Petal-bushes, Petalidium spp., are woody perinal shrubs in the Family Acanthaceae found in arid sandy or stoney areas of Africa, India, and the Mascarene Islands, although most species are found in areas of Southern Africa with summer rainfall and no frosts. There are currently 35 species recognised from Southern Africa, of which 33 are found in Namibia, 13 in Angola, and six in South Africa. Despite the name 'bush', they are diverse in form, ranging from scrambling herbs to large, robust shrubs. Many species of Petalidium are fast-growing and produce attractive flowers, leading to some species being cultivated by gardeners.
In a paper published in the journal Phytotaxa on 3 September 2025, Wessel Swanepoel of the H.G.W.J. Schweickerdt Herbarium at the University of Pretoria, Kyle Dexter of the School of GeoSciences at the University of Edinburgh, the Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh, and the Department of Life Sciences and Systems Biology at the University of Turin, Martino Adamo, also of the Department of Life Sciences and Systems Biology at the University of Turin, Erin Manzitto-Tripp of the Department of Ecology & Evolutionary Biology, & Museum of Natural History at the University of Colorado, and Abraham Van Wyk, also of the H.G.W.J. Schweickerdt Herbarium at the University of Pretoria, and of the South African National Biodiversity Institute, describe a new species of Petalidium from the Kaokoveld Desert of northwestern Namibia.
The new species is described on the basis of four populations of Petalidium in the Kaokoveld discovered by Wessel Swanepoel while carrying out research for a monograph on the genus in Southern Africa. The populations had been observed by him before, and assumed to belong to the species Petalidium canescens, which is also found in the region. However, in May 2018 Swanepoel visited a population near Palmwag while it was in flower, suggesting that it was a different species, something which was later backed up by generic analysis.
The new species is named Petalidium saxatile, where 'saxatile' derives from the Latin 'saxatilis', meaning 'found amongst rocks', from the habitat where it lives. These Plants form a hemispherical woody shrub about 50 cm tall, with bifurcating stems and elongate oval leaves, both covered with white hairs. Flowers are roughly tubular, with four lobes, the lower of which is yellow and the others pinkish brown (unlike the all pink flowers of Petalidium canescens).
Petalidium saxatile is known from only four sites, three in an approximate line from Palmwag southwards to Bergsig, and one on Welbedacht Farm, to the south of Khorixas. It has been found growing among rocks from the Etendeka Group basalt, on arid hillsides and along drainage lines at elevations of 860–1130 m above sealevel, between 70 and 150 km from the sea. Searches of other areas with similar conditions did not reveal any further populations. It is calculated that the area of potential habitation for Petalidium saxatile is 3337 km², but the area of actual habitation is less than 20 km². All of the areas where the species is found are prone to prolonged droughts. As such, Swanepoel et al. recommend that Petalidium saxatile be classified as Endangered under the terms of the International Union for the Conservation of Nature's Red List of Threatened Species.
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