The species assigned to the genus
Didelta are more or less
succulent shrubs or
perennial plants, with or without milk sap, that can have both alternate and opposite leaves, that may be felty hairy or hairless, may have a spiny tip, are seated and have an entire, sometimes spiny margin. The
flowerheads sit individually in the
leaf axils or on a
peduncle. These heads are subtended by 2 rows of free
involucral bracts, the outer 3–5 are protruding, triangular in shape, broadest and leaflike, the inner lance-shaped, ascending and may be spiny. Each head consists of a whorl of yellow, infertile ray florets with 4 teeth at their tips, surrounding yellow disc florets that each have five long, free lobes. Adjacent each of the outer involucral bracts, several florets are fertile, and the surrounding parts of the common base of all florets in the head (or
receptacle) swell and eventually become woody. The receptacle breaks up at maturity, each section corresponding with one of the persistent outer bracts. These segments break free from the parent plant and act as the dispersal units. The ribbed, flask-shaped, more or less curved fruitlets germinate inside the protective encasement of the woody segments. These are topped by a
pappus of winged scales that have merged at their base.
Differences between the species D. spinosa lacks milk sap, has hairless, more or less oval leaves with spines that often enclose the stem at base, and the swollen, eventually woody segments of the receptacle containing the fruitlets lack spines.
D. carnosa has milk sap, elliptic to linear, variably tomentose leaves, and the swollen and eventually woody segments of the receptacle containing the fruitlets are spiny. Two varieties are distinguished.
D. carnosa var.
carnosa is hairless or becomes hairless with age, while
D. carnosa var.
tomentosa remains densely felty hairy at least on the undersides of the leaves.
Differences with related genera Cuspidia cernua has bristle-like pappus on top of the
fruitlets and the fruiting head remains intact, while both
Didelta-species have chaffy pappus and the fruiting head breaks into several triangular segments when ripe. == Taxonomy ==