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Veronica parviflora Vahl

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Names_Plants record source
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This is indigenous
Threat status: Not threatened
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Endemic
Wild
New Zealand
Political Region

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Vahl
Vahl
1794
4
ICN
Veronica parviflora Vahl
species
Veronica parviflora
The epithet parviflora is derived from Latin, parvus = little, and flos, a flower. Vahl was probably comparing it to V. macrocarpa, which he described at the same time, and also to Veronica from the northern hemisphere.
Lectotype (designated by Bayly et al. 2000): Nova Zeland, mis: Dr Montin, Hb. Vahlii, C

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parviflora

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Stems shrubby, the branches terete and glab. Lvs rather close, c. 2.5 cm. long, linear-lanceolate, stiff, smooth, glab., entire, the apex plicate-mucronate. Racemes in upper axils, c. 3·5 cm. long, with short terete peduncles. Pedicels short, opp., each with a minute bract at base. Calyx-lobes oblong, obtuse, glab., subciliate under the lens. Corolla-lobes obtuse. Style > corolla. Capsules oval, 2 × calyx.
Small tree 3-7·5 m. tall, when young perfectly dome-shaped. Ultimate twigs bearing fascicles of lvs near their ends. Lvs erect or reflexed, 2.5-3·5 cm. × 4 mm., linear-lanceolate, acute. Infls dense-fld, seldom > lvs. Calyx-lobes ovate, obtuse. Corolla c. 4 mm. diam. Capsule c. 3 mm. long, swollen, c. 2 × calyx.
Gynodioecious shrub or small tree, up to c. 7.5 m tall. Branches erect; old stems pale grey; youngest branchlets progressing from olive- green to brown, or red-brown; internodes (1.5-)3-17(-20) mm long; leaf decurrencies obscure; leaf- base scars evident; stem pubescence bifarious (mostly), uniform or absent (rarely), eglandular puberulent (when hairy). Leaf bud about as long as mature leaves with leaves of a pair separating when mature; sinus absent. Leaves decussate, free at base, erecto-patent to recurved; lamina lanceolate or linear-lanceolate, folded or flat, (8-)25-60(-76) mm long, 1.5-7 mm wide; apex whitish, acute or shortly acuminate; base cuneate; evident venation in fresh leaves consisting of midrib only or consisting of midrib and 2 secondary laterals arising from base; midrib depressed to grooved above and thickened beneath; margin not thickened, usually translucent and yellowish green to orange-brown (the latter when dry), scabrous or minutely pubescent (with short, stiff, basally swollen, antrorse hairs), entire; adaxial surface light green, dull, usually with dense stomata, not pitted, hairy along midrib; abaxial surface pale green, dull, with dense stomata (more so than adaxial surface), not pitted (although frequently with many small glandular hairs) or sometimes faintly pitted with small depressions that each contain a twin-headed glandular hair. Inflorescences with (20-)40-80(-130) flowers, lateral, racemose and unbranched, (2-)4-10(- 12) cm long, longer than subtending leaves, flowers usually opening in acro-petal sequence, with all flowers (including those near the apex) usually developing to maturity; peduncle (0.35-)0.5--1.9 cm long, eglandular pubescent or pubescent with a mixture of eglandular and glandular hairs; rachis (1.6-)3-10.2 cm long, eglandular pubescent or pubescent with a mixture of eglandular and glandular hairs; bracts alternate, acute to obtuse, ciliolate with both glandular and eglandular hairs, ovate to deltoid or oblong; pedicels ranging in length from much longer than bracts to shorter than bracts, eglandular-pubescent or pubescent with both eglandular and glandular hairs or glabrous, erecto-patent to patent at anthesis, suberect to recurved at fruiting, (0.3-)0.5-3.5(4) mm long. Flowers protandrous, those on individual plants either hermaphrodite or female. Calyx terete, 1.5-2.3(-2.7) mm long, 4-lobed, equally divided; lobes all similar, ovate to elliptic (often broadly so), obtuse to acute (sometimes on one inflorescence), with mixed glandular and eglandular cilia, margins membranous. Corolla white with lobes tinged pink to mauve at anthesis, white after pollination; tube hairy inside, 2.1-3.8 mm long, 1.4-3(-3.8) mm wide, cylindric or slightly expanded in lower half, longer than calyx; lobes glabrous or with a few hairs toward base on inner surface, hairs (when present) multicellular; posterior lobe broadly ovate, obtuse or emarginate, patent to recurved, with margin and apex turned upwards; lateral lobes ovate, obtuse, suberect to patent, with margin and apex turned upwards; anterior lobe ovate, obtuse, suberect to patent, with corolla throat white. stamen filaments white, diverging after anthesis, incurved at apex in bud (Fig. 6), becoming straight after anthesis, 3-5 mm long; anthers obtuse (with a short, blunt apiculus), magenta, 1.5-2.2 mm long; sterile anthers of female flowers very pale lilac or light brown, c. 1 mm long (when dry). Nectarial disc glabrous. Ovary ovoid, glabrous, margin and apex turned upwards, not enfolding style; 0.8-1 mm long, 2-locular; ovules c. 8-12 per locule, marginal in one layer on a flattened placenta; style 3.5-6 mm long, 0.12-0.22 mm thick glabrous, pink (especially when young) or white; stigma subcapitate or capitate, yellow at anthesis, 0.17-0.22 mm wide. Capsules latiseptate, obtuse or subacute, dark brown, 2.5-3.5 mm long, 1.4-2.5 mm thick, glabrous, septicidal split extending to base, loculicidal split extending ¼-¾-way to base.

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Hebe parviflora (Vahl) Andersen
Veronica parviflora Vahl
Hebe parviflora var. arborea (Buchanan) L.B.Moore
Veronica parviflora Vahl
Hebe parviflora var. arborea (Buchanan) L.B.Moore
Veronica parviflora Vahl
Veronica arborea Buchanan
Veronica parviflora Vahl
Veronica parviflora Vahl
Veronica parviflora Vahl
Veronica parviflora Vahl
Veronica parviflora Vahl
Veronica parviflora Vahl
Veronica parviflora Vahl
Veronica parviflora Vahl
Veronica parviflora Vahl
Veronica parviflora Vahl
Veronica parviflora Vahl
Veronica parviflora var. arborea (Buchanan) Kirk
Veronica parviflora Vahl
Veronica parviflora var. arborea (Buchanan) Kirk
Veronica parviflora Vahl

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New Zealand
South Auckland Land District
New Zealand
Wellington Land District
Veronica parviflora Vahl
New Zealand
Veronica parviflora Vahl
New Zealand
Canterbury Land District
Veronica parviflora Vahl
New Zealand
Gisborne Land District
Veronica parviflora Vahl
New Zealand
Hawke's Bay Land District
Veronica parviflora Vahl
New Zealand
Marlborough Land District
Veronica parviflora Vahl
New Zealand
North Auckland Land District
Veronica parviflora Vahl
New Zealand
South Auckland Land District
Veronica parviflora Vahl
New Zealand
Taranaki Land District
Veronica parviflora Vahl
New Zealand
Wellington Land District

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typification
Lectotype (designated by Bayly et al. 2000): Nova Zeland, mis: Dr Montin, Hb. Vahlii, C
Etymology
The epithet parviflora is derived from Latin, parvus = little, and flos, a flower. Vahl was probably comparing it to V. macrocarpa, which he described at the same time, and also to Veronica from the northern hemisphere.

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402c4eeb-c879-493f-83d0-065d0f6ac0ef
scientific name
Names_Plants
5 November 2002
15 July 2011
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