Page:Manual of the New Zealand Flora.djvu/500

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BORAGINACEÆ.
[Myosotis.
Erect, silky with appressed hairs, 6–14 in. high. Leaves 2–4 in., lanceolate-spathulate. Flowers numerous, crowded, bright-yellow, ½–⅔ in. long. Corolla broadly funnel-shaped, tube broad, shorter than the limb 21. M. concinna.
Hispid with spreading or appressed hairs, 6–14 in. high. Leaves 2–6 in, lanceolate-spathulate. Flowers large, crowded, brownish-orange, ⅔–1 in. long. Corolla-tube twice as long as the limb 22. M. macrantha.


1. M. uniflora, Hook. f. Handb. N.Z. Fl. 192.—A small much and closely branched densely tufted perennial herb, forming rounded patches 2–6 in. diam., everywhere clothed with appressed rigid white hairs, giving the whole plant a greyish-white appearance; root woody, tortuous; branches densely leafy. Leaves closely imbricated, erect, ¼ in. long, linear-oblong or linear-lanceolate, obtuse or subacute, dilated at the base, almost glabrous above. Flowers solitary, terminal, almost sessile, about ¼ in. long, yellowish-white. Calyx-lobes linear-oblong, acute, clothed with straight rigid hairs. Corolla-tube cylindrical, twice as long as the calyx, throat with 5 emarginate scales; limb flat, spreading; lobes 5, short, rounded. Stamens 5; filaments very short; anthers linearoblong, included, their tips just above the level of the corolla-scales. Nuts ovoid, acute.

South Island: Canterbury—Sources of the Waimakariri, Enys! T. F. C; Rangitata Valley, Armstrong! W. W. Smith! Wilberforce River, Haast! Tasman Valley, T. F. C.; Hopkins River, Haast. 2500–4000 ft. December–February.

A very curious little plant. The M. uniflora of Buchanan (Trans. N.Z. Inst. xiv. t. 33, f. 1) appears to me to be referable to the next species.


2. M. pulvinaris, Hook. f. Handb. N.Z. Fl. 193.—A small much-branched densely tufted perennial herb, forming soft rounded cushions 2–4 in. diam., more or less clothed with soft white hairs; branches short, densely compacted. Leaves most densely imbricated all round the branches, erect, closely overlapping, ⅙–¼ in. long, broadly obovate or obovate-spathulate, rounded at the tip, slightly narrowed to a broad sessile base, rather membranous, both surfaces clothed with long soft hairs or the lower half glabrous. Flowers white, solitary, terminal, almost sessile, about ¼ in. long. Calyx-lobes linear, acute, densely clothed with long straight hairs. Corolla-tube about twice as long as the calyx, throat with 5 scales; lobes 5, short, rounded, spreading. Stamens included, the tips of the anthers slightly above the level of the corolla-scales. Nuts ovoid, acute.—Buch, in Trans. N.Z. Inst. xiv. (1882) t. xxxiii. f. 2. M. Hectori. Hook. f. Handb. N.Z. Fl. 193; Buch. l.c. t. xxxiii. f. 3.

South Island: Canterbury—Locality not stated, J. F. Armstrong! Otago—Mount Alta, Hector and Buchanan! Mount Pisa, Old Man Range, Hector Mountains, Mount Cardrona, and other high peaks to the west and north-west, Petrie! 4500–6500 ft. January–March.