Archive of Vanished Flora
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Nightdew Ring Ventiflora evanida
Specimen · N°001 · Wind · ▶ Film

Ventiflora evanida

The flower vanishes with the dawn.

FOUND 50.5°S 73.0°W · Wind-swept grassland of southern Patagonia  ·  ✝ EX · Last seen 1975

A low perennial 8–14 cm tall. It presses to the rock to escape the wind, spreading slender silver-grey leaves in a radial rosette. The short, reddish-brown stem swells its basal water-storing tissue only after rain. The flowers are pale blue-grey saucers with a translucent calyx. It blooms for a single night; before dawn the calyx and corolla lose moisture and shrink to a thin film, so by morning only a small damp ring remains in the hollow of the rock.

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Feature Film

Vertical, as filmed / tap to play
FULL FILM · also on social

The flower vanishes with the dawn.

This footage was made vertical (9:16) and is also published on social media. The archive keeps it in its original ratio.

9:16 VERTICALFULL EDITSOUND ON
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Specimen Plates

8 plates · click to play
Nightdew Ring plate 1PLATE I
Nightdew Ring plate 2PLATE II
Nightdew Ring plate 3PLATE III
Nightdew Ring plate 4PLATE IV
Nightdew Ring plate 5PLATE V
Nightdew Ring plate 6PLATE VI
Nightdew Ring plate 7PLATE VII
Nightdew Ring plate 8PLATE VIII
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Field Note

Habitat
Wind-swept grassland of southern Patagonia. At the start of the dry season it appears only on basalt ledges that stay damp after rain, a little apart from old footpaths.
Local name
Ring of the Waiting Wind
Folklore
Locally it is held to appear only before the season of steady dry westerlies. People heading into the mountains long read the damp ring it leaves on the rock to know that water on the ledges had begun to recede, and judged by it when to move on.
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Locator

Coordinates
50.5°S 73.0°W
Wind-swept grassland of southern Patagonia
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Record

Narration
0:00 / --:--

By morning, only a ring remains.

That is the only proof it bloomed.

The windswept grassland of southern Patagonia.

Just before the dry season, on rain-soaked ledges, the Nightdew Ring shows itself for a single night.

Lower than a palm, it spreads silver-grey leaves flat to the ground.

After rain, a small water-storing tissue at its base swells, and at night it opens a pale blue-grey flower.

More分類・学名・語源などの詳しい標本データ
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Classification

Classification & specimen data
Scientific name
Ventiflora evanida  A. Reinholt, 1972
Taxonomy
Plantae › Angiosperms › Dicotyledons › VentifloralesVentifloraceaeVentiflora › evanida
Voucher
AVF-001 · Holotype
Archive of Vanished Flora (AVF)
Conservation
✝ EX — Extinct Last seen 1975
Collector
Y. Aoki
1971-02-08
Synonym
Ventiopsis evanida L. Fontaine, 1969
Protologue (Latin)
Planta humilis, caule brevissimo, petalis albidis nitentibus, in loco aperto crescens. Typus: Wind-swept grassland of southern Patagonia. Species iam extincta.
Discovered / Described
1971 / 1972
Height
8〜14cm
Life form
Perennial herb
Phyllotaxy
Alternate
Chromosome
2n = 16
Flowering
A few hours around dawn
Pollination
Nocturnal small moths
Substrate · pH
Basaltic, weakly acidic
Elevation
200〜1,200 m
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Etymology

Etymology of the name
VentifloraGENUS
ventiWind
florflower
evanidaEPITHET
evanidvanishing
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Related

Specimens of the same habitat
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