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Manual of the New Zealand Flora.

1. Parsonsia, R. Br

1. Parsonsia, R. Br.

Twining shrubs, with long slender branched stems, often woody below. Leaves opposite.- Flowers small, in terminal or axillary corymbose cymes. Calyx 5-partite, naked or glandular within or furnished with 5 scales. Corolla salver-shaped; tube short, cylindrical or nearly globular, throat naked; lobes 5, spreading, the edges overlapping to the right. Stamens inserted about the middle of the corolla-tube or below it; filaments often twisted; anthers included or exserted, cohering in a cone or ring round the stigma, cells produced into 2 rigid empty basal lobes. Hypogynous scales 5. Ovary 2-celled; style slender; ovules numerous in each cell. Fruit elongated, cylindric, of 2 coherent follicles which ultimately more or less separate from one another. Seeds linear or oblong, numerous, with a tuft of long silky hairs at the tip.

A small genus of about 12 species, found in tropical Asia, the Malay Archipelago, Australia, and New Zealand. Both the New Zealand species are endemic.

page 440
Flowers ¼ in. long. Calyx ⅓ as long as the corolla-tube. Anthers included 1. P. heterophylla.
Flowers ⅛ in. long. Calyx about as long as the corolla-tube. Anthers exserted 2. P. capsularis.
1.P. heterophylla, A. Cunn. Precur. n. 402.—A tall and slender branching climber, often ascending trees to a considerable height; stems tough and pliant, in old specimens woody towards the base; young branchless terete, more or less pubescent. Leaves extraordinarily variable in size and shape; of young plants 1–5 in. long, narrow-linear, linear- or oblong-spathulate, or linear-oblong, entire or irregularly sinuate or provided with 2–4 rounded lobes on each side, sometimes linear and expanding at; the tip into an oblong or rounded blade; of mature plants 1½–3½ in. long, usually from ovate or oblong-ovate to ovate-lanceolate or elliptic-lanceolate, sometimes obovate, more rarely narrower and lanceolate or linear, acute, petiolate, coriaceous, deep shining green above, paler beneath, veins transverse. Cymes large, many-flowered, 1½–4 in. long, terminal and axillary. Flowers white, sweet-scented, ¼ in. long. Calyx-lobes about ⅓ as long as the corolla-tube. Corolla with a long tube often inflated below the throat; lobes much shorter than the tube. Anthers included within the corolla-tube. Capsule 3–6 in. long, terete, acute.—Hook. f. Fl. Nov. Zel. i. 181. P. albillora, Raoul, Choix, 17. Hook. f. Handb. N.Z. Fl. 187. P. variabilis, Lindl. in Journ. Hort. Soc. v. (1850) 196. P. macro-carpa, Col. in Trans. N.Z. Inst. xiv. (1882) 331.

North and South Islands: Abundant from the Three Kings Islands and the North Cape to Foveaux Strait. Sea-level to 2500 ft. Kaiku; Kai-Whiria. November–March.

I have restored Cunningham's name for this species, it having at least five years' priority over that of Raoul.

2.P. capsularis, R. Br. in Mem. Wern. Soc. i. (1809) 65.—Habit of P. heterophylla, but smaller and more slender. Leaves equally variable, of young plants ¾–3 in. long, narrow-linear or lanceolate to spathulate, entire or sinuate or irregularly lobed; of adult plants varying from extremely narrow-linear, 1–4 in. long by sometimes barely 1/10 in. broad, to oblong or oblong-lanceolate, 1–2½ in. long by ½–¾ in. broad, obtuse or subacute, coriaceous; margins usually entire. Cymes few or many-flowered, axillary and terminal, usually shorter than the leaves. Flowers small, -18 in. long. Calyx-lobes equalling the corolla-tube or very little shorter. Corolla campanulate, tube short; lobes revolute, as long as the tube. Anthers exserted.—A. D.C. in D.C. Prodr. viii. 401 (in part); Raoul, Choix, 17; Hook. f. Fl. Nov. Zel. i. 180. P. rosea, Raoul, l.c. 16; Hook. f. l.c.; Handb. N.Z. Fl. 188. P. Forsteri, G. Don. Gen. Syst. iv. 79. P. ochracea, Cot. in Trans. N.Z. Inst. xxii. (1890) 480. Periploca capsularis, Forst. Prodr. n. 126; A. Rich. Fl. Nouv. Zel. 205. page 441

North and South Islands: Prom the North Cape to Foveaux Strait, not uncommon. Sea-level to 2000 ft. Aka-kiore. November–March.

Easily separated from the preceding by the smaller campanulate flowers with a short tube and exserted anthers. Forster's diagnosis, and A. Richard's description, drawn up from some of Forster's own specimens, prove beyond doubt that this species is the original Periploca capsularis. There seems to be no sufficient reason for sinking the specific name in favour of the much later one bestowed by Raoul.