Qjure
HomeRemediesSearchQJournal
Powered bySimilia
HomeRemediesSearchQJournalAccount
Powered bySimilia
Qjure

The homeopathic encyclopedia. Explore remedies, read materia medica, and discover the classification system developed by Jan Scholten.

Platform

  • Remedies
  • Search
  • Journal
  • Membership

Legal

  • About
  • Contact
  • Privacy
  • Terms

© 2026 Qjure. All rights reserved.

Powered bySimilia
Back to ProteoideaeBrowse all remedies

Mimetes cucullatus

Kingdom
3Plants
Phylum
6Angiospermae
Class
4Fabanae
Subclass
3Proteidae
Phase
1Proteales
Subphase
3Proteoideae
Stage
14
Name

Mimetes cucullatus

Author

Qjure

Type

Info

Chapter

3-643.13.14

Book
Family
English: Pagoda; Common pagoda; Red pagoda; Common mimetes; Red mimetes.
Afrikaans: Rooistompie; Stompie.
Synonym: Leucadendron cucullatum.
Name: cucullātus is Latin means hooded.
Region: South Africa.
Habitat: can cope with a relatively large range of environmental circumstances.
Use: ornamental; cut-flower.
BotanyEvergreen shrub; resprouter, shoots up new growth from its base after a fire; other Mimetes are re-seeders, their seeds germinate after a fire, but mature plants are killed by fire.
Stem: several, mostly not branching, occasionally forking, upright stems of 1 to 2 m high; covered in grey felty hair when young.
Root: firm woody tuber.
Leaves: alternate; very narrow to broad elliptic or inverted egg-shaped, ± 4 cm long and ± 1 cm wide; scarlet coloured when young, green lower down the stem.
Inflorescence: many flower heads; axils of the highest leaves on the stem; cylindric; 6 to 10 cm long and 4 to 7 cm in diameter, topped by a tuft of smallish, more or less upright, narrowly egg-shaped, scarlet coloured leaves, with 4 to 7 flowers; leaves that subtend the flower heads are inverted fiddle-shaped, folded backwards from the midline out, scarlet in the upper parts during flowering, gradually turning through yellowish to green at the base or entirely yellowish with a green base or softly orange; bracts are unequal in size, clasp the base of the flowers tidly, fringed by a rim of silky hairs, form a two-lipped involucre, below the attachment ellipse-shaped with a pointy tip, larger, above the attachment are smaller, lance-shaped with a pointy tip.
Flowers: 4-merous.
Pollination: by birds.
Ecology: ants may defend the plants against insect herbivores, attracted by extrafloral nectaries at the tips of its leaves.
Dispersion: by ants.
  • 0 Kingdoms
  • ›3 Plants
  • ›6 Angiospermae
  • ›4 Fabanae
  • ›3 Proteidae
  • ›1 Proteales
  • ›3 Proteoideae