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

Dichondra micrantha Urb.

*D. micrantha Urban, Symb. Antill.  9:   243  (1924)

Mercury Bay weed

Perennial herb, with most parts densely hairy; hairs white, ± appressed, forked. Stems stoloniferous, freely branching, purplish, forming extensive mats or low cushions to 5 cm high. Lf internodes 1-2 cm long; petioles erect or nearly so, to 6 cm long, short on very exposed stolons. Lamina (5)-10-30 mm diam., suborbicular to reniform, membranous, glabrous or nearly so and dull above, with appressed hairs below; veins raised beneath, not impressed above; base broad-cordate; apex rounded or slightly emarginate. Peduncles 5-15 mm long, bract very small and inconspicuous. Calyx c. 2 mm long, densely hairy outside; lobes alternately linear-oblong and ovate-oblong, obtuse to subacute. Corolla 4-5 mm diam., greenish white, lobed to c. 1/2 way; lobes narrow-oblong to lanceolate, = calyx lobes at anthesis, becoming > calyx lobes. Anthers violet or violet-margined. Ovary densely hairy. Capsule usually deeply 2-lobed, with 1-(2) seeds per loculus, 2-2.5 × 4-5 mm, more rarely only 1 locule developed, indehiscent, slightly to strongly hispid, > calyx. Fruiting calyx to 3 mm long, fruiting peduncle recurved. Seeds c. 1.5 mm long, yellow to dark brown.

N.: N. Auckland (Kawau Id) to Wellington; S.: Christchurch.

West Indies, S. North America 1978

Usually a lawn weed.

FL Sep-Feb.

D. micrantha has been widely planted as a lawn in warmer parts of N.Z. and in many places it has thrived and spread naturally to a limited extent. Until recently this plant has been referred to the indigenous D. repens, but Forde, M. B., New Zealand J. Bot. 16: 283-285 (1978), has shown that the lawn plant represents an introduced American element sometimes placed within a broad concept of D. repens but more correctly treated as the distinct sp. D. micrantha. Self-pollination occurs, but cleistogamy, which has been reported for D. micrantha elsewhere, has not been substantiated for N.Z. (Forde, loc. cit.).

Click to go back to the top of the page
Top