Streptocarpus porphyrostachys

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  • Photographer: Graham Grieve
  • Grown by: Growing near Umtanvuna, KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa
  • Licensing Details: CC BY-NC 4.0 Learn More

Images copyright by the individual photographers or their institutions.


Streptocarpus porphyrostachys is a relatively small-growing unifoliate species, which can be accommodated in a 4″ pot or smaller. The single thick leathery leaf (300 x 180 mm) is typically grayish green, in some plants more gray than in others, the underside is deep beetroot red. It produces a very nice set of beautiful dark or lighter blue/purple flowers in cultivation, in nature the number of flowers is often less.

Plants are normally monocarpic, and usually die after fruiting, but in cultivation some produce a subsequent new leaf for the next season. Hybrids occur in nature which can be rosulate, so this species possesses considerable potential for the hybridizer.

Streptocarpus porphyrostachys is endemic to a small area on the South African east coast called Pondoland, which has a rich flora which includes a number of other Streptocarpus species. Streptocarpus porphyrostachys grows in rock cracks or moss covered rocks in forest often right at the edge of grassland where a rock embankment falls away towards a river or a forest. The common flower of the species is tube-shaped, corolla 30 – 43 mm long, with up to 24 flowers in nature, many more in cultivation. Extensive fieldwork in Pondoland has revealed a form with an identical leaf but with a keyhole shaped flower. Such plants are fewer flowered, and plants with intermediate flowers have also been discovered.