We value your privacy

We use cookies and other technologies to enhance your experience, analyse site usage, help with reporting, and assist in other ways to improve the website. You can choose to allow cookies and other technologies or decline. Your choice will not affect site functionality.

Volume IV (1988) - Flora of New Zealand Naturalised Pteridophytes, Gymnosperms, Dicotyledons
Copy a link to this page Cite this record

Cotoneaster simonsii Baker

*C. simonsii Baker, in Saunders, Refug. Bot.  1:   t. 55  (1869)

(W.R.S., D.R.G.)

Khasia berry

Deciduous or semi-evergreen shrub up to 4 m high; stems erect or slightly arching; young shoots densely brown-tomentose or villous but later becoming brownish grey and glabrate. Lvs crowded along stems or in fascicles, sometimes 2-ranked; petiole 2-3 mm long; blade ovate to rhombic, 13-25-(40) × 7-15-(25) mm, cuneate at base and mucronate at apex, thinly pilose above when young, later glabrous and ± shining, with veins sometimes somewhat impressed above, paler green to greyish green with indumentum of numerous long and ± appressed hairs below, often becoming sparse at maturity; margins slightly recurved and sometimes reddish; stipules lanceolate or triangular-lanceolate, densely pilose, acuminate. Fls 1-4-(5), in corymbs scattered along branches or on short shoots; peduncles brown-pilose, up to 5 mm long. Sepals c. 1-1.5 mm long, ± triangular, somewhat pilose, acuminate. Petals erect, c. 2-3 mm long, ± obovate, whitish to pale pink. Fr. obovoid to oblong-obovoid, 5-10 mm long, shining orange-red or scarlet.

N.: Volcanic Plateau (Ohakune and Tongariro), Wellington City; S.: Canterbury (foothills from Hanmer southwards, Banks Peninsula, Ashburton, Mt Cook National Park), N.E. Otago, Otago Peninsula, Southland (Lake Manapouri, Tapanui, Tahakopa); St.

Assam, Burma 1958

Scrub, wasteland, plantation and forest margins up to c. 900 m, also a garden weed.

FL Nov-Dec FT Dec-Jul.

This sp. is sometimes grown for low shelterbelts and hedges, and at a few sites naturalised plants from such sources are abundant; for example, the sp. forms a dominant understorey in some conifer plantations at Hanmer. The record of C. divaricatus Rehder from Rakaia Gorge (Given 1982) is based on a specimen of C. simonsii; true C. divaricatus is uncommon in cultivation in N.Z.

Click to go back to the top of the page
Top