Additional notes (click to expand)

Commemorative

Christian Friedrich Ecklon (Åbenrå 1795 – Cape Town 1868) was a Danish botanical collector and apothecary. Ecklon collected extensively in South Africa. His first visit was in 1823, as first an apothecary's apprentice and then pharmacist, looking for plants with medicinal value. Lack of funding and a deteriorating health forced him to live in poor circumstances, selling bulbs or preparing herbal remedies. Nevertheless, when he returned to Europe in 1828, he had collected an extensive herbarium. During his stay in Hamburg, from 1833 to 1838, he worked on revising this collection. This herbarium would become the basis for the Flora Capensis (1860–1865) by his friend, the Hamburg pharmacist Otto Wilhelm Sonder (1812–1881) in collaboration with the Irish botanist William Henry Harvey (1811–1866). The herbarium was later sold to Unio Itineraria, a Württemberg Botanical Society. Ecklon was the author, with Karl Ludwig Philipp Zeyher who had travelled with him from 1829, of Enumeratio Plantarum Africae Australis Extratropicae (1835-7), a descriptive catalogue of South African plants. He later returned to South Africa, where he died in 1868. The herbaria of Lehmann and Sonder in the Swedish Museum of Natural History in Stockholm gives special reference to the collection of Ecklon and Zeyher. According to IPNI, Ecklon named a total of 1974 different genera or species. Like many botanists he was an entomologist making collections of plant associated insects. The genus Ecklonia, including Ecklon's kelp (Ecklonia biruncinata or E. radiata), as well as Ecklon's Purple Iceplant (Delosperma ecklonis 'Bright Eyes') and Ecklon's Everlasting (Helichrysum ecklonis) were named in his honour.
wikipedia December 2013

Nomenclature

cultivar unknown

Osteospermum ecklonis (DC.) Norl. cultivar

Family: ASTERACEAE
Genus: Osteospermum
Species: ecklonis (DC.) Norl.
Cultivar: cultivar
Distribution summary: South Africa (East Cape)
Habit: Perennial
Hardiness: H2 - Tender; cool or frost-free greenhouse
Garden status: Not currently grown
Flowering months: July, August, September
Reason for growing: Commemorative


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