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 II (1970) - Flora of New Zealand Indigenous Tracheophyta - Monocotyledons except Graminae
Copy a link to this page Cite this record

Carpha alpina R.Br.

C. alpina R.Br. Prodr. 1810, 230.

Type locality: Australian. Type: K.

Tufted. Culms (3)–6–30–(75) cm. × 0.5–1.5 mm., grooved, flaccid or rather rigid, occ. curved. Lvs , (5)–10–20–(30) cm. × 0.5–1.5–(2) mm., us. <, but occ. > culms, rigid, lamina narrow-linear, flat or concavo-convex, tip obtuse; sheath broad, brown, shining; lower portion of lamina and mouth of sheath minutely serrulate. Infl. a terminal corymb, occ. condensed and almost forming a head, or spikelets in 4–6 loose stalked clusters; bracts subtending infl. 1–2, lf-like; bracts subtending spikelets more glume-like. Spikelets 8–12 mm. long, pale and shining, 1-fld. Glumes us. 5, lanceolate, ± obtuse, stiffly membr., keeled, the 2 lower shorter, the next larger pair subtending the fl., the fifth glume setaceous. Hypog. bristles 6, plumose with silky hairs almost to the tip, then scabrid, > glumes when mature. Nut 2.5–3 mm. long, slightly < 1mm. wide, trigonous, minutely punctulate, shortly stipitate, pale to dark brown, surmounted by the dried and rigid, long, narrow, smooth or minutely hairy style-base.

DIST.: N. Southwards from lat. 36º30' S., St., A.

Common in bogs in mountain districts from 300–1,800 m. altitude; occ. occurs at sea level in Southland and on St. and A.

FL. 12–1. FT. 2–4.

Kükenthal in Fedde Repert. Spec. nov. Regn. veg. 47, 1939, 113, describes the style-base as smooth. The majority of specimens from North Id have minutely hairy style-bases but specimens from South Id resemble Australian plants in having a smooth style-base, except for one gathering from Mt Stokes, Marlborough. In the closely related South American C. schoenoides, the style-base is minutely scabrid while in plants of C. alpina from New Guinea it is distinctly scabrid and there are a few projections on the edges of the nut as well.

Plants collected from pakihi-land on the West Coast of South Id are us. taller and more slender than average, with narrower lvs.

Click to go back to the top of the page
Top