Volume III (1980) - Flora of New Zealand Adventive Cyperaceous, Petalous & Spathaceous Monocotyledons
Copy a link to this page Cite this record

Iris pseudacorus L.

*I. pseudacorus L. Sp. Pl. 1, 1753, 38.

Yellow Flag

Clumps very leafy, many-flowered, to 1 m high, dark green, ± glaucous, purple at base. Rhizome c. 3 cm diam., reddish-brown. Leaves c. = stems, 2-3 cm wide, cross-veinlets apparent when leaf is held up to light, midrib distinct. Stems terete, with several long leaves. Inflorescence usually branched, central axis and each branch terminated by 2-5-flowered clusters. Flowers to 12 cm diam., yellowish, varying from golden-orange to very pale cream, without scent; pedicels long, stout, > ovary; tube funnel-shaped, ± ½ length of ovary; outer segments 7 cm long, oval-oblong, limb c. 4 cm wide, very drooping, abruptly narrowed to dark brown-veined claw; inner segments c. 3 cm long, shorter and narrower but more erect than style-branches. Style-branches oblong, bifid crest fimbriate. Capsule c. 5 × 2 cm, oblong-elliptic, beaked; seeds brown, ± trigonous.

N. Taranaki - Mt Egmont; Wellington - Manawatu, Masterton, Hutt Valley. S. Marlborough-Blenheim; Canterbury; Southland - Riverton. Along rivers, streams and water races, and in swampy ground.

(Europe, Asia, N. Africa)

First record: Kirk 1878a: 368.

First collection: Waiwhetu Stream, Hutt Valley, V. D. Zotov, 2.12.1938 (CHR 21567, 21568). The large leafy clumps, and tall stems with conspicuous yellow flowers readily distinguish this water-loving iris.

FL. 11-12.

Still occasionally planted as an ornamental about garden ponds, this escape is a nuisance in some localities in drains, water races and slow-moving streams, impeding water flow. It is a prominent feature along the lower Avon River, Christchurch, and noticeable in some water races.

Spread is by seed, and vegetatively by portions of clumps eroded and dispersed by floodwaters.

Click to go back to the top of the page
Top