main corm. Although all species of the section Homeria are considered possible invasive pests, only five species (M. collina, M.flaccida, M. miniata, M. ochroleuca, and M. pallida) are currently listed as federal noxious weeds by the U.S.