Verbena supina
Citation:
L., Sp. Pl. 21 (1753).
Synonymy: Not Applicable Common name: Trailing verbena.
Description:
Sparsely hairy procumbent or erect herb with branches 15-50 cm long, much-branched from the base; stems quadrangular with rounded angles separated by narrow grooves, strigulose; leaves petiolate, triangular or ovate-cuneate in outline, 1- or 2-pinnatipartite or -pinnatisect, 2-4 cm long, 1.5-2.5 cm wide, densely strigulose, the lobes bluntly toothed.
Spikes terminal, slender, shortly pedunculate, up to 10 cm in fruit; bracts lanceolate, strigulose, usually half as long as the calyx; calyx 4-toothed, 4-angled, c. 3 mm long, strigulose outside; corolla lilac, about as long as the calyx, pubescent about the middle of the tube outside.
Mericarps lightbrown, wrinkled in the upper part of the outer face, 2-2.5 mm long.
| Flowering branch, flower and opened flower.
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Image source: fig. 545D in Jessop J.P. & Toelken H.R. (Ed.) 1986. Flora of South Australia (4th edn).
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Published illustration:
Munir in Jessop (1981) Flora of central Australia, fig. 391; Cunningham et al. (1982) Plants of western New South Wales, p. 570.
Distribution:
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Common weed in waste places and on damp or sandy grounds.
N.S.W.; Vic. Native to the Mediterranean region.
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Conservation status:
naturalised
Flowering time: mainly Nov. — March.
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SA Distribution Map based
on current data relating to
specimens held in the
State Herbarium of South Australia
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Biology:
No text
Author:
Not yet available
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